The mainstream Australian media are reporting
with astonishment on the sight of elementary school children being
pushed front and center by radical adults to embody the lust for
Islamist jihad and to advocate the killing of unbelievers.
Published: September 20th, 2012
Australian Muslims
Photo Credit: SF Sentinel
This past weekend, we blogged here about foaming-at-the-mouth
proponents of jihad rampaging through the streets of Australia’s largest
city, Sydney [see our blog post
here].
Today, the mainstream Australian media are reporting with
astonishment on the sight of elementary school children being pushed
front and center by radical adults to embody the lust for Islamist jihad
and to advocate the killing of unbelievers.
*An eight year-old Australian girl called Ruqaya, reading a prepared speech promoting jihad at a
Hizb ut-Tahrir (“Party of Liberation” in Arabic) conference for “
Islamic fundamentalists” in the western Sydney community of Bankstown this past Sunday, a day after the riot. [The video is
here - she starts in Arabic, and then switches between English and Arabic.] The name of the conference:
Muslims Rise. More than 600 people took part.
*A second child, probably younger than
the girl, is photographed today in several Australian papers, holding a
placard that reads “Behead all those that insult the prophet.” It’s unlikely he has the ability to read the sign, let alone write it.
Jared Owens writing in
The Australian [
here]
says, without much evident conviction, that these unsettling
developments amount to a challenge for moderate Australian Moslems to
stand up and speak out. Speaking in customarily measured and moderate
Australian tones, he uses the word ‘set-back’ in describing the general
mood among Australians exposed to the events of the past four days.
Our familiarity with Australia gives us the sense that, after showing
considerable tolerance and exemplary patience to their newly arrived
Islamic neighbours over several decades, a sense of alarm and dismay at
what these people are ready to do to their own children has begun
setting in, along with a sense of dread about what they are willing to
do to
other people’s children
We wonder how much Australians in general know about the emerging
calls to restore this thing called a caliphate. Following is a brief
extract from
Wikipedia’s “Caliphate” entry:
“Al-Qaeda has as one of its clearly stated goals the
re-establishment of a caliphate. The late al-Qaeda leader, Osama Bin
Laden, called for Muslims to “establish the righteous caliphate of our umma.”
…Ayman al-Zawahiri (Bin Laden’s mentor and al-Qaeda second-in-command
until 2011), once “sought to restore the caliphate…which had formally
ended in 1924 following the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire but which
had not exercised real power since the thirteenth century.” Once the
caliphate is re-established, Zawahiri believes, Egypt would become a
rallying point for the rest of the Islamic world, leading the jihad
against the West. “Then history would make a new turn, God willing,”
Zawahiri later wrote, “in the opposite direction against the empire of
the United States and the world’s Jewish government.”
In the videos of Saturday’s Sydney Islamist riots, the clearly-heard rallying cry of the men bashing the police was “
Obama, Obama, we love Osama“ [check it on the
RT (Russia Today) video here]. Understanding what they mean is child’s play.
About the Author: Frimet and Arnold Roth
began writing and speaking publicly soon after the murder of their
fifteen year-old daughter Malki Z"L in the Jerusalem Sbarro massacre,
August 9, 2001 (Chaf Av, 5761). They have both been, and are, frequently
interviewed for radio, television and the print media, including CNN,
BBC, New York Times, Washington Post, Al-Jazeera, and others. Their blog
This Ongoing War
deals with the under-appreciated price of living in a society afflicted
by terrorism which, they contend, means the entire world. Frimet is a
native of Queens, NY while her husband was born and raised in Melbourne,
Australia. They brought their family to settle in Jerusalem in 1988.
They co-founded the Malki Foundation in 2001 and are deeply involved in its work as volunteers. They can be reached at thisoingoingwar@gmail.com .
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