If I can find it again, it was an article on the BBC, but it involves what a female Muslim is calling Islam Feminism, and the do question certain parts of the Quran.
I have noticed, no one criticizes Martin Heidegger, even though his philosophies were influential during the Islamic Revolution during the 70s. I'm just glad society has largely moved away from the idea that Nietzsche has some very dangerous ideas that are best avoided.
I still stand firm, the problem is not religion, it's people. Why do people not ask questions? Why do some people fear change so much they will kill to preserve tradition? Why do some people cling to their beliefs so much they will turn violent over them? Focusing solely on religion, as many do, will not adequately answer these questions, and when you focus on religion, you must ask "why these followers, but not these?" The answer to that, I am very certain, lies not in the religion but in the individual person, in their culture, and rather than just questioning why are there some violent Muslims and some peaceful Muslims, we can include things like nationalism, animal rights, and profit as other things that incite people to violence, giving ourselves more samples to draw from when trying to answer why some people turn violent. Even over romance, people are known for turning violent. Why is this?
While I agree with on some parts, but I have to say that this view of dividing line between religion and people is not so black-and-White as you think it is.
My view is that religion and their followers as a system of a religion.
Meaning, you can't separate people (followers, believers or whatever you want to call them) from their religion.
Religion is about the people, and not "for the people".
Can a religion exist without the people?
I don't think it can.
No matter what religion you follow, you as the people or group of followers, could be view as the "religion" as a whole.
Sure, you can divide the followers, let's use Muslims as an example, from Allah, from the prophet and from the Qur'an, BUT where would Islam really be if Muhammad was the only follower to follow Islam and if Muhammad had no followers? Could Islam survive without the hundreds, thousands or millions of followers? Could Muhammad win in any battle without any follower?
Considering that Muhammad couldn't read nor write, without followers, there wouldn't be anyone to write the Qur'an after his death.
Without the people, there wouldn't be any Islam.
Because Islam had increasingly grown larger, there were about to be different interpretations to what in the Qur'an and what Muhammad had taught the people, and very early on, after Muhammad's death, there were frictional and conflicts between Muslims, between the Sunni and ****tes, each sside have their own sets of hadiths. And both Sunni and ****tes don't like other newcomers, like the Sufi Muslims and the Ahmadiyya Muslims.
Yes, the divisions between these sects are about divisions between people, but Islam is part of that very division, because they want exclusive rights to the Qur'an and to the followers.