I'm almost certain the Meccan Pagans didn't actually tell people to do this; mostly because Muslims, based on their behaviour I've observed here and elsewhere on the Internet, have an inveterate habit of misrepresenting or even lying about other belief systems in order to make Islam seem more rational and civilised. Besides, on the subject of giving wealth to & worshipping idols, isn't Saudi Arabia making an absolute fortune off of Muslims going on pilgrimage to worship the Kaaba?
sovietchild doesn't see the irony of all his claims. Every claims sovietchild has made, actually reflect back what Muhammad and his followers did.
There were no crime committed in worshipping pagan religion or worshipping idols. Muhammad did preach for banning pagan worship, but he has no legal and political authority to ban when he was a prophet between 610 and 622.
You are right, Scotsman this, and about that too:
He had no such right. Mecca had done him no wrong - Muhammad violated the communal spirit by prating against Mecca's religion for years; by recruiting followers to behave violently towards the Meccans and by insulting the Meccan's traditions. He had no right to take by force a city that exiled him after putting up with his intolerant demagoguery for over a decade. He had no right to conquer the city, install himself as its ruler and force his religious beliefs on everyone else. The double standards at work in your logic are unbelievable:
- Muhammad raved against the Meccans' religion for over a decade and when he was exiled he left behind notable amounts of property. To Muslims, this is unjustifiable and amounts to little more than theft;
- In Medina, Muhammad exiled the Jewish Banu Qaynuqa tribe from Medina - probably because they didn't accept him as a Prophet - and stripped them of their property. This is as much theft as the Meccan seizure of Muhammad's property yet Muslims see this as totally justified.
Before leaving Mecca, in 622, Muhammad was never part of any government, he was no prince or noble, so he had no authority to enact legislation to ban pagan religion.
Just because he self-proclaim himself as a prophet, that doesn't give him any authority to tell what Meccans should or shouldn't do.
If anyone was a traitor, it was Muhammad and his followers, they were acting against the law, when they were inciting their followers to destroy or damage properties that don't belong to them.
Just because Muhammad returned to Mecca with his army and made himself ruler of Mecca, doesn't mean he did the right thing. And he went against his own scripture by ignoring the "no compulsion" rule. That's an example of Muhammad's arrogance and hypocrisy.
He may call himself a "prophet" or "messenger", but to me, he looked no better than a warlord or a bandit.
Anyone who attack a civilian target, like the series of raids and looting of merchant caravans, from 623 to 624, is nothing more than a bandit, a robber or a pirate. Which is exactly what Muhammad did and what he is. Instead of getting jobs or starting new jobs, Muhammad became leader of bandits, robbing people who travel with trade goods.
And what you said about Banu Qaynuqa is also right. Muhammad claimed that that they lost everything when they went into exile, in 622. So I find it hypocritical of Muhammad in exiling and robbing the Qaynuqa (624) because they rejected him as a prophet.