Prophet Muhammad and His Western Critics A Critique of W. Montgomery Watt and Others by Zafar Ali Qureshi, Idara Ma'arif Islamic, Lahore, 1992, 2 Vols, p. 1103.

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Ibrahim Kalin

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Abstract

This book by the Pakistani scholar Zafar Ali Qureshi is devoted to an
important aspect of the relationship between Islam and the West.
The image of the Prophet Muhammad (pbu) produced by western scholars
of Islam has determined, in many ways, the parameters of the relationship
between the two religions and the respective civilizations to which they
have given rise. The main argument of Qureshi's extremely well-researched
book is that the western scholarship bred by the centuries-old
Christian prejudices against Islam has tried to undermine the religious and
intellectual basis of Islam by undermining the central place and authority of
the Prophet of Islam. This strategy was in no way accidental, because the
Christian conception of religion takes as the basis of the Divine revelation
not the revealed book, i.e., the Qur'an or the Bible, but Jesus Christ. Seen
through the eyes of Christology, Islam could not be anything other than
'Muhammadanism', and any scholarly treatment of it was bound to be
based on the figure of the Prophet of Islam. It was within this framework
that a number of historicist and materialist accounts were given to prove
that the Prophet Muhammad was not an authentic prophet and that his
motives were basically political, tribal or economic.
The number of books produced in this line of spurious scholarship is
immense, and Qureshi has carried out an immense survey of western
literature on the life and personality of the Prophet. Although the author
spans through hundreds of books produced in the West, he focuses on the
work of Rev. Montgomery Watt, the celebrated western scholar of Islam.
The reason for this concentration is that Watt's two-volume work on the ...

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