The Curse of God: Why I Left Islam
By Harris Sultan and Ali A. Rizvi
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About this ebook
The book starts with a little introduction of the author—how and why he became an ex-Muslim—and it is followed up with the importance of writing the book. The first chapter covers the importance of critical sense over common sense and how we should always invoke critical thinking when it comes to looking at the world around us. The book also covers some arguments for God and some counterarguments against God’s existence. It discusses the importance of God in keeping the morality of the society and the mental well-being of the human species. It also discusses the baggage that comes with religion, leaving our only lives here on planet earth devoid of pleasure and enjoyment. Moreover, it discusses the scientific flaws in the Quran and argues how it looks like a book written by a seventh century Arab warlord rather than the creator of the billions of galaxies. It discusses the critical and sensitive topic of the character of Allah (Muslim God) and Muhammad in light of the Quran, Hadith (collection of Muhammad’s quotes), and the biography of Muhammad. It gives a detailed account of Muhammad’s wives and violence in his life. In the last part of the book, the author discusses the rise of Islamism in the western world and its dangers. Finally, it educates its readers on how to debate with a religious apologist and some common arguments and techniques employed by them. It is a very interesting read into Islam from an ex-Muslim’s point of view and the best guide to learning Islam.
Harris Sultan
Harris Sultan is an Australian ex-Muslim atheist of Pakistani descent. Harris moved to Australia at the age of 19 and was exposed to the big wide world other than his hometown of Lahore, Pakistan. He credits Richard Dawkins for exposing the counter arguments against God resulting in his Atheism however, the honest study of Quran and Muhammad’s biography moved him away from Islam. Harris’ deep understanding of Islam and his ability to explain the flaws of Islam in the simplest of styles makes his book, blogs and videos the best way to understand Islam. Harris enjoys a huge following on social media where he stays in contact with the plight of ex-Muslims and gives voice to the cause of encouraging ex-Muslims to come out.
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The Curse of God - Harris Sultan
Copyright © 2018 by Harris Sultan.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2018910635
ISBN: Hardcover 978-1-9845-0213-1
Softcover 978-1-9845-0212-4
eBook 978-1-9845-0211-7
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright owner.
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.
Rev. date: 12/19/2018
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Contents
Foreword for the Curse of God by Ali A. Rizvi
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Art of Thinking
Change of Mind
Chapter 2 The Necessity of Religion
Depression
Chapter 3 The Baggage of Religion
Chapter 4 The God Hypothesis
The Character of God
Angry
Hatred for Women
Vengeful
Genocidal
Simply Evil
Some Other Problems with God
Chapter 5 The Character of Muhammad
Violent
Womanising
First Woman
Second Woman
Third Woman
Fourth Woman
Fifth Woman
Sixth Woman
Seventh Woman
Eighth Woman
Ninth Woman
Tenth Woman
Eleventh Woman
Twelfth Woman
Thirteenth Woman
Fourteenth Woman
Fifteenth Woman
Sixteenth Woman
Seventeenth Woman
Eighteenth Woman
Nineteenth Woman
Twentieth Woman
Twenty-first Woman
Twenty-second Woman
Twenty-third Woman
Twenty-fourth Woman
Tyrannical
Cult Leader
Death of Muhammad
Chapter 6 Morality
Chapter 7 The Quran
Is the Quran the Word of God?
Scientific Inaccuracies of the Scripture
The Big Bang
Embryology
First Way
Second Way
Salt and Fresh Water Fallacy
Body of the Pharaoh (Ramses II)
Knowledge of the Mountains
Darkness in the Sea
The Quran and the Cerebrum
Rain and Hail
Flat Earth
Geocentric Model
Sun and Moon Being Similar
Moon Splitting
Flying Horse
Jonah and His Whale
The Sky as a Physical Object
Thoughts Come from the Heart
Purity of Milk
The Purpose of Animals
Authenticity
Incorrect Verses
Lost Verses
Modification of the Quran
Violence
Meccan Verses
Medinan Verses
Chapter 8 Islamophobia
Chapter 9 How to Debate with a Muslim Apologist
1. Claims Absent of Reason
2. Claims with Some Reason
UME Technique
3. Unfalsifiable Claims
GOL technique
Circular Logic
Personal Beliefs Are Sacred
Common Excuses
Final Word
References
FOREWORD FOR THE CURSE OF GOD by Ali A. Rizvi
We have all heard of lapsed Catholics from magazine articles and stand-up comedians. In the Jewish community, secular Jews are almost the default. Former Hasidics are featured in award-winning Netflix documentaries. Ex-Scientologists frequently score lucrative book and TV deals.
What, then, of the ex-Muslim? Is it really reasonable to assume that the world’s second largest religious community – numbering over 1.6 billion – is the only one that hasn’t produced any significant number of freethinking individuals who favour reason over faith, and morality over piety?
Of course it isn’t. Yet while lapsed Catholics, ex-Hasidics, and ex-Scientologists are embraced – even celebrated – ex-Muslims are somehow dismissed as a fringe faction, as Islamophobic ‘native informants’, or as self-hating traitors who are party to the demonisation of Muslims by the anti-Muslim populist far-right.
This, dear readers, is bigotry. It assumes that Muslims are uniquely unable to tolerate dissent, satire or even dialogue. This book, then, is much more than just a riveting account of why a once-believing young Muslim man lost his faith in pursuit of truth and moral consistency; it is also an opportunity for Muslims to engage in the kind of dialogue they are widely thought to be incapable of.
All of us who live in liberal Western democracies are beneficiaries of the Age of Enlightenment. Our fundamental values and rights – of free expression, individual liberty, equal rights and democracy – are the result of courageous freethinkers who challenged the European theocracies and religious orthodoxies of their time. So brutal and powerful were these regimes that they make today’s Islamic State look like amateurs.
Thomas Jefferson, who incorporated these enlightenment ideals into the U.S. Declaration of Independence, is famously known to have taken a razor blade to the Bible, stripping it of all supernatural claims and superstition. Rather than building a nation on the basis of ‘Judeo-Christian values’, as some erroneously claim, America’s founding fathers did quite the opposite: they founded their nation as a deviation from Judeo-Christian values. The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution throws up a wall between religion and state, while guaranteeing free speech and free expression.
Today, this Age of Enlightenment is dawning again – in the Muslim world.
Like Voltaire, Rousseau and Jefferson, countless young men and women across the world’s Muslim communities are openly questioning the religion of their parents and organising as they never could before. Just as the advent of the printing press opened up the contents of a once-opaque Bible to the average person, the Internet has made the contents of the Quran transparent to any pre-adolescent child with basic Google skills. When I grew up in the 1980s, we had a Quran on the top of a bookshelf in the living room. It was in a language we didn’t understand, and it could not be touched, much less opened or read, without a purification ritual called wudhu. Most Muslims, while revering the book as sacred, had no more than a vague familiarity with its contents. For those of us who did wish to read and understand it, finding all of the verses related to a certain topic took hours of perusal and bookmarking, preferably of a translation that was acceptable to most Muslims (most weren’t). In contrast, today children can conduct keyword searches of the entire Quran by topic, compare dozens of translations side by side, delve into etymology, grammar and syntax, and share everything they’ve learned with their friends – in minutes.
Why don’t we hear about it then? The answer to this question is as simple as it is unfortunate. The few who have dared to speak out in Muslim-majority countries have had to bear dire consequences. My friend Raif Badawi continues to be imprisoned in Saudi Arabia, separated from his wife and children for over six years as of this writing. His crime? Blogging about the separation of religion and state in his country. The charge? ‘Insulting Islam.’ Secular bloggers like Avijit Roy in Bangladesh have been hacked to death with machetes in broad daylight for writing a book challenging religion and promoting science and rationality. Iran executed the 37-year-old Mohsen Amir Aslani in 2014 for questioning the story of Jonah (Yunus in the Quran) and the big fish he allegedly lived in. Mashal Khan was lynched to death by a mob of university students – yes, university students, who killed him openly on campus – for, among other things, asking questions about Adam and Eve. This is just a superficial sampling of the people who have stepped up to speak openly. There are many more we never hear of. And there are still more that don’t bother speaking up in the first place. You may now understand why. Thirteen countries in the world currently punish atheism with death. All are Muslim-majority. Even in countries where the government doesn’t get you, the mob will.
Recently, Muslim governments have begun to crack down harder on the non-believers in their populations. Saudi Arabia has declared atheism to be a terrorist offense. Malaysia has announced its intention to actively hunt down atheists. Pakistan is doubling down on its blasphemy laws, trying to get everyone, from the UN to YouTube, to support them. Similar crackdowns are underway in Iran and Egypt.
This sounds like bad news – until you ask yourself why.
Why the crackdown? Why the desperation?
It is in the answer to these questions that one finds encouragement: apostasy is on the rise in unprecedented numbers in the Muslim world. In this book, you will read about these numbers, which – as eye-opening as they may be – are almost certainly under-reported because of the dire risks and consequences involved. Even in the United States, a recent Pew Research poll found that almost a quarter of children born to American Muslim families no longer identify with the faith. To the outsider, this may not be hard to believe since it is consistent with the increasingly large numbers of youth leaving religion in general. However, for Muslims, it is undoubtedly new.
Both the left and the right get it wrong when it comes to Islam and Muslims. For many on the left, any criticism of Islam is seen as bigotry against all Muslims; for many on the right, problematic parts of Islamic doctrine are assumed to be the beliefs of all Muslims. Both sides make one key mistake: they conflate ‘Islam’, which is a set of ideas, with ‘Muslims’, who are living, breathing people. Islam can be challenged and criticised, because ideas and books don’t have rights and protections. Muslims should not be demonised or discriminated against, because human beings do have rights and protections. Challenging ideas moves societies forward. Demonising people rips societies apart.
In The Curse of God, Harris Sultan deftly strikes this balance with intelligence, honesty and compassion. His criticism of Islam, the faith of his ancestors, is scathing and unapologetic, yet rooted in dispassionate and thoroughly researched reasoning. This book will help questioning Muslims realise they are not alone in their doubts. It will help the Muslim parents of sceptical children understand that their choices are not an affront to their upbringing but an attempt to live a life that is morally consistent and free of cognitive dissonance. It will help far-left apologetics understand that diversity doesn’t just occur between groups, but also among the individuals within them. It will help far-right identitarians understand that the Muslim world isn’t monolithic, but also contains within it millions of dissidents, freethinkers and secularists who value freedom over authoritarianism.
When freethinkers in Europe challenged Christianity, we called it the Age of Enlightenment, and we benefit from it to this day. Now that freethinkers in the Muslim world are risking their lives and livelihoods to challenge Islam, it would be an injustice to call it anything else.
—Ali A. Rizvi
Introduction
It is likely that when this book is published, I will have a fatwa or two on my life, possibly by the tyrant regime of Iran, the Taliban of Pakistan, or worse, one of the ISIS agents in Australia. The threat of Hizb ut-Tahrir’s extremism is always present in Australia. However, this will not stop people like me from lifting the curtain off what is a seemingly peaceful and harmless organised religion, specifically Islam. The purpose of this book is not to offend the followers of any particular religion but to educate people on how to think about religion. You might assume that even religious apologists would not object to learning how to think rather than being told what to think. But even though they will not disagree with it openly, they will still encourage people to blindly follow scriptures written by men thousands of years ago. Obviously, I am not suggesting that we shouldn’t pay any attention to thinkers or philosophers from thousands of years ago, but we should always consider new information with an open mind and be able to question the teachings no matter who wrote them or when.
This book is not written to discuss the lack of possibility of existence of any particular god but of all gods, whether Zeus or Yahweh, Vishnu or Allah. Although most of the references in this book will be in relation to Allah or the Islamic God, it is not my intention to condemn only Allah. The reason why Allah is mentioned before any other god is simply because that is the religion I’m the most familiar with.
Although I started questioning the plausibility of Islam from the age of 9 or 10, I had not begun to denounce religion altogether until I read alternative ideas and counter-arguments against traditional religious arguments. It would be a blatant lie to say that only one book changed my mind, but I must mention Prof Richard Dawkins, who inspired me to think outside the religious box. It was a rather long and painful journey coming out of the fairy tale–like, magical world of religion and into the wonderful world that the sciences have introduced to us. I must admit that although it was painful, I am glad I went this way, thinking independently rather than being told what to think. I am thankful to the hundreds of educators out there who wholeheartedly and tirelessly spend their lives telling people that there is an alternative to religion. Science is an alternative that gives us answers rather than mystifying the natural world and natural processes that religion has told us not to think about. It answers questions such as how the world came into being or how life evolved on our planet. Religion tells us that God created everything without telling us ‘how’. This assertion leaves us with an even bigger problem: who created God? Obviously, religion has no credible answer, at least no answer that doesn’t just give rise to further questions without answers.
It is the aim of this book to reach out to moderate religious people, especially Muslims, who listen to music or wonder what is so wrong about falling in love with a fellow human being outside of wedlock, people who don’t agree with stoning adulterers to death or chopping the hands off thieves, etc. Some Western readers might think that I will not have a large audience as not a lot of Muslims think like that, but let me assure you – there are far more moderate Muslims than religious nuts like the Taliban or Hezbollah; I know this is the case at least in Pakistan. As I was raised in Pakistan, most of the views will be narrowed down to Pakistani Muslims and Islam; however, I must state again that this book is not only about Muslims or Pakistani Muslims. It is for all the people who ask if the stories about gods and angels are lies. It is for Muslims who like to explore the world and sing songs, listen to music, those who might be homosexual, who enjoy movies and appreciate paintings depicting other humans or animals, those who might want to treat women equally, who might want to slaughter animals humanely, etc. Yes, let me surprise you; all these ‘acts’ are actually prohibited by various sects of Islam.
We have thousands of Muslim musicians, actors, actresses, and activists who stand against inhumane systems such as Sharia, who advocate for the freedom of women and animal rights, etc., not to mention millions more who actually support and idolise these musicians, artists, and activists. These include some great Muslim thinkers and even scientists, such as the only Muslim Nobel Prize winner in physics, Prof Abdus Salam, famous cricketer and now Prime Minister Imran Khan of Pakistan, Mahathir Muhammad of Malaysia, Pervez Musharraf, and many more. I admire all these people for some of the great work they have achieved for humanity instead of glorifying Allah, but I give credit for their efforts to them only. I don’t expect them to change their way of thinking.
This book is written for those Muslims who unknowingly disagree with the values that are fundamentals of Islam. My message to all these in-between Muslims is to either denounce Islam altogether (since you disagree with its values) or become like the Taliban or ISIS since they are the true followers of Muhammad’s Islam. It may seem harsh, but the true Islam is actually the Islam of the Taliban and ISIS, and by living a double life, I am certain, if there was a God, he would not be happy with you for accepting some of his ideas and ignoring the rest.
Lastly, the real audience of this book is the Muslim women who are being abused by this religion. I cannot comprehend the sorrow and sense of powerlessness a woman has every day in a male-dominated religion. Any sane person understands how important women are in producing the society of not only today but also of tomorrow, yet women are treated as if their sole purpose is to produce babies and serve their men. I would like to reach out to those women who are being abused and discriminated against by their husbands, brothers, or fathers and encourage and empower them to raise children who will be like anything but those husbands, brothers, or fathers.
Why Write This Book?
People like us don’t criticise religion just because it’s a lie; we do it because it is a very dangerous lie. We don’t get a kick out of destroying myths that are so dear to a large part of the human population; we are forced to do it because of the dangers these myths bring to another large part of human civilisation.
The biggest motivation to write this book came from my knowledge of the rising number of atheists in Muslim communities. Even though I had been an atheist for over ten years, I was somewhat sceptical towards the rise of atheism in the Muslim world. I always had a strong intuition that there were atheists in Pakistan, but I had no idea about the number. To find out more, I started a Facebook page to interact with some ex-Muslim atheists. Within weeks, I started getting thousands of likes from Indian and Pakistani Muslims, Hindus, and atheists. I was contacted by thousands of angry Muslims wishing death on me, but I was also contacted by thousands of ex-Muslims living in Pakistan in total fear for their lives. How can I keep quiet when I know there are thousands of people like me in a country I once called home, being persecuted, discriminated against, and having their most basic of human rights violated?
You all would have heard that Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world. It is, but mainly because of high reproduction rates rather than adult conversions. There is no evidence to suggest that the number of adults converting to Islam is higher than the number of adults leaving it.
Let’s look at the rising number of atheists in some Muslim countries:
I figure the number could be much higher than the ones reflected in this Gallup index of 2012 as atheism is a taboo with serious consequences in the Muslim world. Moreover, there are a lot more Muslim countries than the ones mentioned in the above table, so you can easily assume the number of atheists in predominantly Muslim countries is far greater than thirteen million.
It is absolutely imperative for people like me to raise our voices against the barbarity of the religious establishment. We are simply asking you to stop killing us just because we no longer believe in your fairy tales. Even making this request offends this religious establishment so much that they are happy to issue fatwas for our deaths. History has shown us the only way to destroy taboos is to talk about them openly, hence this book and many others from writers like me.
We have to keep ridiculing and offending subscribers to bad ideas. As a result of the ridicule of the last ten years, Saudi Arabia has now allowed women to drive, yet since 2013, forty-eight secularists and atheist bloggers have been killed by Islamists in Bangladesh alone for ‘offending’ religious groups. We have to keep ridiculing the Islamic establishment for killing apostates so that they stop killing them. Unfortunately, some of us might die in the process, but that is no reason to stop fighting for it. In 2017, Mashal Khan made news all over the world as he was lynched and brutally murdered by an Islamist mob for ‘blasphemous’ Facebook posts. Pakistani authorities arrested Ayaz Nizami, a Facebook blogger in early 2017, and as of 29th of August 2018, we have no idea about his fate. He is also accused of blasphemy and, if convicted, could receive the death penalty. Because of these incidents, atheists live in constant fear in these countries and are reluctant to come out. On my Facebook page, most of these atheists from Muslim countries have created fake Facebook profiles to avoid being targeted by the authorities. This has to stop. Writing this book is one small effort to achieve that goal.
Why Did I Leave Islam?
This is a question I get asked by a lot of people: Why did I leave Islam? At what point did I decide that it was over? The answer is not very simple as there was no single moment when my belief in Islam – and later God in general – was eradicated.
I was born in Lahore, Pakistan, in a Muslim household; my whole family is still Muslim, and they love their religion. But I was a little different. I had questions. As a kid, I asked other kids questions, but they either didn’t know the answers or simply had no interest in finding them. I remember around the age of 9 or 10, I asked my mother who created everything, and when she said Allah did, I asked who created Allah; she had no answer.
My mother, despite my atheism, still loves me and did not want me to write this book. She could not convince me why I