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In this mailing:
by Raymond Ibrahim
• November 5, 2015 at 5:00 am
- Western
"mainstream media" and academia continued to exonerate Islam
in deceptive op-eds, such as the Huffington Post's "ISIS Violates
The Consensus Of Mainstream Islam By Persecuting Christians," by
Qasim Rashid, a recipient of Saudi largesse, by way of Harvard
University's Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Center.
- A 12-year-old girl,
raped by an Islamic State fighter, was told that "what he was about
to do was not a sin" because she "practiced a religion other
than Islam."
- "In school I
only learned about Islam. Parts of our teaching were about destroying
Christianity. So we did what we learned, by attacking Christians ... Our
teachers would tell us every time there was a new church in town and we
were told to go and attack the people and destroy the church. So that is
what we did." — Tofik, a former Muslim cleric who converted to
Christianity.
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Islamic State jihadists in the midst of destroying the
ancient Mar Elian monastery in Syria.
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Throughout the month of August, the Obama administration and the
so-called mainstream media kept insisting that Islam does not promote the
persecution of Christians -- all the while ignoring the direct testimonies of
those who have undergone it.
According to Chaldean Archbishop Bashar Warda,
All the statements [by U.S. government and media] have not condemned
strongly what damage it [persecution of Christians] is doing. What they are
saying is just "This is not the true Islam. This is violating the
picture of Islam." The issue for them is the image of Islam, but none
of these statements speak about the victims, about what has been done to the
victims, they are not even mentioned. And that is one of the questions
our people have. [Author's emphasis].
Warda added that persecuted Christians are "being denied visas,
while others who have participated [in the violence] or at least were silent,
can go."
by Jagdish N. Singh
• November 5, 2015 at 4:00 am
- Palestinian
leaders, including the Palestinian Authority, have done a lot to whip up
this violence and little to stop it. They may refer to peace and
co-existence on some diplomatic occasions, but they preach and practice
non-stop hatred and violence against Israel and the Jews.
- It would have been
more helpful if President Mukherjee had stressed his gospel of peace in
the Palestinian territories, not Israel. Ever since its creation in
1948, Israel has believed in peaceful co-existence with Palestine. The
successive offers of peace from Jerusalem have always supported this
policy.
- In contrast, not
only has the Palestinian leadership never believed in peaceful
co-existence, but it has constantly indulged in racist incitement, and
often violence, to try to eliminate Israel.
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Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, speaking
on PA television, September 16, 2015.
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After a reception at the presidential palace in Israel in Mid-October,
India's President, Pranab Mukherjee, said: "We are distressed at the
recent violence [in the region]. India condemns all forms of terrorism. We
have always advocated a peaceful resolution of all disputes." Later, the
President told Israel's Leader of the Opposition, Isaac Herzog,
"Violence is not a solution to any crisis. Violence achieves nothing but
more violence. We in India believe in a principle of live and let live."
What great new ideas!
Why, though, did President Mukherjee say so only in Israel? Apparently,
he remained completely silent on the issue of terrorism when he visited the
Palestinian Authority (PA) a day or two earlier. In Ramallah, he just
reasserted India's position that New Delhi remained committed to the
Palestinian cause, and supported a peaceful solution of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
by Burak Bekdil
• November 5, 2015 at 3:30 am
- Turkey has detained
more people for tweeting against the government than for being members
of the Islamic State. — Sezgin Tanrikulu, a Kurd, and a leading
opposition member of parliament.
- "Why did you
all go to eat ice cream after prayers?" — Police interrogator in
Usak, Turkey.
Sometimes one small incident best tells how countries can go insane. The
pro-government Islamist psyche in Turkey has no limits in defying logic and
humanity.
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu's native province, Konya, in central
Anatolia, has traditionally been an Islamist stronghold -- before and after
Turkey's ruling Islamist party, the Justice and Development Party (AKP), was
founded in 2001. In parliamentary elections on June 7, AKP won 65% of the
vote in Konya, compared to 40.7% it won on a national scale.
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