Author: Robert Spencer
Publication: Jihad Watch
Date: May 29, 2008
URL: http://jihadwatch.org/archives/021216.php
Today marks the anniversary of the real Nakba,
or perhaps more precisely the ?????????? -- the Catastrophe: on this day in
1453, the armies of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmet II entered Constantinople, marking
the end of the Eastern Roman Empire, more commonly known as the Byzantine
Empire.
If anything deserves to be called an occupation,
and a nakba, it is this, although it has, like so many other bloody conquests
in human history, been legitimized by time. Still, if the descendants of the
Christian inhabitants of Constantinople and Anatolia were to demand, and receive,
a right of return, rapidly-Islamizing Turkey would look vastly different from
how it looks now.
On this day in 1453, the conquerers were extraordinarily
brutal. Historian Steven Runciman notes that the Muslim soldiers "slew
everyone that they met in the streets, men, women, and children without discrimination.
The blood ran in rivers down the steep streets from the heights of Petra toward
the Golden Horn. But soon the lust for slaughter was assuaged. The soldiers
realized that captives and precious objects would bring them greater profit."
(The Fall of Constantinople 1453, Cambridge University Press, 1965, p. 145.)
Some jihadists "made for the small but
splendid churches by the walls, Saint George by the Charisian Gate, Saint
John in Petra, and the lovely church of the monastery of the Holy Saviour
in Chora, to strip them of their stores of plate and their vestments and everything
else that could be torn from them. In the Chora they left the mosaics and
frescoes, but they destroyed the icon of the Mother of God, the Hodigitria,
the holiest picture in all Byzantium, painted, so men said, by Saint Luke
himself. It had been taken there from its own church beside the Palace at
the beginning of the siege, that its beneficient presence might be at hand
to inspire the defenders on the walls. It was taken from its setting and hacked
into four pieces." (P. 146.)
The jihadists also entered the Hagia Sophia,
which for nearly a thousand years had been the grandest church in Christendom.
The faithful had gathered within its hallowed walls to pray during the city's
last agony. The Muslims, according to Runciman, halted the celebration of
Orthros (morning prayer); the priests, according to legend, took the sacred
vessels and disappeared into the cathedral's eastern wall, through which they
shall return to complete the divine service one day. Muslim men then killed
the elderly and weak and led the rest off into slavery.
Once the Muslims had thoroughly subdued Constantinople,
they set out to Islamize it. According to the Muslim chronicler Hoca Sa'deddin,
tutor of the sixteenth-century Sultans Murad III and Mehmed III, "churches
which were within the city were emptied of their vile idols and cleansed from
the filthy and idolatrous impurities and by the defacement of their images
and the erection of Islamic prayer niches and pulpits many monasteries and
chapels became the envy of the gardens of Paradise."
It has come to be known as Black Tuesday,
the Last Day of the World. Tuesday has been regarded as unlucky by superstitious
Greeks ever since. But they're about the only ones who remember. The world
has forgotten what happened on Black Tuesday, and on so many other days like
it from India to Spain, and persists in the fantasy that Islam does not contain
an imperialist impulse and that Muslims can be admitted without limit into
Western countries without any attempt to determine how many would like ultimately
to subjugate and Islamize their new countries, the way their forefathers did
to Constantinople so long ago.
Oh, and there are a few others who remember
as well. Sheik Ali Al-Faqir, former Jordanian minister of religious endowment,
said this on Al-Aqsa TV on May 2, 2008: "We proclaim that we will conquer
Rome, like Constantinople was conquered once..." Hamas MP and Islamic
cleric Yunis Al-Astal said this, also on Al-Aqsa TV, on April 11, 2008: "Very
soon, Allah willing, Rome will be conquered, just like Constantinople was,
as was prophesized by our Prophet Muhammad."
Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi remembers also. In
writing about "signs of the victory of Islam," he referred to a
hadith: "The Prophet Muhammad was asked: 'What city will be conquered
first, Constantinople or Romiyya?' He answered: 'The city of Hirqil [i.e.
the Byzantine emperor Heraclius] will be conquered first' - that is, Constantinople
Romiyya is the city called today 'Rome,' the capital of Italy. The city of
Hirqil [that is, Constantinople] was conquered by the young 23-year-old Ottoman
Muhammad bin Morad, known in history as Muhammad the Conqueror, in 1453. The
other city, Romiyya, remains, and we hope and believe [that it too will be
conquered]. This means that Islam will return to Europe as a conqueror and
victor, after being expelled from it twice - once from the South, from Andalusia,
and a second time from the East, when it knocked several times on the door
of Athens."
Mehmet the Conqueror was motivated by exactly
the same religious ideology that motivates the Islamic warriors of the contemporary
era. Historian Halil Inalcik says of the Ottomans that their "culture
was dominated by the Islamic conception of Holy War or ghaza." Ghaza
refers to warfare to expand the land under the hegemony of Islam -- and thus
it is not identical to jihad, but is one of the chief means of jihad. Inalcik
continues: "By God's command the ghaza had to be fought against the infidels'
dominions, dar al-harb (the abode of war), ceaselessly and relentlessly until
they submitted." (The Cambridge History of Islam, Volume 1A, Cambridge
University Press, 1970, p. 269)
And Mehmet himself explained as he argued
for the necessity of conquering Constantinople: "The ghaza is our basic
duty, as it was in the case of our fathers." (The Cambridge History of
Islam, Volume 1A, p. 295)
He was pursuing offensive jihad against the
infidels, in accord with the mandates of the Qur'an and Sunnah. If anything
today's jihadists are less radical than he was: because there is no caliphate
today, they do not consider themselves authorized to wage offensive jihad,
since that is the prerogative of the caliph only. They characterize all their
jihad activity as defensive.
May 29, Black Tuesday, the Last Day of the
World, the true Nakba: today should be a day for all those threatened by Islamic
jihad supremacism to redouble our efforts to resist, so that more such catastrophes
may never again destroy the lives of free people.