Skip to main content

Saturday, 23 November 2024 | 09:20 am

|   Subscribe   |   donation   Support Us    |   donation

Log in
Register


"Dhimmitude and Disarmament - Islamic law": Mohammad instructed, “Fight against those who believe neither in Allah nor the Last Day, who do not forbid what Allah and his apostles have forbidden until they pay jizya out of hand and are utterly subdued"

The dhimmi suffered an “endemic lack of security on the highways.” Because they could not carry arms, the dhimmi frequently had to travel in groups accompanied by paid Muslim guards
 |  Satyaagrah  |  Islam
ISLAMIC LAW AND LAW OF THE MUSLIM WORLD
ISLAMIC LAW AND LAW OF THE MUSLIM WORLD

Under shari’a law, non-Muslims, known as dhimmi, have been forbidden to possess arms and to defend themselves from attacks by Muslims. Disarmament is one aspect of the pervasive civil inferiority of non-Muslims, a status known as dhimmitude. This Essay examines the historical effects of the shari’a disarmament, based on three books by Bat Ye’or, the world’s leading scholar of dhimmitude. As Ye’or details, the disarmament had catastrophic consequences, extending far beyond the direct loss of the dhimmi’s ability to defend themselves.

Disarmament is interesting to study in its own right, as a historical example of negative interfaith relations. Yet the story of disarmed and demoralized Christians and Jews also has implications for the modern United States, where there is no shari’a law, but some subgroups of the population have been condemned, in effect, to a disarmed and defenseless status of civil inferiority. Perhaps the ancient tragedy of dhimmitude has something to teach us about the modern tragedy at Virginia Tech University.

In 628 A.D., Mohammad and his followers attacked the Jews who lived at the oasis of Khaybar, over a hundred miles northwest of Medina. The Jews surrendered after a six-week siege. Mohammad allowed them to continue living at the oasis if they gave him half the produce. He reserved the right to expel them whenever he chose.

Mohammad’s model became a standard for the treatment of conquered people, who were called dhimmi.

Mohammad instructed “Fight against such of those to whom the Scriptures were given as belief neither in Allah nor the Last Day, who do not forbid what Allah and his apostles have forbidden, and do not embrace the true faith, until they pay tribute (jizya) out of hand and are utterly subdued.” The jizya was a special tax on non-Muslims. Alternative translations say that the non-Muslims should be “humiliated.” Scholars have debated whether the humiliation should be in the form of non-Muslims having to pay the tax personally by carrying it in hand, whether the tax should be so high that non-Muslims are humiliated, or whether non-Muslims should be humiliated and subdued in every aspect of life.

Forced conversions were the rule for conquered pagans, but Jews, Christians, and Zoroastrians (all of whom were monotheists) were all allowed to keep their religion.

Even conquered Hindus and Buddhists were given in dhimmi status in areas where they were so numerous that forced conversions were impossible to impose.

Dhimmi were inferior subjects. They were forbidden to keep or bear arms. Not even a cane was allowed. The arms ban also outlawed the wearing of military clothing.

Christians in recently-conquered Balkan territories of the Ottoman Turks were sometimes allowed to retain arms, if they performed Turkish military service, although the exception diminished with time. The more common method by which a Christian might bear arms was by becoming a janissary. The Muslim military would round up the best-looking and strongest Christian teenage boys in a town. The boys were taken away from their families forever, forcibly converted to Islam, and turned into élite career soldiers. The janissaries were early adopters of firearms and were the foundation of Ottoman military strength.

There were many other restrictions on dhimmi, such as a prohibition of dhimmi wearing the color green or clothes that were luxurious. The dhimmi could not stand on the roof, lest they see a Muslim woman bathing. They could not build homes taller than Muslim homes. Dhimmi could not ring church bells, pray or perform public religious ceremonies that a Muslim might see them. The construction of new synagogues or churches was banned, as was the exterior repair. Dhimmi could not ride on horses with saddles and sometimes could not ride horses at all.9 Within the dhimmi communities, the dhimmi were generally allowed to govern themselves by their own laws.

Sometimes the dhimmi were quite harshly persecuted. At other times, the dhimmi were allowed relatively tolerable living conditions. For example, Jews under the Ottoman Turks were often better off than Jews who lived under the European Christians. After the Jews were expelled from Spain in 1492, and after Spain coerced Portugal into expelling the Jews too, about 200,000 Iberian Jews moved to Turkey or other Ottoman lands. During the apex of Ottoman power, Jewish life and culture reached heights never previously achieved by the Diaspora in Christian nations.

Christians, too, sometimes fled to Islam for religious tolerance. The Byzantine Emperor Leo III the Isaurian (717-41) tried to convert the Jews by force, and also persecuted  Christian dissenters from the  Byzantine Orthodox Church. So Jews and Christians alike emigrated to the territories of the caliphs and sultans, who welcomed the well-educated and talented immigrants.

According to Ye’or, “The prohibition preventing specific groups from bearing arms placed the indigenous masses in a state of permanent insecurity and humiliating inferiority…” Because of the arms ban and the other aspects of dhimmitude:

The individual resigned to a passive existence, and developed a feeling of helplessness and vulnerability, the consequence of a condition of permanent insecurity, servility, and ignorance….

Reduced to an inferior existence in circumstances that engender physical and moral degradation, the dhimmi perceives and accepts himself as a devalued human being.

Theoretically, the dhimmi were entitled to protection from the state. In practice, they often had to pay special protection bribes to the local governors or gangs. The dhimmi suffered an “endemic lack of security on the highways.” Because they could not carry arms, the dhimmi frequently had to travel in groups accompanied by paid Muslim guards.

A Muslim who killed a Jew might, at the most, have to pay a fine, and was frequently not punished at all. In Yemen, if a Jew who was protected by a Muslim tribe was killed, his protecting tribe would kill a Jew who was protected by the offending tribe. Thus, the Muslim killer would receive no penalty. Jewish testimony was generally not accepted in court.

If a Muslim attacked or insulted a Jew, the Jew was forbidden to fight back. If a Jew did resist, the government might undertake reprisals against the entire Jewish community. So a crowd of Muslim boys could freely chase an elderly Jew through the streets, pelting him with rocks.

Describing Algeria and Morocco in the early nineteenth century, a Briton wrote:

Any Turk might enter the Jews’ town, walk into a house, eat, drink, insult the owner, and ill-treat the women without opposition or complaint; the Jew was too happy if he escaped being beaten or stabbed. In Morocco, no Moor could be put to death for killing a Jew, though killing a Christian might be a capital offense; in fact, it not infrequently happened, that a Jew complaining of the death of his friend or relative, was himself the person punished, while the murderer was let go free. The consequence of this is, that the Jew seldom thinks of an appeal to justice, or an attempt at obtaining satisfaction. He cringes to receive the blow, or fawns on the hand uplifted to strike.

In southern Morocco, a French observer noted that Jews and their families were serfs who belonged to their master families just like physical property. When there was a new governor in Algeria, the military was allowed to celebrate by pillaging the Jews, unless the Jews paid an enormous bribe to be left alone.

Like blacks in the American South during the Jim Crow era, the dhimmi had to cower and simper before their persecutors. A British observer in nineteenth-century Morocco recounted:

I have, on more than one occasion, seen a Moorish boy about ten years of age step up to a Jew in the street, and, having stopped him, kick, and slap him in the face, without his venturing to lift a hand and defend himself. Should he dare to do so, his hand would be cut off, as if being raised against one of the true believers. The poor man was obliged to content himself with crying out, addressing his little persecutor at the same time by the title of side, or master, and supplicating him to let him pass. As to the unfortunate Jew boys, they make their appearance with fear and trembling where any Moorish children may chance to be playing, being considered as fair game, much in the same light as a dog, and are sure to be well thumped and pelted.

A French diplomat in Yemen in 1910 reported a conversation in which a Turkish officer described a scene that the officer witnessed repeatedly: “some youths had caught hold of an elderly Jew and amused themselves by pulling his sidelocks, while their victim grinned and simpered stupidly. Constantly obliged to bear these insults, the Jew has lost all sense of dignity, and has come to accept his fate; instead of fighting back, he smiles.”

Similarly, in Persia, “If a Jew is recognized as such on the streets…The passers-by spit in his face, and sometimes beat him so unmercifully, that he falls to the ground, and is obliged to be carried home.”

In Ottoman Palestine in the first half of the nineteenth century, armed mobs might fall upon a Jew, and demand “Strip yourself, Jew.” The mob would take for itself all the Jew’s clothes and belongings, as “Allah’s reward” (kasb Allah). A Jew venturing into the market would be stoned and spat upon. A Jew attempting to barter in a trade with a Muslim would be threatened with his life, and forced to take the Arab’s price. Jews would be accosted at random, and required to carry heavy burdens for Arabs. And it was “impossible for Jewish women to venture into the streets for the lewdness of the Muslims.”

Dhimmitude often made life nearly unbearable. A dhimmi could not travel to another town, or to the market in his own town, without taking a grave risk of being attacked. The Muslim attackers could be sure that the dhimmi victim would not have weapons, and would be forbidden even to use his limbs to fight back.

Jews in the United States, of course, never had an official inferior status. In Western Europe, Jewish emancipation—the abolition of special legal restrictions on Jews—was accomplished in the nineteenth century through internal reform movements which drew decisive support from philo-semitic Christians. In contrast, dhimmitude in the Muslim world was formally ended only because of intense Western pressure on the Arab states.

The  Ottoman  Empire officially abolished dhimmitude in  1855. The  British favored the integration of the Ottoman ex-dhimmi into the military, “as a means of hardening populations who had been forbidden to carry weapons and whom the laws had reduced to cowardice.”

But in practice, dhimmitude remained in force for much longer. For example, the arms ban for Jews was still in effect in Yemen during the twentieth century. The absence of progress was seen in an 1860 report by the British consul in Kosovo, Serbia, observing that because Serbian  Christians were disarmed, they were frequently attacked by Albanian Muslim brigands, and their churches were pillaged.

When the ex-dhimmi community tried to assert its new (theoretical) rights, the backlash was severe.  A  dispute over what taxes Christians should pay led to anti-Christian riots in July 1860 in Damascus. The Christians had managed to acquire only a few poor guns, leaving the Christians mostly defenseless against the huge Muslim mobs which murdered about ten thousand.

Persecution of Jews ended in Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia only after the French colonized North Africa. The 1922 Pahlevi revolution in Persia/Iran emancipated religious minorities. The Jews in Yemen escaped from oppression only by emigrating to Israel in

1948-50.33 After Arab governments launched and lost a 1948 war to exterminate the new state of Israel, the governments inflicted harsh reprisals on the Jews living in Muslim nations.

Among Bosnian Serbs, the “prohibition on bearing arms caused a wide movement toward Islamization.” The effect was similar in other parts of the House of Submission. It is understandable that so many Christians and Jews emigrated if they could, or converted to Islam. The long-term effect of dhimmitude was to destroy many Christian and Jewish communities from Iran to Morocco. Ye’or writes that the remaining “micro minorities struggle along, the last remnants of the multitudes of Christians and Jews who formerly populated those lands. Only cemeteries and ruins recall their past.

Their historical, political, and cultural rights dissolve in the great oblivion of time and, in their usurped history, the profound sense of dhimmitude is revealed: obliteration in non-existence and nothingness.” For the Jews and Christians of the Muslim world, disarmament was the condition precedent to destruction.

Not all Muslims behaved despicably to Jews. But the disarmament of the Jews and the other dhimmi gave free rein to the worst inclinations of the bullies among the Muslims. Since the Koran, like other major scriptures, condemns bullying and mistreatment of the weak, it might be said that the disarmament of the dhimmi provided an occasion to sin for some Muslims. Had the dhimmi not been defenseless, the persecutors might not have been so boldly arrogant.

In many Christian nations too, Jews have been disarmed and victimized by mob violence and by bullies. In modern Europe, Jews have been emancipated and are no longer subject to special legal disabilities. However, Western European nations such as France and Germany ban the carrying of guns or other arms for defensive purposes. As a result, Jews in those nations are often attacked by gangs of Muslim youths.

In the United States, adults in 40 states are allowed to carry handguns for lawful protection, providing that they pass a background check and, in most states, a safety course. Yet in most of the United States, adults are forbidden, by law or administrative policy, from possessing defensive arms at K-12 schools, and at universities. The prohibition does not apply merely to 21-year-old students who are attending keg parties (a reasonable restriction, and comparable to the many state laws which forbid the carrying of licensed firearms into bars). The prohibitions even forbid a 50-year-old professor, who had previously served two decades in the U.S. Army, from having a handgun in a locked container in his own office.

The consequences have been predictable. Evildoers intent on sensational mass murder have overwhelmingly targeted schools and universities, which are among the few places where killers can be sure that none of the potential law-abiding victims will have a firearm.

Ba’at Yeor’s work on dhimmitude shows the effect that disarmament has on potential victims. In much of the Muslim world, disarmament created a condition of learned helplessness, which eventually led to the gradual elimination of many Christian and Jewish communities. The result would not have been surprising to the American Founders. As Joel Barlow, one of the leading intellectuals of the Early Republic, wrote, “Disarmament palsies the hand and brutalizes the mind: a habitual disuse of physical force totally destroys the moral, and men lose at once the power of protecting themselves...” Likewise, in the centuries before the Holocaust, the vast majority of European Jews were disarmed by law—not only by overtly Christian governments in the pre-modern era but also by the dictatorships which ruled most of Eastern Europe in the period before the Nazi conquests. Although a greater proportion of Jews fought as anti-Nazi guerillas than did any other group, the majority of European Jews remained passive until their deaths.

At many American educational institutions, a 30-year-old medical student and a 60-year-old professor must live in a status of defenselessness. They are forbidden under any circumstances to possess defensive arms anywhere on campus, even in locked boxes in a car trunk. Physical disarmament is made worse by the enforcement of an ideology of mandatory pacifism in many American schools. It starts with grade-school teachers drilling children with the idiotic mantra that “violence never solves anything.” (Even though quite obviously, the violence of the passengers on United Flight 93 prevented the airplane  from  being  crashed  into  the  U.S.  Capitol,  and  the  violence  of  the  Allies’ militaries in 1941-45 ended the Holocaust.) A timid and passivist mentality leads to the Virginia Tech administration not only banning guns on campuses, but creating staff rules requiring that, in the event, a violent, angry person offers to hand over his gun, the staff person should refuse to take the gun, but should instead wait for a security officer to arrive.

Sometimes, many lives have been saved because heroic unarmed persons rushed a mass killer while he was changing ammunition clips. That was how the killer at a high school in Springfield, Oregon, in 1998 was stopped, and it is how the killer on the Long Island Railroad in 1993 was stopped. Sadly, the mainstream American media have made sure to ignore or downplay the story of Springfield’s heroic 17-year-old Jake Rykar.

What is surprising is how often at school no one fights back. After the Virginia Tech murders, Billie Loudon, a Denver deputy sheriff and army veteran wrote, in an op-ed titled “We’ve forgotten how to fight back”:

Upon hearing the number of victims in Virginia, I assumed the shooter had used an automatic rifle capable of firing many rounds per second. When I later learned he was armed with only two handguns, disbelief washed over me. It was later revealed he fired 190 rounds in about seven minutes. Being in law enforcement as well as having been in the military, I know for a fact the shooter had to have spent a great deal of time reloading and exchanging magazines. I can only wonder what was going on during these necessary pauses.

I don’t blame the victims for their own demise. I blame the non-confrontational attitude in America that may have stopped someone from fighting back….

Our kids are being taught to avoid conflict and try to reason with the unreasonable. A non-aggression mentality has been ingrained in them since grade school…

We have got to stop sticking our heads and our children’s heads in the sand, pretending evil does not exist. Unless we recover the fight-back spirit buried inside ourselves and pass it on to our kids, we are doomed. No one can predict or stop the next horrendous act that will surely come to be. What we can do is assure that our survival instincts will lower the number of victims.

Reading the history of Jews under dhimmitude who had to cower before the bullies, a modern reader might think, “How terrible. What kind of morally defective society would make such wretched, helpless victims? I’m glad that I don’t live in such a world.”

But you do live in such a world if you or your children are part of the educational system in most of the United States—a system where law-abiding adults are disarmed, and where people of all ages are trained that they must never fight back.

~ by David Kopel
Social Science Research Network
New York Law School: nyls.edu

Support Us


Satyagraha was born from the heart of our land, with an undying aim to unveil the true essence of Bharat. It seeks to illuminate the hidden tales of our valiant freedom fighters and the rich chronicles that haven't yet sung their complete melody in the mainstream.

While platforms like NDTV and 'The Wire' effortlessly garner funds under the banner of safeguarding democracy, we at Satyagraha walk a different path. Our strength and resonance come from you. In this journey to weave a stronger Bharat, every little contribution amplifies our voice. Let's come together, contribute as you can, and champion the true spirit of our nation.

Satyaagrah Razorpay PayPal
 ICICI Bank of SatyaagrahRazorpay Bank of SatyaagrahPayPal Bank of Satyaagrah - For International Payments

If all above doesn't work, then try the LINK below:

Pay Satyaagrah

Please share the article on other platforms

To Top

DISCLAIMER: The author is solely responsible for the views expressed in this article. The author carries the responsibility for citing and/or licensing of images utilized within the text. The website also frequently uses non-commercial images for representational purposes only in line with the article. We are not responsible for the authenticity of such images. If some images have a copyright issue, we request the person/entity to contact us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and we will take the necessary actions to resolve the issue.


Related Articles