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Dec092004
Thursday, December 9, 2004 at 08:03PM
When Europeans launched the Crusades as a prolonged "holy war" against
Islam, couched in terms of "good-versus-evil," they did so for three
reasons. First was the rise of Islam itself, one of the greatest
historical movements of the Middle Ages. Its existence and rapid
expansion were seen as a threat to the dominant Byzantine Empire.
Secondly, the Pope was struggling with the Holy Roman Emperor for
supreme power in Europe, and so in 1095 a decision was made at the
Council of Clermont to launch a Crusade that would consolidate his
authority as a supreme leader. The third reason was driven by economic
change. Behind the rising religious craze in Europe, a new holy war was
seen as a shortcut for Europeans to make business contacts with the
affluent oriental East and the highly civilized Arab world. The shape
of the current Crusade may be different, but the goal is the same:
conquering territories, controlling resources and undermining the
culture and the religious self identity of the indigenous population,
the "others" who need fixing. The notion that only outside intervention
can save Islam and Muslims has been in circulation since the Iranian
Revolution of 1979, but it gained greater urgency after September 11,
2001. [more]