Mohammed's Koran: Why Muslims Kill For Islam

(Dana P.) #1

  1. As Dr. Andrew Bostom says:

    The 1990 Cairo Declaration, or so-called Universal Declaration of
    Human Rights in Islam, was drafted and subsequently ratified by all
    members of the OIC. Both the preamble and concluding articles (24 and

  2. make plain that the OICʼs [Organisation of Islamic Conference] Cairo
    Declaration is designed to supersede Western Conceptions of Human
    Rights as enunciated, for example, in the US bill of Rights and the United
    Nationʼs 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The opening
    preamble to the Cairo Declaration repeats a Koranic injunction affirming
    Islamic supremacism... -- Andrew Bostom, (2012) Sharia Versus
    Freedom: the Legacy of Islamic Totalitarianism, New York, p.141.

    The OIC represents all the Muslim countries in the world. The Cairo
    Declaration makes it clear that Muslims place sharia law above universal
    human rights. Sharia law systematically discriminates against non-
    Muslims and legalizes slavery (something rejected outright by the
    Universal Declaration). This means that for decades Muslims have been
    telling the world that they reject the concept that the rights of man are
    universal. When you look through our version of the Koran you can see
    that separating believers from unbelievers is endemic in Islam, and that
    unbelievers are to be killed unless they submit to Islam (which is clear
    from Koran 9:29).

    The only people trying to draw your attention to the Muslim world
    having rejected and supplanted our concept of human rights is a group of
    independent researchers. See David Littman, (1999) “Islamism Grows
    Stronger at the United Nations”, in Robert Spencer (ed), (2005) The Myth
    of Islamic Tolerance: How Islamic Law Treats Non-Muslims, New
    York,pp 308-316; David Littman, (1999) “Universal Human Rights And
    ‘Human Rights in Islam’”, in Robert Spencer (ed), (2005) The Myth of
    Islamic Tolerance, pp.317-325; Bat Yeʼor, (2002) Islam and
    Dhimmitude, Lancaster, p.198; Bat Yeʼor, (2011) Europe, Globalization
    and the Coming Universal Caliphate, Madison. See also Sultan Hussyn
    Tabandeh, A Muslim Commentary on the Universal Declaration of
    Human Rights, Guildford, 1970. ↵

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