Mohammed's Koran: Why Muslims Kill For Islam

(Dana P.) #1

  1. A rare exception to the lack of chronological Korans is Nicholas
    Starkovsky, The Koran Handbook: an Annotated Translation, New
    York, 2004. Starkovsky puts the Koran in chronological order, ending
    with Chapter 9 as the penultimate chapter (with the final chapter being the
    insignificant Chapter 110). Starkovsky thus knows that Mohammedʼs
    career as a leader ended with the creation of “a powerful Islamic State”
    (p.515), but this does not stop Starkovsky from admiring Islam and
    Mohammed, with his hope that his translation of the Koran helps
    Muslims and Christians (p.xiii). At the end of his book Starkovsky
    prefaces Chapter 9 thus: “the return of the Prophet to Medina after his
    conquest of Mecca [...] The Prophet denounced the treaty with the
    Confederates [...] took Mecca, fought the remaining opponents and, later,
    Byzantium [...], preparing the territorial conquests that began after his
    death” (p.515). We assume Starkovsky thinks the attacks by Mohammed
    and the first Muslims on the Jews of Medina, the Pagans of Mecca, and
    the Christians of Byzantium were all justified. Perhaps Starkovsky is of
    the view that if only the entire world submitted to Islam then the world
    would be at peace (apart from the lethal doctrinal disputes between Sunnis
    and Shias, etc.) Whilst Starkovsky was writing this translation, his wife
    was simultaneously preparing a version of the Koran in Russian,
    presumably also with the penultimate chapter being Chapter 9. ↵

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