Atheism behind mass murders of history
The Christian Science
Monitor
November 21, 2006
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1121/p09s01-coop.html
Atheism, not
religion, is the real force behind the mass murders of history
By Dinesh D'Souza
RANCHO SANTA FE, CALIF. -
In recent months, a spate of atheist books have argued that religion represents,
as "End of Faith" author Sam Harris puts it, "the most potent
source of human conflict, past and present." Columnist Robert Kuttner gives
the familiar litany. "The Crusades slaughtered millions in the name of
Jesus. The Inquisition brought the torture and murder of millions more. After
Martin Luther, Christians did bloody battle with other Christians for another
three centuries." In his bestseller "The God Delusion," Richard
Dawkins contends that most of the world's recent conflicts - in the Middle East,
in the Balkans, in Northern Ireland, in Kashmir, and in Sri Lanka - show the
vitality of religion's murderous impulse.
The problem with this
critique is that it exaggerates the crimes attributed to religion, while
ignoring the greater crimes of secular fanaticism. The best example of religious
persecution in America is the Salem witch trials. How many people were killed in
those trials? Thousands? Hundreds? Actually, fewer than 25. Yet the event still
haunts the liberal imagination.
It is strange to witness
the passion with which some secular figures rail against the misdeeds of the
Crusaders and Inquisitors more than 500 years ago. The number sentenced to death
by the Spanish Inquisition appears to be about 10,000. Some historians contend
that an additional 100,000 died in jail due to malnutrition or illness.
These figures are tragic,
and of course population levels were much lower at the time. But even so, they
are minuscule compared with the death tolls produced by the atheist despotisms
of the 20th century. In the name of creating their version of a religion-free
utopia, Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, and Mao Zedong produced the kind of mass
slaughter that no Inquisitor could possibly match. Collectively these atheist
tyrants murdered more than 100 million people.
Moreover, many of the
conflicts that are counted as "religious wars" were not fought over
religion. They were mainly fought over rival claims to territory and power. Can
the wars between England and France be called religious wars because the English
were Protestants and the French were Catholics? Hardly.
The same is true today.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not, at its core, a religious one. It arises
out of a dispute over self-determination and land. Hamas and the extreme
orthodox parties in Israel may advance theological claims - "God gave us
this land" and so forth - but the conflict would remain essentially the
same even without these religious motives. Ethnic rivalry, not religion, is the
source of the tension in Northern Ireland and the Balkans.
Blindly blaming religion
for conflict
Yet today's atheists
insist on making religion the culprit. Consider Mr. Harris's analysis of the
conflict in Sri Lanka. "While the motivations of the Tamil Tigers are not
explicitly religious," he informs us, "they are Hindus who undoubtedly
believe many improbable things about the nature of life and death." In
other words, while the Tigers see themselves as combatants in a secular
political struggle, Harris detects a religious motive because these people
happen to be Hindu and surely there must be some underlying religious craziness
that explains their fanaticism. Harris can go on forever in this vein. Seeking
to exonerate secularism and atheism from the horrors perpetrated in their name,
he argues that Stalinism and Maoism were in reality "little more than a
political religion." As for Nazism, "while the hatred of Jews in
Germany expressed itself in a predominantly secular way, it was a direct
inheritance from medieval Christianity." Indeed, "The holocaust marked
the culmination of ... two thousand years of Christian fulminating against the
Jews."
One finds the same
inanities in Mr. Dawkins's work. Don't be fooled by this rhetorical legerdemain.
Dawkins and Harris cannot explain why, if Nazism was directly descended from
medieval Christianity, medieval Christianity did not produce a Hitler. How can a
self-proclaimed atheist ideology, advanced by Hitler as a repudiation of
Christianity, be a "culmination" of 2,000 years of Christianity?
Dawkins and Harris are employing a transparent sleight of hand that holds
Christianity responsible for the crimes committed in its name, while exonerating
secularism and atheism for the greater crimes committed in their name.
Religious fanatics have
done things that are impossible to defend, and some of them, mostly in the
Muslim world, are still performing horrors in the name of their creed. But if
religion sometimes disposes people to self-righteousness and absolutism, it also
provides a moral code that condemns the slaughter of innocents. In particular,
the moral teachings of Jesus provide no support for - indeed they stand as a
stern rebuke to - the historical injustices perpetrated in the name of
Christianity.
Atheist hubris
The crimes of atheism have
generally been perpetrated through a hubristic ideology that sees man, not God,
as the creator of values. Using the latest techniques of science and technology,
man seeks to displace God and create a secular utopia here on earth. Of course
if some people - the Jews, the landowners, the unfit, or the handicapped - have
to be eliminated in order to achieve this utopia, this is a price the atheist
tyrants and their apologists have shown themselves quite willing to pay. Thus
they confirm the truth of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's dictum, "If God is not,
everything is permitted."
Whatever the motives for
atheist bloodthirstiness, the indisputable fact is that all the religions of the
world put together have in 2,000 years not managed to kill as many people as
have been killed in the name of atheism in the past few decades.
It's time to abandon the
mindlessly repeated mantra that religious belief has been the greatest source of
human conflict and violence. Atheism, not religion, is the real force behind the
mass murders of history.
* Dinesh D'Souza is the
Rishwain Fellow at the Hoover Institution. His new book, "The Enemy at
Home: The Cultural Left and Its Responsibility for 9/11," will be published
in January.
Copyright (c) 2006 The Christian Science Monitor.