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For shafique - Muhammad's war crimes against the Nadir tribe


event horizon This thread is for discussing the collective punishment against the Banu Nadir tribe. In a few days, I can quote Western historians, such as Montgomery Watt and Maxime Rodinson pertaining to the ethnic cleansing of this tribe from the Yathrib and also discuss the so far unsubstantiated assertions made by the Ahmadi author shafique has cited. Shafique can also explain what 'crimes against humanity' the B. Nadir tribe were 'guilty' of.
shafique I'm surprised it will take a few days to pick out the quotes to support 'eh's version of history.
Perhaps this time he will surprise us all and not provide the discredited Orientalist view, but I don't hold out much hope for this.
But, the whole Banu Nadhir expulsion background is given in full here and I'll leave it to eh to provide evidence that the account is erroneous. I suspect he will only be able to provide extracts which do not contradict the full account, but only highlight certain aspects of it. Again let's see whether the quotes he gives are selective or not.

Cheers,
Shafique event horizon Great, in the meantime, what were the 'crimes against humanity' the Banu Nadir tribe were 'guilty' of? I assume this to be an alleged assassination attempt. Hopefully anyone with half a brain will realize that an alleged and very convenient assassination attempt (why didn't the Jews just kill Muhammad when he was in their walled compound???) is not a crime against humanity. Perhaps shafique can explain if he agrees that the men and women Muhammad assassinated were also crimes against humanity. At least with Muhammad, he was a military leader and, therefore, a legitimate target for assassination. shafique The crimes that led to their banishment are listed in the extract - I appreciate that the long quote looks a bit daunting, but have a little patience and read it sentence, by sentence. I'll be happy to explain any difficult bits to you. As for 'crimes against humanity' - I only used this in the context of Islamphobic accusations of Muslims committing 'crimes against humanity' - you seem to be confusing what I wrote and think I was referring to the crimes of the Banu Nadhir. Easily done, given you are working hard to not answer questions I'm posing - but here take your time and read through the full account for a change. Cheers, Shafique event horizon Ok, cool. I now have Watt's, Rodinson's, Tabari's and some other scholar's book on my person. When I have time, I will type out their accounts on the ethnic cleansing of the Banu Nadir tribe. In the meantime, what crime against humanity was the tribe guilty of? Your claim, not mine. shafique Knock yourself out - as I said, let's examine the quotes you provide and hopefully you'll give the full contexts. Interesting that you have faith in these historians of the past, but choose to ignore the latter day historians' conclusions such as Kung, Kennedy et al (whom you have also selectively quoted from). But hey - I won't prejudge and I'll wait for you to type out the full accounts and trust you won't be just picking up the quotes from the aforementioned websites. Perhaps you'll find some time to answer the pending questions? Cheers, Shafique event horizon Which pending questions are in this thread that you want answered? I thought I asked to tell me what 'crimes against humanity' the Banu Nadir tribe was 'guilty' of. I see my question has not been answered, maybe you'll get around to it in your next reply.
It certainly is interesting to compare Watt's account with what shafique claims the Banu Nadir tribe were 'guilty' of 'crimes against humanity'. I guess even Watt, sympathetic to Muhammad, did not see such 'flimsy evidence' as any proof of guilt, let alone as a crime against humanity, which Watt later says such an attempt against an individual life did not merit the expulsion ('out of proportion to the offence'), ethnic cleansing, of an entire people.
Oh, and here's Watt's version of events:
p211
Almost exactly a year after Ka'b's death, a second Jewish clan, Banu n-Nadir, were expelled from Medina. The story is that Muhammad went to the settlement of an-Nadir to demand a contribution towards the blood-money due to B. 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah for the two men killed by the survivor of Bi'r Ma'unah. As an-Nadir were in the alliance with 'Amir, there may been complications, though the sources say nothing of these; Muhammad may have thought that the Jews ought to do more than the average of the inhabitants of Medina, and they may have thought they ought to do less. Whatever the precise point was, an-Nadir professed themselves ready to give a satisfactory answer, but bade Muhammad make himself comfortable while they prepared a meal. He and his companions seated themselves with their backs to the wall of one of the houses. Presently Muhammad slipped quietly away and did not return, and his companions also eventually left. When they found him at his house, he explained that he had had a Divine warning that an-Nadir were planning a treacherous attack on him - they could easily have rolled a stone onto his head and killed him as he sat by the house. He therefore at once dispatched Muhammad b. Maslamah to an-Nadir with an ultimatum' they were to leave Medina within ten days on pain of death , though they would still be regarded as owners of their palm-trees and receive part of the produce. Such an ultimatum seems out of proportion to the offence , or rather to the apparently flimsy grounds for supposing that treachery was meditated. Yet perhaps the grounds were not so flimsy as they appear at first sight to the Westerner of today. Both parties knew how some Muslims had treated Ka'b b. al-Ashraf, and, in accordance with the ideas of the Arabia of that day, Muhammad was bound to expect that, if he gave his opponents and opprtunity, they would kill him. And-Nadir's postponement of a reply created such an opportunity, and was therefore tantamount to a hostile act.
Basically, Muhammad receives a 'divine' revelation that the Jews in the settlement he traveled to had planned to kill him when he was with a few companions.
One wonders why Allah did not warn Muhammad ahead of time to save his prophet a trip?
Strangely, the Jews did not cut Muhammad and his few companions down when they were in the heart of their walled compound and the Jews must have been so busy talking to themselves that Muhammad was able to walk out of their compound without so much as a single Jew even noticing.
Those Jews must have been watching Muhammad like a hawk!...or not.
Muhammad then uses his 'divine' revelation of an alleged assassination attempt as a pretext to expel the entire B. Nadir tribe, in which he wastes no time in doing - immediately sending out troops to besiege the tribe.
Now, a normal person might say, 'woah, since when are 'divine' revelations enough evidence for an alleged assassination attempt and since when do *rational* people expel an entire people, i.e., ethnically cleanse an entire people, over this alleged assassination attempt?'
Well, the answer is that you have to think like a Muslim. In doing so, you have to throw common sense ('flimsy evidence' to boot) out of the window and unconditionally accept that Muhammad really did have a 'divine' revelation, as opposed to a made up excuse, and, unfortunately, the Muslims following Muhammad uncritically accepted Muhammad's account and his advice for 'dealing' with the problem.
So, how would a 'rational', 'normal' person such as you now do? Again, you must think like a Muslim. Throw common sense out of the window, now.
Does it make sense to forcibly expel an entire tribe within, presumably, a few hours based on an alleged assassination plot, you might ask? Well, no, it doesn't. Even historians sympathetic to Muhammad, such as Montgomery Watt, seem baffled over this *very* convenient 'divine' revelation, based on 'flimsy evidence' and must rationalize the ethnic cleansing of the tribe based on their interpretation of the cultural values of Muhammad's time.
Watt tacitly acknowledges that there was not a *real* assassination plot. No, this was, like many other things, a figment of Muhammad's imagination. The assassinaiton plot was, instead, what Muhammad was expecting the Banu Nadir tribe to eventually carry out to avenge Ka'b's death - who was murdered on orders from Muhammad for writing poetry of Muslim women and sympathizing with the Meccans killed at the battle of Badr.
So, Muhammad, in fact, pre-emptively expelled, i.e., ethnically cleansed, an *entire* tribe of people - hundreds (well over one thousand) of men, women and children to save his own skin from some future assassination attempt.
Well then! That certainly turns things around. Now, a rational, normal Westerner may ask, so Muhammad is basically a tyrant who expels tribes - entire peoples, based on his whims and desires and, of course, profits from their expulsion?
Of course! One does not need to have shafique's level of IQ to see that this assassination plot was a convenient invention of Muhammad's. Surely, it sounds odd that Muhammad could just sneak out of the Banu Nadir walled compound if the Jews were really plotting to kill the prophet. If the Jews really wanted to kill Muhammad, would they hatch and argue over a silly plan of dropping a millstone on Muhammad when they could arm their men and cut Muhammad and his few companions down in a matter of minutes? Think not.
But alas! We are not Western, rational, normal people. We are Muslims and we are unable to see the 'duh' parts of this story which, when put together, illustrate how ridiculous this story is. Unfortunately, the sad part is that as a result of Muhammad, an entire tribe was ethnically cleansed due to his Stalin like paranoia. shafique
I'd like your answers to the pending questions I asked before this thread - eg. who Paul was referring to when he said 'your women' are blonde, and whether you denounce Goldstein as a religious terrorist - to name the two main ones I can recall right now.

I answered this in my previous post - correcting your misconception - please try and keep up.
It is interesting to compare Watt's account and the fuller account I quoted earlier - and we can see why eh chooses to give more weight to the less full account.

Is it shocking that a Prophet of God receives revelations? Is this news for you? :)

An interesting spin on what the accounts say - but then again, no one doubts your active imagination!

I choose not to ignore the facts and let my imagination run riot - but hey that's just me.

I agree. Your interpretation doesn't make sense -the punishment is one that befits a larger crime than just an assassination attempt on one person (even if he is the Prophet of God).

See previous comment about 'imagination' - but I see that Watt is only 'tacitly' agreeing with 'eh's interpretation.
Let me quote Watt from above:
Yet perhaps the grounds were not so flimsy as they appear at first sight to the Westerner of today
Give a guy enough rope and he hangs himself! Tell me that you understood what Watt said is this sentence when you cut and pasted the above?

Careful, the Islamophobia is showing through the veil of argument.

Glad to see the Orientalist conclusions weren't lost on you.
Cheers,
Shafique event horizon Sorry shafique, but Watt's accounts say that Muhammad 'immediately' sent out his henchmen to give their 'eviction' notice to the Banu Qaynuqa tribe.

Somehow, I don't think the pain of death part and an ultimatum to send an entire tribe 'packing' over an alleged revelation was a paper threat.
The account says that the tribe shuttered itself in their compound and Muhammad and his men immediately laid siege.
You're free to believe that Muhammad and his henchmen took their time to surround the B. Nadir tribe, but I have a feeling that it was pretty much immediate.
Oh, and I see you have not addressed why the Jews simply did not murder Muhammad right there and then and how did Muhammad slip away?
Was this another one of Muhammad's miracles, such as splitting the moon? shafique I forgot to point out that Watt's conclusion was (in eh's quote above)
And-Nadir's postponement of a reply created such an opportunity, and was therefore tantamount to a hostile act.

Watt says the Nadhir's actions were a 'hostile act'. An inconvenient quote eh?
I have given the full account of what Banu Nadhir's actions were in my quote - asking me to endorse your interpretation based on misreading Watt's quote is a little bit rich. However, if there was part of the long post that confused you, let me know and I'll try to explain more clearly.
Cheers,
Shafique

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event horizon
I didn't cute and paste the quote, I typed them out. If you have any evidence that I cute and paste the quote, after I told you I had to type the quotes out, please bring them forward.
I see that you must have missed what Watt goes on to say.
He does not appeal to evidence but that Muhammad must have 'expected' an assassination attempt based on the customs of those days.

So, there was no 'real' assassination attempt, only a potential one Muhammad could expect in the future.
I understand this is difficult for you, kind of like getting confused over the meaning of 'contemporary sources'. event horizon
Sure, in the mind of a paranoid man, a postponement of a reply is 'tantamount' to a hostile act.
Do you think someone is acting hostilely towards you if they don't answer your question on a message board? Perhaps Muhammad is not the only one who needed to see a shrink. shafique So you typed out the quote from Watt saying the Banu Nadhir committed a hostile act and that Westerners may wrongly think the grounds he lists are flimsy. It appears therefore that your issue is with Watt (or rather with basic comprehension of what he wrote). As I stated earlier, the fuller account I gave gives more detail. Watt's account does not contradict the quote I gave. Let me know where you think the fuller account contradicts what Watt has said. Cheers, Shafique event horizon Is your book scholarly reviewed by any chance? It seems strange that Watt doesn't include the conversion of a Jewish man to Islam who later says that the Jews conspired to kill Muhammad. Why do you think Watt doesn't include that part? shafique I asked whether Watt's account contradicted the fuller account I quoted. You now are asking about whether the book was reviewed and why the quote you gave is shorter and less detailed than the one I gave. I'm afraid that both authors are now dead, and that the quote I gave was from a more recent book - and Khan actually quotes Watt a few times in his book, but also had access to all the primary sources available when he wrote the book. But the accounts speak for themselves - if there are factual errors in the account given, I'll be happy to look into them. Cheers, Shafique



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