What Islam Actually Teaches About Violence.

Based on Qur’anic principles and globally recognized Islamic scholarship.

IMPORTANT!

How Extremist Groups Misuse Religion

Extremist groups do not invent religion — they selectively quote, remove historical context, and ignore ethical limits to create religious cover for violence.

Isolated verses without full context

Extremist groups often quote single verses while ignoring the historical background, surrounding verses, and ethical conditions. This creates a distorted meaning that supports violence, even though the full context places strong limits on harm and emphasizes justice and restraint.

Ignoring protections for civilians

They leave out clear religious and ethical rules that protect women, children, the elderly, and non-combatants. By removing these protections, violence against ordinary people is made to seem acceptable, even though mainstream teachings strictly forbid it.

Declaring other Muslims as non-believers

Extremist groups label other Muslims as “not true believers” to justify violence against them. This tactic removes unity, creates fear, and allows the group to claim exclusive religious authority. Mainstream Islamic scholarship strongly rejects this practice.

Using fear, guilt, and destiny narratives

They pressure people by using fear (“you will be punished”), guilt (“you are failing your faith”), and destiny (“this is your divine role”). These emotional tools reduce critical thinking and make people feel they have no real choice, even when they do.

The Amman Message

Global Scholarly Rejection of Extremism

The Amman Message (2004), signed by hundreds of leading Islamic scholars worldwide, states that:

If you are feeling pulled by anger, guilt, or pressure, pause and take a moment to reset and reflect.
Feeling pressured by extremist ideas?