@interminable
If it is such a difficult task to correctly interpret the Qur'an, it seems reasonable to ask why it is worth the trouble at all.
People seem to make no worse without it, after all.
I don't think there is a lot of truth to be found in your claim that the blame for the troubles of Islaam comes ultimately from the US and other "foreigners". It is not like the Islaamic world has a significant tradition of avoiding inner conflict.
Sure, there is no doubt that the US and others took advantage of those conflicts when the opportunity presented itself. But despite all the insistence of the Qur'an on the need to avoid conflict between Muslims, the plain fact is that Muslims keep killing other Muslims practically from the moment Muhammad died - albeit often insisting that the others are not true Muslims, as we now see with Daesh/ISIS.
If it is such a difficult task to correctly interpret the Qur'an, it seems reasonable to ask why it is worth the trouble at all.
People seem to make no worse without it, after all.
I don't think there is a lot of truth to be found in your claim that the blame for the troubles of Islaam comes ultimately from the US and other "foreigners". It is not like the Islaamic world has a significant tradition of avoiding inner conflict.
Sure, there is no doubt that the US and others took advantage of those conflicts when the opportunity presented itself. But despite all the insistence of the Qur'an on the need to avoid conflict between Muslims, the plain fact is that Muslims keep killing other Muslims practically from the moment Muhammad died - albeit often insisting that the others are not true Muslims, as we now see with Daesh/ISIS.