The Historical Whitewashing of Islamic Conquests
How Centuries of Invasion Were Rebranded as Liberation and Peace
Islamic historiography — both classical and modern — frequently describes the expansion of the early Muslim empire as a divinely guided mission of peace, liberation, and justice.
But a deeper examination reveals a starkly different story:
The early Islamic conquests were not peaceful spiritual awakenings — they were aggressive, militarized campaigns that reshaped civilizations through war, subjugation, and the sword.
This discrepancy between historical fact and religious narrative has led to centuries of whitewashing — where violent conquest is rebranded as enlightenment, and domination is spun as deliverance.
๐บ️ A Rapid Military Expansion — Not a Spiritual Awakening
After Muhammad’s death in 632 CE, the Islamic state exploded out of the Arabian Peninsula with unprecedented speed:
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Within 100 years, Muslim armies had conquered vast territories including Persia, the Levant, Egypt, North Africa, Spain, and parts of India.
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This expansion was not driven by mass conversion or peaceful invitation — it was achieved through military force, treaties under duress, sieges, and suppression.
Historical records — including those from Muslim sources — acknowledge this.
⚔️ Examples of Violent Campaigns
1. The Sasanian Empire (Persia)
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Battle of Qadisiyyah (636 CE): Muslim forces decimated Persian defenses.
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Fall of Ctesiphon (637 CE): The imperial capital was looted, and the Sasanian Empire eventually collapsed.
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Persian Zoroastrians were reduced to dhimmi status or fled to India.
This was not liberation — it was military decapitation followed by religious suppression.
2. The Byzantine Empire (Levant & Egypt)
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Muslim armies overran Christian-majority regions.
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Cities like Jerusalem (638 CE) and Alexandria (641 CE) fell after sieges.
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Churches were converted, taxes imposed on non-Muslims, and dissidents punished.
The conquests did not eliminate Christianity — but they institutionalized Muslim supremacy and Christian subjugation.
3. North Africa and Spain
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From 647 to 709 CE, Muslim armies moved west, defeating Berber tribes and Byzantine garrisons.
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711 CE: The Umayyad invasion of the Iberian Peninsula began. Within a few years, Visigothic Christian Spain fell.
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These lands were taken by force, not persuasion.
Despite modern romanticism about “Al-Andalus,” the conquest was brutal, with forced conversions, looting, and sectarian warfare.
4. The Indian Subcontinent
Islamic invasions into India were among the bloodiest campaigns in medieval history:
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Mahmud of Ghazni (11th century) conducted at least 17 raids, destroying temples and massacring civilians.
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Delhi Sultanate (13th–16th centuries): Widespread slaughter of Hindus, destruction of religious sites, and imposition of jizya (tax on non-Muslims).
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Babur’s Mughal conquest further entrenched Islamic rule through military domination.
Muslim chroniclers like Al-Biruni and Ferishta themselves record the violence and plunder.
๐ How the Narrative Was Rewritten
The Myth of “Liberation”
Islamic apologists often frame these conquests as liberating oppressed peoples from corrupt empires.
This reframing ignores:
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The fact that conquered peoples were often non-Muslims who didn’t invite Muslim rule.
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The imposition of dhimmi status and jizya — a second-class status for non-Muslims.
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The mass displacement, enslavement, and violence that accompanied conquest.
In truth, many regions had functioning, sophisticated civilizations before Islamic rule.
The Myth of “Peaceful Spread”
The idea that Islam spread primarily through peaceful da’wah (invitation) is contradicted by history:
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The initial spread of Islam followed military conquest — only later came mass conversion, often under social, economic, or political pressure.
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The sword opened the gates, and then religious structures enforced conformity.
Peace came after conquest, not instead of it — and only on terms favorable to the victors.
Sanitized Textbooks and Mosques
In both Muslim-majority countries and diaspora communities, the history of Islamic conquest is whitewashed:
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Textbooks omit or glorify invasions.
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Imams and scholars describe conquests as divinely mandated, often using euphemisms like “bringing Islam” or “establishing justice.”
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Historical massacres and cultural destruction are ignored or downplayed.
This creates generations of Muslims unaware of their own imperial legacy.
๐งผ Common Apologist Responses
“Other empires did the same.”
→ True — but this doesn’t excuse it. The difference is, most don’t claim divine perfection and moral superiority while doing it.
“Islam forbids forced conversion.”
→ While some Quranic verses preach no compulsion (e.g. 2:256), others mandate warfare until submission (9:5, 9:29). Coercion took many forms — including taxation, threat, and exclusion.
“Conquered peoples lived peacefully under Islam.”
→ Some did — but always as second-class citizens, under legal, social, and financial burdens.
๐️ Cultural and Religious Erasure
Islamic conquest wasn’t just political — it was cultural and religious transformation:
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Temples and churches were destroyed or converted.
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Indigenous languages and scripts (like Sanskrit or Coptic) were sidelined.
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Non-Muslim holidays, customs, and dress codes were banned or restricted.
This was not coexistence — it was dominance through civilizational overwrite.
๐ Expansionism as Theology
Conquest isn’t just a historical phenomenon in Islam — it’s embedded in doctrine:
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The world is divided into Dar al-Islam (land of Islam) and Dar al-Harb (land of war).
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Classical jurists wrote legal rulings on conducting jihad to expand Islam’s reach.
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Caliphs and Sultans justified military campaigns using religious language — not just politics.
Conquest was not incidental. It was systemic and scriptural.
๐ฃ The Modern Legacy of Whitewashed History
This sanitized version of Islamic conquest has modern implications:
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It fuels Islamic triumphalism, where imperialism is romanticized, not critiqued.
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It suppresses critical reflection in Muslim communities, making reform harder.
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It legitimizes violence today by invoking the supposed glory of the past — as seen in ISIS’s caliphate narrative.
When history is rewritten as holy war masked as holy peace, future generations inherit the justifications for past atrocities.
๐ฏ Final Word
The early Islamic conquests were imperial military campaigns — not liberation missions.
The historical reality is clear:
Islam expanded through war, not persuasion.
Peace came at the end of a sword, not before it.
And the so-called “Golden Age” was built atop the ruins of conquered civilizations.
Rewriting this legacy as spiritual enlightenment isn’t just inaccurate — it’s dangerous.
Until this whitewashed narrative is abandoned, Islam cannot fully confront its own imperial past — or the ideological consequences it still carries into the present.
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