Taqiyya and Da’wa

The Muslim Brotherhood Project is unusual not because it out lines a strategic plan to establish a world Islamic caliphate but because it includes methods other than violence, to implement cultural jihad. One of the hallmarks of the Muslim Brotherhood is to use two principles: Taqiyya and Da’wa.

Taqiyya is the Islamic practice of “concealing or disguising one’s belief, convictions, ideas, feelings, opinions and/or strategies at a time of eminent dangers, whether now or later in time, to save oneself from physical and/or mental injury. Taqiyya is also used as justification for lies and deceit to advance the cause of Islam.

Da’wa is the act of inviting non-Muslims to accept the truth of Islam. Da’wa involves both words and actions and is frequently practiced in public schools in America and Western communities.

Both manipulate Westerners to make them believe that Islam is a peaceful religion and its doctrines are written to help all mankind. In contrast to this Islamic principle, people raised in Judo-Christian cultures are taught from childhood that lying is bad and honesty is good. So when Westerners here Muslims heads say the Muslim religion is all about peace we tend to believe them. It is not lying to them, they would probably pass a lie detector test with flying colors, telling the untruth to an infidel is not a lie. In our ignorance we support the spread of Islamic practices and culture in the West, and do so in the name of tolerance, understanding and multiculturalism. Another way to put it is we are getting taken over slowly, with a smile and a lie.

This is a documented fact according to both ancient and modern scholars of Islam.  The renowned classical Islamic scholar and theologian Abu Hamid Mumammad al-Ghazali (1058-1111) instructs that “speaking is a means to achieve objectives” and that “it is permissible to lie if attaining the goal is permissible.”  More recently Amir Taheri states that according to Islam, “muslims have every right to lie and to deceive their adversaries and a promise made to a non-muslim can be broken whenever necessary.”

According to Abdullah al-Araby: within Islam there are certain provisions under which lying is not simply tolerated, but actually encouraged.  The book The spirit of Islam by the Muslim scholar Afif A Tabbarah, was written to promote Islam, On page 247 Tabbarah stated: “Lying is not always bad, to be sure, there are times when telling a lie is more profitable and better for the general welfare, and for the settlement of conciliation among people, than telling the truth.  To this effect, the Prophet says: ‘He is not a false person who [through lies] settles conciliation among people,, supports good or says what is good.