islamic conquest liberated many lands from tyranny, many people invited the muslims like the iberians
1 day ago
| 215
Importantly, no Jews were expelled from Palestine under Ottomans. But guess who caused the nakba?
1 day ago | 194
So basically when Muslims fought the bigger enemies. Europe were the bigger enemy oppressing smaller people. Alhamdulillah for the blessings of Islam May Allah protect anyone under oppressors. Like Palestine and Sudan
1 day ago | 241
I honestly believe if Muslims discovered the Americas first my native ancestors wouldn’t have been killed in the ways that they were.
1 day ago
| 156
The motive was plunder, theft, wealth accumulation, and slavery, not religion
18 hours ago | 5
There’s a difference between Classical Empire and Colonial Empire.
20 hours ago | 6
The prophet was the head of state of Medinah and governed it by a charter— ‘Political unity: Muslims, Jews, and other tribes formed one community (ummah) for mutual defense. Religious freedom: “To the Jews their religion, and to the Muslims their religion.” Each group kept its own laws and religious practices. Cultural and tribal autonomy: Tribes retained their customs, leadership, and internal governance. Collective security: All groups were responsible for defending Medina if attacked. Treason clause: Any group or individual that broke the pact or allied with enemies was considered liable for punishment and lost the protection of the community. This clause later became a factor in conflicts with certain Jewish tribes who were accused of violating the Charter. In short: The Charter protected individual, tribal, and religious rights, but it also established that betrayal or treason against the community nullified these protections. It was an early form of constitutional pluralism with accountability.’ Charter of Medinah is worthy of discussion in your videos. It gets overlooked even by Muslims, and particularly those with the misinformed assumption that the prophet was a warlord. He actually ended about a century of tribal conflict in Medinah bringing peace to it and most of his marriages were to widows (8 of 10) as part of his exceptional role as a ruler and his mission as a prophet. This was expected from a ruler in that era, especially in a difficult tribal situation.
23 hours ago | 18
I would like to make small correction. "Islamic conquest is primarily driven by religious RESPONSIBILITY to INVITE people towards peace."
18 hours ago | 6
💯 true. Wherever Muslim went they spread the light of humanity, justice ,equality and list goes on , even the modern immigration to developed countries
15 hours ago (edited) | 2
Islam liberates Christianity (European) obliterates
1 day ago (edited) | 23
الله أكبر 💝 ولله العزة ولرسوله الكريم و للمؤمنين والمؤمنات الأحياء منهم والأموات جزاكم الله خير الجزاء في الدنيا والآخرة السلام عليكم جميعا ورحمة الله وبركاته
12 hours ago | 1
And Islam (mainly Arabs, Persians, and Indians) came to Southeast Asia by trade, commercial, economic based, and people to people contact, they never try to convert local people. While Europeans came with weapons, armed forces, and spreading religion
1 day ago | 12
That's why the Islamic conquests rarely gotten fight out by populations , but the colonialism confronted warfare and resistance everywhere 🤷♂
1 day ago | 10
Ottoman sultan mehmad the 2nd says ; border is for the expension, conquest the world and rule. 🇵🇰❤
21 hours ago | 2
Indonesian here. Although I didn't experience it myself, my grandma and grandpa did. Whenever they told me the story of being treated as third-class people in their own land, it was horrible. Yet they always taught me not to hate anyone. Because in Islam, we don't believe in original sin. No child is born carrying their parents' sins, and no parent dies carrying their children's sins. That's why there's no Christian-phobia here, and no one really hate dutch or Japanese people or something.
11 hours ago | 1
The Islamic Caliphate had no periphery. From Samarkand to the Maghreb and Cordoba, all developed economically and culturally. Unparalleled in history.
9 hours ago | 1
Blogging Theology
1 day ago | [YT] | 6,866