Pharaoh: A Fascist
Character Related In The Koran
 The defining characteristic
of fascist leaders is their tendency to construct
regimes founded on fear and oppression. They tend
to intimidate their citizenry through threats,
repression and torture, and thus control them as
they wish. This is the case in almost all fascist
regimes. Those who go along with them are those
who generally support might instead of right,
easily bow their heads in the face of brutality,
and are the kind of weak souls that can easily be
led in any direction the authorities want.
Ignorance here plays an important role.
In the Koran, God provides an example of a
cruel dictator and the kind of society those loyal
to him consist of: Egypt in the time of the
Pharaohs.
The Pharaoh who ruled Egypt at the time of the
prophet Moses established a system based entirely
on the use of oppression. He did not hesitate
using force and brutality, as all fascist leaders
have done in order to fortify their authority.
When we examine what the Koran has to say about
Pharaoh, we see a striking resemblance to modern
fascist leaders. Like fascist leaders in our own
time, Pharaoh divided the people in his country
into classes, massacring some of them:
We recite to you with truth
some news of Moses and Pharaoh for people who
believe. Pharaoh exalted himself arrogantly in the
land and divided its people into camps, oppressing
one group of them by slaughtering their sons and
letting their women live. He was one of the
corrupters. (Koran, 28:3-4)
Another striking feature of Pharaoh's regime is
the use of military power against his own people,
in the very same way as the modern fascists. For
instance, he sent his army to prevent the flight
of the children of Israel and the Prophet Moses.
The Koran repeatedly uses the expression "Pharaoh
and his troops" when speaking about his
government, which indicates that it was a
militarist one.
Another similarity between Pharaoh and
contemporary fascists is the way they portray
themselves as divine. The "deification of the
leader" employed in Hitler and Mussolini's regimes
was also openly employed by Pharaoh:
Pharaoh said, "Council, I
do not know of any other god for you apart from
Me…" (Koran, 28:38)
Pharaoh called to his
people, saying, "My people, does the kingdom of
Egypt not belong to me? Do not all these rivers
flow under my control? Do you not then see?"
(Koran, 43:51)
The verse also indicates that Pharaoh gave
virulent speeches and hectored his people, a most
distinctive feature of the propaganda methods
employed by fascist dictators such as Hitler and
Mussolini.
 RAMESES II: THE FASCIST PHARAOH OF
ANCIENT EGYPT Rameses II, who ruled Egypt in
the time of the prophet Moses, governed a regime
founded on oppression and violence, enslaving
minorities in his country (the Israelites), and
portraying himself as a divine being: Just as
modern fascists have
done. |
At a time when Pharaoh was pressuring his
people to follow wherever he led them, a true
prophet, the Prophet Moses, came to tell the
people of Egypt the truth and lead them onto the
correct path. But they were afraid to follow
Moses, and stuck with Pharaoh, who appeared to
them more powerful:
No one believed in Moses
except for a few of his people out of fear that
Pharaoh, and the elders, would persecute them.
Pharaoh was high and mighty in the land. He was
one of the profligate. (Koran, 10:83)
As we have seen, some of those who might have
believed in the Prophet Moses failed to do so out
of fear of incurring the wrath of Pharaoh and
those around him. This shows that Pharaoh's regime
was one that oppressed people solely because of
their beliefs, a fundamental characteristic of
fascism.
Another similarity between Pharaoh
and contemporary fascist leaders is their
discriminatory and racist treatment of people. The
racist views of modern fascists can also be seen
in Pharaoh. Like the "anti-Semitic" leaders of our
own time, Pharaoh also saw the people of Israel as
a so-called inferior race, and belittled the
prophets Moses and Aaron before their own people,
the People of Israel. Here is an example of the
words of Pharaoh and those around him:
They said, "What! Should we
believe in two human beings like ourselves when
their people are our slaves?" (Koran,
23:47)
As is clear from the examples given so far,
there were important resemblances between
Pharaoh's system and that of fascist regimes in
our own time. These similarities are not just
limited to administrative systems, but also apply
to the peoples administered under those systems.
Certainly, most people who abided by Pharaoh and
followed his rule knew that they were doing the
wrong thing, and that the Prophet Moses was in the
right. But, because they saw Pharaoh as powerful,
and as their ruler, they thought that they had no
other alternative. They fell under the influence
of brute force and power. They believed in the
principle that "might is right," though the only
true possessor of might and dominion is God.
Because they could not comprehend this, they and
Pharaoh ultimately suffered great humiliation,
both in this world and in the hereafter. The Koran
describes the end that awaited these people:
 The use of modern fascist symbols
in Rameses II's royal bearings (above) is
particularly interesting, symbols of aggressive,
wild animals, and figures reflecting pagan
beliefs, meant to inspire violence and
fear. |
So We seized him and his
troops and flung them into the sea. See the final
fate of the wrongdoers! We made them leaders,
summoning to the Fire, and on the Day of Rising
they will not be helped. We pursued them with a
curse in this world and on the Day of Rising they
will be hideous and spurned. (Koran, 28:40-42)
The end met by fascist leaders is just as
unhappy as that of Pharaoh. Hitler committed
suicide, and Mussolini was condemned to death by
his own people. The cruelties they committed in an
attempt to elevate themselves only led to their
humiliation. They became people who were
remembered with disgust by those who came after.
Furthermore, their humiliation in the hereafter
will be much greater than that in this world. But
it must be remembered that the suffering in the
hereafter is not just restricted to them, it also
includes their followers. This truth is again
revealed in the Koran:
They will all parade before
God and the weak will say to those who were
arrogant, "We followed you, so can you help us at
all against the punishment of God?' They will say,
"If God had guided us, we would have guided you.
It makes no difference whether we cannot stand it
or bear it patiently. We have no way of escape."
(Koran, 14:21)
Many dictators have established despotic
regimes in this world, with their people bowing
their heads to them, taken by the spell of brute
force, violence, fear and domination, or as the
Koran puts it "…followed the
command of every obdurate tyrant" (Koran,
11:59). God reveals the great error these
leaders and their societies have made:
Pharaoh and those before
him and the Overturned Cities made a great
mistake. They disobeyed the Messenger of their
Lord so He seized them in an ever-tightening grip.
(Koran, 69:9-10) |