It’s In The Koran

Charles Johnsonfollow me on twitter
Sat Feb 4, 2006 at 1:38 pm PST • Views: 676

(Click picture to play video. Requires QuickTime.)

About the song: It’s In The Koran, by ‘Patrick Henry.’

From the author:

Commenters have argued that the Koran doesn’t say what this song claims the Koran says. To everyone who holds this view, I answer - and this is very important, so I’ll be stating it again below - that I agree with you. I agree that the Koran says what you claim it says. Islam is one of the world’s great religions, and I don’t believe that billions could have followed it if it weren’t, at its core, beautiful and life-engendering.

The problem is this: all the incidents I describe in the song have happened, and all were caused by men who disagree with you. These men have a different view of Islam. They find in the Koran inspiration and justification for their horrible acts.

To these men the Koran says that it’s proper that girls fleeing a fire should be trampled to death because they aren’t wearing headscarves. To these men the Koran says, even demands, that these girls die. The Koran says this, not to you, not to me, but to them.

The same goes for the other deeds I name: rape, torture, massacre, beheading, defilement of shrines. To these men, the Koran insists that they commit such acts.

I wrote the song from the point of view of these men because they’re the dominant force in Islam now. If you don’t believe me, remember this: Palestinians have just elected Hamas to lead their parliament, knowing that Hamas plan to institute sharia. Muslims had a choice, and they chose as leaders the kinds of men my song is about.

If you want more evidence, go to MEMRI.org and read the translations of interviews with influential Islamic figures. It’s rare to find one criticizing anything done by Muslims to non-Muslims, or even to other Muslims.

Here’s a comparison I find useful:

When the Abu Ghraib photos appeared, every American with a microphone - columnist, politician, religious leader - condemned the soldiers responsible.

When radical Muslims hide among civilians so that our soldiers can’t fight them without killing the innocent - do Arab and Muslim leaders, politicians, journalists unite to call such behavior cowardly and un-Islamic? No. When radical Muslims murder women and children? No. Gang-rapes in Scandinavia, forced mass starvation in Sudan - the list is long and wretched, and the men who commit these actions receive no criticism from the only people they might listen to: their religious leaders.

That’s why I wrote this song.

Again, if you say that Islam doesn’t permit such deeds, and that the men who perform them aren’t behaving like true Muslims, I’ll agree with you. But these men consider themselves true Muslims, the only true Muslims, and think that Muslims who disagree with them are apostates, the worst of betrayers.

I stand by every line in the song; it’s what such men believe. All I did was make their beliefs rhyme, scan and bounce like a vaudeville tune.

To those of you who feel that I’m mocking Islam, I reply: I’m not. I respect your view of it. These men - the men I’m writing about - don’t. You should be arguing with them, not with me.

Advertisement

223 comments

^ back to top ^

Name:

Pass:

Register Forgot Your Password? Account Settings Re-send Confirmation (To log in, cookies must be enabled in your browser!)

Turn off ads by subscribing!
For about 33 cents a day, our subscription option turns off all advertisements at LGF!
Read more...


► LGF Headlines

  • Loading...

► Tweeted Articles

  • Loading...

► Tweeted Pages

  • Loading...

► Top 10 Comments

  • Loading...

► Bottom Comments

  • Loading...

► Recent Comments

  • Loading...

► Tools/Info

► LGF Hits

► Resources

► Never Forget

► Statistics

► Tag Cloud

► Contact

You must have Javascript enabled to use the contact form.
Your email:

Subject:

Message:


Messages may be published in our weblog, unless you request otherwise.
Tech Note:
Using the Contact Form

More Partners

Compare Electricity Prices in your area. Texas Electricity is deregulated; you have the right to choose Texas Electric Rates from among many Texas Electric Companies.

May impair your ability.

TwitterFacebook
LGF Pages
Recent Pages

MichaelJ
Nortel Hacked for Years but Failed to Protect Itself, Report Says
39 minutes ago
Views: 34 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 0

Look At My New Grandbaby!
Fashion Week 2012: Unpaid Internships Challenged After Intern Files Lawsuit
41 minutes ago
Views: 45 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 1 • Rating: 0

RanchTooth
Blogosphere Screams UN Conspiracy
45 minutes ago
Views: 30 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 0

Channeling Confucius
Misery in Athens : 'New Poor' Grows From Greek Middle Class - Der Spiegel
1 hour, 12 minutes ago
Views: 34 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 0

Channeling Confucius
8 Unexpected Downsides of the Switch to E-Books
1 hour, 47 minutes ago
Views: 68 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 0

Randall Gross
The Moral Calamity of Serving in Congress
2 hours, 3 minutes ago
Views: 56 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 0

Channeling Confucius
Occupy Fights the Law: Will the Law Win?
2 hours, 50 minutes ago
Views: 48 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 0

Look At My New Grandbaby!
iSlaves: Forced Labor Key to Apple Profits
3 hours, 11 minutes ago
Views: 79 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 2 • Rating: 1

Randall Gross
Police: Iranian blows off legs in Bangkok blast
3 hours, 20 minutes ago
Views: 109 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 2

Randall Gross
Wakefield Anti-Vaxxer Accomplice appeals ruling
3 hours, 34 minutes ago
Views: 83 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 0

 Frank says:

Drop out of school before your mind rots from exposure to our mundane educational system. Forget about the Senior Prom and go to the library and *educate yourself* if you've got any guts. Some of you like *pep rallies* and plastic robots who tell you what to read. Forget I mentioned it. *This song has no message.* Rise for the flag salute. -- Liner notes for "Hungry Freaks, Daddy" on "Freak Out!"