
In so doing, they unwittingly bolster hard-line Islamists elsewhere who trample on the rights of their own people. Rizvi is especially distressed by Western liberals who defend the most questionable aspects of Islam because they see it as a minority religion in danger of subjugation. “The Abrahamic religions, he writes, “are inherently political” and, as such, will always spill outside of the framework of faith and into public life.

The author begins by discussing the violence, inequality, and lack of freedom he witnessed in the Muslim world, and he reminds his readers that these aspects of Islamic society are not simply cultural outcroppings, but are tied directly to the Muslim religion. In a multifaceted work, Rizvi attempts to convince others that a rational view of Islam as a culture without need for a religion will allow it to join the modern world. Despite a religious upbringing, the author grew skeptical of the tenets of Islam at an early age and eventually opted for atheism.

Rizvi was raised and educated in such thoroughly Muslim nations as Saudi Arabia and Pakistan before making his home in Canada. Leaving Islam and showing others the way out.
