Dave Belton for School Board
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The Crusades

Crusades:

 

The Crusades: The First Islamic War on Christianity

Once upon a time, about a thousand years ago, some Christian leaders found it politically expedient to tell their followers to wage war in the name of God. Because modern-day Christians are members of that same faith, we have no business drawing distinctions between ourselves and any other faith.

No. That is liberal guilt. It has blinded our reason and neutered our resolve.

Contrary to popular opinion, the Crusades were not an unprovoked attack upon the poor, peaceful Muslims. Quite the contrary: they were a desperate military attempt to defend Christian Europe against Islamic aggressors. The Christians in the East, located in what historians now call the Byzantine Empire, had been under a relentless assault by Islamic jihadists for literally hundreds of years. After the disastrous Battle of Manzikert, the Christians were officially losing. The Byzantine emperor, Alexius, asked the Pope in Rome for help. Christian Europe, seeing their Christian brothers on the brink of extinction, responded.

Keep in mind these jihadists had already conquered the Holy Lands, all of northern Africa, all of the Middle East, modern day Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and much of India. They also overran Portugal, Spain, and parts of Italy. Even more disturbing, they conquered three of the five centers of Christianity: Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria. And they were besieging the fourth – Constantinople.

Most of these ravaged areas were Roman and Christian. In short, Western Culture was under assault by radical Islam. Sound familiar?

But perhaps the most striking part of this story is that few of us would guess that these four cities were once the epicenters of the early Christian Church. Christians in these cities were exterminated by Muslims, and we don't even know their names?

How did it happen? Islamic jihad.

The Muslims nearly conquered France – the most powerful country in Europe – but they were narrowly defeated at the Battle of Tours. This was probably the most important battle in history.

Even more alarming was when Rome – the last center of Christianity – was sacked by Muslim raiders. Most of Christendom had been lost. Western Europe was on its heels. Is it any wonder the Christians fought back?

I’m not defending the tactics employed during the Crusades. Nowadays, everyone (except the terrorists we fight) agrees that religious wars are a very bad thing. We don’t wage wars over religion anymore: it was a mistake – we’ve moved on – about a thousand years ago.

And that’s the point. The entire world has given up on this medieval idea – everyone except the jihadists who are stuck in their feudalistic past.

In fact, Islam is the only current religion that encourages violence. And like Communism, it is the only religion whose stated goal is to convert the rest of the world.

Some might think I’m drudging up useless history. No one cares about that ancient stuff.

Americans don’t care – I’ll grant you that. But consider this…

The high-water mark of Islamic expansion occurred in 1683. A vast, overwhelming Muslim army was about to accomplish something they’d been trying to do for centuries – conquer the jewel of classical Europe – Vienna.

The invaders had bombed out part of the wall and were ready to storm the Austrian capital. But a Polish king, John Sobieski, came to the rescue of his Christian neighbor, smashing the enemy in a daring cavalry charge. The ignoble defeat of the Muslim army – just when they were on the verge of a glorious success – was a source of humiliation for centuries to come.

The date? September the 11th.

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