“Yes Amrozi, we do remember Khaibar”
Mark Durie
When Amrozi bin Nurhasin, the smiling Bali bomber, entered a Bali courtroom
on the day of his sentencing, he was shouting “Jews, remember Khaibar.
The army of Muhammad is coming back to defeat you.” What was this Khaibar,
and why should it be remembered?
In the time of Muhammad, Khaibar was a fertile oasis in the Arabian desert.
It was populated by Jews, who maintained its irrigation systems and lived off
its produce. When Muhammad conquered the oasis in 628, the Jews who lived there
managed to negotiate a surrender. The conditions of their surrender were that
some of them could remain to tend the date palms and gardens, but in return
they had to pay 50% of their harvest to the Muslims. The land itself would henceforth
belong to the Muslim community. The Jews of Khaibar were also granted permission
to keep practising their faith. Soon after, the Arab Christians of Najran were
forced to accept the same conditions.
The right of the Jews of Khaibar to stay on their former lands was a temporary
concession, withdrawn in 640 by Umar, in obedience to Muhammad’s dying
wish: ‘Two religions shall not remain together in the peninsula of the
Arabs’. In this same year the whole of Arabia was cleansed of non-Muslims.
Khaibar is a name all Muslims jurists will recognize, since it was the conquest
of Khaibar which set the precedent in Islamic case law for the subsequent treatment
of non-Muslims who surrendered to Islamic conquest and rule. (Khaibar also provided
Muhammad with one of his wives, Safiya, a leading Jewish woman of Khaibar whom
he selected for himself from among the enslaved captives.)
The discriminatory shari’a regulations applying to non-Muslims, who are
referred to in Islamic law as dhimmis, are based upon the precedent of Khaibar.
Through a twist of history the defeat of the Jews of this little-known Arabian
oasis helped determine the treatment of many millions of non-Muslims after Islamic
conquest, including the once-vast Christian populations of the Middle East.
For this reason, the name of Khaibar has great significance for us all. For
extremist Muslims like Amrozi, it stands for the defeat of infidel enemies,
and their humiliation and subjugation under shari’a conditions, an enduring
signpost to the hope of an Islamist victory. For non-Muslims this name stands
for centuries of obliterated history and oppressive discrimination, referred
to by Bat Ye’or, historian of the dhimmis, as dhimmitude.
Amrozi the smiling terrorist was right — we should all remember Khaibar,
as a turning point in world history. Today the precedent of Khaibar continues
to shape the lives of the Jews of Iran, the Copts in Egypt, Africans in the
Sudan, Pakistani Christians, Hindus and Zoroastrians, and many more. Widespread
discrimination against non-Muslims is endemic in Islamic nations, to a significant
degree, and there are signs that the problem is getting worse in the twenty
first century, not better.
Amrozi’s laughing face has been constantly on the front page of Australian
newspapers in recent months. The grief felt over the casualties in the Bali
attacks is profound. So it was a irony that, when the Australian newspaper reported
Amrozi’s words on the day after his sentencing, the editors did not recognize
the name of Khaibar and misspelled it as Hibah. Despite its landmark significance
for interfaith relations, the name of Khaibar now seems to be forgotten, its
significance obscured. The fate of the Jews of Khaibar had momentous consequences
for world history, yet this page of history has been torn out of the non-Muslim
world’s collective consciousness. It is time for it to be returned to
its rightful place.