Why Don’t Two Billion Muslims Kill Us All? Jihad Between Doctrine, Numbers, and Gradual Phases
Why Don’t Two Billion Muslims Kill Us All?
This is one of the most common questions raised when discussing the relationship between Islam and violence. The answer is neither simplistic nor conspiratorial.
Islamic violence is not a permanent individual obligation for every Muslim in every place and time. It is instead opportunistic, gradual, and closely linked to conditions of numerical, political, and military strength. It does not require that all Muslims take up arms. A determined and ideologically motivated minority is often sufficient — especially when supported by the silence, theological justification, or ignorance of the majority.
Classical Islamic doctrine explicitly allows this dynamic through the distinction between fard ayn (individual obligation) and fard kifaya (collective obligation), the use of taqiyya and da’wah in times of weakness, and the shift to more assertive phases once sufficient power is acquired.
This article provides a serious analysis based on primary Islamic sources — the Quran, Hadith, classical tafsir, and fiqh — explaining why jihad is not a constant spiritual effort, but a flexible mechanism activated according to circumstances.
