100 years ago today, the last Caliph, or
emperor of Islam, declared the last Jihad against the infidel-- and
today is the first time ever that the National Cathedral in the nation's
capital will host Muslim prayers.
Most American's will have no idea that, as
part of World War I, the then-Caliph of the Ottoman empire declared a
Holy War against infidels, as was his right within sharia law and
Islamic theology. You can read the full fatwa
here (ignore the date of 1915 which is an original typo).
That statement by the last sitting head of what was the theocratic empire of Islam was the catalyst which led to
religiously-fueled genocide against Christian Armenians and Assyrians.
The Episcopal church leaders who agreed to
the host Muslim prayers inside the Washington cathedral probably have no
idea what happened a century ago in Asia Minor, or that there even was a
Caliph in office at the beginning of the 20th century.
However, we can rest assured that the
co-organizers do, for they include the Council on Islamic Relations
(CAIR), The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), The Muslim Public
Affairs Council (MPAC) and the All-Dulles Area Muslims Society (ADAMS)
Center.
Both CAIR and ISNA will be fully aware of the
significance of November 14th, seeing as both organizations were
declared by a federal court to be unindicted co-conspirators of Hamas,
the Muslim Brotherhood terror group, in
the largest terrorist financing trial in US history.
Those muslims who have a supremacist
understanding of their religion, such as members of Al Qaeda and the
Muslim Brotherhood - which was recently declared an illegal terrorist
organization in the country of its founding, Egypt - have a special
regard for historic dates and anniversaries.
It is, of course, no accident that the 9/11
attacks, the worst terror attacks in world history, occurred exactly to
the day in 1683 when the Islamic Ottoman forces were defeated outside
the city walls of Vienna, the deepest the Islamic Caliphate's forces
made it into the heart of the Christian West.
There is nothing inherently wrong about
interfaith initiatives as long as they start from the same place: a
mutual respect for the belief system of the other, and their inherent
dignity as humans created by God. When one party acts in bad faith based
upon its ideological commitment to see other faiths destroyed or
subjected, then the event runs the risk of becoming a propaganda coup
for the extremists and their followers.
We know that the Episcopal church is in trouble with
more conservative believers leaving in great numbers and
the remaining adherents not exactly outdoing their Catholic cousins in
terms of reproducing the next generation of believers. But I doubt they
also understand the finer points of jihadist doctrine, one of which is
that if a place of worship is used by Muslims for their prayers, that
territory subsequently becomes part of Dar al Islam, sacred muslim land.
Forever.
Sebastian Gorka PhD is the Major General
Matthew C. Horner Distinguished Chair of Military Theory at the Marine
Corps University, and national security and foreign affairs editor at
Breitbart.com. You can follow him on Twitter at: @SebGorka.