Why do they hate us? Making peace with the Muslim world

Steve Slocum

Book - 2019

After 9/11, the world became more fearful, and acts of terrorism were prominent in the news cycles. In Why do they hate us?, author Steve Slocum takes the spotlight off the extremists and instead exposes the heart of the everyday Muslim through Christian outreach. -- From publisher's description.

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Subjects
Published
Vista, CA : Top Reads Publishing [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Steve Slocum (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 275 pages : maps, charts ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 254-265) and index.
ISBN
9780998683867
  • List of Maps and Figures
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • 1. Jihad and Sharia Law Are Evil... Right?: Islam's Roots in Social Justice
  • No Help for the Helpless - Mohammed's Tragic Childhood
  • Love for the Unloved - Mohammed's Career and Marriage
  • Islam Is Born - Mohammed's Prophetic Calling
  • Mohammed Comes Out - Persecuted by the Quraysh
  • Sharia Law - Justice for the Poor and the Weak
  • Winning in Self-Defense - The Meaning of Jihad
  • 2. Meteoric Rise - Demeaning Fall: The Islamic Empire
  • A Perfect Storm - Two Empires Fall
  • Hijacked! The Dynastic Takeover of the Islamic Empire
  • Islam Defines Itself- The Evolution of Sharia Law
  • Islam Shines - The First Renaissance
  • Under the Cruel Hand of Colonialism
  • The Birth of Radical Terrorism The Terrifying Story of Mohammed Al-Wahhab
  • 3. Who Is Your Muslim Neighbor?: Present-Day Teaching and Practice of Islam
  • The Four Major Divisions in Islam
  • The Quran
  • The Five Pillars
  • Islam, Judaism, and Christianity
  • Refugees
  • Who Speaks for Islam? Islam's Moderate Mainstream
  • 4. Why Do They Hate Us?
  • They Hate Our Freedom?
  • We Hate Their Freedom? The British, The CIA, and Iranian Oil
  • The CIA Goes jihadist in Afghanistan From Single Shot Rifles to Stinger Missiles
  • On Reaping and Sowing and the Creation of Monsters The Taliban
  • Osama Bin Laden Finds Sanctuary
  • Will Godzilla Be Tamed? The U.S. Invasion of Afghanistan
  • Afghanistan - The Long View
  • A War of Aggression - The Invasion of Iraq
  • On the Morality of an Unprovoked Invasion
  • The Real Source of Terrorism - Religion or Politics?
  • Do Muslims Hate Us?
  • The Human Cost
  • Conclusion
  • 5. Peace IS Possible
  • The Perception of Hostility
  • Can YOU Respect a Muslim?
  • On an Ethical Foreign Policy
  • Appendix: People and Places of the Muslim World
  • The Middle East
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Yemen
  • The Gulf States
  • Iraq
  • Syria
  • Lebanon
  • Jordan
  • Israel and the Palestinian Territories
  • Persia Speaking Region - Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan
  • The Indian Subcontinent - India, Pakistan, Bangladesh
  • The Turkic Speaking World
  • Southeast Asia and Oceania
  • North Africa
  • Egypt
  • Libya
  • Tunisia
  • Algeria
  • Morocco
  • The Horn of Africa
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Europe
  • Acknowledgments
  • Glossary
  • Works Consulted
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Booklist Review

Islamophobia centers on the notion of Muslims as the other , and at its worst, portrays Muslims as incapable of rational thought and motivated by a single-minded determination of destruction. Mutual distrust has muted moderates and turned up the rhetoric of hate. This book seeks to understand the roots of this discord and examines the possibility of co-existence. The first two chapters outline the beginnings of Muslim life and the salient forces that shaped it. The book then goes on to provide an overview of Islam's religious landscape, its development, major divisions, and nuances. Slocum then explores the origins of Islamophobia and delves into the everyday lives of Muslims across the globe. The narrative deftly weaves historical events with personal anecdotes, making it relatable and resonant. The last chapter outlines possible trajectories to mutual co-existence. Well-researched, cogently argued, and drawing on the work of scholars as well personal insights, Slocum's work avoids clichés and deeply examines the complex relationship between Islam and the West. In the end, Slocum unmasks a clash of ignorance and reveals a shared humanity to which we can all relate.--Muhammed Hassanali Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In his comprehensive, helpful debut, Slocum, an aircraft design engineer and former missionary, encourages Christians to establish friendly relationships with Muslims. He begins by exploring the origins of Islam, introducing readers to the life of Muhammad, before delving into Koranic passages. Concentrating mainly on passages often cited as inciting violence, Slocum argues that the vast majority of Muslims view their religion as nonviolent. He then moves briskly through a history of the Middle East, covering the Islamic Empire, colonialism, and the rise of pan-Arabism. Exploring how Islam emerged from the Middle East to become a global religion, Slocum shares personal experiences from living in the U.S. and, as a missionary, in Kazakhstan, to highlight facets of the everyday lives of Muslims ("I know of no force more powerful than that of face-to-face interaction" to dispel unfounded fears, he writes), including a particularly affecting story of visiting a San Diego imam. While his sections discussing aspects of Islam that most Christians are fearful of or may be misinformed about-notably, jihad and sharia-are instructive, they often read like study guides. Slocum's most valuable contribution is his highly critical discussion of U.S. foreign policy, including a concise history of American involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq, which he uses to answer President Bush's question, "Why do they hate us?" Effectively countering pernicious, misinformed narratives, this is an essential contribution to interfaith studies. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An exploration of Islamic beliefs and history that aims to challenge American Islamophobia.Debut author Slocum, a former Christian missionary to Kazakhstan, writes that he was horrified at ignorant depictions of Muslims in American media after the 9/11 attacks. During his years as a missionary, he "never changed anyone's mind to become a believer in the Bible," he says, but his newfound Muslim friends left an indelible mark on his own lifeparticularly, the fact that their culture prized hospitality toward strangers. The book begins by subverting popular American conceptions of Sharia law by rooting it in social justice, centered on protecting the poor and weak. Similarly, Islam's "greater jihad," he says, is not a literal holy war (a term first coined by Christian Crusaders) but rather "the internal struggle of living a life that is pleasing to God." The book's middle chapters offer a survey of Islamic history from Muhammad through the present day, highlighting both the wonders of the Islamic Golden Age and the horrors of European colonialism. To Slocum, the birth of the "dark blight" of Wahhabism in the 18th century marked a decisive turning point. Although the moderate Muslim majority rejected this absolutist ideology, he says, it gained traction in Saudi Arabia at the same approximate time that the West undergirded a Saudi monarchy linked with Wahhabism. Central to the book's analysis of radical Islam is the notion that it's a force of the West's own making, from their support of the mujahedeen in Afghanistan to their installation of a brutal monarch in Iran. In doing so, Slocum is particularly deft at challenging the tropes that Islamic radicals hate American freedom or that Islam is an inherently violent religion. Although many in the West tend to associate Islam with Arabs, this book highlights not only the faith's ideological diversity, from Sunnis to Shias to Ahmadis, but also Muslims' ethnic diversity; only about 10 percent of the world's Muslims hail from Arabic nations. Of course, none of this will be new to Islamic scholars or historians of the Middle East, but to many Americans who are unfamiliar with the topic, this is a first-rate primer.A clear, concise, and thoughtful introduction to Islam. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.