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Radical
Islam Was Brexit's Elephant in the Room
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Excerpt
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The
distress of ordinary Britons at how their country was being reshaped to
accommodate medieval Islamic values tipped the Brexit vote in favor of
leaving the EU.
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The beauty of an uprising like the Brexit vote is that it makes the
political and media elites who govern our lives look like fools.
...
In the once-thriving mining town of Barnsley, where 70% of the
population voted to leave the European Union, one middle-aged man summed
it up as he spoke to Britain's ITV network: "It's to stop the
Muslims from coming into this country. Simple as that."
Few others dared to be so explicit. But neither before nor after the
Brexit vote has the political and media elite dared to discuss the
elephant in the room – radical Islam.
The fear of being labelled racist may silence many for now. But in the
future there will be an ultra-right-wing backlash in which innocent
Muslims may well suffer.
I remember the fallout when former British foreign secretary Jack
Straw in 2006 asked one of his constituents to remove her burka while
speaking to him. He was accused of "thinly veiled racism" and
his fate gave the elites one of many cues to tiptoe around such issues.
Neither before nor after the
Brexit vote has the British elite dared to discuss the elephant in the
room – radical Islam.
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But trust ordinary Britons to be appalled at how their country was
being reshaped to accommodate medieval values, not imported by Muslim
immigrants, but entrenched in the values their British-born children were
being taught at school.
The UK is not alone. From India to Myanmar, France to the Central
African Republic, ordinary people are angry at Islamism.
As as a result, innocent Muslims suffer while their radical leaders
gloat at this "proof" of their predictions that the
'"kuffar," non-Muslims, are enemies of Islam.
If Muslim leaders do not acknowledge the flaunting of radical Islam on
the streets and in the workplaces of Europe's cities, then Brexit is just
the beginning.
Is blocking off streets in Paris and Delhi for Friday prayers the best
way for Muslims to display our faith? It's time to take stock, but is
anyone listening?
Tarek Fatah, a founder of the
Muslim Canadian Congress and columnist at the Toronto Sun, is a Robert J. and Abby B.
Levine Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
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