First off, neither the Bible or the Koran is especially violent. Sure, there are a lot of violent passages and highly questionable morals in both of them. But they both yammer on about the importance of forgiveness and that it's always best to forgive. They both make the argument that even if violence can be morally justified it's still always preferable to forgive.
Where are you getting this from in the Quran? Do you have some of the Quran that you can quote to us? Is there a part that says something like "If somebody blasphemes Allah or his Prophet, do not harm to him, but turn the other cheek"? If there is, then that part of the Quran needs very badly to be highlighted right now in the face of the militant Muslims.
First of all, the Quran and the Hadith are two VERY different things. There ARE passages in the Quran that call for forebearance of apostasy, and there are EXPLICIT calls for tolerance of Christians and Jews. The Hadith diverges from this, but the situational context is different from passage to passage and is not always preserved when quoted.
Second of all, it would be a waste of time to highlight those passages in the face of "the militant Muslims" because most extremists don't actually
read the Quran. This is as true as Muslims as it is for Christians: in the latter case, we have a book that EXPLICITLY calls for forgiveness of sins and for peace and understanding towards all people; this same book spawned Christian thinkers to view the Spanish Inquisition and the Witch's Hammer as perfectly acceptable forms of religious expression.
Interestingly, the Quran even contains explicit warnings about people who "raise a Mosque for mischief" rather than for submission. This, IMO, is probably the most heavily ignored verse in the entire book these days, not unlike the Bible's "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone!"
As your link notes, the Bible is a much bigger book, so there is more you can pick from in there. Your link also says that if you take size into consideration, the Quran is twice as violent.
I take issue with that. The Quran has more individual references to violence, but fewer references to violence actually being done. The Old Testament, in particular, has far more stories of the Hebrews deliberately butchering their enemies -- soldiers, women, children and cattle -- on flimsy if not totally false provocations. Most of the Quran's most violent passages quote Muhammed telling his followers "Those guys threw you out? Go back over there and kick their asses!"
It's also interesting to note that according to every Muslim I have ever talked to, the crowning achievement in Muhammed's military career was when he returned to Mecca and conquered it without killing anyone in it. The implication is that Muhammed used a combination of cleverness and overwhelming superiority to force the Meccans to surrender, thereby capturing the town and its inhabitants intact. In the minds of such people, Muhammed is revered not for his adherence to violence or intolerance of others, but for his leadership and wisdom and his ability to dominate his enemies and overcome all forms of opposition.
Basically, the same reason Americans worship their assorted war heroes.
The Bible also contains the example of Jesus himself saying things like "turn the other cheek", and the most violent Jesus himself gets in the story is his temper tantrum in the temple. Mohammed was a warlord who led battles and killed many.
So were almost all of the old testament kings and prophets. If anything, Islam is on par with Judaism in terms of violence and the glorification thereof, except that Islam only has a SINGLE prophet glorifying violence while Judaism has several.
To say it is all culture, poverty, western actions etc, and that the Quran and Islam itself has nothing to do with it, appears to be an entirely faith based position.
Oh no, the Quran has ALOT to do with it, being a highly central aspect of Islamic culture. It's just the Quran itself is not a necessary factor for the kind of violence outbursts we have been seeing, nor is Islam itself sufficient. Islamic teachings are a contributing factor in the SHAPE of that reaction, but at the end of the day it is a REACTION more than anything else.
The question is, a reaction to what? It's 1400 years too late to argue that it's a reaction to the rise of Islamic teachings, but a lot of other things have happened in recent history that are more likely to be causal factors.
It could be that the only way to tame Islam is to get Muslims to read less of their holy text and become less attached to it and Mohammed, ie, wean them off Islam.
It's not, though. The only way to tame Islam is, in fact, to tame Muslims as a group. There are historical, social, political and economic reasons that also need to be considered, a combination of which are quite literally driving huge groups of Muslims insane. Rampant poverty and disenfranchisement are the oft-cited cliches, but until they and other factors are resolved they will REMAIN highly relevant. The simple fact of the matter is, Muslims for the most part do not resort to violence when they live comfortable and productive lives; even Christians will do that when you subject them to the kind of deprivation that Muslims have been putting up with for the past hundred years (which, in fact, they DID in Northern Ireland).