Jefferson Studies Koran to Fight War on Muslim Terrorists
It's true that Thomas Jefferson owned a Koran, but his reason for studying it went beyond a desire to understand another religion. He was preparing to lead the nation in war with Muslim terrorists! At the time of his presidency, one sixth of American wheat and flour exports traversed the Mediterranean Sea, as well as one fourth of its pickled and dried fish exports.
These products represented a sizable portion of the young American country's trade. The commodities, as well as the crews that transported them, were being attacked by Muslims.
From the late 1500s, shipping in the Mediterranean faced a constant threat from Muslim pirates who viciously attacked commercial vessels as much for their crews as for their cargoes. These were the infamous Barbary pirates, named after the states of the Barbary Coast, modern Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya. The pirates were state-sponsored, backed by the Ottoman Empire.
They enslaved crews that they captured, using them to man the oars on the pirate vessels. Any women taken were shipped to markets to be sold as concubines. Captured young boys were mutilated to create eunuchs, who would bring higher prices in the slave markets.
Until the American Revolution, the British Royal Navy protected ships from the colonies that sailed the Mediterranean. During the war, an alliance with France brought the American vessels under its protection, but after winning independence, the United States had to fend for itself. European nations at the time attempted to lessen the threat from the pirates by paying them "tribute money," essentially a protection racket. In exchange for the bribes, the pirates would not attack.
However, the agreements were flimsy and often broken. When the pirates took captives, they would demand ransom money from the crew's home nation. Initially, the fledgling American Congress followed the European model, paying tributes and ransoms, until the amounts reached a staggering 20 percent of America's national revenue by 1800!