2021/08/24

No God but God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam by Reza Aslan | Goodreads

No God but God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam by Reza Aslan | Goodreads



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No God but God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam

by
Reza Aslan
4.10 · Rating details · 25,110 ratings · 1,600 reviews
A fascinating, accessible introduction to Islam from the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Zealot

INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER • A finalist for the Guardian First Book Award

In No god but God, internationally acclaimed scholar Reza Aslan explains Islam—the origins and evolution of the faith—in all its beauty and complexity. This updated edition addresses the events of the past decade, analyzing how they have influenced Islam’s position in modern culture. Aslan explores what the popular demonstrations pushing for democracy in the Middle East mean for the future of Islam in the region, how the Internet and social media have affected Islam’s evolution, and how the war on terror has altered the geopolitical balance of power in the Middle East. He also provides an update on the contemporary Muslim women’s movement, a discussion of the controversy over veiling in Europe, an in-depth history of Jihadism, and a look at how Muslims living in North America and Europe are changing the face of Islam. Timely and persuasive, No god but God is an elegantly written account that explains this magnificent yet misunderstood faith. (less)

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Kindle Edition, 384 pages
Published August 30th 2011 by Random House (first published March 15th 2005)
Original Title
August 24, 2021 – Shelved

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Nov 28, 2011Susan rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Our Bible study class decided we wanted to learn something about Muslims. We were woefully ignorant on the subject and needed to learn something about the religion. Someone recommended this book and it turned out to be a great choice. I have to be up front that I knew nothing about Muhammad and so it was great place to begin. One thing that came as a surprise to me was that Muhammad, like Jesus, did appreciate women and their contributions. It was the followers who came after both of them that twisted their message. Muhammad married an older woman, Khadija, a wealthy and respected businesswoman. He was in a monogamous relationship with her until she died. He valued her and she was his advisor, advocate, lover and friend.
The book goes into the many sects of Islam. It's very much like Christianity that varies from Catholics to Mormons to Jehovah's Witnesses to Evangicals.It seems like we have many similarities but there are also cultural differences. I really learned a great deal and don't feel as ignorant as I did before. It's a great jumping off place to expand your horizons. (less)
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Jul 12, 2010Will Byrnes rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: terrorism, nonfiction, religion-and-sprituality, religion

Reza Aslan - from The Guardian

Aslan has produced what should be required reading for anyone with an interest in things Islamic, whether that interest be religious or geopolitical. He makes clear that there are several types of Islam, and that fanatical, fundamentalist Wahabism is not the only brand on the market. I found the book eye-opening. The only reason I did not go for that 5th star is that the text can get quite dry, and in the early going was a sure cure for consciousness. But it was well worth the effort to stick with it. It is not only important to know one's enemy, but also one's potential and even current friends.

=============================EXTRA STUFF

Links to the author’s personal, Twitter and FB pages

His latest book is God: A Human History, published in 2017 (less)
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Jul 26, 2019BlackOxford rated it it was amazing
Shelves: favourites, philosophy-theology, islam, iranian
Riding the Tiger

Various studies of religion over recent decades show a remarkably similar pattern of development that seems to be universal. The start of religious movement is most often sociological and economic. The deficiencies of the prevailing conditions are typically expressed in syncretistic religious terms borrowed from whatever spiritual traditions are available. These social/spiritual insights are progressively codified and formalised as doctrine with only an increasingly vague connection to the original motivating social conditions. As a religious establishment forms to ‘protect’ emerging doctrine, this establishment takes responsibility for interpreting the meaning of religious practice in new circumstances. It is not unusual at this point that differences in interpretation cause schisms among adherents, leading to competing sects.

Aslan’s story is of Islam, but its main points are exactly these and are equally applicable to Christianity. Muhammad, for example, used precisely the same strategy as St. Paul in creating a ‘super-tribe’ of equal members open to all by simple affirmation of a fundamental tenet. Just as with the medieval papacy in which every doctrinal decision was politically motivated, so in Islam the collection of Hadiths, interpretations of Muslim doctrine, were equally political and used to further political aims by leading Muslims. And just as in Christianity, the initial religious thrust in Islam toward social justice and mutual regard succumbed quickly and persistently to the interests of the religious establishment in maintaining its position of power.

Islam is syncretistic, just as is Christianity, and both from similar sources. Islam assimilated its strict monotheism and the idea of prophecy from Judaism, much of its ritual from the pagan cults of Arabia, and its cosmology from ancient Zoroastrianism. But arguably, its most important acquisition was the Christian notion of faith, and the related compulsion to proselytisation. Neither of these was present anywhere among the tribal religions of the Arabian peninsula nor among the ancient religions of Mesopotamia and Persia. They were innovations strictly from Christian sources and, as with Christianity, formed the foundation for a doctrinal religion with global ambitions.

“Religion, it must be understood, is not faith,” says Aslan. He goes on to point out an essential aspect of this fact: “With the exception of a few remarkable men and women, no Jew, Christian, Zoroastrian, or Muslim of this time would have considered his or her religion to be rooted in the personal confessional experiences of individuals. Quite the contrary. Your religion was your ethnicity, your culture, and your social identity.” Religion, in other words, was a fact of human existence, not a set of beliefs about what other people had perceived as divine revelation. And so it has remained ‘with the exception of a few remarkable men and women’ throughout history. Faith is the basis of a new kind of tribalism which is grounded not on genetics or shared cultural background but on the verbal affirmation of an inner conviction.

But Aslan does not develop the implication of his own observation. Religions of faith are inherently expansive, and, therefore, combative, regardless of their doctrinal content. Both Islam and Christianity have the intention of world-wide conversion. They both have a need to justify themselves as bearers and guardians of truth and to overcome others who claim such truth. The paradox of a Christianity which claims its truth as universal divine love yet feels justified in committing any human horror to prove it, is only rivalled by the paradox of Islam which recognises the gift of human life as divine and is willing to kill in order to ensure others share that recognition. Such is the nature of faith and its doctrines, no matter what such doctrines are. Faith itself, not any particular belief, is the key to understanding these religions of faith.

Doctrinal faith is also inherently prone to fragmentation. That is to say, it promotes conflict, often intense, where none had previously existed. Claims to orthodoxy, correct beliefs, are as diverse in Islam as they are in Christianity. So, consequently, are the mutual anathemas that are delivered most vehemently against those who are closest but not identical in matters of doctrine. Such fragmentation is not promoted or maintained by the rank and file believer who typically has no idea of the content or complexity of doctrinal pronouncements. Rather, it is the result of religious leaders’ political ambitions justified on the basis of alternative interpretations of foundational texts. Put rather more simply: doctrinal religion is necessarily ideological and essentially divisive.

It might be argued that all religion is a political activity in the sense that one of its essential functions is to establish the distinction ‘them’ and ‘us’. But with the doctrinal religions of Christianity and Islam this ethnic distinction, which can be merely descriptive, is transformed into a political judgement that leads to alienation and hatred. Small-scale tribal tension becomes global competition. Possibilities for negotiation among conflicting parties are eliminated by opposing claims to absolute truth. In fact the politics of doctrinal truth tends toward the elimination of all other politics as is clear in such apparently different cultures as that of Afghanistan and Alabama, or of Tehran and Washington D.C.

If Aslan’s analysis is broadly correct, and I think it is, there seems to be an almost instinctive turn to religion in order to justify radical social action. His narrative of Muhammad’s striving against the inequities of contemporary life in Mecca, for example, is parallel to that of St. Paul in his struggle against the inequities of the Roman Empire. In addition, in order to establish their divine credentials for questioning the existing order of things, both men attacked those religious practices closest to them - Paul his native Judaism, and Muhammad his native veneration of the Ka’ba. Similar narratives could easily be developed for Hinduism and Buddhism among other religious movements

Having fulfilled its function in mobilising support for such social change, however, religion quickly develops its own self-serving agenda. The politics of religion then become conservative and, when required, oppressive in order to further its own claims to power. Doctrinal religions based on texts (and therefore interpretations) are most prone to such political cooptation. Whatever spiritual ‘luminosity’ might be present in such texts is inevitably overcome by political expediency. The social objectives riding the tiger of doctrinal religion always winds up inside.

Postscript: For more on doctrinal religion and its alternatives, see: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... (less)
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Aug 15, 2007Conrad rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: owned, history
An astounding work. This book really took the top of my head off. Aslan is an excellent writer, and the book isn't too academic, but his command of Arabic and, at the same time, comprehensive familiarity with not one but at least three or four different English translations of the Quran (and the misunderstandings that result therefrom) makes this well worth reading.

Aslan makes a strong case for the Hijaz as a place of prelapsarian cultural intermingling for Jews, Christians, and Muslims; his portrait of Muhammad makes the Prophet both a divinely inspired revolutionary and a reformer with secular concerns and family problems of his own for whom it would be impossible not to feel sympathy. Aslan also touches on the liberalizing effect of the spread of Islam, which allowed adherents of the three monotheistic religions to live peaceably in Spain for a time, introduced strict laws limiting legal retribution and encouraging forgiveness, redistributed wealth with an eye to enriching the impoverished, and spurred reforms in the way women were treated in inheritance laws.

The book also discusses the Iranian revolution, and the vexed relations between Iran and the United States. Aslan seems to think that the aims of Iran's revolutionaries and those of American liberals were/are more alike than either group bothers to recognize now. This is a perspective that I would imagine is unlikely to make Aslan many friends in either country, both of which are now run by cynical men. How unfortunate.

My only objection to the book, and it is a minor one, is that Aslan spends a lot of ink criticizing the Ulama (conservative academic interpreters of the Qu'ran) over the past several hundred years, but he does not specify exactly who these people are, saying only that the Ulama did this and the Ulama did that and everything they did was always all wrong. This could use a little more parsing; I find it hard to believe that the Ulama is quite as univocal as that, even if it is as stultifying and traditionalist as he suggests.

Anyway, this is an excellent book, readable, relevant, profound, subtly ideological but also very persuasive. Prepare to leave this book with a very different perception of what it means to be Muslim than you will ever get from Christiane Amanpour. (less)
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Sep 30, 2008Kelly rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Recommends it for: everyone with the slightest interest in religious studies or current affairs
Recommended to Kelly by: Conrad
Shelves: inshallah, current-affairs-and-politics, 21st-century
"Don't like the question? Don't accept the premise. Then change the conversation."

This quote (from West Wing- yeahyeahyeah) kept coming to mind while I was reading this book. Reza Aslan has done this to absolutely brilliant effect. This book, which functions both as an introduction to the religion of Islam and a political statement on current affairs, frames Islam and its history in terms meant to make it sympathetic and understandable to an audience raised in Judeo-Christian based, secularized Western societies. As a Muslim scholar of religions who was born in Iran, but who left as a child due to the Islamic Revolution to be raised and educated in America, Aslan is perfectly placed to understand exactly what it is that needs to be talked about and how.

Aslan begins his book with a discussion on the climate in which Islam came into being- he shows us 7th century pagan Arabia, with its nomadic tribes of all different faiths- including Christians and Jews and polytheists of all sorts. He shows us evolution of Mecca and the culture into which the Prophet Muhammad was born. We see how all of these things affected the formation of Muhammad's initial community of followers (who Aslan presents as egalitarian, socialist reformers with fair minded justice in mind), the development of Islam, the Recitation of those things contained within the Qu'ran. We are shown a religion without a leader after the Prophet dies, struggling to understand the way it should go, how his words should be understood, what to do with the power they have as the Islamic empire increases in size and power. The religion breaks off into various family groups, ideologies, and radical small sects. Various people use the religion for their own gain, as a distraction, to claim legitimacy. Powerful, traditionalist scholars of the Qu'ran who believe in a literal interpretation of the text take control for a very long time- the Ulama. Everything is twisted by this group, by political leaders, by imams etc, and all in the name of supposedly the same ideal, to get back to some mythical, perfect paradise. As Aslan points out again and again in his book:

"Muhammad in Medina" became the paradigm for the Muslim empires that expanded throughout the Middle East after the Prophet's death, and the standard that every Arab kingdom struggled to meet during the Middle Ages...Regardless of whether one is labeled a Modernist or a Traditionalist, a reformist or a fundamentalist, a feminist or a male chauvanist, all Muslims regard Medina as the model of Islamic perfection. Put simply, Medina is what Islam was meant to be.

And the argument goes on and on as to what this ideal of perfection means. Does this sound familiar? That's because it should. Aslan weaves another major plot thread throughout this book, which is the idea that we are presently living in the age of the Islamic Reformation, and all the violence that we see is an internal struggle, not a "clash of civilizations". He brings up the many similiarities he sees to the Christian Reformation throughout the book, arguing for understanding and hope for the future:

"What is taking place now in the Muslim world is an internal conflict between Muslims, not an external battle between Islam and the West... All great religions grapple with these issues, some more fiercely than others. One need only recall Europe's massively destructive Thirty Years' War between the forces of the Protestant Union and those of the Catholic League to recognize the ferocity with which interreligious conflicts have been fought in Christian history. In many ways, the Thirty Years' War signaled the end of the Reformation: perhaps the classic argument over who gets to decide the future of a faith. What followed that awful war was a gradual progression in Christian theology from the doctrinal absolutism of the pre-Reformation era to the doctrinal relativism of the Enlightenment. This remarkable evolution in Christianity from its inception to its Reformation took fifteen vicious, bloody and occasionally apocalyptic centuries.

Fourteen hundred years of rabid debate over what it means to be a Muslim; of passionate arguments over the interpretation of the Qu'ran and the application of Islamic law; of tribal feuds, crusades and world wars- and Islam has finally begun its fifteenth century."

If this seems like a superficial parallel on some levels, that's true. There are a lot of differences in the form this "Reformation" has taken and how it has taken shape, but to get bogged down in that would certainly miss the point- that Islam and its followers are no different from any other major religion, no more backward or primitive, just at a different stage in their process than the rest of the world. This is especially remarkable given that some radical, fundamentalist sects have gained control of large sections of Islam due to historical circumstance, use of force and financial might (yeah this means Saudi Arabia), and due to colonialism, "Christianizing" missions, financial incentives and internal struggles, there is a large sympathetic audience to some parts of this theology and its ultimate consequences.

Aslan showed me a glitteringly complicated, sophisticated faith, with its brilliant and dark places, like any powerful religion has. He showed me the evolution of the Sunnis, Shi'ites (Shi'ah) and the Sufis, the small radical sects that have had an effect on the future, and the long line of intellectuals and their historical circumstances (affected by them just like Muhammad was) and how faith was bent and twisted and shaped to suit current needs- showing Islam is by no means an inflexible faith. He ends in arguing that there is hope for an Islamic democracy, but an indigenous one, not one forced on it from the outside. A tolerant Islamic state is possible, it just hasn't succeeded yet, but it absolutely could.

It is true, Aslan does construct his own "Muhammad in Medina" from the evidence available, just as everyone else does. But it fits beautifully with his argument that interpretation is up for debate and everyone should be allowed to bring their various ideas on the topic to the table. His ideal is beautiful and passionate and earnest. Moral and upright, liberal and full of optimism. Naive? Perhaps. But nevertheless, what he presents is a possibility, and one that I think everyone would do well to hope comes about.

The only possible weaknesses I see here are: Some may find his arguments "apologist." He addresses this issue himself at the beginning of the book, basically saying that he's okay with that as there is no higher calling than to defend one's faith. I admire that he was so upfront about what he was doing, but I will say that it did make a few of his arguments a little hard to buy. It is easy to see him discarding evidence that doesn't fit his vision of Islam by the wayside, and a few times directly contradicting himself in the service of making it work. For example, I found the part of his book on women in Islam and how Muhammad was actually this super liberal guy who was just affected by the times he lived in somewhat spotty. Just saying that everything is the fault of the Muslim men who followed Muhammad and controlled everything, while a nice sop to the feminist part of me, isn't entirely convincing. I also found his end chapters on the way that a non secular, tolerant, but officially Islamic state could grow up, fairly unconvincing as well. I liked the ideas, but its clear that practical application is not his forte, which is fine, it just weakened his final argument that everything is going to be all right. He has a tendancy to go off into misty, dreamlike prose when he gets to an argument that is hard to defend. I understand that partially- it is hard to talk about faith in general, but it can get a little silly and distracting sometimes.

However, if you just keep those few things in mind, I couldn't imagine a better introduction to the faith than this book. He opened up a whole new world of perspective for me and gave me the language to articulate a lot of what I hate about those dumb "clash of civilizations" people without resorting to lefty talking points. He left me curious, engaged, much more careful to judge, and absolutely wanting to know more.

I don't know what better recommendation I can give than that.




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Jun 06, 2014Cecilia Nelson rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: religion, cultural
I have extremely mixed feelings about this book.

On the one hand:

There are multiple cases of seemingly intentional skews. One particular example is Aslan's analysis of the practice of stoning adulterers: He says it was instituted by Umar, the second successor of Muhammad. Umar apparently lied about it being a part of original Revelation that was somehow "accidentally" left out of the authorized text. Aslan then refers to the hadith collections of Muhammad al-Bukhari and Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj as the most "respected" and "reliable" canons. Well, sorry, but Bukhari and Muslim both contain multiple incidences of the Prophet commanding and overseeing the stoning of adulterers, meaning it was NOT introduced by Umar and has its basis in hadith/sunna, Quran notwithstanding (this punishment is prescribed by the Tawrat/Torah/Old Testament, which is why Muhammad did it). There is absolutely no way that a Muslim and scholar on Islam like Aslan is not aware of this, making it feel like more of deception than a mistake. In my opinion, this is just one of many instances where Aslan scapegoats Umar and other prominent figures in Islam's history to exonerate Muhammad himself (and by proxy Islam) of violence and/or misogyny and other morally reprehensible practices.

On the other hand:

Most sources of information on Islam originating in the West (that I have seen, at least) are slanted in the other direction: emphasizing incidents of violence and misogyny in the Quran, sunna, hadith, and history of Islam. This intentionally produces a decidedly ignorant, oversimplified/out-of-context and ethnocentric perception of the religion. Anyone with any proximity to Islam knows that here in America, viciously discriminatory attitudes against Muslims are horrifyingly common. These ideas are not benign: hate-crimes against Muslims and people perceived to be Muslim are well-documented and it would be ignorant to not deem Islamophobia a potential contributor when considering the litany of atrocities and human rights abuses committed by the American government and Armed Forces in the so-called War on Terror and prior. This considered, is it really so wrong or inexcusable for a Muslim to intentionally present only the most cuddly, friendly face of his faith?

In short, despite my personal discomfort with its biases, if a person said to me "I'd like to learn something/more about Islam", this is the book I'd hand them because if I'm going to influence someone's perception of 1/5 of the world's population, I'd rather bias them towards positivity than hatred and fear. Hence the 4 stars. (less)
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Dec 06, 2012Joe rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Oh man. What a conflicting review to have to write. On one hand, we have a wealth of easy-to-read historical and cultural information about Islam in a great, readable format for Western audiences. On the other, we have an author so blinded by personal bias that I routinely had to put the book down and walk away.

The author, Reza Aslan, clearly knows his history as a scholar of Islamic culture and a personal believer, himself. It makes sense that the book is at its best when Aslan focuses objectively on the history and culture of Islam and presents the facts. He's a great writer who really does a nice job of making history sound like fiction (a rare trait), and these passages are a joy to read. If the entire book were presented in this manner, this would be an easy five stars.

Unfortunately, his aforementioned bias compromises the entire integrity of his work. At times, Aslan is drawn into argument regarding common criticism of Islam and its system of beliefs; it almost seems as though he feels compelled to personally defend its honor. Whether he's defending jihad as "just slander the Christians started during the Crusades," or explaining how Muhammad's slaying of 400-700 Jews in early Medina "can't really be classified as genocide since he only killed one percent of the Jewish population," you get the distinct impression he's defensively and emotionally reacting to scholastic criticism.

This happens often with regard to the prophet himself, Muhammad. In the first hundred pages alone, Aslan defends the following:
- Muhammad's marriage to a six year old girl ("But everyone back then was doing this! And he waited to consummate until she was nine!")
- Muhammad's polygamy in general to nine wives in ten years ("He had to hold the kingdom together with political alliances!" Hard to see how marrying a slave girl helps in that regard.)
- The Ummah's penchant for caravan raiding ("It's not stealing, it's redistributing wealth!")
- Perhaps most egregiously, he defends dhimma not as an example of Islam's subjugation of other religions, but actually of its religious tolerance? A quick internet search provides plenty of Muslim sources who believe quite the opposite.

Historical context is often important, especially when looking at religious history. Islam is certainly not the only faith to commit these kinds of acts, but sugarcoating it with baseless excuses just comes off as pandering to critics. This wouldn't be so bad if Aslan spent any time citing other sources who could verify his claims, but there's usually no substantiation whatsoever with regard to these claims; often, I'd be disappointed when Googling just about any of the claims when I suspected he was being overly subjective.

It's a shame "No god but God" suffers from these issues, because when Aslan sticks to the facts, he's an immensely talented storyteller that really could have created something special. I don't have a dog in his fight when it comes to what I think of Islam, but unfortunately, the defensive attitude in which he confronts fair criticism leads me to believe I need to do further reading before I make any sort of judgment. And isn't the point of a book like this to settle some of those feelings, not create more? (less)
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Dec 16, 2012Zayn Gregory rated it did not like it · review of another edition
Shelves: islam
Tight composition, fast pacing, authoritative tone: it's no surprise it was a bestseller. Of politics and history it is a good introduction for the non-muslim. But if the intent was to present a vision of how muslims should understand their faith under the challenge of modernity, it falls way short. Even presuming the raft of hostile orientalists he draws from represented the most neutral and authoritative of western scholarship on Islam, the author's own tone and framing make it needlessly more odious. We are informed the Prophet was "indecisive", an "empty vessel", a "hooked nose" Arab, that the Quran *was dictated by* its environment, that the 5 daily prayers are apocryphal, and for that matter the entire hadith corpus should be thrown out the window, etc. I'm not reverse FoxNewsing him and saying he must be a staunch muslim to write a book on Islam. I'm just saying this book is speaking to and from a position so far removed from the Islamic scholarly tradition that I can make no use of it. (less)
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Oct 22, 2007Paul rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: about-islam
"Religion, it must be understood, is not faith. Religion is the story of faith." That is the reader's key to this fascinating account of the origins and development of Islam. Faith is a way of moving and being in the world; religion is a body of traditions and practices and institutions that preserve the story of how to move and be in the world that way. In order to speak to new generations, traditions adapt, but faith is eternal. From this perspective, Reza Aslan retells the story of Islam. Written in clear prose and filled with memorable stories both personal and traditional, I found my mind and heart easily staying engaged with this book.

"This book," writes Aslan, "is, above all else, an argument for reform. There are those who will call it apostasy, but that is not troubling. No one speaks for God - not even the prophets (who speak about God). There are those who will call it apology, but that is hardly a bad thing. An apology is a defense, and there is no higher calling than to defend one's faith, especially from ignorance and hate..." In these words, I perceive at once an acceptance and a desire for dialogue, and a fatalistic attitude. Just as Islam's beginnings took place 600 years after the beginnings of Christianity, Aslan argues, so the Islamic Reformation is taking place now, 600 years after the Protestant one. Just as pre-Reformation Christianity was divided into Orthodox and Roman confessions, so today's Islam is divided into Sunni and Shi'ah. Whirling around early Christianity were ascetics and mystics, as Sufism does around Islam. And as did Christianity during the Reformation, Islam today is finding its way into a more literate citizenry's hands. "[T]he Christian Reformation was an argument over the future of the faith - a violent, bloody argument that engulfed Europe in devastation and war for more than a century. Thus far, the Islamic Reformation has proved no different. ... It took many years of violence and devastation to cleanse the Hijaz of its 'false idols.' It will take many more to cleanse Islam of its new false idols - bigotry and fanaticism - worshipped by those who have replaced Muhammad's original vision of tolerance and unity with their own ideals of hatred and discord. But the cleansing is inevitable, and the tide of reform cannot be stopped. The Islamic Reformation is already here. We are all living it."

The question is, how shall we live it? Are there enough people in today's world who understand the futility of violence and will not charge or be led into it? Are there enough of us who understand that power is only valuable as a means and bankrupt as an end? Can the foundational principles of true faith - tolerance and dialogue - guide us in the ways of peace and toward the spirit of mutual love? Can we peaceably contain the bigots and fanatics? Collaboration, not coercion, is the ideal in every healthy heart. Shall we choose many more years of violence and devastation to achieve any goal, or shall we choose tolerance, dialogue and justice made in the spirit of mutual love? During the Christian Reformation, Socinians in Poland and Unitarians in (now) Romania chose the latter. There weren't enough of them to turn the tide of violence in their day. I have to believe that there are enough people today who would choose and rely upon love rather than power, tolerance rather than force. All it takes is simple human choice. (less)
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Product description
Review
"Grippingly narrated and thoughtfully examined . . . a literate, accessible introduction to Islam."--The New York Times

"[Reza] Aslan offers an invaluable introduction to the forces that have shaped Islam [in this] eloquent, erudite paean to Islam in all of its complicated glory."--Los Angeles Times Book Review

"Wise and passionate . . . an incisive, scholarly primer in Muslim history and an engaging personal exploration."--The New York Times Book Review

"Acutely perceptive . . . For many troubled Muslims, this book will feel like a revelation, an opening up of knowledge too long buried."--The Independent (U.K.)

"Thoroughly engaging and excellently written . . . While [Aslan] might claim to be a mere scholar of the Islamic Reformation, he is also one of its most articulate advocates."--The Oregonian

About the Author
Reza Aslan is an acclaimed writer and scholar of religions whose books include No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam and Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth. He is also the author of How to Win a Cosmic War: God, Globalization, and the End of the War on Terror (published in paperback as Beyond Fundamentalism), as well as the editor of Tablet & Pen: Literary Landscapes from the Modern Middle East. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife and three sons.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Well researched and written but too pious and uncritical
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Reza Aslan is a good writer and a good historian of religion. His 2013 book Zealot on Jesus was excellent, so I had high hopes for this 2011 book on Islam. Many hopes were indeed fulfilled: the historical timeline is clear, the known facts are in place, the conjectures are properly flagged, the context for contemporaries and believers is sketched credibly, and the final result is easy and pleasant to read.

Any historian of Islam will be confronted with controversy and compelled to take sides. Aslan takes the side of the Sufis, a relatively gentle and reflective tradition in Islam with mystic leanings, which grew up in the shade of the Shia branch of the Mohammedan faith in lands that had rich and deep traditions of belief and philosophy. In doing so, he distances himself from the Sunni branch and those of its variants such as Wahhabism that have attracted Western anger in recent years.

What Aslan does not do, and what diminishes his book for me, is stand back far enough from the entire tradition of veneration for the revelations of the Prophet, and their expression in the series of texts that form the Quran, to see the wood for the trees. Even today, no pious Muslim would dare regard the revelations or their canonical expression as anything but holy, but for a modern Westerner with some respect for science and rational thinking the leap of imagination required to take such affirmed holiness at face value is just too great. This reader at least is driven to taking a remote anthropological stance on the Arab and related societies of a thousand plus or minus a few hundred years ago and regarding their strange belief system as shot through with hardly less nonsense than any other ancient myth or curious narrative.

Despite his Muslim roots, Aslan is a modern Western writer, so he must must see the need to keep such rational readers on board, even if in the end he parts company with them in continuing to venerate his holy relics. There may be a learning curve here, for he does a fine job in standing back from Christian or other pieties in discussing Jesus in his later book Zealot; perhaps it is easier to stand back from a faith one feels no residual need to defend or believe in. Modern societies with Christian or Muslim roots are surely robust enough to rise above superstitious awe in face of alleged revelations and the purportedly holy texts that spring from them, or at any rate we can only hope so, if we are to avoid a new clash of civilizations.

Like Aslan, I have some sympathy for the Sufi thread in the story of Islam, and feel some distaste for the hardened institutional forms of the Muslim faith, which like their Christian equivalents have led to serial disasters in the societies swayed by them. Unlike him, however, I see little hope for a revival of Sufism in the Muslim world and indeed little hope of sufficient reform within Islam to accommodate it to the constraints of life in an age of global connectivity, robots, and nuclear weapons. Only a clean separation of secular life, including politics, from the inner life of religion can enable us to regulate the modern world, it seems to me, and even a revived Sufism would be of no obvious help in doing so.

In summary, then, a modern history of Islam, especially one that like this volume takes us up to contemporary political issues surrounding the ongoing wars in Muslim majority societies, can only work for Western readers if it rises above a partisan perspective. As it is, Aslan seems to feel sympathy for the victim narrative that Western imperialists have cruelly exploited the Muslim world, which must therefore rise up and restore its fortunes by defeating the infidels. This cuts no ice with me, even in the context of a volume of history that otherwise deserves some praise.
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Adrian J. Smith
5.0 out of 5 stars Revealing, insightful, and highly readable
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 8 March 2016
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Having read various works on both the history of Islam, and Islam's current issues over it's own identity, this work in particular, stands out.
The book has many strengths, but perhaps what stands out is the insight given into the life of Mohammad, and how he was a genuinely universal social reformer. From the early chapters, a portrait of Mohammad as a genuinely tolerant man with universal and all inclusive aspirations, is unveiled, in stark contrast to the intolerant vision of Islam such contemporaries present in the world today.
The chapters about the prophets succession, and the Sunni-Shi'a divide are of particular strength, and a notable feature of Aslan's style is how he juxtaposes the work with examples from the present, or recent history.
The last chapter is a work on Islam's current identity issues, and how there are many Islam's out there. For a work examining Islam's identity and current issues, it is best to read Ali A Alawi's Crisis of Islamic Civilization, however the strength of Reza Aslan's work is an overall history of Islam.
The current edition has been updated and rewritten very well, and it shows that Aslan takes great care in keeping his work up to date.
On the whole, this book can be recommended to both those who are familiar with Islam, or those who are just curious, as this book sheds much more light on the history that most contemporary scholarship, and is both readable, accessible, and highly informative. In short, a masterwork!
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Lorenzo Baldi
4.0 out of 5 stars Very good but not flawless
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 April 2016
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The book is unquestionably good. It gives you a great account of the origin of the faith and its belief. It is not however, flawless. First of all, the writer is a strong believer himself and sometimes doesn't seems to be completely unbiased. Per se, this can be understood and forgiven, but sometimes it seems quite clear that the writer is "forgetting" to explain important bits, leaving the reader feel some degree of contradiction (i.e. I failed to understand how a "by no means wealthy man" that is just a Sheik of a "tiny oasis", like Ibn Saud could have been chosen by Wahhab as his ally and so be important in the astonishing successful conquer of the arabian peninsula).
Small grievances aside, it is a good book which I strongly recommend.
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emily@aol.com
5.0 out of 5 stars I also liked to hear about Muhamads life and what an amazing ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 September 2015
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Really well explained aspect of todays Muslim life for someone who didn't know very much about it. He explains from the aspect of a `Westerner`what it is to be Muslim today and some of the difficulties they are facing within their own religion and among the different factions. I also liked to hear about Muhamads life and what an amazing man he was but I feel he would be turning in his grave if only he knew how his followers changed aspects to what he preached and lived. I have more peace of mind knowing that he respected other faiths (to a certain extent) and did not set about calling everyone else `non believers`, those where his followers who went to be more radical.
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Ann
5.0 out of 5 stars Easy to read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 March 2018
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Easy to read, but very educational and provides a different view point on Islam. For anyone wanting to find out more about the religion and a view on we are where we are now, a very good read.
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Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth (Audio Download): Reza Aslan, Reza Aslan, Random House Audio: Amazon.com.au: Books

Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth (Audio Download): Reza Aslan, Reza Aslan, Random House Audio: Amazon.com.au: Books

Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth Audible Logo Audible Audiobook – Unabridged
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Gezim Mehmet
4.0 out of 5 stars No wonder this book is a best seller, it dares to challenge long held beliefs through rigorous exploration and research.
Reviewed in Australia on 6 March 2018
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There is a certain sense of reality within the description of people and places of those time and questions notoriously generalised biblical accounts thus giving it a greater sense of clarity than what I was expecting. The author challenges elements of the gospels against in-depth research that would no doubt have takenan extremely long time to account. One does not need to be a theologian to grasp a visual portrayal of the politics, time or human traits of the subjects so for me the book succeeded in answering long held questions I had whilst delivering far more rational explanations.. I was definitely taken back in time on a journey of discovery escaping the modern era yet finding similarities to the mankind of today.
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Sydney1981
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating
Reviewed in Australia on 17 February 2018
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A fascinating, exceptionally researched account of the 'historical' Jesus, which will undoubtedly shake the faith of any Christian. The author analyses the Scriptures through the lens of history to reveal a very human Jesus, whose teachings have been manipulated, changed, politicised and banished throughout history. An absolutely riveting read.
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Martha G.
4.0 out of 5 stars An important book in the search of truth
Reviewed in Australia on 21 June 2015
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This is a very important read for anyone wanting to know who the historical Jesus was and in what ways the biblical Jesus differs from him. Aslan is not trying to dissuade Christians of their faith (in fact, he even provides an argument in support of belief in the resurrection), however he does discuss how some elements of the Jesus narrative are historically impossible or very unlikely. As someone brought up Christian, some of these discoveries come as a bit of a shock, but after reading this book, I feel that I'm in a better position to make up my own mind about my Christian beliefs, knowing what is supported by historical sources and what relies solely on faith. I would have liked there to have been more about how Christianity developed over the centuries, (in the same way as Aslan discusses the development of Islam in his excellent book "No God but God") but perhaps that is the scope of another book.
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Angela Bardon
5.0 out of 5 stars Insightful
Reviewed in Australia on 18 February 2020
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Reza Aslan writes in a manner that is easy for anyone to read. The book gives the historical perspective of the era Jesus was birthed into and how the culture of the day would have shaped Jesus' story. Insightful
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Brian
3.0 out of 5 stars It's a good yarn and is plausible if you want to believe ...
Reviewed in Australia on 10 December 2014
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It's a good yarn and is plausible if you want to believe that Jesus was a simple messianic fanatic of his day. Blandly makes statements that are not necessarily historically accurate and leaves out any consideration of the spirituality of the man Jesus. He quotes the New Testament to support his theory but does so in many cases out of context. A reasonable read for both agnostics and believers, but requires the reader to undertake more investigation - which maybe a good thing
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Rod Baxter
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5.0 out of 5 stars Comprehensive Discussion
Reviewed in Australia on 20 August 2015
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REZA Aslan, has written one of the best books of this type that I have read on the topic of historical Jesus of Nazareth. It is comprehensive and comes at the topic from all angles. It is a good account and puts the events into a historical context. Whilst Aslan is hard hitting and pulls no punches, he does not set out to destroy faith. Unlike so many other commentaries of the type.
I am not big on history, but this one kept me reading.
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reddit the frog
3.0 out of 5 stars History got it wrong, but Reza Aslan has finally figured it out. Or not.
Reviewed in Australia on 13 October 2014
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Oscar Wilde once turned up to a Greek exam to be presented with a passage from John's Gospel to translate - Jesus' trial before Pilate. After a few lines the examiners told him that was good enough; he could stop. "Oh, do let me go on," said Wilde. "I want to see how it turns out.". Reza Aslan might well have done the same. He has an encyclopaedic knowledge about the historical context of Jesus' life, and a formidable, if selective, memory of Jesus' sayings and doings - up to his death. When it comes to "how it turned out" i.e. how and why one life could so change history, his own bias becomes clear; Jesus was one of many would-be revolutionaries, all doing and saying the same sort of thing, with the inevitable result. End of story. Gospel writers like Matthew doctored the sources to bolster up a struggling church (Gospel writer Thinks: We've been suffering and dying for the faith for a century, We'd better make up something for the faith to be about, and get it out there quickly.) Eminently readable creative writing.
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Chris Herrick
5.0 out of 5 stars At last, a believable Jesus.
Reviewed in Australia on 27 June 2014
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Reza Aslan has done theology a service with this latest book on Yeshua bar Yosef. His 'take' on Yeshua is consistent within biblical criticism and Palestinian history. The only unanswered question is how did this zealot transmogrify into the Christian Christ. Perhaps Dr Aslan can turn his lion gaze on the figure of Saul of Tarsus?
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John 29
2.0 out of 5 stars Readable but not convincing.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 August 2018
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This is a book written to substantiate the author's theory about Jesus. It is not a biography. I found it speculative and unconvincing. My doubts started as a result of the number of ideas which were based on the author's assumption that certain events did not happen owing to their being unlikely in the view of the author but without any evidence to support his view point. An example being the trial of Jesus with Pilot. Aslan suggests it is not likely that Pilot would have troubled himself with a Jewish rebel such as Jesus. Therefore the trial of Jesus with Pilot did not take place. But what is the evidence for this other than it being Aslan's speculative theory. Moreover, it is based on the assumption that Jesus was a zealot rather than 'the King of the Jews' and would not therefore have been of interest to Pilot.

The book is advertised as New York Times No1 Bestseller. The moral is beware of Bestsellers!
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F Price
1.0 out of 5 stars False claims of historical accuracy
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 January 2019
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Popular and readable but unreliable and not taken seriously by credited historians, not subjected to peer review. Author claims to be an academic but his degrees are in sociology and creative writing not in history or theology. Good on history of the times but speculative and unlikely reconstruction of Jesus himself which dismisses the plentiful early eye witness evidence about Jesus. Long bibliography masks the fact that the most relevant works are missing from it, eg Bauckhams definitive work on Jesus and the eye witnesses. This book became bestseller mainly because author insulted in an interview which went viral.
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Djilly L.
5.0 out of 5 stars A messianic experience
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 November 2018
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I read a lot. I read a lot in particular about ancient history. This might be one of my top-5 best ever, most enjoyable books.

What a great topic and how well presented. And very readable.

I rarely ever read fiction but that is how this book starts off, before it quickly builds its magnificent setting of Jerusalem and Palestine in 30 AD. While I know a fair bit about Roman history and the historic backdrop, the topic of religious extremists around that time and in that region was more alien to me.

Most people in the West will be familiar with the New Testament. I have a Christian background and read the bible a couple of times in the past.So its just phenomenal how this book answered a lot of my great many questions and managed to put so much in a healthy, historical perspective.

I can see where the religious controversy comes from. But in my view the book isn’t that offensive. First of all, it takes a historical, somewhat scientific approach to the circumstances and to what possibly happened. But like with all proper science this is only one version, one view, that can be discarded by those who feel that have a more adequate theory. But yes it clashes perhaps with religious experience. Yet secondly, I don’t think the book shreds all the New Testament’s mysticism to pieces; alternative explanations are offered for some aspects of Jesus’ life, but most miracles are left unexplained or unquestioned.
So in my view the book is very balanced.

The book also takes you beyond Jezus’ life to how interpretations and perception changed due to the apostle Paul’s involvement .. oh dear, he was a bad-ass ...magnificent.

Will have to read it again at some stage, when I got more time on my hands, closer to retirement.

I should say that I also gave a copy of the book to one of my best friends - with who I share a lot of my interests (and who really gets very upset up about anything related to religion).. but I never heard anything back about it. No problem at all, but perhaps the book just struck a big chord with me...
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Robson
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't waste your money.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 January 2020
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Filled with inacurate information and thinks he greater than Josephus...?

He wanted to discredit Matthew and Luke saying that they were lying but for the simple fact that he doesn't like Christianity doesn't mean he should be dishonest towards the historical facts.

In the Biblical account, we know these facts are presented:

Caesar Augustus ordered a censusQuirinius was governing Syria (hegemoneuontos tes Syrias Kyreniou)Each family must register at their familial city of origin

Further, Matthew chapter 2 reports that Herod the Great ordered the slaughter "all the male children who were in Bethlehem and all its vicinity, from two years old and under"(Matt 2:16). We know that Herod died 4-2 B.C., so Jesus birth had to have been before his death - most likely by two or more years. Given these facts, scholars generally date Jesus' birth anywhere between 6 B.C. to 4 B.C.

From the Josephus account we derive the following facts:

Caesar ordered a censusCyrenius (Quirinius) was sent to account for Syria and sell the house of ArchelausCyrenius (Quirinius) "had been consul"

We also know from other historical records that Herod Archelaus was deposed in 6 A.D., so this census must be about 6 or 7 A.D. So, the question goes, if Herod the Great died in 4 B.C. and Josephus tells us Quirinius' census wasn't until 6 A.D., then isn't this a contradiction?

His arguments is undermined by various facts, which even he admits.

Waste of money do not recomend to anyone.

Go straight to the bin...
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Mic Le Critique
4.0 out of 5 stars Jesus of Nazareth or Jesus Christ?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 July 2014
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Reza Aslan along with other writers attempting to trace the development of Jesus, the inspiration for Christianity, admits that the only sources of academic research on the man is the Bible along with a brief mention by the Roman biographer Flavius Josephus. Rather than speculate on the veracity of the accepted texts Aslan overlays these with known historical and accepted facts covering the period of his birth and death. We learn that Jesus was born in Nazareth, a small poor working class village in Galilee, Judea. He had a number of brothers and sisters who, apart from his younger brother James, are not featured in his life apart from the fact. He was uneducated and therefore could neither read and had only a basic Aramaic vocabulary. There is nothing about his early development that can be verified in the Bible or elsewhere, however when old enough he works in Sepphoris, a nearby town, as a labourer. He is baptised by John the Baptist and joins his sect and, in one of the few examples in the book of speculation, Aslan surmises that John, with his apostles, grooms Jesus the main tenants of preaching. When John is arrested by the Romans and executed Jesus picks up the mantle and begins a three year journey of healing, performing miracles and preaching before he too is appended by the Romans and executed. The biblical details cannot be supported by reference and therefore the Bible is a work of faith rather than fact. Aslan does however, using his technique of overlaying academic historical research onto the events recorded in the Bible, draws attention to some firm conclusions. Jesus was born in Nazareth, not Bethlehem. Jesus was subservient to John the Baptist and not the converse. Performing ‘miracles’, healing and magic were common at that time in Judea by other itinerant ‘Messiahs’ and were not exclusive to Jesus. His popularity grew in Galilee by ‘healing’ for no fee as opposed to other who did and the fact he was a Galilean local. Jesus was a committed Jew and defender of the Torah. Using allegory his preaching was primarily against the Roman occupiers and the corrupt Jewish Temple hierarchy. He was arrested in Jerusalem by the Romans, tried by the Temple hierarchy, handed over the Roman authorities and crucified. There is no historical or archaeological evidence to support the virgin birth, miracles, apparitions, resurrection or other events described in the Bible. The book therefore leaves it to the reader to decide whether to accept the man known as Jesus of Nazareth or the one that became Jesus Christ.
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How to Win a Cosmic War: Confronting Radical Religion eBook : Aslan, Reza: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

How to Win a Cosmic War: Confronting Radical Religion eBook : Aslan, Reza: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store





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How to Win a Cosmic War: Confronting Radical Religion Kindle Edition
by Reza Aslan (Author) Format: Kindle Edition


4.6 out of 5 stars 126 ratings
240 pages
1 March 2011
Product description  Review

Compelling, penetrative and timely. If more of us in the West grasp Aslan's arguments, we will begin to win the war of ideas against Jihadists and extremists. ― Ed Husain, author of The Islamist

excellent ― paul sims, Guardian

absorbing, thought-provoking and illuminating... Few writers are as well qualified to tackle the terrain... Aslan's book represents nothing less than a call to arms, a clear-eyed and impassioned remidner that the most effective way to win a cosmic war is to triumph in the battle for hearts and minds at home. ― Sarfraz Manzoor, Guardian

What is refreshing about Aslan's book is its breadth and its impartiality. ― Telegraph

'Offers a very persuasive argument for the best way to counter jihadism." ― The Washington Post --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.


About the Author
Reza Aslan's No God but God was shortlisted for the 2005 Guardian First Book Award in the UK and nominated for a PEN USA award for research Non-Fiction. He has studied religions at the universities of Santa Clara, Harvard and California, Santa Barbara, and holds an MFA in fiction from the Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa, where he was also visiting assistant professor of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies. His work has appeared in the Nation, Slate, and the New York Times. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.

From the Back Cover


Praise for No God but God:

'Reza Aslan's No God But God is just the history of Islam I needed, judicious and truly illuminating.' A.S. Byatt, Guardian Books of the Year 2005

'A revelation, an opening up of knowledge too long buried... [Aslan's]...careful scholarship and precise language dismantle...false claims and commands... Aslan is acutely perceptive.' Independent

'Aslan...is a superb narrator, bringing each century to life with vivid details and present tense narration that make popular history so enthralling... Illuminating... Aslan is superb on the origins and richness of Islam.... A terrific read.' Glasgow Herald

'Enthralling. A book of tremendous clarity and generosity of spirit.' Jim Crace

'Aslan is an engaging writer, his strength lies...as an observer of contemporary challenges facing Islam... Sensitive and generous' Financial Times

'Grippingly narrated and thoughtfully examined... A literate, accessible introduction to Islam...carefully placing its message and rituals in historical context.' New York Times--This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.


From the Inside Flap

Cosmic War: an unwinnable, unloseable religious battle of identity in which participants divide the world into black and white, good and evil, us and them

Why do they hate us? An entire cottage industry has arisen to answer this question. But what no one has really figured out is who exactly 'they' are - al-Qaeda? Islamic nationalists? Fundamentalist zealots? The whole Muslim world?In How to Win a Cosmic War, Reza Aslan uses the history of religion to explore twenty-first Jihadism and the so-called 'War on Terror', and offers a radically provocative and timely explanation of these two catastrophic phenomena.

The acclaimed author of No God But God (shortlisted for the 2005 Guardian First Book Award) lays out, for the first time, a comprehensive definition of the movement behind and surrounding al-Qaeda, a global ideology properly termed Jihadism. Contrasting twenty-first-century religious extremism across Christianity, Judaism and Islam with its historical antecedents, Aslan demonstrates that while modern Jihadis may have legitimate social grievances - the suffering of the Palestinians, American support for Arab dictators, the presence of foreign troops in Muslim lands - they have no real goals or actual agenda. Their war is not real: it is a metaphysical conflict, a Cosmic War, fought between the forces of good and evil. And since 9/11 western governments have been inciting this conflict, playing into the Jihadis' hands: for the 'War on Terror' is the war they want.

How do we win a Cosmic War? By refusing to fight in one. And in this definitive new study of an ongoing and unprecedented conflict, Reza Aslan offers some surprising conclusions as to how this can be achieved.

--This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.


Book Description
Acclaimed author Reza Aslan dissects two of the most devastating ideologies of our times - Jihadism and the 'War on Terror'. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
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Print length ‏ : ‎ 240 pages
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u.m.y
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, especially for beginners.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 June 2017
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If you are beginning to learn about worldly violence and the role religion plays within it, then this book is the place to start. The reason why it fantastic for beginners is simply because it is easy to read. People with some background knowledge will also benefit as the book focuses upon the Abrahamic religions - Judaism, Christianity & Islam. It places heavy focus on contemporary violence in all three religions and touches upon historical background. In Judaism, Aslan sketches the Zealots and the destruction of the first temple in 70AD all the way to the Zionism and the formation of Israel on the first of May 1948. Aslan looks at the crusades an contrasts modern day Cosmic Dualism (the main thesis of his work, the clash of civilisations, good vs evil) Global Jihadism and the Bush Administration.

My favourite part of the book is when Aslan focuses upon islamism and democracy. Normally, people, particularly in the west, would look at disgust with Islamist organisation who hold ideas which seem the anti-thesis to Liberalism. People may say that Islamist ideas are what underpin the Global Jihadist movement, and to tackle the latter we need to tackle the former. However, Aslan presents a convincing case whereby allowing Islamist parties to partake in democratic elections may be a way to repel people from turning to Global Jihadism.

Aslan also gives a balanced perspective. Some reviews here say that Aslan never criticised the Muslim community yet criticised a lot of American institutions. However, Aslan points out a fundamental and dangerous concept that is widespread in the Muslim world -- takfeerism. Takfir is a widespread doctrine practiced by a number of Muslims, simply put, it is the action of calling some one a Kafir (disbeliever) or a group of people Kuffar. Both the Ulema and Global Jihadists practice this concept. Aslan takes time sketching the history of takfeerism by recalling Ibn Taymiyah, he then takes time to show how dangerous such concept really is for Muslims to practice today.

One negative about this book is that it only talks about everything up to 2007 which means that it misses everything from then on to today. Therefore, the rise of ISIL is not talked about. An evaluation of Obamas presidency is not talked about (which if Aslan reviewed again would come to a different conclusion in his book) and the Syrian civil war is not talked about. Therefore, this book is only good for a good background to the events today. Most of the ideas presented in the book still stand though.

In conclusion, if you are going to buy a book that deals with issues of religion and violence, then do not hesitate to start here!
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spotty
5.0 out of 5 stars very comprehensive and intelligent history and discussion of the problems of Islam and ...Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 October 2014
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very comprehensive and intelligent history and discussion of the problems of Islam and the `Middle East'. This writer has a thorough understanding of his subject and is able to put very opposite and entrenched positions into a proper perspective.

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Helen
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book and was delivered rather quicklyReviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 March 2015
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Excellent book and was delivered rather quickly. I recommend for anyone that is interested in religions and the current situations in the world. The author has a way of explaining things that will be easy even for those with little knowledge of the topic.
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How to Win a Cosmic War: God, Globalization, and the End of the War on Terror
by Reza Aslan
 3.98  ·   Rating details ·  1,632 ratings  ·  186 reviews
A cosmic war is a religious war. It is a battle not between armies or nations, but between the forces of good and evil, a war in which God is believed to be directly engaged on behalf of one side against the other.
The hijackers who attacked the United States on September 11, 2001, thought they were fighting a cosmic war. According to award-winning writer and scholar of religions Reza Aslan, by infusing the United States War on Terror with the same kind of religiously polarizing rhetoric and Manichean worldview, is also fighting a cosmic war-a war that can't be won.
How to Win a Cosmic War""is both an in-depth study of the ideology fueling al-Qa'ida, the Taliban, and like-minded militants throughout the Muslim world, and an exploration of religious violence in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Surveying the global scene from Israel to Iraq and from New York to the Netherlands, Aslan argues that religion is a stronger force today than it has been in a century. At a time when religion and politics are increasingly sharing the same vocabulary and functioning in the same sphere, Aslan writes that we must strip the conflicts of our world-in particular, the War on Terror-of their religious connotations and address the earthly grievances that always lie behind the cosmic impulse.
How do you win a cosmic war? By refusing to fight in one. (less)
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Hardcover, 228 pages
Published April 21st 2009 by Random House (NY) (first published 2009)
Original TitleHow to Win a Cosmic War: God, Globalization, and the End of the War on Terror
ISBN1400066727 (ISBN13: 9781400066728)
Edition LanguageEnglish
Other Editions (16)
Beyond Fundamentalism: Confronting Religious Extremism in the Age of Globalization 
Beyond Fundamentalism: Confronting Religious Extremism in the Age of Globalization 
Beyond Fundamentalism: Confronting Religious Extremism in the Age of Globalization 
How to Win a Cosmic War: Confronting Radical Religion 
How to Win a Cosmic War: Confronting Radical Religion
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Oct 28, 2015Ana rated it really liked it
Shelves: history, religion-or-spirituality, politics, north-american-literature, 21st-century, non-fiction, united-states-literature, western-asian-literature, middle-eastern-literature, iranian-literature
This book explains how extremists think and how they affect the world (Extremist = a person who holds extreme political or religious views, especially one who advocates illegal, violent, or other extreme action.) Evangelicals, jihadists, you name it, Aslan takes them on and explains their role in the post 9/11 middle-east conflict.

This book may shock you if you think of extremists as irrational, evil beings and it may surprise you just how much social justice and extremism have in common.
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Jennavier
Jan 10, 2012Jennavier rated it it was ok
I was really unimpressed by this book. I'm unsure of what the author was trying to say. It's not just that he didn't answer his questions as that he never really posed questions to start with. On top of that he would start to pose interesting and inflammatory questions and then step back, leaving them on their own. It was like throwing firecrackers around as if they were chicken feed, unwilling to actually place them somewhere that can be useful. He also made a lot of sweeping historical generalizations that I do not appreciate. A lot of this book is Aslan's opinion dressed up as fact. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone. (less)
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Jack
May 18, 2009Jack rated it really liked it
Although principally billed as an analysis and commentary on the so-called 'War on Terror' (ie - against Islamic Jihadists), the book is actually a wider discussion on religion, identity and violence. Perhaps the concept that bests summarizes his thoughts is that of al-wala' wal-bara', which would roughly translate to "faith and infidelity"; a "us vs. them" paradigm. A battle between those who share the same beliefs, and those who do not. This is not purely a Islam and Christianity treatise, but includes how this dichotomy can result in internal schisms - Zealots vs Jewish collaborators with Rome, or Jihadists against the "Near Enemy" - a fellow Muslim that have been deemed 'kafir' or an infidel.

For the most part, Reza does not demonize any sides, combining the right dose of analysis, passion and personal anecdotes. But, there is the slight exception to the Christian Right and other ultra-nationalistic, right-wing groups around the world. He would probably argue that such groups feed on the 'us vs. them' mentality and hardens divisions. Indeed, his main thesis is that the best way to win the cosmic war is not to fight it at all. He argues that the best way to deter Jihadists is not to engage on a religious level, but rather to make al-Qaeda irrelevant by listening to the concerns of local Muslims, and to encourage the growth of viable democracies in the Middle East. He does not say that the democracies need to mirror the American democratic system of government, but must, at least, reflect the will of the people and be seen as a legitimate government.

Lastly, I do want to note that at times, Reza is a masterful story-teller. This is how he describes the re-taking of the Temple Mount during the 1967 Six-Day War:

I have that photo, here before me. Rabbi Goren is wearing Coke-bottle glasses, but I can tell you, I can see the light dancing in his eyes. With the ram's horn pressed to his lips he is Joshua, calling forth the wrath of God who crumbles mountains. He is Aaron, staring out with virgin eyes upon the land of milk and honey. He is Moses: see how the soldiers run to him through the parting of dust and rubble! Two thousand years of wandering in the wilderness, and now, at long last, Eretz Yisrael is secured. Surely redemption is at hand.


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Arash
Aug 08, 2011Arash rated it really liked it
Aslan has a wonderful ability to take a complicated subject that is so commonly misunderstood and misrepresented in present day media, and break it down to its more coherent pieces, while maintaining its integrity and providing thoughtful analysis. Aslan frames the current "Cosmic War" between Islam and the West within the context of today's failed War on Terror and a modern day version of the Christian crusades.



His writing is remarkably easy to follow and written with a contemporary understanding of the dominant issues in today's discourse on this matter. His history of jihadism is fascinating and well-documented. His exploration of the true reasons of Islamic fundamentalism (and its terrorist actions) is insightful and eye-opening.



Aslan refuses to accept the flawed and Islamophobic language that is so common today. His writing, like his interviews and talks, reflect his dedication to thinking about these issues in new ways and understanding the complexity of an all too commonly simplified argument: that Islam inherently fuels terrorism. I only wish the book was a bit longer and explored these ideas in more depth. (less)
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Emily
Jan 22, 2018Emily rated it it was amazing
Good overview of global terrorism, an excellent introduction for someone who had very little prior knowledge on the subject (like me). This book is almost ten years old now, but still very relevant, especially given the rise of nationalism in the US.
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Louai Al Roumani
Jan 12, 2017Louai Al Roumani rated it it was ok
I am confused. The book title is clear-cut on what it aspires to achieve; providing ideas on how to win a 'cosmic' war and confronting radicalism. In the opening pages, Aslan makes a striking statement that the only way to fight a cosmic war is simply not to take part in it. An exciting premise that made me yearn for further elaboration.

The book however takes a different turn afterwards, as Aslan starts narrating the origins of Zionism, Islamism and engages in a mostly historical analysis of the origins of zealousness. Providing such a background is important to the reader, but I did not expect it to take almost three-quarters of the book. Aslan's writing is engaging and entertaining, yet as the book approached its ending, my frustration increasingly swelled when Aslan would not start to answer the question on every reader's mind. In the dying ten pages however, he starts to recount the all-too familiar recommendations, the most significant one being engaging Islamist voices in the democratic process. A sound advice but no rigorous dissection of the problems plaguing the Islamic world. He elevates the struggle to being a cosmic war, and does not address the down-to-earth war that needs down-to-earth solutions and radical changes encompassing the entire Islamic world. By confining his analysis to the global hard-core Jihadists, Aslan has confined the battle with these only and in many cases seemed to discount the increasing radicalization of more and more Muslims. He refers to this trend as a 'Jihadi pop culture' and somehow belittles its impact. No talk whatsoever about why moderate Sheikhs have 3K followers on Twitter at best whereas radical Jihadist sheikhs have over a million. No talk about the shocking increase in radicalization that can be easily identified by scrolling under any youtube video in Arabic or Urdu, whether it be a rerun of a Barcelona game or a Lebanese pop song, where you are most likely to start reading inflammatory radical talk in the comments.

Aslan talks about Muslims in Europe and the USA and puts the blame on the institutions there for not integrating Muslims. A lot of this is true, but no talk whatsoever about what Muslims need to do in return. He makes no mention of how on earth we can confront growing radicalism in Muslim-majority countries, except for asking for increased democratization. Any amateur is able to make such a statement, but I expected Aslan to say how he expected to do that in Saudi Arabia for example, and to address the venomous Wahhabist influence. He discounts the influence of madrassas by resorting to the claim that most of the suicide bombers of the 9/11 did not attend madrassas. Well Mr. Aslan, almost one out of every three Muslim taxi drivers I meet in London and Boston have attended madrassas and their radical views are astounding. It is the views of these taxi drivers that represent a timebomb and are reflective of much more than a harmless Jihadist pop-culture if no action is done.

He makes no mention whatsoever of any reform needed for Islam or the need to create a uniform Islamic 'Marjaeya' whereby no Sheikh in the world is able to make a fatwa on his own; all we need to do according to the writer is to include Islamist parties in the democratic process. As to the issue of compatibility with democracy, Aslan dedicates one sentence in the entire book by stating that it worked in countries like Malaysia and Indonesia. That's it.

Sorry Mr. Aslan but this was disappointing and I feel cheated. The book should have been titled 'A Concise History of Jihadism', in which case it would have made a good book. However if that was its tile, I probably would not have purchased it and would have read instead for the likes of Fawaz Gerges. So it was definitely savvy for Mr. Aslan to create such an eye-catching title. (less)
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Daniel Solera
Apr 29, 2009Daniel Solera rated it it was amazing
Shelves: religion, current-events, politics
This was one fantastic read. I had a recent conversation with a close friend, where we talked about the modern-day dangers of religion, and how some of the harshest critics frame the issue unfairly. They choose to single-out religion as the main cause of terrorist acts such as 9/11, instead of looking at the situation from a sociopolitical standpoint. Granted, religion was involved, but it many other elements were at play.

Aslan's book takes this approach in attempts to rationalize the intent of a jihadist. In doing so, he not only glosses over the history of the religious fundamentalist movements of the three large monotheisms , but also explains how the struggles between them have been hurt further by the Bush Administration's foreign policy and rhetoric. Furthermore, he notes that the increasing strife is only made worse by globalization. Specifically, globalization brings cultures together and unifies differences, while the "us vs. them" rhetoric that we have gotten used to does just the opposite - paint the Muslim as an Other, as something to be feared. It is this alienation that confuses young Muslims in industrialized countries and drives them to identify themselves with radical, violent movements.

There is so much discussed in this book, and all of it relevant. I can't recommend it enough to anyone looking to make a little more sense of the long-standing chaos that daily hits the airwaves. There was even a paragraph in it that summarized "Jesus, Interrupted", which I read just last week. So that was nice. (less)
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Gilda Felt
Aug 16, 2019Gilda Felt rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
I’m sure most people only think of Muslims when they think of religious extremists, but, as Aslan shows, they actually came into the game late. Jews and Christians have been using their absurd conviction that they know the mind of god for centuries.

Not only does this book set things straight, but it gives an in-depth history of each religions’ path to fundamentalism; its history, and, maybe, its future. It’s a must read for anyone who wants to know how we got here, and where we might be heading.

I’d love to think that this type of belief system will finally be shown to be the false narrative that it is, that all people, Jews, Christians, and Muslims will let go of their hubris and rigid mindset. But I’m not holding my breath. (less)
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Mila
Jan 17, 2020Mila rated it really liked it
Shelves: political-and-social-theory
This was a fascinating read and hard to put down. There were a lot of insights that really got me thinking, and Aslan is extremely articulate in describing the relationship between apocalyptic religiosity and world politics.

I wasn’t quite in agreement with everything. I thought he went slightly too easy on Islamist movements such as the Muslim brotherhood in Egypt, and seemed to be a bit more charitable to them than Arab secularists. But he did back up his arguments pretty well. I also think the book tried to cover a ton of ground in less than 300 pages, where it could have benefitted from more elaboration. But I suppose this length is the sweet spot when it comes to engaging people who don’t typically read about Middle East and Islamist politics. (less)
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How to Win a Cosmic War by Reza Aslan
The author's aim is not to revolutionise but to communicate a host of useful ideas, says Jason Burke
Jason Burke
Sun 16 Aug 2009 09.05 AEST


Reza Aslan's first book, No God But God, was a global success, explaining Islam as a religion, culture and identity to hundreds of thousands across the world. His follow-up is a sensible, intelligent and slightly worthy overview of what could be called the moderate left position on Islamic militancy. Little has not been covered before, but then the author's aim is not to revolutionise but to aggregate, synthesise and communicate a host of useful ideas.

Aslan rightly focuses on the question of identity, pointing out that the west has effectively appropriated "modernity" for itself, leaving militants to assume a "reactionary identity" based on an invented, mythologised past. He explains how, in our chaotic, interconnected world, the cool, clear certainties of radical Islam provide both an explanatory framework and a programme for change. The militants believe themselves to be warriors in a battle – or "cosmic war" – that has been fought since the beginning of time in the heavens. Events in real life – petty humiliations, frustrations, resentments – are explained by reference to this overarching "single narrative".

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This is all useful stuff, but Aslan's argument that militants want "nothing" is unpersuasive. He is wrong to dismiss the grievances of Osama bin Laden and company as "mind-bogglingly unfocused" and "random". Jihadist militants do not see their desire to erase Israel as "hopeless", but eminently achievable, if not immediately.

Israel and Palestine occupy a central position in the book. About a third of the slim volume is devoted to Zionism, early Jewish zealot rebels, questions of antisemitism, radical Jewish right wingers and the suffering of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank. But though the issue of Palestine is a powerful glue binding disparate strands of political activism, it is merely one cause of Islamic militancy. Were there to be peace in the Holy Land tomorrow, bin Laden and others would not cease their violence.

Aslan's proposed strategy for winning the cosmic war is sensible if slightly predictable. Efficient provision of public services by governments means that Islamist groups such as Hezbollah or Hamas, which have based half their appeal on social activism and filling the holes left by corrupt bureaucracies, will be weakened. More democracy will mean that dissent will cease to be channelled into violence. We have heard all this before. But is democracy really the best answer for somewhere like Afghanistan? Can it ever be imposed from outside? And how likely is it that Hamas, the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood or Hezbollah will "democratise" along the lines of the Turkish AKP if given the chance to participate in elections?

The book is written for an American audience and the emotional passages welcoming President Obama may seem overwrought. So may the flowery sections on Iranian-born Aslan's childhood in snowy Oklahoma. And he does have an irritating habit of over-simplifying, particularly when he is on less familiar ground such as Iraq or Europe. Iraq's sectarian civil war was not launched "almost single-handedly" by militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi but was the result of a complex mix of factors. The French vote against the new European Union constitution and the riots in the Paris suburbs of 2005 were not part of a general reaction against a levelling of difference within the EU, but completely different phenomena. And I don't think that describing the motivation for one of the 7/7 bombers as "love", albeit misguided, is helpful.

However, this remains a thought-provoking book and the chapter on the radicalisation of Europe's young is particularly useful. Aslan describes modern Islamic militancy as a "social movement", helpfully capturing the nature of a phenomenon which depends more on individuals' personal situations than on ideologies. In recasting jihadism as a "pop culture", as a group dynamic, a shared world view, Aslan opens up many fruitful areas of inquiry. One question deserves further discussion: can violence itself become a marker of identity? The answer is probably yes.