๐ฅ What to Do When They Dodge
The Dawah guide to evasion — and how to shut it down cold
๐ Introduction
You ask a simple question:
“Why does the Quran say God’s word can’t be changed, but also say the Bible is corrupted?”
And instead of an answer, you get:
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“You don’t know Arabic.”
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“That’s out of context.”
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“Where did Jesus say ‘I am God’?”
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“But what about the Crusades?”
Welcome to Dawah Evasion 101 — the moment they realize the doctrine can’t be defended, and shift into survival mode.
This post shows you exactly how to spot it, shut it down, and take back control of the discussion.
๐ 1. Learn Their Dodging Patterns
Here are the top Dawah dodges — and the real reason behind each one:
Dodge | Why They Use It |
---|---|
“That’s out of context.” | Stall tactic — they hope you’ll back off. |
“You don’t know Arabic.” | False authority — to shut down critique. |
“That's just your interpretation.” | Evasion — avoids dealing with the actual text. |
“We don’t rely on that Hadith.” | Selective disowning when Hadith is damaging. |
“But what about Christianity?” | Tu quoque fallacy — shift focus to your faith. |
“You’re a liar/islamophobe!” | Ad hominem — emotional shutdown. |
๐ Recognize the pattern = stay in control.
๐ฃ 2. Lock the Frame – Don’t Let Them Shift It
When they try to change the topic, lock the focus.
Example:
You: “Why does Quran 9:29 say to fight Christians and Jews until they feel subdued?”
Them: “What about the Bible’s violence?”
You: “We’ll get to that. Let’s finish this verse first. Does your God command that today?”
๐ Force them to answer before moving on.
Never let them drag you away from your point. The moment you do, you’re playing on their turf.
๐งฑ 3. Stay Calm — Frustration Feeds Their Escape
Dawah thrives on:
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Making you emotional,
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Making you defensive,
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Making you walk away.
Instead:
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Stay steady.
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Repeat your question.
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Say nothing extra.
๐ฃ “I’m happy to clarify later. But first — just answer the question. Why does your Quran say God’s word cannot be changed, but also say the Bible is corrupted?”
๐ They want the pressure to go away. You don’t let them off the hook.
๐ 4. Don’t Let Them Reset the Clock
Muslim apologists will try to restart the debate when they’re cornered.
They’ll say:
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“Let’s step back.”
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“Can we define what we mean by scripture?”
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“Actually, let me ask you something instead...”
๐ Don’t accept the reset.
๐ฃ “No need to step back. Just answer the question already on the table. Then we can move forward.”
๐ฏ 5. Use Precision Traps That Can’t Be Avoided
Use questions that are:
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Based on Islamic texts,
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Binary in outcome (yes/no),
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And cornering by design.
Example:
“If Quran 6:115 says no one can change Allah’s words, and the Bible is Allah’s word (Quran 5:47), then how can it be corrupted?”
There’s no way out.
๐ Either the Quran contradicts itself, or the corruption claim is false.
๐ If they dodge this, you just won — calmly point it out:
๐ฃ “You haven’t answered. That tells me everything.”
❌ 6. Call Out the Dodge — Respectfully but Firmly
๐ฃ “That’s a dodge. Let’s stay on the original point.”
๐ฃ “I’m hearing an excuse, not an answer.”
๐ฃ “If you had a clear answer, you would’ve given it already.”
๐ฃ “You’re appealing to Arabic, not the content. That’s not how truth works.”
Don’t insult — just cut through the evasion and shine a light on it.
๐ช 7. Repeat the Question — Then Silence
Silence is powerful.
Most Dawah types aren’t used to being challenged — they rely on momentum, not substance.
When they dodge:
๐ Repeat the question.
๐ Then wait.
Say nothing. Let them sit in it.
The silence becomes louder than their dodge — and the audience (if public) will see who’s avoiding and who’s standing firm.
๐ง 8. Use Follow-Up Traps to Close the Door
If they start slipping sideways, close the escape routes:
Example:
Them: “But the Bible was changed over time.”
You: “Then you just admitted the Quran is false. It says God’s word can’t be changed. Is the Quran wrong?”
Now they’re cornered again.
Always follow a dodge with a tighter question.
๐งจ 9. Control the Closing Statement
Don’t let them end the discussion on a deflection.
If they try to walk:
๐ฃ “Before you go — just note: I asked a clear question. You didn’t answer. That’s not debate. That’s escape.”
๐ That puts the win on record — especially if it’s being watched or shared.
๐ง 10. Remember: If They Dodge, You Win
Islamic Dawah isn’t about truth — it’s about control, authority, and appearance.
They fear open debate because it exposes their internal contradictions, moral failures, and textual collapse.
When they dodge:
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You don’t lose.
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You don’t chase them.
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You stand your ground and let the silence do the work.
Truth doesn’t need dodging. Islam does.
✅ Bonus Tactics to Use
Tool | How to Use It |
---|---|
“Let’s finish this question first.” | Locks the frame |
“That’s not an answer.” | Exposes evasion |
“Try again — directly this time.” | Re-focus |
“We’ll get to that. But first…” | Control flow |
Silence | Psychological pressure |
Follow-up trap | Tighter contradiction |
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