Robert Spencer dares to face the hard questions about what the Islamic religion actually teaches -- and the potentially ominous implications of those teachings for the future of both the Muslim world and the West. The book evaluates the relationship between Islamic fundamentalism and 'mainstream' Islam; the fixation with violence and jihad; the reasons for Muslims' disturbing treatment of women; and devastating effects of Muslim polygamy and Islamic divorce laws. Spencer explores other daunting questions -- why the human rights record of Islamic countries is so unrelievedly grim and how the root causes of this record exist in basic Muslim beliefs; why science and high culture died out in the Muslim world -- and why this is a root cause of modern Muslim resentment. He evaluates what Muslims learn from the life of Muhammad, the man that Islam hails as the supreme model of human behaviour. Above all, this provocative work grapples with the question that most preoccupies us today: can Islam create successful secularised societies that will coexist peacefully with the West's multicultural mosaic?
Reviews
"[T]he questions Islam Unveiled poses and the answers it provides are hard to dismiss, and given the urgency of the times, necessary to ask."