“Each of us was raped by between three and six men….One
woman refused to have sex with them, so they split her
head into pieces with an axe in front of us.”
This happened in Darfur, from which Sudanese military
personnel actually airlifted women to Khartoum to serve
as sex slaves.
Meanwhile, Indira Dzetskelova, the mother of one of the
child hostages in Beslan, Russia, reports that “several
15-year-old girls were raped by terrorists.” Her
daughter “heard their terrible cries and screams when
those monsters took them away.”
This indicates that there are two things the massacre in
Beslan have in common with the ongoing massacres in
Darfur: both, no less than the 9/11 attacks, are
examples of Islamic jihad terrorism, and both are
characterized by rape.
The jihadist element has been made clear by the
ringleaders of both atrocities. Sudanese General Mohamed
Beshir Suleiman recently declared: “The door of the
jihad is still open and if it has been closed in the
south it will be opened in Darfur.” In southern Sudan,
of course, the jihad was waged against Christians; in
Darfur, the targets are black African Muslims whose
Islamic bona fides don’t satisfy Khartoum. As for Beslan,
the Chechen jihadist leader Shamil Besayev warned the
Russian government last winter: “Praise Allah, we are
dreaming of dying in jihad, we are dreaming of dying on
the way of Allah, so that we could earn paradise and
mercy of Allah.”
What does rape, then, have to do with these religious
conflicts? Unfortunately, everything. The Islamic legal
manual ‘Umdat al-Salik, which carries the
endorsement of Al-Azhar University, the most respected
authority in Sunni Islam, stipulates: “When a child or a
woman is taken captive, they become slaves by the fact
of capture, and the woman’s previous marriage is
immediately annulled.” Why? So that they are free to
become the concubines of their captors. The Qur’an
permits Muslim men to have intercourse with their wives
and their slave girls: “Forbidden to you are ... married
women, except those whom you own as slaves” (Sura
4:23-24).
After one successful battle, Muhammad tells his men, “Go
and take any slave girl.” He took one for himself also.
After the notorious massacre of the Jewish Qurayzah
tribe, he did it again. According to his earliest
biographer, Ibn Ishaq, Muhammad “went out to the market
of Medina (which is still its market today) and dug
trenches in it. Then he sent for [the men of Banu
Qurayza] and struck off their heads in those trenches as
they were brought out to him in batches.” After killing
“600 or 700 in all, though some put the figure as high
as 800 or 900,” the Prophet of Islam took one of the
widows he had just made, Rayhana bint Amr, as another
concubine.
Emerging victorious in another battle, according to a
generally accepted Islamic tradition, Muhammad’s men
present him with an ethical question: “We took women
captives, and we wanted to do ‘azl [coitus
interruptus] with them.” Muhammad told them: “It is
better that you should not do it, for Allah has written
whom He is going to create till the Day of
Resurrection.’” When Muhammad says “it is better that
you should not do it,” he’s referring to coitus
interruptus, not to raping their captives. He takes
that for granted.
With Muhammad revered throughout the Islamic world as
al-insan al-kamil, the perfect man, the rapes of
Darfur and Beslan are nothing surprising. What is
surprising, or ought to be, is the silence from the
Islamic world about the rapes in both cases. Where are
the reformers who will dare to say that Muhammad’s
example must not be followed in this case? Who will
acknowledge that the world has developed principles of
human rights that must supercede those forged in
seventh-century Arabia? Where are the Western spokesmen
who are not so in thrall to multiculturalism that they
will condemn rape that is justified according to Islamic
religious principles? The much-lionized “Muslim Martin
Luther,” Tariq Ramadan, now banned from entering the
U.S., can so far only bring himself to call for a
moratorium, not a definitive ban, on stoning for
adulterers. Rape of captives? His sentiments are not
known. Where is the Muslim Solzhenitsyn, who will speak
honestly about the aspects of Islam that so desperately
need reform, and call for the overhaul that the system
so obviously needs?
The whole world is waiting. But for the girls and women
of Darfur and Beslan, it is already too late.