Guru Tegh Bahadur. x
They were Muslim. Michael Montagne
Axum had protected Muslims from persecution
They are descendants of Zoroastrians who fled to India from Muslim persecution during the 7/8th centuries
Shah Jahan, the Mughal ruler, was an orthodox Muslim, to an extent even more than his father and grandfather.
The Ummayads, who were the first to claim divinity of their lineage as the Persian Emperors did.
The Muslim Mughal Emperors called it the "Paradise of Nations". The country is also referred to as "Bengal".
The Muslim emperors allowed freedom of religion. Unlike popular propaganda that says that Islam forces itself onto people. You can see in history that the Muslims armies only fought soldiers who stood against them, never caused oppression to citizens.
The Crusades brought knowledge of Muslim culture to Europe. As a result, those who did not participate in the Crusades grew more intolerant and began to view all non-Christians as their enemies. This led to the increase in the persecution of Jew in Europe.
Historically, Jews did seek converts to Judaism. However, this practice stopped, mainly due to Christian and Muslim persecution.
The Parsis are Zoroastrians who emigrated from Persia to India somewhere between the 8th and 10th Centuries CE. They were escaping from Muslim persecution in Persia following the fall of the Sassanid Empire there.
It was the Zoroastrians that migrated from Persia to India during the 8th century. They did this to get away from religious persecution by the Muslims.
YES. There were a number of Islamic countries that were sectarian in their outlook and, therefore, expelled Muslims who were believed to be of the wrong sect. The most clear attempts at this in the pre-modern era were the persecution by the Ottomans of the Shiite and Alevi minorities and the persecution of the Sunni minorities in Safavid Persia. In more recent times, the persecution of the Ahmadiyya minority in Pakistan, the forced relocation of Sunni and Shiite Iraqis, and the low-level ethnic cleansing of Hazaras in Afghanistan are examples of Muslims being expelled on account of their sect in Muslim-majority countries.