Bolshevik militants tearing down the Georgievsky
church in the city of Gorky. |
In the Qur'an, it is revealed that throughout history, cruel and tyrannical
leaders have arisen who have denied God and religion. In one verse (28:
41), God calls them "leaders summoning to the fire." This kind of character typified by the person of Pharaoh in various
accounts about Moses in the Qur'an. There have been other cruel rulers
who opposed Prophet Abraham and the Companions of the Cave (a group of
believers recounted in the Qur'an) and who, just like Pharaoh, killed
people simply for having faith in God. It's possible to find these tyrannical
characters in every era of history. These leaders of irreligion have committed
similar acts of cruelty against their societies, used the same methods
in trying to alienate people from religion, and led the unwary to destruction
in this world and the hereafter.
Vladimir
Lenin, Joseph Stalin, Mao Tse-tung and the fathers of their ideas, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Charles Darwin exercised leadership in irreligion
in yet another way by his theory of evolution.
Communism's hostility to religion is beyond dispute. Look at the writings
of any Communist ideologue, and you will find this expressed openly. Marx
himself called religion the "opium of the people," described it as created
by the ruling class to narcotize the poor, and proposed that religious
belief must be destroyed if Communism were to advance. Engels wrote that
human beings are descended from monkeys, claiming that religion developed
as merely a stage in the process of evolution.
According to Lenin, Communists are responsible
for translating and publishing the works of ardent opponents of
religion like Feuerbach. |
To destroy religion, what kind of policies do Communists implement? Lenin
gave the first comprehensive answer.. In 1900, as leader of the Russian
Social-Democratic Workers' Party (later to become the Communist Party),
he wrote an article titled "The Attitude of the Worker's Party to Religion,"
published in the Proletary magazine. In that article he wrote:
Social-Democracy bases its whole world-outlook on
scientific socialism, i.e., Marxism. The philosophical
basis of Marxism, as Marx and Engels repeatedly declared, is dialectical
materialism, which has fully taken over the historical traditions of eighteenth-century
materialism in France and of Feuerbach (first half of the nineteenth century)
in Germany -- a materialism which is absolutely
atheistic and positively hostile to all religion. Let us recall
that the whole of Engels's Anti-Dühring, which Marx read in manuscript,
is an indictment of the materialist and atheist Dühring for not being
a consistent materialist and for leaving loopholes for religion and religious
philosophy. Let us recall that in his essay on Ludwig Feuerbach, Engels
reproaches Feuerbach for combating religion not in order to destroy it,
but in order to renovate it, to invent a new, "exalted" religion, and
so forth. "Religion is the opium of the people"
-- this dictum by Marx is the corner-stone of the whole Marxist outlook
on religion.102
In 1905, he published an article entitled "Socialism and Religion" in
the magazine Nozvaya Zhizn in which he called religion a "fog"
that must be dispersed. In that article, he also described the atheist
propaganda that Communists must spread against religion:
Our Programme is based entirely on the scientific,
and moreover the materialist, world-outlook. . . . Our
propaganda necessarily includes the propaganda of atheism; the publication
of the appropriate scientific literature, which the autocratic
feudal government has hitherto strictly forbidden and persecuted, must
now form one of the fields of our Party work. We shall now probably have
to follow the advice Engels once gave to the German Socialists: to
translate and widely disseminate the literature of the eighteenth-century
French Enlighteners and atheists.103
Note that Lenin said the battle Marxists much wage against religion has
to start by disseminating "scientific literature" and the writings of
the 18th-century Enlightenment atheists. "Scientific literature" means
theories that impose materialism in the guise of science (such as Darwinism);
and these "French Enlighteners" include Diderot and D'Holbach, who wrote
materialist propaganda against religion long before Marx.
Among Communists, this method Lenin taught is still in use. If we examine
certain publishing houses, scientific magazines and media institutions
throughout the world, we clearly see that Marxists are behind publications
that espouse Darwinist and Enlightenment philosophy.
Communism's Hidden Hostility to Religion
While Marxists are not in power, their currents of thought don't usually
follow a definite aggressive policy against religion. It's even possible
for some Communists to seem to show respect for religion and its adherents.
What is the purpose for this moderation?
The answer to this question can
be found among the writings of Lenin. In "The Attitude of the Worker's
Party to Religion," he wrote that, starting with the interpretations and
practices of experts like Marx and Engels, war must never be openly declared
against religion. This was an unnecessary "gamble of a political war."104 Other materialists (for example, the anarchists or "bourgeois atheists")
had voiced hostility to religion and initiated anti-religious campaigns.
Lenin found their activities simple and naïve. He rejected the accusations
of "moderation" and "inconsistency" these people leveled against Marxists
and stated that the "Marxist tactics in regard to religion are thoroughly
consistent, and were carefully thought out by Marx and Engels."105
COMMUNIST HOSTILITY TO SANCTUARIES
Bolsheviks destroyed the Georgievsky church in Gorky. Throughout
the country, Communists destroyed some 50 thousand such places of
worship or turned them into stables and warehouses. |
Lenin continued this moderate stance until the Communists came to power
in 1917. But after this, his moderation disappeared and replaced it with
widespread oppression of religion and religious people throughout the
Soviet territory. Earlier, Lenin had stated thatCommunists must not openly
declare themselves to be atheists and must even accept believers in religion
into their ranks. But once he came to power, he followed a much different
path. In The Harvest of Sorrow, the American historian Robert Conquest
describes some of the main points of Bolshevik religious policy:
Priests and clerics were declared, under another article (65) of the
1918 Constitution, to be 'servants of the bourgeoisie' and disfranchised.
This involved their receiving no ration cards, or those of the lowest
category; their children were barred from school above the elementary
grade; and so on.
A decree of 28 January 1918 forbade religious instruction in schools,
though it was permitted to 'study or teach religious subjects privately.'
This last was further restricted by a decree of 13 June 1921 which forbade
the religious instruction anywhere of groups of persons below the age
of eighteen. . . .
. . . A law of 8 April 1929 forbade religious organizations to establish
mutual assistance funds; to extend material aid to their members; 'to
organize special prayer or other meetings for children, youths or women,
or to organize general bible, literary, handicraft, working, religious
study or other meetings, groups, circles or branches, to organize excursions
or children's playgrounds, or to open libraries or reading rooms, or to
organize sanatoria or medical aid.' In fact, as an official comment put
it, church activity was reduced to the performance of religious services.
On 22 May 1929, Article 18 of the Constitution was amended; instead of
'freedom of religious and anti-religious propaganda' it now read 'freedom
of religious worship and anti-religious propaganda'; at the same time
the Commissariat of Education replaced a policy of non-religious teaching
in schools by orders for definitely anti-religious instruction. . . .
. . . Collectivization 'usually involved the closure of the local church
as well'. Icons were confiscated as a matter of routine and burned along
with other objects of religious worship. A confidential letter from the
Western Provincial Committee on 20 February 1930 speaks of drunken soldiers
and Komsomols [members of the Communist youth organization] who 'without
mass preparation' were 'arbitrarily closing village churches, breaking
ikons, and threatening the peasants'.
The closures applied to all religions. . . .
. . . Moreover when churches were closed, this did not mean that religious
work was permitted outside them. The closure of nine major churches in
Kharkov was accompanied by a decision 'to take proper steps to prevent
prayer meetings in private homes now that the churches are closed'.
The Kazan Cathedral in Leningrad was turned into an anti-religious museum.
. . .
. . . The St Sophia Cathedral and other churches in Kiev were turned
into museums or anti-religious centres. In Kharkov, St. Andrey's was turned
into a cinema; another into a radio station; another into a machine-parts
store. In Poltava, two were turned into granaries, another into a machine
repair shop. . . .
. . . These measures applied to all religions. 'Churches and synagogues'
is often the phrasing in official decrees in the European part of the
USSR. Elsewhere Islam was equally persecuted. . .
. . . In the collectivization evangelical leaders
in the villages were excluded from the kolkhozes and denounced as kulaks;
and most of them were deported.106
After the Bolshevik revolution, Lenin's tactic of "being moderate towards
religion" turned into fanatical hostility. As we saw earlier, to Lenin,
the famine of 1920-21 that cost millions of lives would weaken people's
faith in God.
Lenin, with his rebellious spirit against God and religion, lost his
mental balance and suffered great pain. God returned to Lenin in this
world some of the cruelty he inflicted on people with his hostility to
religion. The Qur'an (58:5-6) speaks of the terrible recompense that such
cruel people will receive on the Last Day:
Those who oppose God and His Messenger will be subdued and overcome as
those before them were also subdued and overcome. We have sent down Clear
Signs. The disbelievers will have a humiliating punishment. On the Day
God raises up all of them together, He will inform them of what they did.
God has recorded it while they have forgotten it. God is a Witness of
all things.
When Stalin rose to power, he was just as anti-religious as his predecessor.
He displayed his hostility by killing millions of believers, destroying
religious institutions and places of worship, and by initiating endless
atheist propaganda. One of the most important weapons in Stalin's propaganda
attack was the theory of evolution. In his autobiography, he wrote:
In order to disabuse the minds of our seminary students
of the myth that the world was created in six days, we had to acquaint
ourselves with the geological origin and age of the earth, and be able
to prove them in argument; we had to familiarize ourselves with Darwin's
teachings.107
In the book Anarchism or Socialism?, Stalin pits Darwin
against Cuvier, a creationist scientist and founder of the science of
fossils. He writes, "Marxism rests on Darwinism and treats it uncritically,
i.e., the Marxists repudiate Cuvier's cataclysms."108
Maoism's Hostility to Religion
Mao, Leninism's and Stalinism's representative in
China, nurtured hostility to religion and implemented it in his policies.
One of his comments on religion he clearly displays his fanaticism:
. . . [B]ut of course, religion is poison. It has two great defects:
It undermines the race . . . [and] retards the progress of the country.
Tibet and Mongolia have both been poisoned by it.109
A Chinese propaganda poster shows Albanian
dictator Enver Hoxha with Mao. |
When Mao came to power, he instituted a war against religion and its
practitioners. But this was done in "secret," as Lenin's Communists had
done. The Communist party initiated a policy called the "Three self movement,"
meaning that all religious institutions must be structured so that they
could be "self supporting, self administrating, and self organized." This
policy appeared to be based on granting freedom of religion, but it was
actually a campaign designed to destroy religion completely. All religious
institutions and places of worship throughout the country-Confucian and
Buddhist temples, mosques and Christian churches-came under the control
of state controlled management bodies. Within a short time, these religious
institutions became "Maoist propaganda centers." A statement given to
the American International Commission on Religious Freedom on March 16,
2000 by a Chinese Christian by the name of Harry Wu says:
But because Mao Zedong could not allow any citizen
of China to hold allegiance to any authority outside the Communist Party,
under Mao these government-run bodies allowed no religious activity. Throughout
the three decades that Mao ruled China, the organizations of the "three
self movement" worked with the Chinese Communist Party to eliminate religion
and to promote the ideology of the Communist Party. Maoism became China's
only legal religion, and Mao's "Little Red Book" its primary religious
text.110
Both the Uyghur Muslims in eastern Turkestan and the Buddhists of Tibet
became targets of bloody brutality. The Chinese Communist Party tried
to control them by reducing their populations and destroying their religious
beliefs. Other Communist regimes in Asia continued Mao's hostility to
religion. In the genocide committed against their own people in Cambodia,
the Khmer Rouge targeted the minority Cham community of Muslims with particular
cruelty. The Black Book of Communism describes the brutality they inflicted
against the Cham:
In 1973, mosques were destroyed and prayers banned
in the liberated zones. Such measures became more widespread after May
1975. Korans were collected and burned, and mosques were either transformed
into other buildings or razed. Thirteen Muslim dignitaries were executed
in June, some for having gone to pray rather than attending a political
rally, others for having campaigned for the right to religious wedding
ceremonies. . . . The more fervent were all but wiped out: of the 1,000
who had made the pilgrimage to Mecca, only 30 survived these years. Unlike
other Cambodians, the Cham frequently rebelled, and large number of them
died in the massacres and reprisals that followed these uprisings. After
mid-1978 the Khmer Rouge began systematically exterminating a number of
Cham communities, including women and children. . . [It is calculated]
that the overall mortality rate among the Cham was 50 percent. 111
In Albania, Enver Hoxha's dictatorship, another Communist regime, displayed
Maoism's hostility to religion. Albania came out of World War II as a
satellite of the Soviet Union, but during the Sino-Soviet conflict of
the 1960s, Albania sided with China and became the representative of Red
Chinese Maoism in Europe. Enver Hoxha closed all places of worship (mosques
as well as Catholic Churches in the north of the country) and even forbade
people from worshipping in their homes. Declaring your belief in any religion
became a crime, and those who disobeyed the prohibition were subjected
to various kinds of oppression and torture. Enver Hoxha, believing he
could eradicate all religious belief by implementing these methods, announced
that he had founded the first State in the world that was truly atheist.
COMMUNISM AND THE IRRELIGIOUS SYSTEMS REVEALED IN THE QUR'AN
At the root of the characteristics of the Communist system is its anti-religious
ideology. The reason for its brutality and dullness is this same crazed
hostility toward religion.
Religion is part of the way of living and thinking that God has given
the human beings He created. The best life for Man is one based on religious
belief; because the One Who knows the human spirit best is our Lord Who
created it. Only a system founded on religion can give peace, while systems
rejecting religion will inevitably bring pain, sorrow, fear and insecurity.
Above all, these systems opposing all religious truth, trying to force
people live in contradiction to it, constitute an even greater danger.
Historically, Communism has been one of the most striking examples of
just such a system.
Interestingly, Communism shows important similarities to the godless
systems that God has described in the Qur'an. Comparing the godless system
of Pharaoh given in the Qur'an with some other systems of our age, we
see a great similarity.
The Passion for Big Buildings
An example of Communism's passion for large
buildings: the Building of Council of Ministries in Moscow. |
One common characteristic of all irreligious administrations is their
seeking to captivate onlookers with grandeur. Their haughtiness and humiliation
of other people are expressed in various ways.
As an example, God tells in the Qur'an about Pharaoh's administration
in Egypt in the time of Prophet Moses. In his pride, Pharaoh opposed both
God and His apostle Moses, while subjecting his own people to oppression.
An example of Pharaoh's arrogance was his command to have a "high tower"
built. The Qur'an (28:38) reveals Pharaoh's command to Haman, one of his
closest man:
Pharaoh said, "Councilmen, I do not know of any other god for you apart
from Me. Haman, kindle a fire for me over the clay and build me a lofty
tower, so that perhaps I may be able to climb up to Moses's god! I consider
him [Moses] a blatant liar."
This desire for a "high tower," an expression of Pharaoh's pride, is
also reflected in Communist dictatorships' passion for "big buildings."
Beginning with the Soviet Union, all Communist states constructed excessively
large state buildings as symbols of the regime's strength and endurance.
For a long time, the palace built by Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu
in Bucharest retained the title of the world's largest building. Yet this
palace has a very cold and joyless appearance; size was its most important
consideration and it remains an expression of the "superiority complex"
of Communist ideology.
Forced Migration
In the Qur'an, God reveals some actions that brought destruction upon
their perpetrators, including the removal of people from their homelands.
For example, those who denied God threatened the prophets that were sent
to them: "We will drive you from our land unless
you return to our religion..." (Qur'an, 14:13) As is told in verse
22:40, they tried especially to remove Muslims; "those
who were expelled from their homes without any right, merely for saying,
'Our Lord is God'."
Communist regimes have engineered the greatest forced migrations, and
Muslims have been the target of most of them. In Stalin's time, first
the Crimean Turks and later, many other Muslim peoples were forced to
leave their lands overnight and were dispatched, hungry and miserable
to the most barren regions of Russia. Hundreds of thousands of innocents
died on the way, and those who survived to reach their destinations died
of hunger, infectious diseases, and freezing cold.
The Destruction of Freedom of Belief
As told in the Qur'an, one characteristic feature of Pharaoh's administration
was its outlawing freedom of belief. The system determined what kind of
beliefs people could hold. Pharaoh's question to the magicians who believed
in Moses shows this clearly; "Have you believed
in Him before I authorized you to do so?" (Qur'an, 7:123) Again,
while speaking to his people, Pharaoh said that he taught the people the
truth they needed to know, and that they shouldn't search for any other
truth besides what he taught them: "I only show
you what I see myself and I only guide you to the path of rectitude."
(Qur'an, 40:29)
Pharaoh's modern representatives are the Soviet Union and all the other
Communist regimes of the 20th century that attempted to establish totalitarian
regimes. In any totalitarianism system, society is totally shaped by the
State. People are physically governed by State oppression and mentally
by propaganda. The model of Pharaoh's totalitarian system, as described
in the Qur'an, was revived in the 20th century by dictators like Lenin,
Stalin, and Mao. The Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha, as we mentioned earlier,
forbade his countrymen from practicing any religious faith. He closed
all places of worship and advertised the government he'd founded as the
"world's first atheist State."
The Idolization of Leaders
Communist propaganda posters idolizing Mao
depict him as a "holy person" rising like the sun over all the Chinese
people, leading them all on the correct road and bringing happiness
and a pleasant life to everyone. |
In the Qur'an (28:38), God tells us that Pharaoh tried to make himself
a god in the eyes of the people, as can plainly be seen in Pharaoh's words
to those around him: "Councilmen, I do not know
of any other god for you apart from me." Egyptian history shows
us how its pharaohs described themselves as "gods in this world."
People prostrating themselves in front of
a statue of North Korean dictator Kim Il Sung demonstrate that Communism
is really a contemporary form of idolatry.
|
Communist regimes wielded the same kind of psychology. Dictators such
as Lenin, Stalin, Mao and North Korea's Kim Il Sung initiated programs
of mass brainwashing to make themselves seem as gods in the eyes of their
peoples. This "cult of personality" was an expression of the policy of
"idolizing the leaders."
This tendency towards idolization started first with
Lenin, leader of the first Communist revolution in Russia. Indeed, some
of the writings Lenin left behind show a noticeable "aura of religion"-but
a religion of idols. Lenin organized the Communist Party as a kind of
non-religious sect. Upon his death, Party members held a huge ceremony
in which they addressed Lenin's corpse with liturgical words such as:
"Comrad Lenin, we swear we will carry out your orders."112 Lenin's body was mummified, like an ancient Egyptian pharaoh's, and placed
in an elaborate tomb.
Stalin and Mao followed Lenin's example. Both leaders had giant statues
of themselves erected in every city of their countries, trying to produce
a portrait of their people's "god-leader." Mao wrote The Little Red Book,
and every Chinese citizen was responsible for reading this "holy" book
and implementing its precepts in his life. Many Chinese still visit the
statues of the "Great Helmsman" erected in every part of the country,
and on Mao's birthday there are mass suicides.
In North Korea, Kim Il Sung was also idolized after he came to power.
He was known as the "Sun of the People," who believed he could lead them
along the right path without ever making a mistake. The same thing happened
with Ho Chi Minh, North Vietnam's Communist dictator.
COMMUNISM:A CONTEMPORARY FORM OF IDOLATRY
People looking at the corpses of Lenin and Mao show Communism's
tendency to idolize its leaders, in a way similar to that of the
idolatrous system of Pharaoh, as revealed in the Qur'an. Lenin and
Stalin, who resorted to brutality like Egyptian pharaohs, were mummified
just like them. Lenin's brain was taken out seemingly to "examine
how superior his intelligence is" and put in protective storage. |
Oligarchic Structure

Communism, like the regime of Pharaoh as described in the Qur'an,
is an oligarchic system based on minority rule. Communist Party directors
look down on the people from above and lead them however they wish.
At left, the Soviet oligarchy of the 1920s-the Bolshevik committee
saluting on Lenin's mausoleum. |
The system of oligarchy is "minority rule," in which political power
rests in the hands of a limited group. A look into the Qur'an shows that
godless systems have a basically oligarchic structure. When we examine
the many verses that speak of "the chiefs of the nations," we see that
these people have taken all political power into their own hands, governing
society according to their own ideas. When we look at the verses relating
to Pharaoh, we see that his administration was an oligarchic class, composed
of advisors, magicians and soldiers. In order to keep the people bound
to Pharaoh's administration, the magicians controlled their thinking.
The soldiers ensured the same control by brute force.
Communist regimes are the modern counterpart of the godless oligarchic
system mentioned in the Qur'an. Communists started out by offering "power
of the people," but in every country where they
came to power, they established minority power relying on domination. All political power in the country passed into the hands of a party that
bore the name of the "proletarian party" or Workers' Party, but had no
relationship with the workers. The decision-making mechanisms-known as
the Communist Party Central Committee and the Politburo, together with
the General Secretary over them-retained all the power and used it mercilessly.
In Communist regimes, all the supposedly "democratic" mechanisms, such
as elections and party congresses, were only a show.
The "Destruction of Crops and Breeding Stock"
When describing the quality of godless administrations in the Qur'an
(2:205-206), God draws our attention to something very important:
When he holds the upper hand, he goes about the earth corrupting it,
destroying (people's) crops and breeding stock. God does not love corruption.
When he is told to heed God, he is seized by pride which drives him to
wrongdoing. Hell will be enough for him! What an evil resting-place!
Notice that "going about the earth corrupting it" and "destroying crops
and breeding stock" in these verses precisely describe
the slaughters and collectivizations implemented by Communist regimes
of the Soviet Union, Red China, and Cambodia. Lenin, Stalin, Mao and Pol
Pot forced an atmosphere of chaos and terror on their countries. By implementing
Lysenko's evolutionist nonsense, they destroyed all the products of agriculture,
killed countless numbers, and nearly erased a whole generation. Later,
this same verse reveals that the people who perpetrated this were arrogant
and irreligious. This description perfectly fits these dictators, who
regarded themselves as gods.
Conclusion
Communists believe that the world is advancing constantly through evolution,
and that older societies were less advanced than our modern ones. For
this reason, they try to belittle the holy books revealed through ancient
prophets thousands of years ago. Fourteen centuries ago, however, the
Qur'an revealed their ideology and spiritual disposition as ignorance,
deceit and psychological depravity. No matter how much Communist leaders
may count themselves at the most advanced stage of history, they share
much in common with Pharaoh, back in the time of Prophet Moses.
Actually, history shows no "advancement" of human intelligence or psychological
make-up. People thousands of years ago had the same characteristics as
those who live today. From a cultural and technological point of view,
there have been both advancements and regressions. For example the technology
in the time of Prophet Solomon, and the technique the Egyptians used to
build pyramids are yet unknown. From their surviving pieces of art, some
civilizations seem to have accumulated very advanced cultures and technologies,
but there is never constant progress.
But as we said at the beginning, God has created human beings of different
types of make-up, with certain particular ways of thinking. Among them,
history develops according to rules that God has determined. The Qur'an
(33:62) says that God's pattern (Sunnah), or the natural and social rules
that God has imposed, have never changed: "This
is God's pattern with those who passed away before. You will not find
any alteration in God's pattern."
People's commitment to such a brutal, dark and barbarous ideology as
Communism caused them to suffer unimagined torments. Those who believed
in Darwin's perversion and chose godlessness, prepared their own end.
In one verse (Qur'an, 30:41), God describes this:
Corruption has appeared in both land and sea because of what people's
own hands have brought about so that they may taste something of what
they have done so that hopefully, they will turn back.
Nobel laureate Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn, a passionate critic of Communism,
captured in his writings these divine rules' social nature. In a speech
delivered in London in 1983, the Russian author stated why disaster had
fallen on his people:
<Over a half century ago, while I was still a child, I recall hearing
a number of old people offer the following explanation for the great disasters
that had befallen Russia: "Men have forgotten God;
that's why all this has happened."
Since then I have spend well-nigh 50 years working
on the history of our revolution; in the process I have read hundreds
of books, collected hundreds of personal testimonies, and have already
contributed eight volumes of my own toward the effort of clearing away
the rubble left by that upheaval. But if I were asked today to formulate
as concisely as possible the main cause of the ruinous revolution that
swallowed up some 60 million of our people, I could not put it more accurately
than to repeat: "Men have forgotten God; that's
why all this has happened."113
Communism happened because people forgot God. It is a living example
that shows how merciless, brutal and barbarous a godless society can be,
and what kind of society materialist philosophies like Darwinism give
birth to. Looking at the misery Communism has brought, we can understand
the great difference between a society with religious moral values and
one with none. And this is the means whereby we will understand that,
for human salvation, the only solution is to live a life founded on religious
moral values.
But as long as people keep denying God and wandering into these philosophies
distant from the morality of religion, Communism and other perverted ideologies
will find a place to exist. As the verse above says, if people do not
want "corruption to appear in both land and sea because of what their
own hands have brought about," first they must distance themselves from
these ideologies and draw others away from them as well. To achieve this,
people must be acquainted with the scientific invalidity and the dark
side of Darwinism, accepted as scientific support for the ideologies that
have inflicted all this misery on humanity.
In this 21st century, one of the most important duties for
people of intelligence, conscience, perception and insight is launching
an intellectual struggle against "the disease of
materialism and naturalism," as the great Islamic scholar Bediuzzaman
called it.
............................
102. Black Book of Communism, Harvard University
Press Cambridge, p. 556
103. Black Book of Communism, Harvard University Press Cambridge,
p. 560
104. Black Book of Communism, Harvard University Press Cambridge,
p. 574
105. V.I. Lenin, The Attitude of the Worker's Party to Religion,
Proletariat, No.45, May 13, 1909
106. V.I. Lenin, Socialism and Religion, Nozvaya Zhin, No.28,
December 3, 1905
107. V.I. Lenin, The Attitude of the Worker's Party to Religion,
Proletariat, No.45, May 13, 1909
108. V.I. Lenin, The Attitude of the Worker's Party to Religion,
Proletariat, No.45, May 13, 1909
109. Robert Conquest, The Harvest of Sorrow : Soviet Collectivization
and the Terror-Famine , Oxford University Press, New York, 1986, p. 138
110. E. Yaroslavsky, Landmarks in the Life of Stalin (Moscow:
Foreign Languages Publishing house, 1940), pp. 8-12.
111. J.V.Stalin, Anarchism or Socialism?, From J.V. Stalin,
Works, Foreign Languages Publishing House, Moscow, 1954, Vol.1, p.302
112. White Paper, Office of Tibet, London, February 2, 1996
113. Statement of Harry Wu Before the US Commission on International
Religious Freedom, March 16, 2000.
|