Saturday, November 12, 2005

from the mailbox: eurabia on the march!

nov 11th
 
interesting comment by a friend on the patrick sookhdeo (he's an indian/west-indian convert to christism and he's some big wheel in church circles) article. sookhdeo is scared silly by the mohammedan march, as any sensible person would be.
 
the wages of dhimmitude are... enslavement.
 
and it couldn't happen to a nicer or more deserving crew than the british. i do wonder what the mohammedans will do to st. paul's cathedral when they take over london. one thing for sure, the idols therein will be in deep trouble.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: G

Sooo good to discover that Europe is discovering its own future in
India's grim past and present. Such satisfaction to note that their
devious complicity in Kashmiri/Jihadi terror against Hindus is truly
being repaid in the form of chickens coming home to roost.
Allah be praised for bringing his message of enslavement to one and all!

G

http://www.spectator.co.uk/article.php?table=&section=&issue=2005-11-12&id=6900

Features (London Spectator   11th November 2005)
Will London burn too?
Patrick Sookhdeo

Trevor Phillips, chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality, has
warned recently of 'sleepwalking our way to segregation'. Although he
was not speaking principally about Muslims, they have become perhaps
the most dominant group in British society. Divided along ethnic and
sectarian lines, Muslims are nevertheless united by their creed, their
law and the powerful concept of the umma, the totality of Muslims
worldwide.
The process of migrating and establishing a Muslim community in a
non-Muslim context has an important place in Islamic theology. The
word hijra is used to describe such a migration, in particular the
migration of Mohammed and his followers in ad 622 from Mecca, where
they were persecuted, to Medina where they established the first
Islamic state. Eight years earlier another hijra occurred when Muslim
refugees found freedom of worship in the Christian kingdom of
Abyssinia.


Muslims see the establishment of a Muslim community in the UK as a
contemporary hijra. But an important question concerns which
7th-century hijra they compare it to: the hijra to Abyssinia in which
the Muslims became contented and loyal subjects of a Christian king,
or the hijra to Medina where they seized political and military power.
While the Muslim scholar Imtiaz Ahmed Hussain has indicated that he
looks to the Abyssinian model, many other Muslims seem to look to the
Medinan model. A book published in 1980 by the Islamic Council of
Europe gives instructions for how Muslim minorities are to work
towards achieving domination of European countries through a policy of
concentration in geographical areas.
The Muslim writer Amir Taheri, tackling the question of 'Why Paris is
Burning', described how France's policy of assimilation began to fail
when (Muslim) immigrants grouped themselves in concentrated areas. The
resulting alienation, says Taheri, opens the way for radical Islamists
to promote religious and cultural apartheid. Some are even calling for
Muslim majority areas to become like an Ottoman millet, i.e., to
organise their own social, cultural and educational life in accordance
with their religious beliefs. In parts of France, says Taheri, a de
facto millet system is already in place, seen in Islamic headdress,
Islamic beards, Islamic control of the administration, and the
elimination of cinemas, dance halls and shops selling alcohol and
pork.
The Muslim community in France is well on the way to becoming a
millet, a state within a state. The only substantive goal still
outstanding is the implementation of Islamic law (Shariah) instead of
French law.
Muslims in France have by and large rejected the concept of the
integration of individuals and are working instead for the integration
of communities. The same is happening in the UK, where the concept of
multiculturalism has long been popular.

Two other Islamic principles are important subjects of debate among
contemporary Muslims. The first concerns 'sacred space'. Islam is a
territorial religion. Any space once gained is considered sacred and
should belong to the umma for ever. Any lost space must be regained —
even by force if necessary. Migrant Muslim communities in the West are
constantly engaged in sacralising new areas — first the inner private
spaces of their homes and mosques, and latterly whole neighbourhoods
(e.g., Birmingham) by means of marches and processions. So the
ultimate end of sacred space theology is autonomy for Muslims of the
UK under Islamic law.
Radical Muslims hope for the re-establishment of the Caliphate,
abolished by Atatürk in 1924. The possibility of a Southern Europe
Caliphate and a North Sea Caliphate has been raised.


The other important principle is the classic Islamic division of the
world into Dar al-Islam (the house of Islam), where Muslims rule, and
Dar al-Harb (the house of war). The sinister name for non-Muslim
territory indicates that Muslims have an obligation to wage war until
it becomes Dar al-Islam. There is much debate within Islam today as to
whether or not the West is Dar al-Harb. Non-Muslims can be thankful
for alternatives such as Dar al-Sulh (House of Truce) and Dar al-Ahd
(House of Treaty).
Some radical British Muslims used to believe in a 'covenant of
security' which forbids Muslims living in the UK from engaging in
military action within the country. Preposterous though it seems, they
believed that, were it not for this 'covenant', they would be
duty-bound to attack the majority community. Most now believe the
covenant to be null and void because of the UK's involvement in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
But the most radical of all hold that the covenant of security applied
only to Muslims who had sought refuge in Britain, not to those who
were born here. In the words of Hassan Butt, 'They [the British-born]
owe nothing to the government. They did not ask to be born here;
neither did they ask to be protected by Britain.'


In Britain we already have many examples of Muslim violence. Some are
within the community — ethnic violence such as Kurds against
Pakistanis in Peterborough or so-called 'honour killings'. Some are
between Muslims and other communities such as the blacks vs Asian
Muslims in Birmingham or the armed black Muslim gangs in south London
threatening to kill those who will not convert to Islam. Will we see
the same patterns of sectarian violence as in Pakistan, the homeland
of so many British Muslims? Shias and Sunnis killing each other, and
the persecution of Ahmadiyyas by Sunnis?
Most alarming of all is the prospect of Muslim secessionist violence
in the UK as in Kosovo, the Philippines, Thailand and elsewhere
(Huntington's much-reviled 'bloody borders of Islam'). Now this is
happening — apparently — in France. A radical Muslim preaching at Hyde
Park Corner on 6 November called for what had happened in France to be
repeated here. He urged all Muslims to move into Muslim areas, after
which any Churches would be expelled. He told his audience that Europe
had once been Muslim and called on them to make it Muslim again.


Many British cities already have concentrated Muslim communities.
Conservative estimates based on census returns indicate that Bradford
had a Muslim population of just under 49,000 in 1991, rising to over
75,000 in 2005. But Sher Azam, president of the Bradford Council of
Mosques, claims that 100,000 Muslims in Bradford attend mosque each
week, suggesting a total Muslim population in Bradford far in excess
of this. Whatever the true figures, it is clear that within a few
years Bradford and many other British cities will have Muslim
majorities. It is also clear that the often quoted figure of 1.6
million for the total British Muslim population must be a gross
underestimate.
Islamic enclaves would be defined by Islamic values, education,
politics, religious practice and above all law. They would be
'cleansed' of any non-Muslim presence. This cleansing is already
beginning by means of threats and violence to isolated churches in
Muslim majority areas. Even Islamic law is already semi-established,
in that a multitude of Shariah councils and Shariah courts exist which
deal with family issues, effectively creating an unofficial parallel
legal system within the UK.
Unless the multiculturalist policy — which has been indirectly
facilitating the separatist agenda of radical Islamists — is reversed
immediately, we shall wake up and find we have sleepwalked into a
situation of apartheid and segregation. If we sleep long enough, we
may even wake up to find that, like Paris, London is burning. Or that
we are living in an Islamic state.
 

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