Further reading: Janet Afary, The Iranian Constitutional
Revolution, 1906–1911 (New York: Columbia University
Press, 1996); Mangol Bayat, Iran’s First Revolution: Shi-
ism and the Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1909 (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1991); Hamid Enayat,
Modern Islamic Political Thought (Austin: University of
Texas Press, 1982); Nikki R. Keddie, Modern Iran: Roots
and Results of Revolution (New Haven, Conn.: Yale Uni-
versity Press, 1981); Nikki R. Keddie, ed., Religion and
Politics in Iran: Shiism from Quietism to Revolution (New
Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1983).
conversion
Conversion to Islam is a remarkably simple pro-
cess, normally entailing no more than saying, with
the proper intent, the
shahada
: I declare that there
is no god but God, and that m
Uhammad
is the
messenger of God. The q
Uran
explicitly rejects
imposition of religious belief, and Islam has his-
torically allowed other religions great freedom.
Islam has always been a proselytizing religion;
Muhammad converted his earliest followers in the
seventh century from the pagan ways of m
ecca
to
the worship of a single God, a
llah
. After suffering
Meccan persecution, the small community moved
to m
edina
, where the small band of Muslims grew
to form the nucleus of the Islamic community, or
umma
. After the death of the Prophet in 632, the
Arab Muslim armies burst out of the Arabian Pen-
insula, conquering enormous swathes of territory
of the Byzantine Empire and utterly destroying
the Persian empire of the Sassanians. In the resul-
tant Islamicate empire, Islam was the religion of
the state, but members of other religious groups
were allowed freedom of worship as
dhimmi
s, or
“protected subjects.” As a result of the military
expansion of the Islamicate empire, the errone-
ous notion of “conversion by the sword” has his-
torically taken root among non-Muslims. In fact,
there was little attempt to convert non-Muslims
during the early conquests. In some cases, conver-
sion was actively discouraged, for it deprived the
state of a source of revenue, as dhimmis were taxed
differently from Muslims. The empire itself, how-
ever, clearly emerged through the use of military
power, and the dominance of Muslims within that
empire should be considered a major, if partial,
motivation for later conversion. Nonetheless, it
is important to note that non-Muslims living in
Islamicate polities generally had freedoms and
rights that non-Christians could only dream of in
medieval Europe.
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