The streets of major Western European cities are occupied territories.
Radical Muslim gangs who harbor a hatred
for Western culture and believe Islam is the answer for all bear a
visceral and violent antisemitic hatred for Israel and Jews. The pogrom
perpetrated by Arab and Turkish Muslims against Israeli and Jewish fans
of the Maccabi Tel Aviv soccer team in Amsterdam earlier this month
illustrates the point. Local law enforcement feigned efforts to contain
the aggressive hordes, which did not prevent the severe beating of
scores of Israelis and Jews and the hospitalization of six. For many
people, the images out of Amsterdam conjured up images of the evil
perpetrated by the SS Nazi Germany and the Kristallnacht pogrom of
November 1938. Attacks on Jews and Israel are now widely evident in
other major Western European cities, including Berlin, Brussels, London,
Madrid and Paris.
Referring to the recent pogrom, there were
kind words from the King of the Netherlands, Willem-Alexander, who told
Israeli President Isaac Herzog, “We failed the Jewish community of the
Netherlands during World War II, and last night we failed again.” Geert
Wilders, leader of the largest party in the Dutch parliament, blamed
Moroccan Muslims for the attack on the Maccabi Tel Aviv fans. He noted
that the Muslims do not hide the fact that they want to destroy Jews and
recommended the deportation of those people convicted of involvement in
the pogrom if they have dual nationality.
Muslim migrants arrived in the
industrialized Western European states after World War II, many from the
countries that were formerly colonial possessions. Algerian, Moroccan
and Tunisian Muslims landed in France and in Belgium (since French was
also widely spoken there). Turkish Muslim temporary laborers were
brought to Germany and never left. The Netherlands became home to
Indonesian Muslims. South Asian Pakistani and Bangladeshi Muslims
settled in Britain. Many of those early Muslim settlers sought a quiet
life, economic betterment and freedom.
The revival of Islamic strength—with Saudi
Arabia accumulating unimaginable oil riches and power in the
1970s—created an initial stirring, followed by the 1979 Islamic Shi’ite
revolution in Iran, and the defiance against the Western world and its
culture. The mayhem in Iraq and the endless terror in the aftermath of
the Bush administration’s 2003 war that deposed Saddam Hussein
eliminated the secular Sunni-Muslim rule in Iraq and led to Shia-Muslim
supremacy and Iran’s stranglehold on Iraq.
Then came the civil war in Syria a decade
later, which created millions of refugees. The guilt-ridden European and
former colonial powers opened their doors to hundreds of thousands of
Muslims from Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan. German Chancellor Angela
Merkel’s misplaced guilt about the Holocaust led to more than a million
Syrian and Iraqi Arabs, as well as Afghan Muslims, coming to live in
Germany. Many of these refugees had been brought up to hate Jews and
Israel.
For the new arrivals, the Western practice
of separating church and state is unfamiliar and unacceptable. Islam is
the state religion in most Arab states, especially in Iran. The
majority of recent Muslim immigrants express less attachment to their
Western European host countries and greater loyalty and attachment to
their country of origin. This situation is exacerbated by the fact that
the host countries do not tend to promote assimilation into the culture.
The Muslims have separate communities, separate schools and separate
rules of law.
The Mosque of Rome, the largest in the European Union
Europe used to have a “Jewish problem” and
still does, but not for the same reasons as their “Muslim problem.” The
Jews integrated well and enriched European culture in multiple ways.
Many European Nobel laureates were Jews. Today’s Muslim immigrants
commit a large percentage of violent crimes, while crime coming out of
the Jewish communities is virtually nonexistent. In most cases, Jews
spoke the native tongue better than the Christian natives. The problem,
until the late 18th century, was religious animus and discrimination,
which later transformed into antisemitic racism. In Europe, Jews became
the scapegoats for the ills of their societies.
The late Oriana Fallaci, famed Italian
journalist and author, who later in life became a staunch defender of
Israel and Jews, famously stated that she stood with Israel and the Jews
and that, “I defend their right to exist, to defend themselves, and not to allow themselves to be exterminated a second time.”
While earlier in her career, Fallaci
defended the Palestinians and Muslims, she was subsequently quoted as
saying, “The Muslims refuse our culture and try to impose their culture
on us. I reject them, and this is not only my duty toward my culture—it
is toward my values, my principles, my civilization.”
Fallaci made no secret of her hatred of the way Islam enforced passivity and submission of women through Sharia law. She famously ended an interview with Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini by ripping off the chador she
had been forced to wear, yelling “These Medieval rags!” She wrote of
the “monstrous darkness of a religion which produces nothing but
religion … secretly envious of us, confessedly jealous or our way of
life … in Europe, the mosques literally swarm with terrorists or
candidate terrorists … .”
The Great Mosque of Paris
In Europe today, Islamists and the radical
left have allied themselves in the green-red alliance with a common
antisemitic agenda under the guise of anti-Israelism. Their vocal
demonstrations in the streets of Amsterdam, Berlin, Brussels, London and
Paris have intimidated the governments who have done little to stem the
gushing hate displayed and the violence accompanying such events, as
demonstrated earlier this month in Amsterdam. While peaceful
demonstrations are a given in Western democracies, incitement to
violence is proscribed.
With the Muslim population in Europe
swelling into double-digit percentages and stagnant native European
birthrates, it is only a matter of a generation or two before radical
Islam becomes dominant in Europe. In her 2005 book Eurabia: The Euro‐Arab Axis, Bat
Yeor, the pen name for Gisèle Littman, pointed out that Europe has
surrendered to Islam and is in a state of submission (described
as dhimmitude) in which Europe is forced to deny its own culture, stand
silently by in the face of Muslim atrocities, accept Muslim immigration
and pay tribute through various types of economic assistance.
Incoming President Donald Trump, by acting
on his unintimidated commitment to deport illegals and criminal aliens
from the United States, may just show the Europeans how to save their
culture. It’s high time for the European elites to consider acting
aggressively on behalf of their survival.
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