Recently, a 20-year-old Austrian woman waiting at a bus stop in Vienna was attacked, beaten, and robbed by four Muslim men from Afghanistan. From her statement:
[One attacker] started [by] putting his hands through my hair and made it clear that in his cultural background there were hardly any blonde women.
So how did Austrian police respond? They told the victim to dye her hair:
At first I was scared, but now I'm more angry than anything. After the attack they told me that women shouldn't be alone on the streets after 8:00 pm. And they also gave me other advice, telling me I should dye my hair dark and also not dress in such a provocative way.
Indirectly that means I was partly to blame for what happened to me. That is a massive insult.
She is not the first European victim of Muslim attackers to be blamed. According to FrontPage Magazine editor Jamie Glazov:
Cologne Mayor Henriette Reker’s response to the assaults under her watch [1,000 German women were sexually molested and raped by Muslim migrants] has been to reprimand the victims, suggesting that they had asked for it.
Reker has vowed to make sure that women will change their behavior, so that they don’t provoke Muslims to sexually assault them again. There will now be published “online guidelines” for women to read so they can prepare themselves …
Oslo Professor of Anthropology Dr. Unni Wikan’s solution for the high incidence of Muslims raping Norwegian women is not for the rapists to be punished, but for Norwegian women to “take their share of responsibility” for the rapes because Muslim men found their manner of dress provocative.
Norwegian women, she has counseled, “must realize that we live in a Multicultural society and adapt themselves to it.”
These responses overlook the fact that, since the dawn of Islam 14 centuries ago, European women -- even nuns -- have always been portrayed as sexually promiscuous by nature. This is easily discerned by examining medieval Muslim perceptions of Byzantine women. (Islam’s initial contact with Europe in the seventh century was through the Christian empire of Byzantium. This contact came to represent white/European women in Islam.)
Consider the following excerpts from Byzantium Viewed by the Arabs by Nadia Maria el-Cheikh:
One quality that the Arab Muslims inevitably assigned to the Byzantines was beauty. … This characteristic, beauty, is associated with Byzantine women in particular. Byzantine women are described as being white-complexioned blondes, with straight hair and blue eyes.
This view traces back to Muhammad. He once asked a new convert:
Would you like the girls of Banu al-Asfar?
Muhammad was including the possibility of capturing “yellow-haired” women to entice the convert to join the jihad on Byzantium. Muhammad also asked the following of another potential jihadist:
O Abu Wahb, would you not like to have scores of Byzantine [fair] women and men as concubines and servants?
Wahb responded:
O Messenger of Allah … if I see the women of the Byzantines, I fear I will not be able to hold back. So do not tempt me by them.
This predilection was not limited to Arab Muslims. Of the Turks, Bernard Lewis writes in Islam and the West:
Europeans saw themselves primarily as Christians threatened by a new assault from the old Islamic enemy … Among the faults and vices ascribed to the Turk, two themes dominated: arbitrary power and unbridled lust.
So universal were these themes and so striking the terms in which they were presented, in both letters and arts …
European women came to exemplify Islam’s femme fatale. Continues the author of Byzantium Viewed by the Arabs:
In our [Muslim] texts, Byzantine women are strongly associated with sexual immorality …
Our sources show not Byzantine women but [Muslim] writers’ images of these women, who served as symbols of the eternal female -- constantly a potential threat, particularly due to blatant exaggerations of their sexual promiscuity.
Muhammad also asserted that there is no “fitna more harmful to men than women.” El-Cheikh explains:
Fitna, meaning disorder and chaos, refers also to the beautiful femme fatale who makes men lose their self-control.
Fitna is a key concept in defining the dangers that women, more particularly their bodies, were capable of provoking in the mental universe of the Arab Muslims.
Cheikh documents how Muslims further claimed:
“[Byzantine females were the] most shameless women in the whole world.”
“[Byzantine women] find sex more enjoyable, they are prone to adultery.”
“[A]dultery is commonplace in the cities and markets of Byzantium … [even] the nuns from the convents went out to the fortresses to offer themselves to monks.”