THE SILK ROAD EXHIBIT


NOTES ON THE SILK ROAD EXHIBIT

By Tabitha Korol August 2014

“Traveling the Silk Road,” at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, appears to be a small section of a larger, global exhibition, “1001 Inventions,” which, accompanied by an award-winning film, professes to be a revelation of a thousand years of scientific and cultural achievements by the Muslim world, with a nod to some contributing faiths and cultures. However, these faiths and cultures were victims of Muslim jihadists who, following in Mohammed’s footsteps, invaded the “infidel” world for more than 1400 years, enslaving, slaughtering, and plundering. Their greatest achievement was their ability to expropriate every creative, innovative, groundbreaking device of Islam’s victims and, defying all logic, fraudulently claim each as their own.

The Silk Road exhibit is a betrayal of its name and deception to the tourists, individuals, schoolteachers and students. Some of the visitors are of those cultures whose contributions were formidable, but were given scant recognition or complete disregard, thereby denying them the knowledge and sense of pride to be had upon learning that their heritage contributed to the growth of civilization along the early trade routes. This Islamic presentation allowed about 20 percent to China.

Islam’s growth in both religious adherents and these “achievements” emanated from their invasions into foreign lands, enforcing their will under penalty of death, and booty acquired from the invaded and enslaved cultures (the worst, the black African trade, was excluded). Slavery, including sexual slavery, is justified in the Qur’an and practiced in many countries, to this day.

Islam is socialism, and socialism is antithetical to creativity. Islam is based on envious hatred of what is noble, the aspirations and outstanding creative individuality in all fields of human endeavor. Muslims are enraged that a small Israel could smash the rocket launchers and their terror tunnels of Gaza, for example. They resent and hate human excellence, yet they take ownership of the ingenuity of others out of envy and deceit to entice.

The museum exhibit is just such an example of Muslims’ adopting achievements of others for their own acclaim, because they have produced nothing of value in 1400 years of existence. The majority of the Islamic world is illiterate, violent combatants who commit atrocities beyond the Western imagination – although we are beginning to learn of what these people are truly capable.

DEFINING THE SILK ROAD

The Routes Network ofChang’on-Cianshan Corridor, Eurasia

Silk 01

A vertical screen hangs at the entrance:

Silk 01a

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That this was an Islamic exhibit.

2. that Islam provides a martyr’s way to Paradise, which includes destruction, slavery, suicide and genocide, and looting.

3. That Islamic countries lead the world in illiteracy.

FACTS:

1. The most prominent reward promised Islamic Martyrs are the 72 Dark-Eyed Virgins in Paradise. A Palestinian religious leader explained, “…the purpose of authentic Islam is to fill Muslims with desire for Paradise” – the anticipation and love of death. He [Muhammad] said (in a Hadith, Islamic tradition): “[There is] a palace of pearls in Paradise and in it seventy courts of ruby… And in each court [there are] seventy houses of green emerald stone. In every house, seventy beds. On every bed, seventy mattresses of every color and on every mattress a woman.” (Hadith)

2. Sahih al-Bukhari HadithHadith 1.35 Narrated by Abu Huraira The Prophet said, “The person who participates in (Holy battles) in Allah’s cause and nothing compels him to do so except belief in Allah and His Apostles, will be recompensed by Allah either with a reward, or booty (if he survives) or will be admitted to Paradise (if he is killed in the battle as a martyr).” http://www.inthenameofallah.org/Shaheed%20OR%20Martyr.html

EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 02

HISTORIC BACKGROUND:

Ancient Chinese guarded the silk production secret for centuries. Ottoman Turks and Persians fought over it; English and French competed to restrict its markets, but every culture was touched by silk. It was found aboard medieval Viking ships sailing out of Constantinople, as kerchiefs from India and as silk bandanas brought by pirates and worn by American cowboys. Damask silk of Damascus, Syria, was actually from China. Martha Washington wore a dress of Virginia silk to George’s inauguration, and Native Americans learned silk embroidery to decorate traditional apparel.

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That the Persian and Babylonian Jews pioneered the intercontinental trade and the Silk Road.

2. It is likely that “Arab traders” is an all-encompassing term to include all the people, religions and cultures that existed in the Middle East, that the Muslims captured and made their own. In fact, the Arab ethnic groups included Lebanese, Syrians, Emiratis, Qataris, Saudis, Bahrainis, Kuwaitis, Iraqis, Omanis, Jordanians, Yemenis, Sudanese, and Egyptians. These were not all Arab, in fact; neither were they of the same original religion; the exhibit is misleading.

FACTS:

1. Intercontinental trade was pioneered by Persian Jews who forged the “Silk Route” to the heart of China in the fifth century BCE. Augustus, first Roman emperor, is said to have commissioned “the first travel guide” from Isidore of Charax (a Greco-Roman geographer of the 1st century BC and 1st century AD). Centuries later, while the Europeans were still deep in the Dark Ages, Persian Radhanite scholar/travelers (medieval Jewish merchants who traded between the Christian and Islamic worlds, 500-1000 AD) pioneered land and sea trade routes to the Far East. “These merchants speak Arabic, Persian, Roman, Frankish, Spanish, and Slavonic,” wrote Ibn Khurdadhih in the ninth century CE, “They travel from East to West and from West to East by land as well as by sea.” They also spoke Hebrew and Aramaic.

2. The Silk Route was pioneered by Babylonian Jews in the fifth century BCE. The Kaifeng, China synagogue complex was erected in 1163 to serve a community of three thousand worshipers, and to accommodate Jewish trader-travelers who came across Asia with their caravans.

 

Silk Road #2, Spices


Cinnamon, Cassia (the bark from which cinnamon is made), jade, camphor, and many other Chinese products were greatly in demand in the West. The earliest reference in any literature to the oriental products, cinnamon and cassia, occurs in Exodus 30:23: Moses is instructed to take “principal spices, of pure myrrh five hundred shekels, and of sweet cinnamon (kinamon besem) half so much.” In 30:24 he is likewise instructed to take “of cassia (kiddah) five hundred shekels.”]

1. Herodotus (485-425 BCE) stated that Kinnamomon (Greek) came from Canaan (3.111); the word in Exodus for cassia, kiddah, appears in Greek as Kitto. Another Biblical word, kes’iah (Psalms 45.9), became the Greek 2 The transcription of Aramaic words into the Greek language identifies the merchants who first brought these spices in the 5th c. BCE from the Orient to the Mediterranean.

2. Linen fabrics (Byssus) were as marketable in China as silk fabrics were in the west. One of the earliest centers of industrial weaving of fine linen fabrics was the city of Beth She’an. The Bible informs us that Beth She’an (“Scythopolis” by the Greeks), was a Canaanite town that fell to the forces of David. By the 3rd c. BCE, the Jews of Beth She’an achieved world fame as producers of fine fabrics. The Jerusalem Talmud refers to “the fine linen vestments which come from Beth She’an.”

3. Beth She’an is described as a city that supplies textiles to the world in the Latin Descriptus Orbis, 4th The superiority of the textiles and clothes made by Jews in Beth She’an was affirmed by Roman Emperor Diocletian, in 296 CE. The edict listed Judaic glassware (by Jews of Judah) and vitri Alessandrini (by Jews of Alexandria). Hadrian also asserted that Jews were the glassmakers of Alexandria.

4. Rabbi Chiyya bar Abba, a famous sage is named in the Bible, was involved with trading goods of glassware, flax, and linen along the Silk Route into China.

5. The tradition of travel and trade expanded into a world-girdling network of Jewish trade under the Rhadanites. Ibn Khurdadhibih, an Arab chronicler of the ninth century, wrote that “these merchants speak Arabic, Persian, Roman, Frankish, Spanish and Slavonic. They travel from East to West, and from West to East by land as well as by sea.” They also spoke Hebrew and Aramaic. The routes radiated out from the Jewish centers of population in the agricultural and industrial heart of Babylonia to Europe, North Africa, India, and China.

Silk Road #3, Merchants


EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 03

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That Sogdians were mainly Zoroastrian (a religion that exists today), yet linked to suggest they are Muslim craftsmen.

2. That Jews who worked at creating merchandise in Samarkand and produced much of the “beautiful objects” described in the exhibit sign, remain unidentified; the Aramaic alphabet may be a means of identification.

FACTS:

1. Sogdians were an ancient civilization of an Iranian people whose religion was Zoroastrianism. Although many converted to Islam, they may number up to 2.6 million today. Not politically aligned, Sogdiana’s various territories centered around Samarkand. They wrote in a variety of scripts derived from the Aramaic alphabet.

2. Most merchants tended to trade goods in a central oasis, and Sogdians established a trading network across the 1500 miles from Sogdiana to China, until they became the all-encompassing name for all merchants to trade with China’s Han Dynasty, into the 10th Their language became a lingua franca of trade; they taught their children to read at age 5. Sogdians worked as farmers, carpetweavers, glassmakers, and woodcarvers.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 04

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That the Sogdian designation for merchants of Samarkand remains The exhibits’ focus is promoting Islam.

2. That skill may have been needed to handle animals and people, named in a questionable order, unless the people are women and children who had been abducted into slavery.

FACTS:

1. The Silk Road exhibit is a tribute to the Islamic culture, with all negative characteristics whitewashed, removed, and replaced with positive traits usurped from the cultures conquered. Islam was and continues to be a culture of acquisition, subjugation, and genocide, responsible for the killing of 270 million people over 1400 years, to this day.

2. The countries involved in the Silk Route include China, Persian Empire, Greece (particularly maritime trade routes), and mainland Europeans. By religion, they were Jews, Zoroastrians, Buddhists, Romans, Grecians, Hindus, Pharoahans, Christian sects and Muslims.

3. Dating back about three millennia, the Jewish community in Iran is the oldest in Asia. Freed from slavery by Persia’s Emperor Cyrus in 539 BCE, they became an integral part of the Persian Empire. They travelled widely in Persian-dominated Afghanistan, the Caucasus and Caspian through Central Asia, and traded with displaced Turgik tribes, and Khazars (glassworks factories, c. 7th and 8th centuries). Persian Jews were merchants in Uzbekistan, Central Asian Silk Road in Bukhara and Samarkand, where major trading posts were established.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 05

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. Some inns provided sex workers to the Silk Road merchants; one Sogdian-language contract shows at least one Chinese bought a Sogdian girl in 639 AD. Earlier 7th century documents point to massive volume in the sex-slave trade, with some recorded marriages. One record shows a Sogdian merchant sold an 11-year-old girl for 40 bolts of silk.

2. That there was a flourishing slave trade. As a youth, Mohammed accompanied his uncle on the caravan expeditions, dealing in human slavery and trading the items looted from the conquered peoples.

3.The many cultures of travelers and slavers remain unidentified, although their grotesqueries are known and continue unabated.

 

Silk Road #4, Glass and Pottery


EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 06

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That glass making originated with the Jewish people, a secret maintained for the next 3,000 years.

2. That it had been considered an Egyptian discovery until an archaeological expedition unearthed the truth, and acknowledged in 1983.

FACTS:

1. The art of glassmaking was born in Akkadia, the Biblical locale in Mesopotamia, home of Terach, father of Abraham, ~2400 B.C.E. It was a Semitic, and then Jewish, art for the next three millennia. Unique among the arts, glassmaking was invented only once in all of human history and its spread was parallel and coincident with the dispersal of the Jews.

2. Manufactured glass was discovered by Dr. R. H. Hall on an archaeological expedition near the ancient city of Eridu, close to Abraham’s purported birthplace of Ur, in the winter of 1918-19. “Only one object of great interest has been found,” reported the astounded Hall, “… In the rubbish beneath the pavement was found a lump of opaque blue vitreous paste which I recognized as true glass… the most ancient piece of glass known.” The object’s date was fixed at between 2047-2038 B.C.E. Later, Akkadian glass, more than two centuries older, was found from buildings and cemeteries of the ancient city of Ur itself.

3. Museums and texts on glassmaking history had always cited Egypt as the birthplace. However, glassmaking depends on thick forests for fuel, requiring several tons of wood to produce just one kilogram of glass, and Egypt had no forests. Further, glass is liquefied silicate stone (quartz), and only a reverberatory furnace (absent from ancient Egypt technology) could achieve and maintain the necessary temperatures of 1200 degrees Celsius. Further, glassware couldn’t suddenly appear in 1500 BCE in 18th Dynasty tombs without a trace of hundreds of years of necessary development. Finally, there is no word for “glass” in Egyptian language (scribes used the Akkadian term) and there was no cobalt, the coloring for the glass, available in Egypt.

4. In 1983, Donald B. Harden, author of the catalogue of the British Museum’s collection of Greek and Roman Glass, finally removed all doubt, admitting, “During my two years at Ann Arbor and the next winter season on the excavating staff in Egypt, I naturally became too Egypto-oriented.”

5. Once manufactured, glass is easily melted and reformed into glassware. Delicate glassware was not transportable, but beads or amulets were. A Canaanite merchant vessel was found off the Turkish coast at the turn of the 14th century, with tons of cargo of glass ingots and eye-beads (beads overlaid with concentric rings of colored glass).   Glass was produced in Israel and Judah, and transported by Canaanites, whom Greeks called Phoenicians – “purple,” from the purple-stained hands and clothes of those who made purple dye.

6. Egyptians and Greeks made advances in glassmaking; Romans brought glass into everyday life by making it transparent at a lower temperature. They manufactured in bulk and transported throughout the Roman Empire via their vast trading infrastructure. The Roman love of glass evolved into the glass window, providing protection from the elements while delivering light. They developed the mirror at a lower cost, increasing effectiveness and longevity.

7. Roman innovation developed into glassblowing to produce delicate creative shapes, and into clear drinking vessels, for color, transparency and wine clarity.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 07

FACTS:

1.  The first evidence of this significant historical milestone was recovered from the 5th century BCE grave at Lo-yang. Glass beads to wear in the next world were among the artifacts buried with the deceased. The Chinese had no knowledge of glassmaking at that time.

2.  The beads were typical of eye beads made in Israel – overlaid with concentric rings of colored glass – and distributed around the Mediterranean by Canaanite seafarers (Phoenicians)

3.  Late BCE eye-beads found in Europe and the near East paralleled those found in China. The technique and composition of eye beads traded across Eurasia validates their common Near-Eastern origin.

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4.  Persian Jews were merchants in Uzbekistan, the Central Asian Silk Road in Bukhara and Samarkand (areas mentioned in exhibit, improperly credited), where major trading posts were established. Evidence of thriving Jewish settlements was found along the Eastern Silk Road, into Kaifeng, China (which included synagogues and Hebrew documents). For the next thousand years, Jewish glassware and linens were the principal goods exchanged for the silk and spices of China and India.

5.  Arabs traded with a variety of merchants and are known for taking proprietorship of the items produced by the peoples they conquered: Africans, Greeks, Jews; Jews traded with Persians, Georgians, Uzbeks, Chinese; Chinese traded with Indonesians, Thais, Sri Lankans. Bloodlines merged; cultural practices and foods were integrated, all blending to form the Great Silk Road.

EXHIBIT SIGNS:

Silk 09

Silk 10

FACTS:

1. Pottery originated during the Neolithic Ceramic objects like the Gravettian culture Venus of Dolní Věstonice figurine discovered in the Czech Republic date back to 29,000–25,000 BC, and pottery vessels discovered in Jiangxi, China date back to 20,000 BP (before present). Early Neolithic pottery has also been found in Jomon Japan (10,500 BC), the Russian Far East (14,000 BC), Sub-Saharan Africa and South America.

2. Pottery was in use in ancient India, including areas now forming Pakistan and northwest India, during the Mehrgarh Period II (5,500-4,800 BC) and Merhgarh Period III (4,800-3,500 BC), known as the ceramic Neolithic and chalcolithic. Pottery, including items known as the ed-Dur vessels, originated in regions of the Saraswati River / Indus River and were found in a number of sites in the Indus Civilization.

3. Early Islamic pottery followed the forms of the regions which the Muslims conquered. Eventually, however, there was cross-fertilization between the regions. One major emphasis in ceramic development in the Muslim world was the use of tile and decorative tilework.

Silk 11

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That Muslims were neither the first nor the only merchants to travel the seas.

2. That the Mediterranean Jews were responsible for opening up these trade routes.

FACTS:

1. Mediterranean Jews were entrepreneurs who controlled much of the trade in the region and developed the economies of those nations, which included Alexandria’s shipping; Syria’s markets; Beirut’s silk-production industry and textile dyeing; and the glass factories, with bead shapes and colorations that are traced to Near Eastern Jewish glass designs.

2. Persian/Jewish traders pioneered the route from the Near East to Kaifeng, then capital of Imperial China, 1700 years before Marco Polo set out on his journey from Venice to China.

3. Interestingly, a saying attributed to Marco Polo is: “The militant Muslim is the person who beheads the infidel, while the moderate Muslim holds the feet of the victim.”

Along another Silk Road

1.The Chinese systems (Buddhism and Confucianism) fused with Korea and Japan, creating a Golden Age, which included the construction of pagodas and temples.

2. Products of the Silk Road were found at a Buddhist Temple site in Korea: bronze iron scissors, glass Buddha beads, terra cotta figures, jade ornaments, bronze buckles, images and bells, pottery, metalworking. The Middle Kingdom (Korea) became proficient at making iron blades and tools, 500 – 400 BCE.

3. Japanese had imports from Silla of perfume, medicine, cosmetics, fabric-dyeing materials, metallic goods, musical instruments, carpets, measuring tool; silk came to Japan in 306 CE. Buddhism became Japan’s state religion in 372 CE.

4. Korea’s Koryu Dynasty (935-1392) had the world’s first metal-printing technology before Gutenberg; the world’s oldest printed book, the Jikji; the world’s oldest surviving complete transcription of the Buddhist cantons; the world-famous Celadon pottery; and development of Buddhism throughout the peninsula.

 

 

 

 

 

Silk Road #5, The Learned


EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 12

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That Chinese calligraphy was also considered beautiful, as were Hebrew and Western Calligraphy. At right, is an illuminated manuscript, decorated with gold and silver. The earliest surviving substantive illuminated manuscripts are from AD 400 – 600, preceding the appearance of Islam. These were initially produced in Italy and in the Eastern Roman Empire, the majority of them being of a religious nature.

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2. That they did not treat equally or fairly the qualities of other cultures, using “smeared” for ink application, and “magnificent, graceful, beautiful, flowing,” for Islamic writing; that Islam produced “stunning” discoveries, adjectives not applied to other cultures.

3. That if Islamic scholars led in all the sciences, why Islam is so backward now; that if they produced so many books, why they trail behind the western countries now.

4. That Islam has always taken on the cultures of the people through which it passed and looted, and kept the enslaved illiterate.

FACTS:

1. Islam’s practice of conquest was part of the directives of Mohammed; acquiring slaves and booty encouraged. Therefore, the spoils of war made it practically unnecessary to strive for values of the western world. When masters have workers, they no longer need to learn or be productive; hence the population is devalued and creativity and production suffer dramatically.

2. As seen in the Koran and other Islamic scriptures, Muslims were barbarian, slaughtering wherever they went in whatever cultures they met, and the same exists today. Therefore, how is it possible that they can claim a lofty culture in the middle (the Golden Age, for example)? And if this were actually so, what caused the changes from barbarian to civilized and the subsequent reversal.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 14

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

Once conquest was made, survivors of the slaughter were converted to Islam. Therefore, it might be prudent to question the original identity of those who owned and ran the paper manufacturers/mills, again in Samarkand, where we know that a large Jewish population existed.

FACTS:

1. The world’s oldest paper book is Chinese, AD 256; with the oldest printed book (using woodblock printing) from China’s Han dynasty (202 BC-AD), although discoveries suggest paper was used more than 10 years before, in 8 BC. After the Muslim defeat of the Chinese in the Battle of Talas in 751 (today Kyrgyzstan), the invention spread to the Middle East.; the first paper mill was founded in Samarkand.

2. The use of water-powered pulp mills for preparing the pulp material used in papermaking dates back to 8th Samarkand, The Muslims introduced the use of trip hammers (human- or animal-powered) in the production of paper, replacing the traditional Chinese mortar and pestle method. By the 9th century, Arabs were using paper regularly for their Qur’an; Arabs made books lighter, although vellum was preferred for the Qur’an. By the 12th century in Marrakech in Morocco, a street was named Kutubiyyin or booksellers, which contained more than 100 bookshops. (Ketubim means “writings” in Hebrew)   Chinese later employed the trip-hammer.

3. Since the First Crusade in 1096, paper manufacturing in Damascus had been interrupted by wars. Egypt continued with the thicker paper, while Iran produced the thinner papers. Papermaking was diffused across the Islamic world, from where it was diffused further west into Europe. Paper manufacture was introduced to India in the 13th century by Arab merchants, where it almost wholly replaced traditional writing materials.

4. In America, archaeological evidence indicates that a similar bark-paper writing material, amatl, was used by the Mayans no later than the 5th century AD. It was in widespread use among Mesoamerican cultures until the Spanish conquest. Paper making as more common to the European practice spread to the American continent first in Mexico by 1575 and then in Philadelphia by 1690.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 15

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. What happened to all these students of learning where now exists an illiterate, death-cult society.

2. That the Qur’an encourages violence, death, and plundering. Therefore, if the Arabs indeed studied this way, what caused the drastic deterioration of their culture.

3. If the conquered people, the People of the Book (dhimmis), were permitted access to the libraries.

FACTS:

1. An important reason for Judaic survival is that manual labor was never reviled In Judaism, but traditionally respected. Labor leads to artisanship and to literacy for a fulfilled life. Therefore, Jews were also prominent among the craftsmen and technicians at the junctures of civilization where industry, technology, and commerce flourished. The market for Judaic artisanship was universal. Art is inherent to artisanship. The former soars in the world of the imagination, and the latter produces the practical things that enhance the environment and prosperity. Through the written word, the reverence of learning, artisanship, and the subjective arts of imagery, Jews became quintessentially a creative people and creativity was their salvation.

2. Unlike the Torah, the Qur’an does not encourage reading and artisanship. The Qur’an exhorts violence, looting, enslavement and murder. Enslavement encourages sloth in the master.   We can wonder what happened to the virtual paradise in Baghdad when writers and readers were not rewarded for industry. Why and how did this magnificence die, so that the various illiteracy rates reach as low as 15.2%.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 16

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That writing was invented in Sumeria, the fertile crescent of Iraq; 3500 BCE.

2. That other cultures produced beautiful writing, also considered art forms.

FACTS:

1. With the introduction of Christianity, came magnificent illuminated manuscripts (manu – hand; script – written), made mainly by monks and nuns in monastic scriptorium. A scribe did the calligraphy (Greek: kali – beautiful; graphia – writing); an illuminator decorated the book; a bookbinder sewed the pages into book format, made the leather binding with gold and precious colors. The Tres Riches Heures and The Book of Kells are two examples of famous exquisite manuscripts that have survived to this day.

2. Of existing examples of historical ketubot (marriage contracts) from Jewish communities around the world, the vast majority fall into the category of floral and ornamental. Jewish ketubah artists drew on the natural world for inspiration, avoiding graven images, and were as diverse as the countries where produced – florals of Italy, Morocco, India and Afghanistan. Others are of historical design, formal, or stylized, folk or contemporary art.

3. Chinese calligraphy is considered an art form, widely practiced and revered in Asia – Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam, China, and Japan. The characters can be traced to 4000 BC, and are closely related to ink and wash paintings. They are distinguishable from other cultural arts because they emphasize motion. Calligraphy has led to the development of many forms of art in china, including seal carving, ornate paperweights, and inkstones. In Imperial China, the graphs on old steles, dating back to 200 BC, are still accessible.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 17

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

The books were Indian; the symbols were Indian; and the Islamic mathematician wrote the book using Indian symbols, yet the numerals are called “Arabic,” another example of undeserved credit and historic revisionism.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

Silk 18

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That the term “scholars” is used only for Muslims, and presented as an isolated phenomenon, unknown to other cultures.

2. That the intent is to usurp the inventions and creativity from other cultures and subtly present them as Islamic.

3. In a show of multiculturalism, there were several one-minute slides, questions and answers on a screen. One slide asked about the music of Matisyahu, “An American singer,” who identifies himself as an orthodox Jew and sings a combination of Hebrew and reggae. The “correct answer” was given only as reggae.

FACTS:

1. Muslims translated Greek works into Arabic, but the exhibit implies that they, not the Greeks, are to be credited with the scientific achievements. Arabs introduced the Indian numeric system as Arabic numerals.

2. Several references to China’s accomplishments were shown as hinged on products from around the world, insinuating that China could not have progressed without the aid of Arabs.

 

Silk Road #6, Inventions


EXHIBIT SIGNS:

Silk 19

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WHAT WASN’T SAID:

That they may have originated in Cairo, Egypt, but also in Babylon, India, China, with the probability of China as early as 4000 BCE, none of which had Islamic scholars or craftsmen.

FACTS:

1. The huge planetary clock-type models, driven by water and considered the forerunners of today’s mechanical clocks, originated during the 1th century and were discovered in China, the Middle East and in North America.

2. A water clock or clepsydra (Greek κλέπτειν kleptein, ‘to steal’; ὕδωρ hydor, ‘water’) is any timepiece in which time is measured by the regulated flow of liquid into (inflow type) or out from (outflow type) a vessel where the amount is then measured. These and the sundials are likely to be the oldest time-measuring instruments, with the only exceptions being the vertical gnomon and the day-counting tally stick. 

3. Their precise origin may never be known, but the bowl-shaped outflow (simplest form) is known to have existed in Babylon and in Egypt around the 16th century BC. Other regions of the world, India and China, also have early evidence of water clocks, dates less certain. Some authors claim that water clocks appeared in China as early as 4000 BC. Therefore, it should be suggested that the inventor could be Chinese, Babylonian, Egyptian, or Indian, but not Islamic.

4. The Greeks and Romans advanced water clock designs to include the inflow clepsydra with an early feedback system, gearing, and escapement mechanism, which were connected to fanciful automata and resulted in improved accuracy. Further advances were made in Byzantium, Syria, and Mesopotamia, where increasingly accurate water clocks incorporated complex segmental and epicyclic gearing, water wheels, and programmability, advances that eventually made their way to Europe. Independently, the Chinese also developed gears escapement mechanism, and water wheels, and passed them on to Korea and Japan.

5. Some water clock designs were developed independently and some knowledge was transferred through the spread of trade. These early water clocks were calibrated with a sundial replaced by the ore accurate pendulum clocks in 17th-c. Europe.

Silk Road #7, Navigation


EXHIBIT SIGN:
Silk 21

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That many people sailed the Indian Ocean, and other cultures’ accomplishments were ignored.

2. That the history of navigation in the Indian Ocean goes back about 4,000 years ago, during the days of Pharaohs, when the Egyptian seafarers sailed to the country of Punt, the coast of Somalia or the Mozambique coast of gold and incense; and the Sumerians and Jews who were traversing the Persian Gulf.

3. Maritime links between the ancient city of Lothal in India and Mesopotamia are known to have existed, and other traders in the Western Indian Ocean were the Phoenicians, Greeks, and Romans.

FACTS:

The results of human genetic and archaeological research provide us with indirect evidence for the early use of water transport around the Indian Ocean, showing they began to move out of Africa more than 100,000 years ago…a distinct stream of modern humans crossed from the Horn of Africa to the Arabian peninsula and then spread around the rim of the Indian Ocean, eventually reaching Australia, perhaps by 80,000 BP (before the present).

EXHIBIT SIGNS:

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

That the Jewish Talmud teaches that the earth is round and the astrolabe is a Jewish invention. To see a Jewish astrolabe click here Hebrew Astrolabe

Silk 23

FACTS:

1. Judaic savants were largely responsible for the invention and development of the instruments and astronomical tables that thereafter facilitated world-girdling sea voyages. The Zohar (Leviticus 1.3) was more specific about the earth’s rotating on its axis like a ball; Maimonides and other medieval Judaic scientists subscribed to that concept.

2. Intercontinental trade was pioneered by Persian Jews who pioneered the “Silk Route” to the heart of China in the 5th BCE. Augustus, first Roman emperor, is said to have commissioned “the first travel guide” from Isidore of Charax (a town on the Euphrates River estuary on the Persian Gulf). Centuries later, while the Europeans were still deep in the Dark Ages, Persian Rhadanite (Medieval Jewish merchants) scholar/travelers pioneered land and sea trade routes to the Far East.

3. “These merchants speak Arabic, Persian, Roman, Frankish, Spanish, and Slavonic,” wrote Ibn Khurdadhih in the ninth century CE, “They travel from East to West and from West to East by land as well as by sea.” They also spoke Hebrew and Aramaic.

4. Astronomical tables were similarly compiled by Joseph ben Wakkar at Toledo in 1396, and in Aragon by various Judaic specialists.   Other significant calculations were made by Emanuel ben Jacob (aka Bonfils de Tarascon).The tables were used along with an astrolabe, an instrument introduced into the Arab-speaking world by a remarkable Jewish genius, Mashala of Mosul, “the phoenix of his age.” The use of the astrolabe, an instrument for taking the altitude of heavenly bodies, in conjunction with the astronomical tables, helped determine a ship’s position at sea.

EXHIBIT SIGN:
Silk 24

WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That the advanced model designed by Rabbi Joseph bn Makhir was used by Copernicus and Kepler.

2. That the most notable cartographers were found among the Jews, and the most advanced cartographer was a Jew who was forced to convert to Christianity. Christopher Columbus’s cartographers and other companions may have been

FACTS:

1. The quadrant, another device important for navigation on the high seas, measured the right ascension (angle from the horizon) of the sun and stars. An advanced model, designed by Rabbi Joseph bn Makhir, became known as the Quadrant Judaicus. Rabbi Makhir compiled the calendar used by Dante, and was quoted as an authority, long after his passing, by Copernicus and Kepler.

2. Rabbi, Levi ben Gershom, in southern France, devoted 136 chapters to astronomy in his major work, The Wars of the Lord; it included an improved quadrant, Jacob’s Staff, that Renaissance explorers depended on for determining latitude and local hour.

3. The most notable cartographers could be found among the Jews. Geographic intelligence was a boon of Judaic dispersion into the Diaspora. Information gleaned by Judaic travelers, deposited with compatriots along their itinerary, was transmitted to other passing Judaic travelers. Geographic intelligence was likewise passed along through correspondence delivered by these travelers from region to region.

4. Majorca, midway between Africa and Europe, became a beehive of Judaic mapmaking; Majorcans were unrivaled seafarers and Jews became their cartographers par excellence. A Jew, Jehuda, forced to convert to Christianity, produced the most famous mapamundi (world map) of the Atlantic coasts and mysterious oceans beyond. He became the first director of the famous nautical observatory in Portugal. Another convert and cartographer authored another famous mapamundi, used by Amerigo Vespucci.

5. Abraham Zacuto (1452-1515) was the most reputable astronomer of the day (University of Salamanca) and possible voyages of Columbus, and instructed Columbus on the use of the perfected astrolabe, which also became the standard in subsequent voyages by all colonialist adventurers, including the ships of Vasco de Gama.

EXHIBIT SIGNS:

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WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That Polynesians were the finest navigators of the time.

2. Vasco de Gama owed his successful voyages and fame to the astrolabe and the mapamundi.

3. That Marco Polo was the most famous, but not the first, European to reach China. Others had preceded him and were living under Mongol rule, some in servitude.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

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WHAT WASN’T SAID:

That the Kemal was not the first or the only type of navigational device in use; sailors were quite ingenious:

  • The first seafarers kept in sight of land: follow the coast, lining up the landmarks.
  • The Greeks learned to navigate from one island to the next by following clouds, which form over land, or odors that carry far out to sea.
  • The Phoenicians looked to the heavens – the sun’s movement across a cloudless Mediterranean sky gave direction and quarter, meaning east and west, Asia and Europe. At night, they steered by the stars, finding fixed “heights” by measuring fingers laid horizontally one over the other.
  • Ionian sailors navigated by the Little Bear constellation 600 BC.
  • Norsemen watched the summer stars, and the behavior of birds.
  • Eskimos studied the snow and Polynesians, whose navigational feats arguably have never been surpassed, watched the waves.
  • Seafarers of the Marshall Islands built ingenious, elaborate maps of palm twigs and shells, denoting everything from the island to the prevailing direction of the swell.
  • Alexandrian astronomer Ptolemy created the first world atlas in 2 AD, plotting latitude and longitude lines; he was preceded by the Greeks, who described trading routes as far east as India.
  • By the 10th, Italian-made portolans supplied detailed directions, distances, depths, coastal description and, by the 13th c., sea maps with scale and bearings began to appear.
  • The greatest advance in navigation came with the Chinese compass; the Chinese knew about magnetism as early as the 3rd millennium BC. The first western compass was mentioned in 1187.
  • Indian traders rode the northeast monsoon to Africa and the southwest monsoon back to the subcontinent. Polynesians also hitched rides on prevailing winds.
  • Phoenicians to the Polynesians measured the height of the sun and stars over the horizon, using the gnomon.
  • The Arabians used the Kemal, as described, to determine latitude.
  • In the Middle Ages, sailors relied on the astrolabe.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

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WHAT WASN’T SAID:

That the dhow is the generic name of a number of traditional sailing and trading vessels with more than one mast. Although some historians claim the dhow was invented by Arabs or Indians, the majority give credit to the Chinese, dating back to between 600 BC to 600 AD. Some claim the sambuk dhow may be derived from the Portuguese

EXHIBIT SIGNS:

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WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That the risk to caravan merchants of the Silk Road might have been the perils imposed by Muslims, known for their attacks, seizing ships, kidnapping, enslavement, and plunder for booty.

2. The First Barbary War (1801–1805), also known as the Tripolitan War or the Barbary Coast War, was the first of two wars fought between the United States and the Northwest African Berber Muslim states known collectively as the Barbary States.   They were fought because U.S. President Thomas Jefferson refused to pay the high tributes demanded by the Barbary States and because they were seizing American merchant ships and enslaving the crews for high ransoms. It was the first declared war that the United States fought on foreign land and seas.

3. The Tripoli Monument, the oldest military monument in the U.S., honors the heroes of the First Barbary War.

EXHIBIT SIGN:

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WHAT WASN’T SAID:

That Timothy Severin replicated a voyage that was sailed by a man who never existed.

 

 

Silk Road #8, Islam


EXHIBIT SIGN:
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WHAT WASN’T SAID:

1. That this exhibit is an indoctrinal, rather than educational, explanation of Muslim activity in this period, representing approximately 80 percent of the exhibit, and those who contrived it must have been aware of its nature, yet complicit in what we recognize as civilizational jihad.

2. That Judaism, Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism and other religions are not represented with historic accuracy; and visiting viewers were lured to view a deceptive work.

FACTS:
1. Mohammed became the leader of the Arab people in the early 600s, after dreaming that he received messages from God.

2. He beheaded the Jewish men of Mecca; killed or enslaved men, women and children of Mecca and Medina (including Christians and idol worshippers), ethnically cleansed the cities and designated them “holy.” Thus he became the leader of the surviving converted to Islam.

3. Muslims or Mohammedans do today as they did in the early 600s: behead men and enslave and convert to Islam the surviving women and children.

4. “Spread” is an oft-used euphemism in today’s revisionist textbooks. The word, although never defined, refers to conquest and forced conversion.

5. European and American historians assert that 10 to 18 million people were taken by Arab slave traders from Africa between the 8th and 19th century, and between one and 1.25 million Europeans from Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, England, the Netherlands, Ireland, and even Iceland, were captured and sold between the 16th and 19th centuries, by Barbary corsairs.

 

Silk Road #9, Slave Trade


EXHIBIT SIGN:
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WHAT WASN’T SAID:

 That the Arab ship was heavily laden with human cargo.

FACTS:

1. Islam Watch: “The Arab slaved trade began and flourished around 800 CE, when it was virtually non-existent in Europe and female slaves often became wives. The Quran, hadith and sire support that Muhammad took, purchased, sold, and gave away both male and female slaves.” Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya – a great scholar, astronomer, chemist, philosopher, psychologist, scientist, theologian and Islamic historian – says – “Muhammad had many male and female slaves. He used to buy and sell them, but he purchased more slaves than he sold. He once sold one black slave for two. His purchases of slaves more than he sold.” [Zad al-Ma’ad, part 1, p.150] (Ibn Quayyim Al Jawziyyah’s (1292-1350 CE] Zad al-Ma’ad, translated as Provisions of the Hereafter, is rated as one of the finest books on the biography of Muhammad.)

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2. Muhammad had a number of black slaves. One of them was named ‘Mahran’, whom Muhammad forced to do more labor than the average man. Whenever Muhammad went on a trip and he, or his people, got tired of carrying their stuff, he made Mahran carry it. Mahran said, “Even if I were already carrying the load of 6 or4 7 donkeys while we were on a journey, anyone who felt weak would throw his clothes or his shield or his sword on me so I would carry that, a heavy load.” Tabari and Jawziyya both record this, so Islam accepts tis as true.” (Behind the Veil)

3. On one occasion Muhammad’s cousin and son-in-law Ali whipped a female slave of Aisha’s in front of Muhammad to make her speak out about the adultery charges brought against Aisha. Muhammad did not say a word to protest Ali’s beating of the slave-girl. On another occasion, Umar beat a slave-girl for wearing the veil (veil is for free Muslim women only). It has been said in the previous article that Muhammad massacred 800 male Koreiza Jews and took their women and children, about 1200 heads, as slaves. He kept at least one Jewish female, named Rihana, as his concubine, and gave the rest away to his companions. He sent his disciple Sa’d bin Zayd with a portion of the captive women and children to Nejd to sell them for horse and weapons for organizing future jihad-raids.

4. All these incidents bear testimony to the fact that Muhammad was an enslaver and slave-trader. The names of many of Muhammad’s slaves are given in detail in Muslim writings and they can be found in “Behind the Veil.” Moreover, even under Muhammad, slaves were treated brutally as above examples make it clear, although some Muslims groundlessly claim that slaves under Islam were always treated fairly and kindly.

5. These may also bear testimony that Muhammad’s entourage and followers may not have traded honestly, but raped and looted.

EXHIBIT SIGN:
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WHAT WASN’T SAID:

That it was an age of inhumane servitude for Jews and Christians, the People of the Book.

FACTS:

1. Jewish communities had always existed in the Middle East and were called People of the Book (the Bible). The Golden Age for Jews and Christians meant large-scale discrimination. They were given the status of Dhimmi, and afforded the ignominious honor to live in shame under Islamic rule.

2. Dhimmi is the Arabic term that refers to its non-Islamic-embracing population, as a distinctly subjugated, second-class, almost-slave non-citizen, who is subjected to dictatorial deprivation of any legal and human rights since he is a non-Muslim permanent resident in a Muslim state. Bat Ye’or’s book, Dhimmi (1971), describes the basis for development of dhimmitude in Islam, and its relationship to the jihad, the war to conquer territory for Islam.

3. Throughout the earliest Islamic history, the people conquered by Muslims were given the choice of conversion, death, or servitude to despotic masters. Jews and Christians had to pay taxes and tolls and give deference to Muslim neighbors and frenzied mobs.

4. Jews and Christians were allowed to continue cultivating land, but cede half the produce, with threat of expulsion at any time. Making and breaking agreements was the hallmark of the Muslim armies.

5. As the Muslims grew more powerful, their holy wars spread beyond Arabia. The jihad became a war of conquest subject to a code of eliminating infidels. Truces were made, but never a lasting peace, as happens today.

6. The jihad became a concept of dar al harab, territory of war, and dar al Islam, territory of Islamic reign. Jihad is a normal state of dar al harab that can only end with conversion of the world. Therefore, jihad became conquest of the world for Islam – forced conversions, killings, taking slaves, seizing property. This enriched the jihadists and brought wealth to Arab nations; participation was/is obligatory either by force or by betrayal from within.

7. The current ruler provided tolerance and security or fanaticism and pogroms.   Communities could be evicted, women raped, exorbitant ransoms paid on them, children abducted for conversion, mass murders of the dhimmis was condoned. There was no due process.

8. Discriminatory and restrictive dress and behavior codes were enacted to identify the dhimmi and severely enforced to reduce dhimmi into a state of despair and poverty. Dress codes included not wearing shoes or sandals, not using certain colors, wearing stars on their clothing, prohibitions against certain occupations, and even rules on how to ride a mule. Dehumanization was generally the rule, as were various forms of physical abuse. Non-enforcement of rules could result in severe beatings, even mortal wounding.

9. Islam was not a Golden Age for non-Muslims; Islam is intolerant, and it fosters and condones belligerent and aggressive actions toward people who choose not to embrace Islam.

10.  There were pogroms against the Jews since the 11th century: 1066 Granada massacre, the razing of the entire Jewish quarter in the Andalusian city of Granada. In North Africa, there were cases of violence against Jews in the Middle Ages, and in other Arab lands, including Egypt, Syria, and Yemen. Jewish population was confined to segregated quarters, or mellahs, in Morocco, walled-in ghettos, beginning from the 15th century. The Almohads, who had taken control of much of Islamic Iberia by 1172, treated the dhimmis harshly. Jews and Christians were expelled from Morocco and Islamic Spain. Faced with the choice of either death or conversion, some Jews, such as the family of Maimonides, fled south and east to the more tolerant Muslim lands, while others went northward to settle in the growing Christian kingdoms. In 1465, Arab mobs in Fez slaughtered thousands of Jews, leaving only 11 alive, after a Jewish deputy vizier treated a Muslim woman in an offensive manner. The killings touched off a wave of similar massacres throughout Morocco.

Silk Road #10, Medicine


EXHIBIT SIGN:
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MEDICINE – FACTS

1.  The history of Arabic science is that the scientists were among the Jews who were forced to convert to Islam. The Arabs had no scientific traditions as they rampaged into the near East, Egypt, and Libya in 694. The Jews had been long established in North Africa; eight Berber tribes converted to Judaism and, under their heroic Queen Kahena, liberated Libya. The Arab troops of 60,000 prevailed; 50,000 Jews and Berbers were massacred, and the descendants of the converted (not of the illiterate invaders) became “Arabic” philosophers and scientists.

2.  A great physician, Isaac Israeli of Kairouan, was an Egyptian Jew who had immigrated to West
Africa, and brought his science with him. Known to Europe as Isaac the Jew, his surviving works include logic, On Definitions, and Aristolian physics, On the Elements; his work on Pharmacology, De Gradibus Simplicum, (translated into Latin) became the standard for medical history.

3. It was from Isaac Israeli that the greatest of “Arab” scientists, Avicenna (980-1037) drew inspiration. He was regarded as Arabic because he wrote in Arabic. He was known as the Aristotle of the East and became a vizier in Persia, but he was born near Bokhara, then heavily populated by Jews, and was probably of Jewish origin. Avicenna’s work reached Europe through translations by Jewish scholars in Spain, Italy, and Provence. The great physician Maimonides was an admirer of Avicenna, and recommended the Jews study his works in The Guide to the Perplexed. (at right)

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Guide_for_the_Perplexed_by_Maimonides.jpg

4. Avenzoar was likewise a Moslem scientist of Jewish origin, “and may thus be included among the great Jewish physicians of history (Roth, 170). His great work, Taysir, was one of the most widely read medical treatises of the century, not least because it was translated early on into Hebrew, “the language of the author’s ancestors.” Johannes of Capua, a converted Jew, in collaboration with another physician from Padua, translated it into Latin in 1280. It was likewise at Padua that the great work of Avicenna, The Colliget (General Rules of health), was translated into Latin by the Jew Bonacosa. The book became a standard medical treatise; it continued to be published after the printing press was invented several centuries later … and there were others. Physicians who attended the lords and kings of Islam and Christendom were largely Jews, a convincing indication of the major role that Jews continued to play in the science of medicine.

DENTISTRY – FACTS

 5. The first known mention of tooth decay and toothache occurs on a Sumerian clay tablet now referred to as the “Legend of the worm.” Recovered from the Euphrates valley, it was written in cuneiform, and dates from around 5000 BC. The belief that tooth decay and dental pain were caused by “tooth worm” is found in ancient India, Egypt, Japan and China, and persisted until the Age of Enlightenment.

6. The word antisepsis comes from the Greek words, anti (against) and sepsis (decay). Antiseptics prevent infection and other changes in living tissue by destroying or slowing the growth of germs (microorganisms that cause disease). The nature and use of anti-septics was not fully understood until the discovery of bacteria.

7. Physicians and healers have been aware of the anti-infective and anti-spoilage properties of certain substances since ancient times. Egyptian embalmers (people who preserved and prepared bodies for burial) used resins (an organic substance taken from plants and trees), naphtha (a liquid hydrocarbon often used as a solvent or diluting agent), and liquid pitch, along with vegetable oils and spices. The effectiveness of this mixture is shown in the fine state of preservation of Egyptian mummies. Persian laws instructed people to store drinking water in bright copper vessels. The ancient Greeks and Romans recognized the antiseptic properties of wine, oil, and vinegar for dressing wounds, dating back to the Greek physician Hippocrates (460 – 377 BC).

8. Ancient China is responsible for contributing much to the modern world, including many innovations to dentistry, and methods of treating tooth diseases – treating toothaches with arsenic, AD 1000, and developing silver amalgam for fillings. They were advanced in the observation of the oral cavity, specifically to mastication and deglutition, systemic diseases and their connection to oral manifestations, such as early detection of measles. Other studies included tooth extraction, abscesses, tumor removal and repair due to trauma, early repair of cleft palates, lip and other congenital defects, and the instruments required to perform such tasks.

TCP We Know Light

Jones Day

Anne and Dan Palmer

RAV Financial

Margaret W Wong &Y Associat5es Co., LPA

Anthony Y Yen

Cleveland Asian Festival

ClevelandPeople.com

Confucius Institute at CSU

Discount Drug Mart

Federation of India Community Associa5tions of Northeast Ohio

Global Cleveland

In June 2014, UNESCO designated the Chang’an-Tianshan corridor of the Silk Road

 

MEET THE CURATORS

Mark Norell

Mark A Norell, curator and chair of the Division of Paleontology at the Museum, has been a team leader of the Joint American Museum of National History/Mongolian Academy of Sciences expeditions to the Gobi Desert, with interests and books written on invertebrate fossils and dinosaur species. I found nothing to suggest that he had any in-depth interest in or discoveries about the Silk Road.

Denise Leidy

Denise Leidy’s bio indicated a deep interest in Asian art and culture, and that she has traveled widely on the Silk Road. A specialist in Chinese sculpture and decorative arts in the Buddhist traditions, there was little or nothing of this included in the exhibit. The majority information focused on Islam. Further, if she curated several exhibitions of Glimpses of the Silk Road, is she not aware of the early stages and the cultures that were responsible for this massive development and progress that affected civilization? Surely some due diligence would have uncovered the facts that are available to all who are willing to delve for accurate attribution.

William Honeychurch

William Honeychurch’s expertise falls into the category of the archaeology of ancient nomadic politics of Mongolia, and the Silk Road of the Steppes region. There was no inclusion of the Silk Road into Mongolia. I question its exclusion and concentration on Islam.

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