Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Duke University Starts Forced Amplified Broadcasts Of The Muslim Call To Prayer From Bell Tower

Duke University Starts Forced Amplified Broadcasts Of The Muslim Call To Prayer From Bell Tower

 http://www.nowtheendbegins.com/blog/?p=29931

| January 14, 2015 | 68 Comments

A weekly call to prayer for Muslims will be heard at Duke University starting Friday, school officials said

“The sweetest sound I know is the Muslim call to prayer”Barack Obama

The Islamization of America continues, as it has since Obama was elected in 2008, at a frightening pace. Public amplified broadcasts of the Muslim call to prayer exists in Muslim majority countries, and is a symbol that they have taken that nation over. If I had a child attending Duke University they would pulled out so fast it would make your head spin.

Islam is not compatible with any free society, it is an religious ideology of forced, violent submission. Every nation where it is dominant is in chaos. Islam is against all American values and ideals, and has no place in a free society.

The azan is the Devil’s call to prayer, don’t answer it.

—Members of the Duke Muslim Students Association will chant the call, known as adhan or azan, from the Duke Chapel bell tower each Friday at 1 p.m. The call to prayer will last about three minutes and be “moderately amplified,” officials said in a statement Tuesday.
duke-university-to-start-broadcasting-azan-muslim-call-to-prayer-islam-satanic-sweetest-sound-i-know-obama
Duke University students to begin call to prayer: Ibrahim Saber with the Duke Muslim Students Association rehearses the traditional Muslim call-to-prayer from the Duke Chapel bell tower. Photo courtesy of the university. 

“The adhan is the call to prayer that brings Muslims back to their purpose in life, which is to worship God, and serves as a reminder to serve our brothers and sisters in humanity,” said Imam Adeel Zeb, Muslim chaplain at Duke. “The collective Muslim community is truly grateful and excited about Duke’s intentionality toward religious and cultural diversity.”

In majority Muslim countries across the globe, the adhan is broadcast from mosques and on television and radio stations five times a day to correspond with prayer times. On Fridays, the day of worship in Islam, sermons are also broadcast. In the United States, amplified adhan exists in a handful of communities.

The Muslim call to prayer is an eerie, scary, demonic-sounding whine. But the words of what is sung should really make you afraid:




“This opportunity represents a larger commitment to religious pluralism that is at the heart of Duke’s mission,” said Christy Lohr Sapp, the chapel’s associate dean for religious life. “It connects the university to national trends in religious accommodation.”

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