From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Fall of the Islamic World: A forecast ( ISBN  9789025437398, original German title: Der Untergang der islamischen Welt: Eine Prognose, ISBN  9783426275443) is a book from 2010 by the German-Egyptian political scientist and Islam critic Hamed Abdel-Samad. [1] [2]

In the book Abdel-Samad claims Islam is over its peak. As root cause, he points to the contradiction that contemporary Muslims do consume the material achievements of modern society, but on a spiritual plane they are not open to much of associated concepts such as freedom, equality and religious criticism in modern society. Moreover, Muslims in the West are largely financially economically dependent on Western social order but despise the underlying moral values. The gap between Islam and society grows and loses its relevance. Adbel-Samad sees a solution in what he called a "post-Koran discourse" a religious-ethnical Islamic revival, but not literally on the Qu'ran word.

References

  1. ^ Marcinkowski, Christoph (2012). "Hamed Abdel-Samed, Der Untergang der islamischen Welt: Eine Prognose [The fall of the Islamic world: a prognosis]". Islam and Civilisational Renewal. 3 (2): 402–405.
  2. ^ Laqueur, Walter (19 November 2010). "Hamed Abdel-Samad prophezeit das Ende des Islam" [Hamed Abdel-Samad prophecies the end of Islam]. Die Welt (in German).


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Fall of the Islamic World: A forecast ( ISBN  9789025437398, original German title: Der Untergang der islamischen Welt: Eine Prognose, ISBN  9783426275443) is a book from 2010 by the German-Egyptian political scientist and Islam critic Hamed Abdel-Samad. [1] [2]

In the book Abdel-Samad claims Islam is over its peak. As root cause, he points to the contradiction that contemporary Muslims do consume the material achievements of modern society, but on a spiritual plane they are not open to much of associated concepts such as freedom, equality and religious criticism in modern society. Moreover, Muslims in the West are largely financially economically dependent on Western social order but despise the underlying moral values. The gap between Islam and society grows and loses its relevance. Adbel-Samad sees a solution in what he called a "post-Koran discourse" a religious-ethnical Islamic revival, but not literally on the Qu'ran word.

References

  1. ^ Marcinkowski, Christoph (2012). "Hamed Abdel-Samed, Der Untergang der islamischen Welt: Eine Prognose [The fall of the Islamic world: a prognosis]". Islam and Civilisational Renewal. 3 (2): 402–405.
  2. ^ Laqueur, Walter (19 November 2010). "Hamed Abdel-Samad prophezeit das Ende des Islam" [Hamed Abdel-Samad prophecies the end of Islam]. Die Welt (in German).



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