Showing posts with label Islam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islam. Show all posts

Friday, June 22, 2018

Let's Unpack Khaw


@MinimumSt8 Jun 21
Replying to @KMGVictoria
You're the one who believes Christ to be the co-equal of God. I merely believe the laws of God are the creation [KPA Khaw typo, should read OF wise men] of wise men throughout the ages with the humility to attribute their wisdom to God because they see the seductiveness of the idea of a Supreme Being with universal laws. Words of wisdom in a Minimum State
The troller Claire Khaw, who lost the battle of logic to KMG wrote this as a twitter reply.

You have to love the atheists.

They can never make up their minds about the God of our universe. At some moment when their atheist's setup all seems so empty and big and scary, they sense that Satan's force is bending his ways toward him. Then, during this brief moment (of their realization) they chanel God through their wavering lifeline.

First of all, why is she capitalizing God if she an atheist? Courtesy toward Grace (the tweeter)? Multi-Culti respect for all peoples (Christians included)?

Or. That lingering feeling that she may indeed be wrong!
...the humility to attribute their wisdom to God because they see the seductiveness of the idea of a Supreme Being
So first there is humility then there is seduction which drives these wise men. Which are they? Wise? Undecided? Stupid?

And which is it: God? Supreme Being?

Somewhere on another twitter interaction with Grace, she waxes poetic about Islam.

There you have it.

There are NO atheists. A true atheist will end up committing suicide realizing that an empty universe is uninhabitable. And coincidentally, Kha talks about suicide at her blog (and has a tag dedicated to "suicide") as an expert.

Since the true God is unacceptable to her, she opts for another. I am surprised she didn't go for Buddha, but she likes that personal God, and Allah will give her that. She goes on at length about "secular" Islam on her blog, but knows full well that cannot happen. Here she is in an interview, she discusses her views about the superiority of Islam over Christianity.

She will, sooner or later, tweet-inform us of her conversion (or acceptance since she has no religion to convert from) to becoming a Muslim.

Friday, January 26, 2018

Succinct

Via The Thinking Housewife

“Let’s face it: Christianity and Islam are eternal enemies. Each makes uncompromising claims of exclusive truth. But this doesn’t mean that the secularist-Zionist war on the Islamic world serves any Christian interest or deserves Christian support.”

— Joseph Sobran

Friday, June 2, 2017

Hirsi Ali and Ferguson Busy Making Babies

Posted at Camera Lucida
By: Kidist Paulos Asrat
Tuesday, June 07, 2011


Hirsi Ali and Niall Ferguson,
no longer a "power couple"

Geert Wilders lives in effective house arrest in his country the Netherlands, and now is in court to defend, and save, his country and the West from encroaching Islamization.

Meanwhile, Hirsi Ali, his former countrywoman, former refugee asylum seeker to Holland from Somalia, former Dutch parliamentarian, and now an American citizen, is busy making illegitimate babies with her British boyfriend Niall Ferguson, according to the Britain's Daily Mail. Ali is pregnant by the British historian, who abandoned his wife and children to start a steamy affair with Ali after he met her at a New York event a few years ago. Ali came to New York to work with the American Enterprise Institute. She is now an American citizen, but everything about her, including her time in Holland, reeks of an opportunistic, global traveler - a nomad, as she correctly identifies herself in one of her books aptly titled Nomad - who will set up tent wherever it is most convenient.

In America, she started a non-profit organization to help Muslim-born women (whether believers in Islam or not) in the West, caught up in Islam's honor killings and other fierce misogynistic behaviors. As I wrote here, the plight of Muslim women is not our problem. The majority of Muslim women do not renounce Islam, but want the best of both worlds - a free life (possibly in the West) with the freedom to continue practicing the religion that has effectively persecuted them (how can we help people like this?). This is in some fashion how Ali is living her life. She hasn't renounced her "Muslimness" although she has a lot to say about reforming Islam to suit her feminist and Westernized lifestyle (see my blog posts here: 1, 2, 3).

Here is what I wrote on Ali in "Islam's Missionary Women":
Hirsi Ali insists that the West downplay one of its hallmarks, Christianity, in order to enter into a secularized unit to subjugate a totalitarian-inclined Islamic world, especially against its women. By declaring that only a West dependent on reason rather than religion can tackle this, she demands a solution that would throw out one of the prime Western traditions – that of Judeo-Christianity – which has historically been successful in defeating previous Islamic threats. Her Enlightenment-biased views allow her to boldly state “ The enemies of reason within the West are religion and the Romantic Movement”, as though Western tradition prior to the Enlightenment (which she gets chronologically wrong by putting the Romantics into the fray) is merely an amalgam of religious fanatics and sentimentalists.
News about Ali is always strange. It looks like she's has been trying to have a child for a while. Here's what she wrote about wanting to have a child in her book Nomad (via the Daily Mail):
I have struggled whether to have you on my own or to marry your father . . . having a child is a personal choice. It’s not only a personal choice; it’s a very selfish choice. I want to have you for me, for my delight, to enrich my existence.
The Daily Mail informs us that she had asked her doctor to have her eggs frozen in case she got too old to have children. So, I would conclude that her pregnancy was a priority in her torrid affair with Ferguson. (By the way, Ferguson, has previously cheated on his wife with eight affairs in five years, according to an earlier article in the often accurate Daily Mail, and I write here that there is no guarantee that he will change his ways with Ali.)

It is interesting that the Mail has posted a photo of Ali in her blue dress, a gaudy electric blue satin dress, looking both vapid and glitzy at the same time. But it is probably the only one they have where she stands in amorous link with Ferguson.

Ali has become an inconsequential speaker for the West by a non-Westerner. Her articles for the American Enterprise Institute are infrequent, and I haven't heard of any important engagement or activity in which she's recently participated. Perhaps the media (and anti-Jihadists) have come to the conclusion that her role as a non-Western mouthpiece speaking up for the West was too much to hope for.

Ferguson dedicated his latest book Civilization: The West and the Rest to her, writing that she "understands better than anyone I know what Western civilization really means – and what it still has to offer the world." He may have to reassess his view of her, and consequent admiration for her.

Saturday, May 27, 2017

Exclusive Christianity


Arthur Rimbaud's House in Harar, Ethiopia

(A post from 2005 at Camera Lucida)

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Arthur Rimbaud has his own house/museum in the city of Harar. Perhaps it is in the name of literary tradition that Canadian novelist Camilla Gibb has made a special ode to this walled, Southern Islamic city in Ethiopia in her new book Sweetness in the Belly.

It is always curious why writers pay such high praises to this city. Although Rimbaud initially said he was living in boredom, he stayed in Harar on-and-off for ten years.

Sir Richard Burton preferred to investigate Harar in his First Footsteps in East Africa rather than travel to the northern Christian Highlands of the Amhara people. And even Evelyn Waugh couldn’t see the ancient strength of this Christian civilization, and in his journalistic travelogues Waugh in Abyssinia and Remote People at times appeared much more complimentary toward the Southern Harare/Somali Muslims. His novel Scoop, based on his journalistic experience of the fascist invasion of Ethiopia, is centered around the fictional "East Africa" country of…Ishmaelia. This is all the more surprising in light of Waugh’s recent conversion to Catholicism. But it could just be that he was temporarily side-tracked by the Catholic (yet fascist) Italians. And such a basic Christianity may have been too much to handle.

I suspect that it is mostly atheist/pantheist/agnostic writers who are lured into the facile spirituality (sensuality) of places like Harar. As always with exotic works, the subject rings of the writer/traveler himself, in his spiritual (or similar) quest to find some meaning in his life. Usually, the farther away from home, the better.

The disciplined, ancient and exclusive Christianity of the highlander Amhara is too difficult and too demanding, and too close to home. I think this Biblical fear drives these writers away. It is easier to wallow in the accessible sensuality of a Southern Muslim city, in search of a generalized spirituality.

The Islam of Harar may be beguiling, and easier to enter. But it is far less forgiving and far less compassionate than the Christianity of the austere Highlanders.


Friday, May 26, 2017

I have been cited in three books...


Nicole Kidman, as Lady Ashley in Australia
Arriving in Darwin


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I have been cited in three books:

1. Little Mosque on the Prairie and the Paradoxes of Cultural Translation
By: Kyle Conway
University of Toronto Press, Feb 10, 2017

(From my article in American Thinker: How Canada's Little Mosque on the Prairie is Aiming for our Souls)

In Chapter 1 : Sitcoms, Cultural Translation and the Paradox of Saleable Diversity

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2. Women and Comedy: History, Theory, Practice
Ed. Peter Dickinson et al.
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, Mar 27, 2014

I am referenced in Chapter 16 in an essay by Regina Barreca: Layla Siddiqui as Holy Fool in Little Mosque on the Prairie:
Baber and his continual critique of Canadian morality no doubt inspired the claim of columnist Kidist Paulos Asrat that the show's intention is to convert North Americans to Islam.
This is once again based on my article How Canada's Little Mosque on the Prairie is Aiming for our Souls, but it is an incorrect interpretation of what I wrote. This is the usual hyperbole of multiculturalists who wish to find a demon in any critic of multiculturalism.

What I wished to communicate was that the show's intent was to make North Americans sympathetic towards Islam, and not to convert them. Little Mosque on the Prairie was still an exotic sitcom then. The show came out in January 2007 as Canadians were learning about it, and was cancelled in April 2012 as the novelty wore off, and not because of "Islamophobia."

Barreca is a feminist academician (no oxymoron there) who also wants to be funny. She quips:
“I used to assume my students were feminists,” she says. “It seemed like everyone got my jokes and laughed. Now I have to explain myself.”
For more on Baber (and his daughter Layla) see their character descriptions on Wikipedia
Layla Siddiqui (Aliza Vellani) is... a portrait of an average teenage Muslim girl struggling to find the right balance between her desire to be a good Muslim and her desire for the lifestyle of a regular Canadian teenager who's into music, clothes and boys. She can be rebellious and sarcastic, especially at her father's foibles (she refers to their home as "Baberistan"), but is also very perceptive and insightful. [
The book is a compilation of lectures at symposium at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia in 2011. The essays collected in Women and Comedy: History, Theory, and Practice, originally presented and discussed at a 2011 symposium held at Simon Fraser University.

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3. Baz Luhrmann
By: Pam Cook
British Film Institute; 2010 edition (July 6 2010)

I am cited in the end notes (104) of Baz Luhrmann, which I presume is in reference to my article: Australia: Whose Land is it Anyway, by Austral filmmaker Baz Luhrmann, in American Thinker. I write about the difficult integration of aboriginal mysticism with British pragmatic colonialism. I come in favor of Nicole Kidman's austere but brave femininity, and her kindly adoption of an aboriginal orphan, rescuing him from being interned in a mission school.

Pam Cook tells us in her "welcome page":
I have been thinking, writing and teaching about moving image culture since the 1970s, and these pages are a record of my work up to the present. Since 2006 I’ve been Professor Emerita in Film at the University of Southampton [UK].

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Made in Canada: Fashion to Eternity


Images arranged and Photoshoped by KPA from Mode-Ste
Mode-ste may appear to be a niche-focused brand, but it’s a very big niche. Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world, according to the Pew Research Center. Data from advisory firm DinarStandard shows Muslims spent US$230 billion on clothing in 2014.

But Chtourou is looking beyond her Muslim customer base. She says Mode-ste is “for every women of all statures, all cultures. Our goal is to make our clothing mainstream.”

[Quote from CTV News video below]



I wrote on Muslim fashion a few years ago here and here. The Muslim fashion industry in Canada has come a long way since, with a Made in Canada factory working out of Montreal to provide clothing that Muslim girls and their infidel friends can enjoy. Of course, Mode-ste has a larger vision that would lead from Fashion to Eternity for All.

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Incompatibilities


Trudeau at the Al Sunnah Al-Nabawiah mosque, Quebec 2014

From Mark Richardson's Oz Conservative:
Another good find by Conservative Thoughts (Konservative Gedanken), this time by Collin Cleary:
The liberal “celebration of diversity” is in fact a celebration of culture only in its external and superficial forms. In other words, to Western liberals “multiculturalism” winds up amounting simply to such things as the co-existence of different costumes, music, styles of dance, languages, and food. But the real guts of the different cultures consist in such things as how they view nature, how they view the divine, how they view men and women, and how they view the relative importance of their own group in the scheme of things. And it is by no means clear that members of cultures with radically different views on these matters can peacefully co-exist.

Unless, of course all cultural differences are eliminated save the purely external, via the transformation of all peoples into homogenized, interchangeable consumers bereft of any deeply-felt convictions. This is, in fact, the hidden global capitalist agenda of multiculturalism, now being cheerfully advanced by useful idiots on the anti-capitalist Left.

Friday, April 3, 2015

Mahdi Returns



Billboard showing the Muslim Jesus behind Imam Mahdi in the Vali-Asr Square in Tehran, completed in 2014

(I photoshopped in the clouds on the right, since the only version of this image I could find had large Persian script across. But, I find these sprawling clouds I added mimic the banners, adding more drama to the image, and to the event.)
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In this time of sorrow, when we are left without our God, here is Jesus as our existential enemies would like it: humiliated, head bent, following the Imam Mahdi who has his averted head, as the devil will always present himself with his face (and identity) hidden from us.

Even these Muslim artists, the Iranian Muslims who painted this billboard in Tehran, know what is real and what is false. The true Jesus shows us the truth, through his true, open presence.

The Iranian leader, on the coming of Mahdi-Jesus, said at the UN Council in 2012:
Creating peace and lasting security with decent life for all, although a great and a historic mission can be accomplished. The Almighty God has not left us alone in this mission and has said that it will surely happen. If it doesn't, then it will be contradictory to his wisdom.

-God Almighty has promised us a man of kindness, a man who loves people and loves absolute justice, a man who is a perfect human being and is named Imam A1-Mahdi, a man who will come in the company of Jesus Christ (PBUH) and the righteous. By using the inherent potential of all the worthy men and women of all nations and I repeat, the inherent potential of "all the worthy men and women of all nations" he will lead humanity into achieving its glorious and eternal ideals.

-The arrival of the Ultimate Savior will mark a new beginning, a rebirth and a resurrection. It will be the beginning of peace, lasting security and genuine life.

-His arrival will be the end of oppression, immorality, poverty, discrimination and the beginning of justice, love and empathy.

-He will come and he will cut through ignorance, superstition, prejudice by opening the gates of science and knowledge. He will establish a world brimful of prudence and he will prepare the ground for the collective, active and constructive participation of all in the global management.

-He will come to grant kindness, hope, freedom and dignity to all humanity as a girl.

-He will come so mankind will taste the pleasure of being human and being in the company of other humans.

-He will come so that hands will be joined, hearts will be filled with love and thoughts will be purified to be at service of security, welfare and happiness for all.

-He will come to return all children of Adam irrespective of their skin colors to their innate origin after a long history of separation and division linking them to eternal happiness.

-The arrival of the Ultimate Savior, Jesus Christ and the Righteous will bring about an eternally bright future for mankind, not by force or waging wars but through thought awakening and developing kindness in everyone. Their arrival will breathe a new life in the cold and frozen body of the world. He will bless humanity with a spring that puts an end to our winter of ignorance, poverty and war with the tidings of a season of blooming.

-Now we can sense the sweet scent and the soulful breeze of the spring, a spring that has just begun and doesn't belong to a specific race, ethnicity, nation or a region, a spring that will soon reach all the territories in Asia, Europe, Africa and the US.

-He will be the spring of all the justice-seekers, freedom-lovers and the followers of heavenly prophets. He will be the spring of humanity and the greenery of all ages.

-Let us join hands and clear the way for his eventual arrival with empathy and cooperation, in harmony and unity. Let us march on this path to salvation for the thirsty souls of humanity to taste immortal joy and grace.
Long live this spring, long live this spring and long live this spring.[Full trascript here]
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

How the Muslim world is being left behind: Why each new terror attack only further marginalizes the Muslim world

The article below is from the recent Macleans, a Canadian weekly current affairs magazine. I've posted the entire article, which is online, since I don't know for how long it will remain online (the alternative is to subscribe to Macleans online,or to buy the magazine. I was going to buy the print edition today, but forgot to do so).

I have a few of criticisms on the article:

1. Why not call the Charlie Hebdo killers Jihadists? They are committed Muslims who are following the madates of the Koran. They have a religious motive, and not a political or personal vendetta.

2. There is much written about the glories of the Muslim world as Europe lived in the dark ages of the Medieval times. I think this is not entirely accurate. The Muslim world has never been as advanced as some Islamic historians opine, and much of their knowledge was borrowed from Christian or Jewish scholars. I will expand on this later.

3. Gilmore describes the combative jihadist activities of Muslims as "terrorist" activities by a few

4. He at times blames the jihadist behavior of Muslims to foreign activities. But jihadist Muslim activity has always occurred whether Muslims were being oppressed, whether there is regional war in the Middle East, or if the West somehow insults Islam.

Other than that, I think it is as straight forward an article we can get from apologist western journalists.

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How the Muslim world is being left behind
Scott Gilmore
Macleans Magazine
January 14, 2015


July 2013: Damaged buildings in front of the Khaled bin Walid mosque, Homs, Syria (Sam Skaine, Getty)

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On the morning of the shooting at Charlie Hebdo in Paris, Maclean’s contributor Scott Gilmore filed this column. In the Jan. 29 issue of the magazine, he expands on his argument:

On Jan. 7, Islamist gunmen ran through the offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo screaming “The Prophet is avenged!” By coincidence, at the very moment they were killing the journalists, the International Space Station passed silently over Paris.

Consider that for a moment.

As terrorists committed a primitive act of tribal savagery in the name of a prophet who lived 1,400 years ago, right above them, orbiting through space, was the most sophisticated expression of mankind’s ability to transcend ignorance and fear with hope and reason.

Twenty-five nations from around the world have come together to build the space station. They include old enemies who fought each other for centuries over God and gold, Cold War rivals, small countries and large. But none are Islamic nations.

It has become a cliché to point out that science and reason once flourished in the Islamic world. Nonetheless, it is true. While Europe stumbled through the Dark Ages, Islamic scholars made dramatic advances in every field of science including mathematics, optics and experimental physics. Our modern world was built on the scientific breakthroughs of Islam. From the eighth century, mathematicians such as Muhammad ibn Mūsā al-Khwārizmī, who helped develop algebra, there is a direct line of progress that ends with the space station itself. But we no longer associate Islam with progress. In fact, a Muslim astronaut would surprise us as much as a non-Muslim terrorist (although there are many examples of each).

When the Parisian police siege ended on the blood-smeared floor of a kosher supermarket, the Prophet had not been avenged. He was diminished. This terrorist attack, and the others before it, merely isolated the Islamic world further from the global mainstream. In its aftermath, we and our leaders repeat, again and again, “Not all Muslims”—and yet we collectively treat Muslim nations as a threat that must be contained. Equal members of the global community? No. Partners in the space program? Impossible.

The Islamic world is in relative decline. Or, more precisely, a large number of countries with a Muslim majority are not developing as rapidly as the rest of the world, and in some cases, like Syria, they are even regressing.

This is a golden age for most. In the last 100 years life expectancy has more than doubled. In the last 50 years the poverty rate has fallen by 80 per cent. During that same time, the number of wars fell by a similar figure and the number of nations governed democratically tripled.

But, while the global community leapt forward, Islamic nations (as defined as members of the Organization of Islamic Co-operation) have progressed at a much slower pace. This is the case across a wide variety of metrics.

The Social Progress Index, a comprehensive measurement of a nation’s well-being, which includes everything from access to water to freedom of movement, ranks Islamic countries behind every other region in the world, including non-Muslim African countries. The Muslim world does even worse on Transparency International’s Perceptions of Corruption Index. Life expectancy numbers are among the world’s lowest, more than 15 years fewer than North America. And, not surprisingly, on a per capita basis, Muslim nations publish scientific papers at less than one-tenth the frequency of Europeans.

If we are surprised by these numbers, Najmuddin Shaikh is not. The former foreign secretary of Pakistan recently lamented, “The Islamic world is in disarray and decline and that Muslim communities find themselves under siege-like conditions in the West and elsewhere is perhaps an understatement.”

Why has the Muslim world been unable to keep pace? Why is it besieged? The easiest response is to say they did this to themselves. The evidence of this is so pervasive it is hard to refute. For example, just last week alone, while the world was focused on France, there were dozens of other terrorist attacks where Muslims killed Muslims.

In Yemen, a large group of young men were applying for entry into the police academy. They were queued up along a stone wall, which intensified the blast of a car bomb - 33 died.

In Iraq, a wholesale market is held every Saturday morning in Baghdad’s western district of Baiyaa. There a bomb killed five. Later that morning another blast killed three more people in the nearby town of Madian.

In Lebanon, on the same day, a suicide bomber walked up to the crowded Omran Café in Tripoli and triggered his vest. Bloodied survivors were pulling themselves out of the rubble when a second bomber stepped in amongst them. There were nine dead and 37 injured.

In Pakistan, as people gathered to celebrate the Prophet’s birthday by distributing alms at a mosque in Rawalpindi, a bomber pushed his way in. The blast shattered all the nearby windows and killed seven.

In Nigeria, militants wrapped explosives around the midriff of a small 10-year old girl, and told her to walk into the market. When she reached the stalls where the chickens are sold, it went off, killing 19.

This is an incomplete list, from just last week, but it illustrates the broader story well. Internecine conflict in the Islamic world is endemic. The unrelenting Shia and Sunni schism dominates it, but it also includes tribal and ethnic divides. In 2013, there were 12 Western victims of terror attacks compared to 22,000 non-Western fatalities. These do not include those killed by the barrel bombs that Syrian President Assad dropped on his own people, or civilians killed by warfare in Afghanistan or Iraq. From the jungles of Sulawesi to the deserts of Libya, Muslims are killing Muslims at a rate that dwarfs the more highly publicized conflict with the West. In that light, it is hard to subscribe to the theory this is a clash of civilizations. Rather, it is one culture turning on itself.

The self-inflicted wounds are not always violent. The Taliban banned girls from being educated. In Syria, Islamic State closed all schools. In 2013, militants in Mali burned the fabled and ancient libraries of Timbuktu. In a speech just days before the Paris attacks, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi pleaded for an end to this self-destruction: “The Islamic world is being torn, it is being destroyed, it is being lost. And it is being lost by our own hands.”

Focusing just on the violence does not take into account the broader context, the economic and geographic circumstances in which these countries find themselves. The Maghreb (northwest Africa), the Arabian Peninsula, the Central Asia steppes, the Gulf of Guinea, the Indus valley, the Indonesian archipelago: each of these presents different but equally daunting barriers to building modern economies and functioning states. Whether it is drought or monsoons, a lack of harbours or impassible mountain ranges, the Islamic world was not dealt the best geographic hand.

It has faced economic hurdles, too. The international demand for heroin has created a lucrative but destructive poppy trade that the United States and all its allies could not even slow. Similarly, but perhaps less dramatically, the oil reserves of the Middle East and West Africa have been both a blessing and a curse, fuelling building booms, corruption and instability.

There are also the historical circumstances that must be acknowledged. The legacy of disastrous foreign intervention is everywhere. For hundreds of years the Dutch treated Indonesia as a warehouse, merely to be raided for its wealth, forestalling the evolution of local institutions. When independence came, dictators Sukarno and Suharto merely perfected what the Dutch had begun.

Bangladesh faced a similar colonial legacy, but one that was followed by partition and a brutal civil war. The elites who emerged redefined corruption, and it is difficult to judge which has done more damage: the typhoons or the politicians.

Further west, the arbitrarily drawn Durand Line was established in the 19th century to separate Pakistan and Afghanistan by cutting right through the Pashtun homeland. This colonial relic has remained a festering wound that makes both countries virtually ungovernable.

A similar exercise produced a comparable result in the Middle East. The secretly negotiated Sykes-Picot Agreement, creating spheres of influence for the Great Powers during the First World War, produced fractious borders and lit a bonfire of ethnic and sectarian violence that this week burned the Baiyaa market and the Omran Café.

Even recent history has been unkind to the Islamic world. The U.S.-led invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan exploded into regional instability. repeated conflicts with Israel have drained meagre budgets from militaries who spend most of their time blaming Zionist conspiracies for the repressive chaos they themselves create at home.

When one considers the heavy weight of these extenuating circumstances, it is easier to see that the terrorism of the last 20 years is not the reason the Islamic world has been left behind. But it is perhaps the reason it is staying there.

Lockerbie. Embassies in Africa. Sept. 11. Subways in London. A memorial in Ottawa. A café in Sydney. A magazine in Paris. We have witnessed a steady series of attacks against the West. Some of these were large and well-organized conspiracies, others lone-wolf attacks by mentally unstable men with tenuous connections to Islam. But they had the same effect: to provoke a fear in the West that Islam is a threat, and the impression that the Muslim world is not a partner, but a challenge to be managed.

We, and our governments, don’t say this. In fact, we do all we can to make it appear otherwise. We talk about engagement and launch various initiatives to build “constructive dialogue.” These are just euphemisms.

President Barack Obama wanted to use the space program as a tool to engage the Islamic world. He instructed NASA to help Muslim nations “feel good about their historic contribution to science, math and engineering.” In Canada, we reached out by, among other things, naming a special envoy to the Organization of Islamic Co-operation (OIC) and by sending its member countries over $12 billion in aid since 2002. During that same period, the United States sent $137 billion.

These efforts were not about expanding mutually beneficial relations with peers to create new opportunities. They were about preventing problems and neutralizing a threat. Most of our energy has gone into isolating, not engaging, the Islamic world. Compare, for example, what has been spent on intelligence, homeland security and military operations. Since 9/11, Canada tripled its spy budget and spent $18 billion sending troops to Afghanistan. The United States spent between $4 trillion and $6 trillion on military campaigns (including Iraq)—over 25 times more than they spent on engaging through aid.

With every act of terror, we push the Muslim world farther way. We launch more drones. We deploy more troops. We fortify more embassies. We watch more mosques. We accept fewer refugees. We issue fewer visas.

A passport from an Islamic nation is less welcome than one from any other region of the world. Citizens of the OIC enjoy visa-free travel to fewer countries than anyone else. This small fact tells a much larger story about the lack of interpersonal contact between Islamic nations and the rest of the world. It illustrates the fear that some of us feel when we see that the man boarding the flight ahead of us is wearing a shalwar kameez. It highlights the difficulty any of us have had bringing Muslim colleagues to international conferences, or transferring money to business partners in the Middle East. It makes us realize we can’t remember the last time someone talked about going to Egypt to see the pyramids. And it explains why last year less than two per cent of the visitors to Canada were from the Islamic world, despite those countries comprising 25 per cent of the world’s population.

It is not just the West. Russia, China, India: all the global powers have developed similar postures toward the Islamic world. Occasionally, although less frequently than the West, they talk about engagement. But really, like us, their strategy is primarily focused on containment.

The isolation also exists at the multilateral level. Only 19 per cent of global economies are not members of the World Trade Organization, but that short list is dominated by Islamic nations. The centrally important Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has only one Islamic member: Turkey. Canada belongs to 207 international organizations. The average Islamic nation belongs to about half that, making them less connected and included than are European, Latin American, Caribbean and Asian countries.

Of course, it is not all containment. The international community does engage more constructively with some Islamic countries than with others. For example, while Malaysia is not a member of the International Space Station partnership, it did second an astronaut to Russia, who then sent him to the space station. Turkey is not only a member of the OECD, it is also part of NATO. (But is hard to imagine it being invited to join today, given that just this week the United States cancelled the transfer of two frigates to the Turkish navy, due to growing concerns about its Islamist tendencies.)

The United States and Canada are negotiating with Indonesia so that we can enter the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement. And Western oil companies are deeply entrenched in Saudi Arabia and Nigeria. But these exceptions prove the rule. Unless you are among the most moderate members of the OIC, or drowning in oil, the international community is not interested.

Ironically, this isolation may be what the extremists actually want. Many of the terrorist attacks were meant to drive a wedge between the Muslim world and the West, to eliminate the degenerate influences of the outside. They want to be left behind, or at least left alone.

Can we change this dynamic? Will we continue to pull back from the Muslim world? It is difficult to find signs that this pattern can be broken. Our economies now depend on trillion-dollar industries whose sole purpose is to protect us from the Islamist threat by building better body scanners and faster cruise missiles. Our own governments have restructured themselves as vigilant watchdogs, safeguarding us from terror. Even as the Paris attacks were still unfolding, the Canadian government was announcing even more anti-terror legislation. And our political institutions have been rewired, dramatically shifting the balance between our personal freedom and our collective security. All of this is intended to build blast-proof walls between us and them.

But perhaps, if we realize that with every terrorist attack our collective instincts to contain the Muslim world grows stronger, we can change this. It would take some patience and courage on our part, and a few leaps of faith, to increase the free flow of our peoples and in their wake, perhaps ideas and values. Of course, it would also require an effort on the part of Islamic nations to reach out, too. We can’t drag them into the OECD.

Terrorists like those who captured our attention in France are not responsible for the relative decline of the Islamic world, but they are prolonging its isolation. This attack and all the others before it have compelled the international community to instinctively respond by containing the threat. But this is merely palliative. As the Muslim world is further contained, it becomes further alienated from the global community, and it falls further behind. This trend must change. We must recognize that as mankind moves further into space, some of us are being left behind.

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Camel at the Cloisters


Wall Painting of a Camel, first half 12th century (perhaps 1129–34)
From the hermitage of San Baudelio de Berlanga
Fresco transferred to canvas; 65 x 134 in. (165.1 x 340.3 cm)
The Cloisters Collection, 1961 (61.219)

[Photo By: KPA, December 13, 2012]


I just found a way to get to my XD-Picture Card files, from my old Olympus camera. Apparently, this card is pretty much out of date now, but I managed to find a memory card reader, which allows me to download a variety of files.

This is not a great photograph (my camera then was having problems with interiors and using a flash would produce too much glare). I only recently found it (or was able to find it due to the reader).

I took the photograph in August 2012, when I came to New York for a brief summer trip. I met Larry Auster for several outings, despite his ill health, and we went to the Cloisters together. I went twice, (the first time is when I took the photograph). The second time, I went with Larry, having figured out that it would be possible for him to make the trek all the way out there.

I think this photograph is symbolic of our times, and also symbolic of the battle Larry was fighting. It is a reminder not to stop, and not to lapse into complacency. We may stop, but this hard and determined enemy doesn't. I will explain below.

For some reason, I didn't take any photos of Larry. I think I was just being polite. But below is one of him taken at the dinner planned for (and by) him, to celebrate Christmas together with his friends.

He sent me the photo with these remarks: "A photo of me at the dinner with my little pig eyes... My eyes are already small, and when I haven't had much sleep they get even smaller."

Larry was never one to fall to vanity, nor was he one to mince his words. I think he looks cheerful. We came from far and wide to celebrate Christmas with him. He was happy to be amongst friends.


Larry Auster
Kennedy's Pub and Restaurant, New York City
December 8, 2012


Now back to the camel.

Here is how the Metropolitan Museum of Art describes this wall painting:
The hermitage of San Baudelio de Berlanga was constructed in the beginning of the eleventh century at the heart of the frontier between Islamic and Christian lands. Its interior was transformed 150 years later with the addition of two cycles of vibrant wall paintings. The upper walls of the church were decorated with a series of scenes from the life of Christ, while the lower sections include boldly painted hunt scenes and images of animals, all of which derive from earlier Islamic objects.

Associated with aristocratic power and pursuits, the camel was a subject often seen on the courtly fine arts of the Umayyad caliphate and Ta’ifa monarchies. Islamic court art was known and admired by inhabitants of the Christian kingdoms for its costly materials and unparalleled craft. Though the Christians under Alfonso VII had definitively wrested Berlanga from Islamic forces in 1124, the paintings in the hermitage suggest that they continued to rely on Islamic motifs and the style of the Islamic court when seeking to create a luxurious setting.
We are back again in that fascinated mode of the medieval Christian kingdoms. Camels are desert creatures, belonging to their Muslim masters. The medieval artist who created this wall painting didn't quite know how to depict the camel's hooves. He cleverly made them flat and wide, suitable for travel along unstable desert sands. But why create camels in the first place, other than a desire to bring the exotic closer? It was this openness, and "tolerance" that eventually led to the Islamic conquest of Spain.

In our eagerness to experience the exotic, we contemporary folk have made our cities dangerous for conquest once again. It seems that we in the West will always have this perennial cycle of openness, then conquest (by those we opened our doors to), then war, then freedom once again. But this time, it may not have that desired ending.

Larry spent a good deal of his time writing about this civilization we might lose. He exhorted us to stop our lazy ways and not to neglecting this civilization. And he warned us about the dire consequences if we did.

In view of the recent shocking events in France, where armed Jihadis were in the middle of the streets of Paris with sophisticated weaponry, I say that we pay especial heed to his words.

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat

Friday, January 9, 2015

Je Ne Suis Pas Charlie!



Look at this pathetic collection of westerners, Parisians, FRENCH, who have Général De Gaulle in recent memory, standing there with their little signs!

This is what is going to "set them free?"

Geert Wilders posted this statement on the jihad in France and the murder of the French journalists, at his website, and also the video below:
The West is at war, and should de-Islamize

The assassinations of ten journalists and two policemen today in Paris serve as a warning to all the countries in the free world. We are at war. Charlie Hebdo was under police protection following numerous threats because of its outspoken criticism of Islam. Despite the protection by the police, terrorists were able to murder their opponents.

Western governments have to realize that we are at war. We should no longer show any respect for an ideology that rejects our fundamental values. The only way to defend our democratic values and fundamental freedoms is to start the de-Islamization of our societies.

We have to close our borders, reinstate border controls, get rid of political correctness, introduce administrative detention, and stop immigration from Islamic countries. We must defend ourselves. Enough is enough.



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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Thursday, January 8, 2015

"I couldn’t give a damn if you offend my religion!"

A Muslim would never say this. Trust a Christian to do so. This is what Michael Coren says in an interview here on his book Hatred: Islam's War on Christianity:
LOPEZ: People understandably don’t want to offend people and their religion. Is that the wrong way to be looking at things?

COREN: Why? Why, why, why? I couldn’t give a damn if you offend my religion! I am a Catholic and my beliefs are far too strong to be damaged by some cartoon or joke or argument in a book. This fatuous modern notion of “being offended” is a moan, an annoying weep. I am offended, therefore I am. If you don’t like something, don’t read it or watch it. We are not made of glass and we won’t break. All I ask for is an even playing field. What happens now is that it’s fine to offend Christians but not to offend other religions. We have to be careful here. What matters in a healthy democracy is not the protection of feelings but the right to speak one’s mind. Remember, it’s the Left who tend to complain about being offended while habitually abusing the Right.
This is false and wrong. How can anyone stand by and let something sacred to him be desecrated? I have a whole section on "Desecration" in Reclaiming Beauty, where I discuss various artistic attempts at destroying that which is beautiful, and Godly.

In the modern West, we are all to be equal offenders and equally offended: Christians, Muslims, Jews, and so on. But the reality is that very few cultures are willing to allow their sacred things to be tarnished, and least of all by outsiders. That is why Muslims behave the way they do.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Cause Célèbre!


Does this look like a Cause Celebre to you?

An email I sent to a correspondent:
Dear...

[H]ere is an email I sent to Michael Coren, who has written a new book titled Hatred: Islam's War on Christianity, and whose lecture I attended last week at the Jewish Defense League. I wrote this reply to his email after he told me to say he cannot find any way to have me on his nightly show.

I gave him good reviews [here and here] for his book at my website, since I didn't want to pick too much at the details.

But, unfortunately, he is of the same ilk as Robert Spencer, Jamie Glasov, David Horowitz, et al. The Islam apologists/Islam destroyers, who never quite took it seriously enough to take what the Koran said as what Muslims really do believe, and who would say things like "destroy radical Islam."

It was a long shot, trying to contact Coren, and perhaps to guage if he really can go the distance with Islam, conservatism, etc, since I really do need supporters here in Canada, and links to publishers. But, it looks like I will have to keep focused on what I'm doing, and doing it as authentically as possible.

Best,

Kidist
Correspondent:
I don't know much about this Coren fellow, but much of what drives commercial broadcasting, Tv, and print, is very specific and needs to fit their niche and attract viewers. Perhaps you're viewed as not controversial enough, or too controversial, or too-much-this-and-not-enough-that. It's hard to know. You're not famous and controversial, two things which can help drive media attention. But do keep plugging away. Recall those authors who submitted their book to 30 publishers and were turned down by all, and then one publisher picks it up and has some success. Persistence pays off. Your follow up to Coren is very good. Maybe you could get yourself arrested, or something, to drive some media attention. Just kidding. It is difficult to penetrate the media barrier....
Kidist:
I think I'm TOO nice and proper! When I breach out of that, people are actually surprised. Even Laura (of The Thinking Housewife) once said to me that I was full of surprises, and someone else said (it was actually at Jim's (Kalb) dinner) that I don't look like my blog...

Yes, I will start to be difficult, obnoxious etc. I thought of reporting Coren for "racism" or better "discrimination" or something. He is discriminating against me because I dare to say that Islam has no place in Canada. He daren't have me say what I think we should do about that (i.e. present Larry's carefully outlined program for how to deal with immigration and Muslims, and Islam). Coren has all kinds of other "minority" groups on his show. How about an Ethiopian, Christian, Westerner!!! I will send an email to that Jamie Glasov of Horowitz and Frontpage Magazine, and other pseudo conservative sites which Coren idolizes.

Now that I'm over the disappointment, I will just "have fun," as the saying goes. And keep on plugging.
And here, my correspondent goes through my email, giving his views, and advice:

KPA:
I think I'm TOO nice and proper!
Correspondent:
You do come across as being nice and proper, and a fine thing it is, too, in our liberal culture of abrasive and improper women. I wouldn't like to see you as yet another loud-mouthed, obnoxious chick. A proper conservative man, in a proper conservative society, would properly deplore that. But then, this is hardly a proper conservative society. And then, there was Joan of Arc. And I think Phyliss Schlafly is a fine model of a woman who stands up for civilized values against the rising tide of liberation.
KPA:
When I breach out of that, people are actually surprised. Even Laura [of the Thinking Housewife] once said to me that I was full of surprises, and someone else said (it was actually at Jim's [Kalb] dinner) that I don't look like my blog...
Yes, I will start to be difficult, obnoxious etc.
Correspondent:
I think you can be effective without having an obnoxious manner. Larry was a good example of that. He always (well, almost always) said what he had to say in a calm, deliberate voice, reasonable, factual, and with great conviction.
KPA:
I thought of reporting Coren for "racism" or better "discrimination" or something. He is discriminating against me because I dare to say that Islam has no place in Canada.
Correspondent:
We shouldn't try to use illegitimate leftist arguments like "discrimination" against our opponents. It would look like a cynical ploy.
KPA:
He daren't have me say what I think we should do about that (i.e. present Larry's carefully outlined program for how to deal with immigration and Muslims, and Islam). Coren has all kinds of other "minority" groups on his show. How about an Ethiopian, Christian, Westerner!!! I will send an email to that Jamie Glasov of Horowitz and Frontpage Magazine, and other pseudo conservative sites which Coren idolizes.
Correspondent:
You're at the place Larry arrived at long ago -- the greatest obstacle to defeating liberalism is our own so-called-conservatives, who accept liberal principles like diversity and non-discrimination and merely try to ameliorate the worst symptoms rather than opposing liberalism on fundamental ground.
KPA:
Now that I'm over the disappointment, I will just "have fun," as the saying goes. And keep on plugging.
Correspondent:
You do have the unique advantage of being a non-Westerner, and a woman, who opposes liberalism. We tend to feel guilty when one of our own, a white man, tries to defend us. But people will be more open to listening when one of the "other" -- a chick! an Ethiopian chick!! -- says non-liberal things. Say it in a quiet, yet firm voice of conviction -- "you so-called-conservative leaders are one of the reasons we're losing". Unfortunately, you'll find the liberals are especially hate-filled towards anyone they perceive to be one of "their own" (and that includes Ethiopian chicks) who goes off the reservation and starts denouncing them and their false religion. It really gets under their skin. Oh, you could get yourself arrested on hate charges, don't you think, in Canada?
KPA:
Agreed, 100%.

Thanks for the reality check.

Getting arrested in Canada for hate charges? The sheer confusion would just kill everyone!
Correspondent:
"The sheer confusion would just kill everyone!"

Yeah, and you'd probably get a lot more hits at your blog! And then Coren and the rest would be falling all over themselves to get you on their shows. Asrat, La Cause Celebre!
:-)
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Thursday, January 1, 2015

Ethiopian Christian Tolerance, Ethiopian Islamic Jihad


Mural painting of Saint George slaying the dragon
Debre Birhan Selassie church in Gondar, Ethiopia


In view of the terrible plight of Christians in the Middle East, which I wrote about here in relation to Michael Coren's new book Hatred: Islam's War on Christianity, below is an article I wrote back in January 2007, which was posted at Larry Auster's View From the Right. Larry introduced the article thus:
ETHIOPIAN CHRISTIAN TOLERANCE, ETHIOPIAN ISLAMIC JIHAD

Last month, VFR reader KPA, a citizen of Canada who comes originally from Ethiopia, told us something of the fascinating history of Christian-Muslim relations in Ethiopia between the 14th and 16th century, when tolerance by the Christian Kingdom toward its Muslim minority eventually enabled the Muslims to launch a jihad. In an article written for VFR, she now expands on this theme.
And here is the article.

CHRISTIAN TOLERANCE, ISLAMIC JIHAD

I am trying to put forth the thesis that the Ethiopian Christian Kingdom, prior to the great Muslim devastation from 1527 to 1543, was essentially a non-imperialistic nation, with a tolerant attitude toward its non-Christian subjects and regions. This tolerance, in its many forms as I will discuss below, allowed Islam to flourish during moments of weakness within the Ethiopian Kingdom, and eventually allowed the Muslims to mobilize into a destructive jihad in the mid-sixteenth century.

Ahmad ibn Ibrihim al-Ghazi (1506-1543) known as Grañ or the Left-Handed by the Christian Ethiopians, spearheaded Ethiopia’s devastation by the Muslims from 1527 to his death on the battlefield in 1543. Grañ was from the southeastern Muslim tributary of Adal. He monopolized the acute jihadist mood of the Muslims of the time, sparked by constant defeats by Christian Ethiopia, and set out to lead this jihad himself. Having killed the sultan of Adal, he proclaiming himself both leader and Imam, and started his campaign by refusing to pay tributes to the Ethiopian Emperor. During his scourge, he managed to ravage the Christian Ethiopian Kingdom of much of its churches, monasteries, religious art and sacred texts, and embarked on the total Islamization of the country. At his death, his movement disintegrated, and Ethiopians were able to rebuild their lost Kingdom.

The Ethiopian Kingdom, prior to Grañ’s uprising, was essentially a heterogeneous region, with Muslims, Pagans, northerners and southerners living under the dominant Christian Amhara civilization. This tolerant attitude was also practiced in the peripheral tributaries where the only expectation the Christian Ethiopians had of these regions was that they pay periodic taxes and tributes. These regions were left alone for the most part to practice their own religions and customs. Muslim tributaries also played an important role in trade routes and as intermediary traders.

Ethiopian Christians were not really interested in leaving their highland Kingdom behind to live in the less appealing lowlands. On a deeper level, their Christian and “neighborly” preference was to leave their tributaries as they were without interfering too much. Certainly there were elements of proselytization, especially with the important monastic culture of the Ethiopian Church, but there was too much to integrate within the Church itself—between Church and State, between the various Orthodox factions, between Egypt’s Copts and appointed Patriarchs, etc.

But wherever there was interaction between Ethiopian monarchs and their Muslim tributaries, Muslims were not treated any differently than the other non-Muslims of the Kingdom. They may have received even more tolerance in view of their importance as trade middlemen, and also their strong and cohesive culture and system.

Yet, at the great moment of destruction, the Muslims had a completely different strategy, of annihilation in fact, of the Christian elements, despite the friendly beginnings between Ethiopia and the Muslims at the early stages of Islam’s history.

Here is a summary of how I came to these conclusions.

Earliest contacts with Muslims describe the refuge the Ethiopian (by now Christian) Aksum Kingdom gave to Muslims fleeing persecution, around 615 AD, including Mohammed’s son-in-law. This exempted Ethiopia from the jihad which started to take place in nearby regions. Later on, when the Muslims had control over Jerusalem, Ethiopian pilgrims were allowed to travel there, and even maintain holy sites in the city.

Ethiopia depended on the Egyptian Copts to send the Abunes or Patriarchs from time to time. This led to conflicts and skirmishes with Muslim Egypt. At times, Ethiopian Christians even spoke out against mistreatment of Copts, often with beneficial results

Perhaps the most significant contact Ethiopia had directly with Muslims and the Muslim world was through trade. Important trade caravans traveled from the interior of Ethiopia to the coastal outlets to the Red Sea and out to Egypt, Yemen, even as far out as India and Southern Europe. The caravans were controlled by Muslims from across the Red Sea, and also involved Ethiopian Muslims from within the Kingdom. These caravans eventually resulted with important Muslim settlements in the peripheries of the Christian Kingdom,

Ethiopian Muslims lived peacefully and affluently in Ethiopia proper through their privileged role in trade, and received most of the benefits of Ethiopian citizenry. The peripheral Muslim regions were expected to pay tributes to maintain their inland routes with their trade caravans. As these Muslim settlements grew, they started to push for expansion inland, but were curtailed and some were put under some type of Ethiopian rule. This aggression, though, was initiated by the Muslims.

Emperor Amda Siyon I (1313-1344) was really continuing with the strategy of bringing these trade routes under Ethiopian control (to reduce the Muslims’ aggression and to optimize the Ethiopian economy) when he began his ambitious expansionist scheme. It was more politico-economic rather than religiously motivated. Such Muslim lands that Amda Siyon and his predecessors put under Ethiopian control were expected to pay taxes and tributes, like any other non-Muslim regions. But they were generally left alone to pursue their own cultures and religions. They were, in effect, semi-autonomous regions, with their own rulers, religions and cultures.

One important characteristic of the Ethiopians was their reluctance, as a group, to venture out of their beloved highlands into the “colonies.” Mostly this was a “laissez-faire,” tolerant attitude. Also, it was a lack of desire to live with heathen peoples, in inhospitable and climatically difficult areas.

Another aspect is the heterogeneity of the Kingdom itself, with Ethiopian Muslims, Pagans, and other ethnicities from tributary regions living within the Kingdom, albeit all under the umbrella of the dominant Amhara Christian culture of the Ethiopians.

Although the Ethiopians were expanding their Kingdom initially as a reaction to Muslim aggression, Amda Siyon’s “I am the Emperor of all the Muslims in the land of Ethiopia” was really said in a spirit of inclusion, not aggression. This is shown by his tolerance of the Muslims’ beliefs and way of life, and by his continuing his precedessors’ policy of allowing the Muslims to live in semi-autonomous peripheral regions practicing their religion freely within their own ethnic, social and cultural structures.

While peripheral Muslim regions showed signs of submission, paying taxes and deferring to the Emperor of the time, they still used any opportunity to advance aggressively into Ethiopia, or to subvert what they believed to be a weak ruler. This invariably resulted with regional wars, from which the Ethiopians always returned victorious.

These conflicts continued after Amda Siyon’s death, causing another Emperor, Zara Yaqob (1399-1468), to use more stringent methods such as forced conversions, which even got him admonishment from the clergy who criticized his mistreatment of Muslims through “futile deaths of men, arrests and beatings.”

The regularly defeated and bitter Muslims finally declared jihad on Ethiopia. This was a far cry from the jihad-free promise they gave Ethiopians at the time persecuted Muslims were given refuge by the Aksumite Kingdom in early Islamic history.

A number of factors contributed the Muslim leader Ahmad ibn Ibrihim al-Ghazi’s (Grañ’s) success.

- Help from other Muslims, namely the Ottomans, who provided firearms to the Muslims, weapons which the Ethiopians did not have until later via the Portuguese.

- Weakened religious and social structures within the Kingdom itself, due to the now heterogeneous society, intermarriage with Muslims and other non-Christians, conversions from Christianity, and other social factors.

- Rivalries between feudal Ethiopian lords and lack of allegiance to the Emperor and the Kingdom, often with a weak Emperor at the realm.

- Compromises and leniency toward the peripheral Muslim settlements—especially during uprisings and rebellions—by later Emperors, unlike Amda Siyon’s and Zara Yaqob’s stringent reactions.

- Fear of Catholicism by an important ally, the Portuguese, whose assistance was sought later rather than sooner.

Grañ was thus able to exploit these internal weaknesses, and set to destroy all of Christian Ethiopia and supplant her with a purely Muslim state. Quite different from the tolerant Ethiopian Emperors which allowed Muslims to sustain their beliefs, cultures and religions.

Thus, my conclusion is that the Ethiopian Kingdom never set out to be an invasive, imperialistic presence. It tolerated semi-autonomous Muslim regions which it brought under control to monopolize trade routes and curtail Muslim aggression. Muslims lived peaceably in “greater” Ethiopia until they felt they could take advantage of the situation, and attacked, although they were continually defeated.

But Grañ finally came with all the circumstances on his side.

Ethiopians never endeavored mass, forced, conversions, never tried to coerce different ethnicities to change their cultures and societies, and for the most part left the Muslim regions apart from Ethiopia proper as semi-autonomous tributaries. And the Ethiopian Muslims (who were citizens of the Kingdom and not part or the regional settlements) lived affluent and privileged lives as traders, and to some extent as ambassadors to foreign lands where they took their caravans.

The degree of intolerance set by Grañ during his five years of destruction with his aim of a “Futuh” or a complete conquest of Ethiopia was spectacular. All references to Christianity, churches, monasteries, religious art, sacred books, etc. were destroyed. And the Ethiopians were to live as a completely subjugated people.

But, with the help of the Portuguese, and more astute leaders—Libna Dingel (1508-1540) and his son Gelawdewos (1540-1559)—the Muslims were finally driven out, and Ethiopia retrieved lost lands.

It is hard to say how the Ethiopians should have dealt with these problematic Muslim tributaries. They could have been more diligent with their proselytization, or they could have depended less on Muslim traders and trade routes and consolidated this economy solely under Christian Ethiopians. Nonetheless, their non-interventionist style allowed Islam to flourish over the years, to devastating effect.

My small readings about other Christian lands, their treatment of Muslims, the treatment by Muslims of Christians and other ethnic and religious groups, indicate to me that Muslims are generally and consistently intolerant of other ethnic and religious groups, and this trend continues today.

The United States, Canada and Europe, it seems to me, are in a very similar situation in which Ethiopia found herself those many centuries ago. These tolerant, heterogeneous societies, giving equal or even privileged treatment to Muslims, may all one day dissipate when internal weaknesses and external forces give Muslims—both within and without the West—the strength to carry out their destruction.

I strongly believe that Muslims are not to be underestimated in any manner whatsoever.

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References:

Harold G. Marcus, The History of Ethiopia.
Richard Pankhurst, The Ethiopians: A History.
Mordechai Abir, Ethiopia and the Red Sea: The rise and decline of the Solomonic dynasty and Muslim-European rivalry in the region.
Paul B. Henze, Layers of Time: A History of Ethiopia.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Wednesday, December 24, 2014

A Plea for Christmas


Michael Coren, host of the current affairs program The Arena,
and author of the recently published Hatred: Islam's War on Christianity


If there is anything we can learn this Christmas, it is the plight of Middle Eastern Christians about whom Michael Coren has written in his newly published book Hatred, Islam's War in Christianity.

I have copied below the last paragraph of the last page of the book, and rather than a march to war, Coren is asking for prayers, that God may guide us all to the plight of these "broken and betrayed."

I think the situation is as bad as Coren told us last night at his presentation, which I wrote about here, where Coren said that this is worse than anything he has ever seen, and it has been kept hidden for so long that these people have been indeed forgotten.

It is time now not to betray them. But, not simply for them. We all stand to be in their shoes.
A victim and a perpetrator cannot meet in some imaginary middle, a person who is being beaten cannot compromise with the person doing the beating. Christian forgiveness is vital in all this but the new equation has to begin with the cessation of Muslims throughout the world of their hateful campaign against innocent Christians. It is the most hideous, vehement and widespread persecution of an identifiable minority in modern times, and it is taking place right before our eyes. Yet so many people prefer blindness to a calrity of vision that might shock and disturb and shake us from our comfort zone. Pray God for good sight, pray God that the situation will change. The cries of millions of the broken and betrayed scream out throughout the world and for all time.
[Source: Hatred, Islam's War Against Christianity, p176]
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Chanukah Lights and Christian Lives


Chanukah Lights at the Toronto Zionist Center
[Photo By: KPA]


I attended yesterday a Channuka Party at the Jewish Defense League here in Toronto. The gathering was also to introduce Michael Coren's new book: Hatred: Islam's War on Christianity.

There was good food and good people, as the invitation said, and Coren's presentation was as forceful and forthright as his approach during his nightly current affairs program The Arena.

Here is a chilling excerpt from Coren's book (pp25-26):
One of the central planks in the relationship between Muslims and Christians is the so-called Pact of the Umar, allegedly singed by the second caliph, Umar I (634-44). We don't know all the details of the treaty or even its precise date, and some historians argue that it was written by the conquered Christian themselves. We do know that it is used, or exploited, by modern Islamic scholars to underpin their attitudes toward Christian minorities. Among its conditions are the following:
"We shall not build, in our cities or in their neighborhood, new monasteries, churches, convents, or monks' cells, nor shall we repair, by day or by night, such of them as fall in ruins or are situated in the quarters of the Muslims. We shall keep our gates wide open for passersby and travelers. We shall give board and lodgings to all Muslims who pass our way for three days. We shall not manifest our religion publicly nor convert anyone to it. We shall not prevent any of our kin from entering Islam if they wish it. We shall show respect to the Muslims, and we shall rise from our seats when they wish to sit. We shall not seek to resemble the Muslims by imitiating any of their garments, the cap, the turban, footwear, or the parting of the hair. We shall not speak as they do, nor shall we adopt their surnames. We shall not mount on saddles, nor shall we gird swords nor bear any ind of arms nor carry them on our persons."
Whatever its accuracy, chronology and origin, it has been employed by Islam for fifteen hundred years to subjugate Christians.
And here is a modern-day description, also from the book, of the current condition of the Coptic Christians of Egypt:
"The Copts of Egypt," he continued [Anthony Browne, journalist at The Spectator], "make up half the Christians in the Middle East, the cradle of Christianity. They inhabited the land before the Islamic conquest, and still make up a fifth of the population. By law they are banned from being president of the Islamic Republic of Egypt or attending Al Azhar University, and severely restricted from joining the police and army. By practice they are banned from holding any high political or commercial position. Under the 19th-century Hamayouni decrees, Copts must get permission from the president to build or repair churches - but he usually refuses. Mosques face no such controls. Government-controlled TV broadcasts anti-Copt propaganda, while giving no airtime to Copts. It is illegal for Muslims to convert to Christianity, but legal for Christians to convert to Islam. Christian girls - and even the wives of Christian priests - are abducted and forcibly converted to Islam. [From Hatred: Islam's War on Christianity, p6. The full article is in The Spectator, March 26, 2005, and is here]
Coren tells us that things are getting worse, with unimaginable human suffering going on as he speaks.
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Saturday, December 20, 2014

To Be French, in a Particular, Unique, French Way...



Galliawatch has a post on journalist Eric Zemmour. I've posted below extracts from the post. But, what caught my attention was Zemmour's reply to the intriguing question:
"What does it mean to live in the French manner?"
And Zemmour answers thus:
"It means giving French names to your children, being monogamous, dressing like the French, eating like the French, cheese for example. Joking in cafés, courting the girls, loving French history, feeling oneself to be the heir to this history and wanting to continue it..."
What a concept: To be French, in a particular, unique, French way!

Here are parts of the interview:
Journalist Stefano Montefiori: Your book is a type of reactionary and populist manifesto.

Eric Zemmour: But I support populism. On the surface things haven't changed. Paris is still beautiful and the girls still make heads turn, but under the surface everything is rotten. Populism is the refusal to renounce our way of life.

Stefano Montefiori: Who is responsible for this attack on traditional France?

Eric Zemmour: Le Monde has written that my book is conspiratorial. But I am not denouncing a conspiracy, I am criticizing an evolution of society imposed by the French ruling elite. In the last forty years this ruling elite has acted in accordance with the three D's: derision, deconstruction, and destruction of France in the name of great ideals: Europe, opening to the world, progress.

Stefano Montefiori: Modernity, globalization, immigration are concerns of everybody, not just France.

Eric Zemmour: That's true but only in France is there such a self-hatred propagated by the ruling elite. They never stop repeating that we are not enough like the Germans, or the Americans, or the Swedes. All models are good except our own. Then, in Italy, there is no strong State, society is used to defending itself. We feel betrayed by the State. We are the country with the largest Muslim community in Europe.

Stefano Montefiori: But the elite that you are denouncing defend laïcité, for example. France is one of the few countries where the burqa, and even the veil at school, are forbidden.

Eric Zemmour: This is residue, insufficient, from a system that is finished. The French model was assimilation, that is, anybody can be French if they make an effort to be French. My ancestors were Berbers of the Jewish religion, they were certainly not French, but today I say that my ancestors are the Gauls. This no longer exists. The Muslims have their own civil code, it's called the Koran. They live among themselves, on the peripheries. The French have been forced to leave.
Later on Montefiori asks Zemmour an intriguing question:
Stefano Montefiori: What does it mean to live in the French manner?
And Zemmour answers thus:
It means giving French names to your children, being monogamous, dressing like the French, eating like the French, cheese for example. Joking in cafés, courting the girls, loving French history, feeling oneself to be the heir to this history and wanting to continue it...
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Tuesday, December 16, 2014

This is the New America


On Fox News, Megyn Kelly interviews CIA interrogator Dr. James Mitchell,
last night on The Kelly File


Dr. Mitchell says (starting at the 15:51 minutes point to 18:15):
Even though you don't want to do it, you're doing it in order to save lives in the country. And we would just have to man up, for lack of a better term, and carry forward.

Do you think at all about the 9/11 victims in these moments?

The 9/11 victims are the reason that I'm here. You know, when they first asked me if I would be willing to do this, my initial thought was "I don't want to do interrogations. That's not who I am." And I knew for a fact that my life as I had previously designed it would be over. But I know the exact instance that I ponied up to this. The exact instance was a person there had asked me if I would do these, and I was hooing and haaing a little bit and either him or another person said "After you see all the intel that I've saw suggesting that a second wave was coming and there was going to be a catastrophic attack, and all that sort of stuff, and if you're not willing to do this, how can we ask somebody else." And that picture of that falling man flashed into my mind, and I thought, I know this is going to sound corny, but it's true. Those people on Flight 94 gave up their lives...If they're willing to give up their lives, these ordinary people, willing to turn into warriors and give up their lives in order to save the Capitol building, [inaudible] that I should be willing to give up my moral high ground to go try and save some additional American lives. What we forget is Al Qaeda tried to decapitate the United States on 9/11. They hit our financial center, they hit our military leaders and they had intended to take out our political leaders. The loss of life was tremendous and horrible. But the real danger...can you imagine if they had managed to kill the senators as well as do everything else they did?
I recommend listening to the complete interview which is here.

I've put up an image (above) which is larger than the usual size I post because I wanted to be able to show the expressions in the eyes of Megyn Kelly, the interviewer at The Kelly File, and the CIA agent Dr. James Mitchell.

Kelly is clearly close to tears, but (as I watched the whole interview), she managed to hold off even a drop of a tear. She was reacting to the gross maligning that this noble man received from his own country.

Mitchell is red-eyed and exhausted. He is defending his honor, and his country, and has been doing so for a while.

This is the consequence of the "CIA document releasing" actions of the American government, clearly supported by the President.

Here is what Chris Wallace says in a discussion on Fox News Sunday:
...President Obama had to walk kind of a tightrope this week because on the one hand, he continued to condemn these enhanced interrogation as torture, he's the one who ended them in 2009. On the other hand, he certainly didn't want to undercut the CIA and his director, the man leading the agency, John Brennan.
This is the new America.
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Posted by: Kidist P. Asrat
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Wednesday, December 10, 2014

The Dogma of Multiculturalism: The fallacy of “equally valid” cultures polarizes society


Mural by Damon Lamar Reed
at the University of North Texas Multicultural Center
It is appropriate that such an intellectually empty concept should also
have such an artistically barren piece to showcase one of its centers.
More on the center's mural:
The Multicultural Center celebrates its remodeled offices with an 11 a.m. ceremony Sept. 1 [2010] in the University Union, Courtyard.

[...]

The center’s new floor-to-ceiling mural, which welcomes visitors at the front door, shows the different populations that the center serves. The contemporary mural by Chicago artist Damon Lamar Reed depicts college-age people of different cultures.

Reed was one of six artists to submit proposals for a mural to reflect the aspects of access, diversity, equity and inclusion. He said he used the center’s motto, “Your window to the world,” to create his proposal [Reed's proposal was accepted, and he designed the mural].
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The article below was published 2 1/2 years ago by columnist Thomas Sowell. It was posted recently on National Review Online.

Multiculturalism is now an over-dissected topic. I would have hoped the National Review would have asked asked Sowell for his insights on multiculturalism now, not 2 1/2 years ago, whether its perception, and its presence, has changed at all. The answer, of course, is yes. There is even more of what Sowell is writing about, and even less discussion about it.

Even more pressing, what about Sowell's views on (warnings against) Islam? After all, it entered, and stays, in our society using the "multiculturalism" identity. So far, there is nothing from Sowell.

I recently wrote to a group of friends regarding Islam:
We have our own Antichrist (as Hildebrand describes Hitler) in the guise of "The Religion of Peace" which we need to call by its real name, not "Radicalism," Terrorism," "Radical Islam," but simply Islam.

This is now the old and tired argument which we've dissected so many times, and especially as Larry Auster would do tirelessly and repeatedly. In one article (among many), he calls Mohammed The Successful Hitler. So it is astonishing that this truth still hasn't permeated our society. It is at our peril if we let it remain in this naive, but now deliberately obtuse, manner.
And at the Hildebrand Project facebook, one poster quotes from My Battle Against Hitler:
It is precisely our struggle against evil that God wills, even when we suffer external defeat...
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The Dogma of Multiculturalism:
The fallacy of “equally valid” cultures polarizes society

By: Thomas Sowell, Senior fellow at the Hoover Institution
March 15, 2013

Among the many irrational ideas about racial and ethnic groups that have polarized societies over the centuries and around the world, few have been more irrational and counterproductive than the current dogma of multiculturalism.

Intellectuals who imagine that they are helping racial or ethnic groups that lag behind by redefining their lags out of existence with multicultural rhetoric are in fact leading them into a blind alley.

Multiculturalism is a tempting quick fix for groups that lag; it simply pronounces their cultures to be equal with others, or “equally valid,” in some vague and lofty sense. Cultural features are just different, not better or worse, according to this dogma.
Yet the borrowing of particular features from other cultures — such as replacing Roman numerals with Arabic numerals, even in Western cultures that derived from Rome — implies that some features are not simply different but better. Some of the most advanced cultures in history have borrowed from other cultures, because no given collection of human beings has created the best answers to all the questions of life.

Nevertheless, since multiculturalists see all cultures as equal or “equally valid,” they see no justification for schools to insist that black children learn standard English, for example. Instead, each group is encouraged to cling to its own culture and to take pride in its own past glories, real or imaginary.

In other words, members of minority groups that lag educationally, economically, or otherwise are to continue to behave in the future as they have in the past — and, if they do not get the same outcomes as others, it is society’s fault. That is the bottom-line message of multiculturalism.

George Orwell once said that some ideas are so foolish that only an intellectual could believe them. Multiculturalism is one of those ideas. The intelligentsia burst into indignation or outrage at “gaps” or “disparities” in educational, economic, or other outcomes — and denounce any cultural explanation of these group differences as “blaming the victim.”

There is no question that some races or whole nations have been victimized by others, any more than there is any question that cancers can cause death. But that is very different from saying that deaths can automatically be blamed on cancer. You might think that intellectuals could make that distinction. But many do not.

Yet intellectuals see themselves as friends, allies, and defenders of racial minorities, even as they paint them into a corner of cultural stagnation. This allows the intelligentsia to flatter themselves that they are on the side of the angels against the forces of evil that are conspiring to keep minorities down.

When they cannot come up with hard evidence in any particular case to support this theory, that just proves to the intelligentsia how fiendishly clever and covert these pervasive efforts to hold down minorities are.

Why people with high levels of mental skills and rhetorical talents would tie themselves into knots with such reasoning is a mystery. Perhaps it is just that they cannot give up a social vision that is so flattering to themselves, despite how detrimental it may be to the people they claim to be helping.

Multiculturalism, like the caste system, paints people into the corner where they happened to have been born. But at least the caste system does not claim to benefit those at the bottom.

Multiculturalism not only serves the ego interests of intellectuals, it serves the political interests of elected officials, who have every incentive to promote a sense of victimhood, and even paranoia, among groups whose votes they want in exchange for both material and psychic support.

The multicultural vision of the world also serves the interests of those in the media who thrive on moral melodramas, as well as serving the interests of whole departments of ethnic “studies” in academia and a whole industry of “diversity” consultants, community organizers, and other miscellaneous race hustlers.

The biggest losers in all this are those members of racial minorities who allow themselves to be led into the blind alley of resentment and rage even when there are broad avenues of opportunity available. And we all lose when society is polarized.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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