Muslim scholars, during the Islamic Golden Age, became the custodians of ancient wisdom. Through the meticulous art of translation, they resurrected the texts of Greek, Persian, and Indian sages, rendering them into the elegant script of Arabic. Muslim scholars contributed to astronomy, literature, medicine, anatomy, architecture, alchemy, metallurgy, biology and pretty much any other field of study.
The House of Wisdom in Baghdad stood as a sanctuary for this sacred task. These intellectual titans did not merely preserve; they engaged, dissected, and built upon the foundations laid by their predecessors.
Al-Khwarizmi, the father of algebra; Avicenna, the master of medicine; Averroes, the philosopher, influenced the Latin West with their works. This process helped to ignite the spark of the Renaissance.
Libraries in Cordoba and Cairo became the treasure troves of civilization. Through the veins of trade routes they disseminated their wisdom, fostering a relentless exchange of ideas.
Islam is hated by those who don’t know it.
