Either you are grossly ignorant or intentionally lying.
I vote the latter.
...
After Muhammad died in 632, his successors (the
Caliphs) continued to lead the Muslim community based on his teachings and guidelines of the Quran. The majority of Muslims consider the first four successors to be 'rightly guided' or
Rashidun.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2020)">citation needed</span></a></em>] The
conquests of the
Rashidun Caliphate helped to
spread Islam beyond the
Arabian Peninsula, stretching from northwest India, across Central Asia, the
Near East, North Africa, southern Italy, and the
Iberian Peninsula, to the
Pyrenees. The Arab Muslims were unable to conquer the entire Christian
Byzantine Empire in
Asia Minor during the
Arab–Byzantine wars, however. The succeeding
Umayyad Caliphate attempted two failed sieges of
Constantinople in
674–678 and
717–718. Meanwhile, the Muslim community tore itself apart into the rivalling
Sunni and
Shia sects since the
killing of caliph Uthman in 656, resulting in a
succession crisis that has never been resolved.<a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>60<span>]</span></a> The following
First,
Second and
Third Fitnas and finally the
Abbasid Revolution (746–750) also definitively destroyed the political unity of the Muslims, who have been inhabiting multiple states ever since.<a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>61<span>]</span></a>
Ghaznavids' rule was succeeded by the
Ghurid Empire of
Muhammad of Ghor and
Ghiyath al-Din Muhammad, whose reigns under the leadership of
Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji extended until the
Bengal, where South Asian
Islamic missionaries achieved their greatest success in terms of
dawah and number of converts to
Islam.<a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>62<span>]</span></a><a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>63<span>]</span></a>[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citing sources - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citing sources"><span title="This citation requires a reference to the specific page or range of pages in which the material appears. (October 2019)">page needed</span></a></em>]
Qutb ud-Din Aibak conquered Delhi in 1206 and began the reign of the
Delhi Sultanate,<a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>64<span>]</span></a> a successive series of dynasties that synthesized Indian civilization with the wider commercial and cultural networks of Africa and Eurasia, greatly increased demographic and economic growth in India and deterred Mongol incursion into the prosperous
Indo-Gangetic Plain and enthroned one of the few female Muslim rulers,
Razia Sultana.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2022)">citation needed</span></a></em>]Notable major empires dominated by Muslims, such as those of the
Abbasids,
Fatimids,
Almoravids,
Gao Empire,
Seljukids,
largest contiguous Songhai Empire (15th-16th centuries) of
Sahel,
West Africa, southern
North Africa and western
Central Africa which dominated the centers of Islamic knowledge of
Timbuktu,
Djenne,
Oualata and
Gao,
Ajuran,
Adal and Warsangali in
Somalia,
Mughals in the Indian subcontinent (India,
Bangladesh,
Pakistan, etc.),
Safavids in
Persia and
Ottomans in
Anatolia,
Massina Empire,
Sokoto Caliphate of northern
Nigeria,
Toucouleur Empire, were among the influential and distinguished powers in the world.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2020)">citation needed</span></a></em>] 19th-century colonialism and 20th-century decolonisation have resulted in several independent Muslim-majority states around the world, with vastly differing attitudes towards and political influences granted to, or restricted for, Islam from country to country.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2020)">citation needed</span></a></em>] These have revolved around the question of Islam's compatibility with other ideological concepts such as
secularism,
nationalism (especially
Arab nationalism and
Pan-Arabism, as opposed to
Pan-Islamism),
socialism (see also
Arab socialism and
socialism in Iran), democracy (see
Islamic democracy),
republicanism (see also
Islamic republic),
liberalism and progressivism,
feminism,
capitalism and more.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2020)">citation needed</span></a></em>]
...
After Muhammad died in 632, his successors (the
Caliphs) continued to lead the Muslim community based on his teachings and guidelines of the Quran. The majority of Muslims consider the first four successors to be 'rightly guided' or
Rashidun.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2020)">citation needed</span></a></em>] The
conquests of the
Rashidun Caliphate helped to
spread Islam beyond the
Arabian Peninsula, stretching from northwest India, across Central Asia, the
Near East, North Africa, southern Italy, and the
Iberian Peninsula, to the
Pyrenees. The Arab Muslims were unable to conquer the entire Christian
Byzantine Empire in
Asia Minor during the
Arab–Byzantine wars, however. The succeeding
Umayyad Caliphate attempted two failed sieges of
Constantinople in
674–678 and
717–718. Meanwhile, the Muslim community tore itself apart into the rivalling
Sunni and
Shia sects since the
killing of caliph Uthman in 656, resulting in a
succession crisis that has never been resolved.<a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>60<span>]</span></a> The following
First,
Second and
Third Fitnas and finally the
Abbasid Revolution (746–750) also definitively destroyed the political unity of the Muslims, who have been inhabiting multiple states ever since.<a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>61<span>]</span></a>
Ghaznavids' rule was succeeded by the
Ghurid Empire of
Muhammad of Ghor and
Ghiyath al-Din Muhammad, whose reigns under the leadership of
Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji extended until the
Bengal, where South Asian
Islamic missionaries achieved their greatest success in terms of
dawah and number of converts to
Islam.<a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>62<span>]</span></a><a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>63<span>]</span></a>[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citing sources - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citing sources"><span title="This citation requires a reference to the specific page or range of pages in which the material appears. (October 2019)">page needed</span></a></em>]
Qutb ud-Din Aibak conquered Delhi in 1206 and began the reign of the
Delhi Sultanate,<a href="
Muslim world - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>64<span>]</span></a> a successive series of dynasties that synthesized Indian civilization with the wider commercial and cultural networks of Africa and Eurasia, greatly increased demographic and economic growth in India and deterred Mongol incursion into the prosperous
Indo-Gangetic Plain and enthroned one of the few female Muslim rulers,
Razia Sultana.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2022)">citation needed</span></a></em>]Notable major empires dominated by Muslims, such as those of the
Abbasids,
Fatimids,
Almoravids,
Gao Empire,
Seljukids,
largest contiguous Songhai Empire (15th-16th centuries) of
Sahel,
West Africa, southern
North Africa and western
Central Africa which dominated the centers of Islamic knowledge of
Timbuktu,
Djenne,
Oualata and
Gao,
Ajuran,
Adal and Warsangali in
Somalia,
Mughals in the Indian subcontinent (India,
Bangladesh,
Pakistan, etc.),
Safavids in
Persia and
Ottomans in
Anatolia,
Massina Empire,
Sokoto Caliphate of northern
Nigeria,
Toucouleur Empire, were among the influential and distinguished powers in the world.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2020)">citation needed</span></a></em>] 19th-century colonialism and 20th-century decolonisation have resulted in several independent Muslim-majority states around the world, with vastly differing attitudes towards and political influences granted to, or restricted for, Islam from country to country.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2020)">citation needed</span></a></em>] These have revolved around the question of Islam's compatibility with other ideological concepts such as
secularism,
nationalism (especially
Arab nationalism and
Pan-Arabism, as opposed to
Pan-Islamism),
socialism (see also
Arab socialism and
socialism in Iran), democracy (see
Islamic democracy),
republicanism (see also
Islamic republic),
liberalism and progressivism,
feminism,
capitalism and more.[<em><a href="
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (June 2020)">citation needed</span></a></em>]