The holy source of Islaam is the ’Qur~an; and the model of morality in the ’Qur~an is completely different from the image of it formed in the minds of some westerners. The ’Qur~an is based on the concepts of morality, love, compassion, mercy, modesty, self-sacrifice, tolerance and peace, and a Muslim who truly lives according to these moral precepts is highly refined, thoughtful, tolerant, trustworthy and accommodating. To those around him he gives love, respect, peace of mind and a sense of the joy of life.
Islaam Is a Religion of Peace and Well-being
The word Islaam has the same meaning as “peace” in Arabic. Islaam is a religion that came down to offer humanity a life filled with the peace and well-being in which God’s eternal mercy and compassion is manifested in the world. God invites all people to accept the moral teachings of the ’Qur~an as a model whereby mercy, compassion, tolerance and peace may be experienced in the world. In Chapter of Alba’qarah verse 208, this command is given:
You who believe! Enter absolutely into peace (Islaam). Do not follow in the footsteps of Satan. He is an outright enemy to you.
As we see in this verse, people will experience well-being and happiness by living according to the moral teaching of the ’Qur~an.
God Condemns Mischief
God has commanded humanity to avoid evil; he has forbidden immorality, rebellion, cruelty, aggressiveness, murder and bloodshed. Those who do not obey this command of God are walking in the steps of Satan, as it says in the verse above, and have adopted an attitude that God has clearly declared unlawful. Of the many verses that bear on this subject, here are only two:
But as for those who break God’s contract after it has been agreed and sever what God has commanded to be joined, and cause corruption in the earth, the curse will be upon them. They will have the Evil Abode. (Chapter of Arra‘d, verse 25)
Seek the abode of the hereafter with what God has given you, without forgetting your portion of the world. And do good as God has been good to you. And do not seek to cause mischief on earth. God does not love mischief makers.’ (Chapter of Al’qa’sa’s, verse 77)
As we can see, God has forbidden every kind of mischievous acts in the religion of Islaam including terrorism and violence, and condemned those who commit such deeds. A Muslim lends beauty to the world and improves it.
Islaam Defends Tolerance and Freedom of Speech
Islaam is a religion which fosters freedom of life, ideas and thought. It has forbidden tension and conflict among people, calumny, suspicion and even having negative thoughts about another individual.
Islaam has not only forbidden terror and violence, but also even the slightest imposition of any idea on another human being.
There is no compulsion in religion. Right guidance has become clearly distinct from error. Anyone who rejects false gods and believes in God has grasped the Firmest Handhold, which will never give way. God is All-Hearing, All-Knowing. (Chapter of Alba’qarah, verse 256)
So remind, you need only to remind. You cannot compel them to believe. (Chapter of Al’gaashiyah, verse 22)
To force anyone to believe in a religion or to practice it, is against the spirit and essence of Islaam. Because it is necessary that faith be accepted with free will and conscience. Of course, Muslims may urge one another to keep the moral precepts taught in the ’Qur~an, but they never use compulsion. In any case, an individual cannot be induced to the practice of religion by either threat or offering him a worldly privilege.
Let us imagine a completely opposite model of society. For example, a world in which people are forced by law to practice religion. Such a model of society is completely contrary to Islaam because faith and worship have value only when they are directed toward God. If there were a system that forced people to believe and worship, people would be religious only out of fear of the system. What is acceptable from the point of view of religion is that religion be practiced in an environment where freedom of conscience is permitted, and that it be practiced only for the approval of God.
God has Made the Killing of Innocent People Unlawful
According to the ’Qur~an, one of the greatest sins is to kill a human being who has committed no fault:
If someone kills another person - unless it is in retaliation for someone else or for causing corruption in the earth - it is as if he had murdered all mankind. And if anyone gives life to another person, it is as if he had given life to all mankind. Our Messengers came to them with Clear Signs but even after that many of them committed outrages in the earth. (Chapter of Almaa-idah, verse 32)
Those who do not call on any other deity together with God and do not kill anyone God has made inviolate, except with the right to do so, and do not fornicate; anyone who does that will receive an evil punishment. (Chapter of Alfur’qaan, verse 68)
As we can see in the verses above, those who kill innocent human beings without a cause are threatened with evil punishment. God has revealed that killing one person is as great a sin as killing all mankind. Anyone who respected the prerogatives of God would not do harm to even one individual, let alone murdering thousands of innocent people. Those who think that they will escape justice and punishment in this world will never escape the account they must give in the Presence of God on the Last Day. So, those believers who know they will give an account to God after their death, will be very careful about respecting the limits God has established.
God Commands Believers to Be Compassionate and Merciful
In this verse, Muslim morality is explained:
...To be one of those who believe and urge each other to steadfastness and urge each other to compassion. Those are the Companions of the Right. (Chapter of Albalad, verses 17-18)
As we see in this verse, one of the most important moral precepts that God has sent down to His servants so that they may receive salvation and mercy and attain Paradise, is to “urge each other to compassion”.
Islaam as described in the ’Qur~an is a modern, enlightened, progressive religion. A Muslim is above all a person of peace; he is tolerant with a democratic spirit, cultured, enlightened, honest, knowledgable about art and science and civilized.
A Muslim educated in the fine moral teaching of the ’Qur~an, approaches everyone with the love that Islaam expects. He shows respect for every idea and he values art and aesthetics. He is conciliatory in the face of every event, diminishing tension and restoring amity. In societies composed of individuals such as this, there will be a higher civilization, a higher social morality, more joy, happiness, justice, security, abundance and blessings than in the most modern nations of the world today.
God Has Commanded Tolerance and Forgiveness
Chapter of Ala‘raaf, verse 199, which says “practice forgiveness”, expresses the concept of forgiveness and tolerance which is one of the basic principles of the religion of Islaam.
When we look at Islaamic history, we can see clearly how Muslims established this important precept of the moral teaching of the ’Qur~an
in their social life. At every point in their advance, Muslims destroyed unlawful practices and created a free and tolerant environment. In the areas of religion, language and culture, they made it possible for people totally opposite to each other to live under the same roof in freedom and peace, thereby giving to those subject to them the advantages of knowledge, wealth and position. Likewise, one of the most important reasons that the large and widespread Ottoman Empire was able to sustain its existence for so many centuries was that its way of life was directed by the tolerance and understanding brought by Islaam.
For centuries Muslims have been characterized by their tolerance and compassion. In every period of time they have been the most just and merciful of people. All ethnic groups within this multi-national community freely practiced the religions they have followed for years and enjoyed every opportunity to live in their own cultures and worship in their own way.
Indeed, the particular tolerance of Muslims, when practiced as commanded in the ’Qur~an, can alone bring peace and well-being to the whole world. The ’Qur~an refers to this particular kind of tolerance:
A good action and a bad action are not the same. Repel the bad with something better and, if there is enmity between you and someone else, he will be like a bosom friend. (Chapter of Fu’s’silat, verse 34)
Conclusion
All this shows that the moral teaching offered to humanity by Islaam is one that will bring peace, happiness and justice to the world. The barbarism that is happening in the world today under the name of “Islaamic Terrorism” is completely removed from the moral teachings of the ’Qur~an; it is the work of ignorant, bigoted people, criminals who have nothing to do with religion.
The solution which will be applied against these individuals and groups that are trying to commit their deeds of savagery under the guise of Islaam, will be the instruction of people in the true moral teaching of Islaam.
In other words, the religion of Islaam and the moral teachings of the ’Qur~an are not the supporters of terrorism and the terrorists, but the remedy by which the world can be saved from the scourge of terrorism.