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Why Did They Become Muslims

WHY DID THEY BECOME MUSLIMS? The book Why Did They Become Muslims consists of 3 sections. Section I is a book of Islam and Christianity. Information about Prophets, books, religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) is given, conditions of being a true Muslim are explained, the words of those filled with admiration for Islam and the lives of 42 people who being a member of other religions chose Islam are narrated. Section II is a book of the Qur’an-ı Karîm and the Torah and the Bibles as of Today. Information about today’s Torah and Bibles is given, errors in the Bible are explained; that the Qur’an-ı Karîm is the last and unchangeable book is explained scientifically. Besides, explained are miracles, virtues, moral practices and habits of Muhammad ´alayhissalâm. Section III is a book of Islam and Other Religions. That Islam is not a religion of savageness, that a true Muslim is not ignorant, that there can be no philosophy in Islam are explained along with explanations of primitive religions and celestial religions.

WHY DID THEY BECOME MUSLIMS?

The book Why Did They Become Muslims consists of 3 sections. Section I is a book of Islam and Christianity. Information about Prophets, books, religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) is given, conditions of being a true Muslim are explained, the words of those filled with admiration for Islam and the lives of 42 people who being a member of other religions chose Islam are narrated. Section II is a book of the Qur’an-ı Karîm and the Torah and the Bibles as of Today. Information about today’s Torah and Bibles is given, errors in the Bible are explained; that the Qur’an-ı Karîm is the last and unchangeable book is explained scientifically. Besides, explained are miracles, virtues, moral practices and habits of Muhammad ´alayhissalâm. Section III is a book of Islam and Other Religions. That Islam is not a religion of savageness, that a true Muslim is not ignorant, that there can be no philosophy in Islam are explained along with explanations of primitive religions and celestial religions.

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It is written in the eighth and later verses of the twenty-seventh<br />

chapter of I Samuel that Dâwûd (David) ‘alaihis-salâm’ and his<br />

soldiers “invaded the Gesh’u-rites, and the Gez’rites, and the Am’alek-ites”<br />

and “left neither man nor woman alive.” (I Sam: 27-8, 9)<br />

It is written in the eighth chapter of II Samuel that Dâwûd ‘alaihissalâm’<br />

“slew of the Syrians two and twenty thousand men,” (II Sam: 8-<br />

5) and that later he slew “eighteen thousand men.” (ibid: 13) It is<br />

stated in the final part of the tenth chapter that he “slew the men of<br />

seven hundred chariots of the Syrians, and forty thousand horsemen,”<br />

(10-18) while the twelfth chapter reports that he killed the inhabitants<br />

of the cities that he had captured “under saws, and under harrows of<br />

iron, and under axes of iron, and made them pass through the brickkiln.”<br />

(12-31)<br />

It is written in the Old Testament that after Mûsâ ‘alaihis-salâm’,<br />

Yûshâ ‘alaihis-salâm’ had millions of people slaughtered. (Josh: 8, and<br />

also later chapters)<br />

The thirty-fourth verse of the tenth chapter of Matthew quotes Îsâ<br />

‘alaihis-salâm’ as having said, “Think not that I am come to send peace<br />

on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword.” (Matt: 10-34)<br />

It is written in the fifty-first verse of the twelfth chapter of Luke<br />

that Îsâ ‘alaihis-salâm’ said, “Suppose ye that I am come to give peace<br />

on earth? I tell you, Nay; but rather division:” (Luke: 12-51)<br />

Again, the thirty-sixth verse of the twenty-second chapter of Luke<br />

quotes Îsâ ‘alaihis-salâm’ as having said, “... But now, he that hath a<br />

purse, let him take it, and likewise his scrip: and he that hath no sword,<br />

let him sell his garment, and buy one.” (Luke: 22-36)<br />

A reasonable person who reads the Holy Bible will see that it<br />

abounds in scenes of savagery and cruelty, and that all those scenes are<br />

ascribed to Prophets and to Allâhu ta’âlâ’s beloved slaves.<br />

Following the commandments of that book, which they believed to<br />

be the Word of Allâhu ta’âlâ, Christians persecuted both one another<br />

and <strong>Muslims</strong> and Jews, perpetrating massacres that were written with<br />

blood in history. It is stated as follows on the twenty-seventh page of<br />

the book Kasf-ul âsâr wa fî qisâs-i-Enbiyâ, which was originally written<br />

in English by Alex Keith and translated into Persian by a priest named<br />

Merik: “Constantine the Great commanded the mutilation of all the<br />

Jews in his country by cutting their ears and exiled them to various<br />

places.” A book written by priests and entitled Siyar ul-mutaqaddimîn<br />

contains the following information: “In 372 C.E., the Roman emperor<br />

Gratianus, after a consultation with his commanders, commanded the<br />

Christianization of all the Jews in the country and the killing of those<br />

who would resist.”<br />

– 272 –

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