Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Islam in Rotterdam: a microcosm of Europe in crisis

The article below is reprinted from an Italian website. It sounds the alarm about the Islamicization of Europe. While the report can be said to reflect to a certain degree the symptoms of neocon Islamophobia, at the same time it raises valid concerns about freedom of speech, misogyny and the invasion of Europe by an alien culture. Where it fails is in its unspoken assumption that Europe under Judaism is preferable to Europe under Islam. The article reflects the supposition that where Islam is not dominant in Europe, Enlightenment values of free expression prevail. Tell that to Germar Rudolf and Ernst Zündel, both of whom are serving long prison sentences in Germany for speaking and writing about their doubts about execution gas chambers in Auschwitz. 

Rotterdam has rejected Christ. Contraceptive pharmaceuticals are the drug of choice for destroying one's own progeny. Euthanasia of the old and the young (!) is legal. Hedonism is the religion of Europe. Into that degenerate, death-loving vacuum rushes virile and youthful Islam, a development which has positive and negative characteristics: no revisionist historian would be jailed in an Islamic Europe and no support would be given for an Israeli regime that slaughtered 1400 people in December and January.  I too support not having to stand when a judge enters a courtroom (see below). 

On the other hand, gender segregation and the policing of women's clothing is grossly disrespectful of the rights of women, which have gone to one extreme in the West (abortion, birth control, same-sex "marriage") and to the other extreme under Islam. 

All things considered however, the new Dutch nostalgia for the Christian faith and the growing rejection of the dogma of multiculturalism  -- led not by fascist demagogues but former Leftist academics -- is a positive development but a fledgling one, capable of misdirection by Israelis, the "Shoah" Churchianity of Pope Benedict XVI and the rabbis of Orthodox Judaism, whose own anti-female edicts give them no bragging rights over Islam.

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The following is a report on Rotterdam published in the Italian newspaper il Foglio on May 14, 2009, the second in a major seven-part survey on Holland. The author, Giulio Meotti, also writes for the Wall Street Journal. Next September, his book-length survey on Israel will be published.

In the Casbah of Rotterdam

by Giulio Meotti
English translation by Matthew Sherry, Saint Louis, Missouri

In Feyenoord, veiled women can be seen everywhere, darting like a flash through the streets of the neighborhood. They avoid any sort of contact, even eye contact, especially with men. Feyenoord is the size of a city, and there are seventy nationalities coexisting there. It is an area that lives on subsidies and residential construction, and it is here that it is most obvious that Holland – with all of its rules against discrimination and all of its moral indignation – is a completely segregated society. 

Rotterdam is new, having been bombed twice by the Luftwaffe during the second world war. Like Amsterdam, it is below sea level, but unlike the capital it does not enjoy an image of reckless abandon. In Rotterdam, it is the Arab shops selling halal food that dominate the cityscape, not the neon lights of the prostitutes. Everywhere are casbah-cafes, travel agencies offering flights to Rabat and Casablanca, posters expressing solidarity with Hamas, or offering affordable Dutch language lessons.

It is the second-largest city in the country, a poor city, but also the economic engine with its huge port, the most important in Europe. Most of the population are immigrants, and the city has the tallest and most imposing mosque in Europe. Sixty percent of the foreigners who arrive in Holland come here to live. The most striking thing when one arrives in the city by train are the enormous and fascinating mosques framed by the vibrant green, luxuriant, wooded, watery countryside, like an alien presence compared to the rest. They call it "Eurabia." The Turkish Mevlana mosque is imposing. It has the tallest minarets in Europe, even higher than the stadium of the Feyenoord soccer team.

Many of the neighborhoods in Rotterdam are captive to the darkest, most violent form of Islamism. Pim Fortuyn's house stands out like a pearl in a sea of chador and niqab. It is at number 11 Burgerplein, behind the train station. Every now and then someone comes to put flowers in front of the home of the professor who was murdered in Amsterdam on May 6, 2002. Someone else leaves a card: "In Holland everything is tolerated, except for the truth." A millionaire named Chris Tummesen bought Pim Fortuyn's house so that it would remain intact. The evening before his murder Pim was nervous, and had said on television that a climate of demonization had been created against him and his ideas. 

And his fears came true, when he was shot in the head five times by Volkert van der Graaf, a militant of the animal rights left, scrawny, head shaved, eyes dark, dressed like an environmental purist in a handmade shirt, sandals, and goat's wool socks, a strict vegetarian, "a guy impatient to change the world," his friends say.

Not long ago in downtown Rotterdam, funerary photos of Geert Wilders were placed under a tree, with a candle to commemorate his upcoming death. Today Wilders is the most popular politician in the city. He is the heir of Fortuyn, the homosexual, Catholic, ex-Markist professor who had formed his own party to save the country from Islamization. At his funeral, only the absence of Queen Beatrice kept the farewell to the "divine Pim" from becoming a funeral fit for a king. Before his death they made a monster of him (one Dutch minister called him an "untermensch," an inferior man in Nazi parlance), afterward they idolized him. The prostitutes of Amsterdam left a wreath of flowers in his honor beneath the National Monument in Dam Square, a memorial to the victims of World War II.

Three months ago, "The Economist," a weekly publication far from Wilders' anti-Islamic ideas, spoke of Rotterdam as a "Eurabian nightmare." For most of the Dutch who live there, Islamism is now a threat greater than the Delta Plan, the complicated system of dikes that prevents flooding from the sea, like the flood in 1953 that killed two thousand people. The picturesque town of Schiedam, part of the greater Rotterdam area, has always been a jewel in the Dutch imagination. Then the fairy tale glow faded, when in the newspapers three years ago it became the city of Farid A., the Islamist who made death threats against Wilders and Somali dissident Ayaan Hirsi Ali. For six years, Wilders has lived under 24-hour police protection.

Muslim lawyers in Rotterdam also want to change the rules of the courtroom, asking to be allowed to remain seated when the judge enters. They recognize Allah alone. The lawyer Mohammed Enait recently refused to stand when the magistrates enter the courtroom, saying that "Islam teaches that all men are equal." 

The court of Rotterdam has recognized Enait's right to remain seated: "There is no legal obligation requiring Muslim lawyers to stand in front of the court, insofar as this action is in contrast with the dictates of the Islamic faith." Enait, the head of the legal office Jairam Advocaten, has explained that "he considers all men equal, and does not acknowledge any form of deference toward anyone." All men, but not all women. Enait is well known for his refusal to shake hands with women, and has repeatedly said he would prefer them to wear the burqa. And there are many burqas on the streets of Rotterdam.

The fact that Eurabia has arrived in Rotterdam has been demonstrated by an episode in April at the Zuidplein Theatre, one of the most prestigious in the city, a modernist theater proud of "representing the cultural diversity of Rotterdam." It is located in the southern part of the city, and receives funding from the municipality, headed by a Muslim, the son of the imam Ahmed Aboutaleb. 

Three weeks ago, the Zuidplein Theatre allowed an entire balcony to be reserved for women only, in the name of sharia. This is not happening in Pakistan or in Saudi Arabia, but in the city from which the Founding Fathers set out for the United States. It was from here that the Puritans disembarked in the Speedwell, which they later exchanged for the Mayflower. This is where the American adventure began. Today, it has legalized sharia.

For a performance by the Muslim Salaheddine Benchikhi, the Zuidplein Theatre agreed to his request to have the first five rows set aside for women only. Salaheddine, an editorialist for the website Morokko.nl, is known for his opposition to the integration of Muslims. The city council has approved this: "According to our Western values, the freedom to live one's own life by virtue of one's convictions is a precious possession." A spokesman for the theater has also defended the director: "It is hard to get Muslims to come to the theater, so we are willing to adapt."

Another man who has been willing to adapt is the director Gerrit Timmers. His words are fairly symptomatic of what Wilders calls "self-Islamization." The first case of self-censorship took place in Rotterdam, in December of 2000. Timmers, the director of the theater group Onafhankelijk Toneel, wanted to stage a performance about the life of Mohammed's wife Aisha. The play was boycotted by the Muslim actors in the company when it became evident that it would be a target for the Islamists. "We are enthusiastic about the play, but fear reigns," the actors told him. The composer, Najib Cherradi, said that he would withdraw "for the good of my daughter." 

The newspaper "Handelsblad" gave the story the title "Tehran on the Meuse," the name of the gentle river that passes through Rotterdam. "I had already done three works about the Moroccans, so I wanted to have Muslim actors and singers," Timmers tells us. "Then they told me that it was a dangerous issue, and they could not participate, because they had received death threats. In Rabat, an article came out saying we would end up like Salman Rushdie. For me, it was more important to continue the dialogue with the Moroccans, rather than provoke them. For this reason, I see no problem if the Muslims want to separate the men from the women in a theater."

Let's meet the director who has brought sharia to the Dutch theaters, Salaheddine Benchikhi. He is young, modern, confident, and speaks perfect English. "I defend the decision to separate the men from the women, because here there is freedom of expression and organization. If people can't sit where they want to, that is discrimination. There are two million Muslims in Holland, and they want our tradition to become public, everything is evolving. Mayor Aboutaleb has supported me."

One year ago, the city was buzzing when the newspapers published a letter by Bouchra Ismaili, a Rotterdam city councilman: "Listen up, crazy freaks, we're here to stay. You're the foreigners here, with Allah on my side I'm not afraid of anything. Take my advice: convert to Islam, and you will find peace." Just a walk through the streets of the city, and you know right away that in many neighborhoods you are no longer in Holland. It is right out of the Middle East. In some schools, there is a "room of silence" where Muslim students, who are in the majority, can pray five times a day, with a poster of Mecca, the Qur'an, and a ritual washing before the prayers. Another Muslim city councilman, Brahim Bourzik, wants signs placed in various parts of the city showing the direction to Mecca.

Sylvain Ephimenco is a Franco-Dutch journalist who has been living in Rotterdam for twelve years. For twenty years, he was the "Libération" correspondent in Holland, and is proud of his leftist credentials. "Even though I don't believe in that anymore," he says, welcoming us to his home overlooking one of Rotterdam's little canals. Not far from here is the al Nasr mosque of the imam Khalil al Moumni, who when gay marriage was legalized described homosexuals as "sick people worse than pigs." 

From the outside, it can be seen that the mosque is more than twenty years old, having been built by the first Moroccan immigrants. Moumni has written a pamphlet that is circulating around the Dutch mosques, "The path of the Muslim," in which he explains that the heads of homosexuals should be cut off and "hung from the highest building in the city." Next to the al Nasr mosque, we sit down at a cafe for men only. In front of us is a halal Islamic slaughterhouse. Ephimenco is the author of three essays on Holland and Islam, and today is a famous columnist for the leftist Christian newspaper "Trouw." He has the best perspective for understanding a city that, perhaps even more than Amsterdam, embodies the tragedy of Holland.

"It is not at all true that Wilders gets his votes from the fringes, everyone knows that, even though they don't say it," he tells us. "Today educated people vote for Wilders, although at first it was the lower class Dutch, the tattoo crowd. Many academics and people on the left vote for him. The problem is all of these Islamic headscarves. There's a supermarket behind my house. When I arrived, there wasn't a single headscarf. Now it's all Muslim women with the chador at the register. Wilders is not Haider. His positions are on the right, but also on the left, he's a typical Dutchman. Here there are even hours at the swimming pool set aside for Muslim women. This is the origin of the vote for Wilders. Islamization, this foolishness with the theater, has to be stopped. In Utrecht, there is a mosque where they provide separate city services for men and women. 

"The Dutch are afraid. Wilders is against the Frankenstein of multiculturalism. I, who used to be on the left but am no longer anything, I say we've reached the limit. I feel the ideals of the Enlightenment have been betrayed with this voluntary apartheid, in my heart I feel the death of the ideals of the equality of men and women, and freedom of expression. Here the left is conformist, and the right has the better answer to insane multiculturalism."

One of the professors at Erasmus University in Rotterdam is Tariq Ramadan, the famous Swiss Islamic scholar who is also a special adviser for the city. Some of Ramadan's statements against homosexuality were uncovered by Holland's most famous gay magazine, "Gay Krant," directed by a talkative journalist named Henk Krol. On a videocassette, Ramadan calls homosexuality "a disease, a disorder, an imbalance." On the tape, Ramadan also has comments on women, "they should keep their eyes on the ground when they're on the street." Wilders' party asked for the city council to be disbanded, and for the Islamic scholar from Geneva to be sent packing, but instead he was renewed in his post for two more years. 

This was happening while across the sea, the Obama administration was confirming the ban on Ramadan entering United States territory. The tapes in Krol's possession include one in which Ramadan tells women: "Allah has an important rule: if you try to attract attention through the use of perfume, or your appearance or gestures, you do not have the correct spiritual orientation."

"When Pim Fortuyn was killed, it was a shock for everyone, because a man was murdered for what he said," Krol tells us. "That was no longer my country. I'm still thinking about leaving Holland, but where can I go? Here we have been criticized by everyone, by the Catholic Church and by the Protestants. But when we criticized Islam, they answered us: you are creating new enemies!" 

According to Ephimenco, the street is the secret of Wilders' success: "In Rotterdam, there are three enormous mosques, one of them is the largest in Europe. There are more and more Islamic headscarves, and an Islamist impulse coming from the mosques. I know many people who have left the city center to go to the rich, white suburbs. My neighborhood is poor and black. It is a question of identity, on the streets Dutch is not spoken anymore, but Arabic and Turkish."

Let's meet the man who inherited Fortuyn's column in the newspaper "Elsevier." His name is Bart Jan Spruyt, a robust young Protestant intellectual, founder of the Edmund Burke Society, but above all the author of Wilders' "Declaration of independence," and his coworker from the beginning. "Here an immigrant no longer has to struggle, study, work, he can live at the expense of the state," Spruyt tells us. "We have ended up creating a parallel society. The Muslims are in the majority in many neighborhoods, and are asking for sharia. This isn't Holland anymore. Our use of freedom has turned back against us, it is a process of self-Islamization."

Spruyt was one of Fortuyn's close friends. "Pim said what the people had known for decades." He attacked the establishment and the journalists. It was a great relief for the people when he went into politics, they called him the 'white knight'. The last time I spoke with him, one week before he was killed, he told me he had a mission. His killing was not the act of a lone madman. 

In February of 2001, Pim announced that he wanted to change the first article of the Dutch constitution, on discrimination, because in his view it kills freedom of expression, and he was right. The following day in the Dutch churches, which are mostly empty and used for public meetings, the diary of Anne Frank was read as a warning against Fortuyn. Pim was truly Catholic, more than we think, in his books he spoke out against modern society without fathers, without values, empty, nihilist."

Chris Ripke is a well-known artist in the city. His studio is near a mosque in Insuindestraat. Shocked in 2004 by the murder of director Theo Van Gogh by an Dutch Islamist, Chris decided to paint an angel on wall of his studio and the biblical commandment "Gij zult niet doden," thou shalt not kill. His neighbors at the mosque found the words "offensive," and called the mayor of Rotterdam at the time, the liberal Ivo Opstelten. The mayor ordered the police to erase the painting, because it was "racist." Wim Nottroth, a television journalist, camped out on the spot in protest. 

The police arrested him, and his film was destroyed. Ephimenco did the same in his own window: "I put up a big white sheet with the biblical commandment. Photographers came, and the radio. If you can no longer write 'do not kill' in this country, then you are saying that we are all in prison. It is like apartheid, whites living with whites and blacks with blacks. There is a great chill. Islamism wants to change the structure of the country." For Ephimenco, part of the problem is the de-Christianization of society. "When I arrived here, during the 1960's, religion was dying, a unique event in Europe, a collective de-Christianization. Then the Muslims brought religion back to the center of social life. Aided by the anti-Christian elite."

Let's go for a stroll through the Islamized neighborhoods. In Oude Westen there are only Arabs, women clothed from head to foot, ethnic foods shops, Islamic restaurants, and shopping centers with Arabic music. "Ten years ago, you didn't see all these headscarves," Ephimenco says. Behind his house, in a flourishing middle class area with two-story houses, there is an Islamized neighborhood. There are Muslim signs everywhere. "Look at all of those Turkish flags, over there is an important church, but it's empty, no one goes there anymore." In the middle of one square stands a mosque with Arabic writing outside. "That used to be a church." Not far from here is the most beautiful monument in Rotterdam. It is a small granite statue of Pim Fortuyn. Beneath the gleaming bronze head, the mouth saying his last words on behalf of freedom of speech, there is written in Latin: "Loquendi libertatem custodiamus," let us safeguard the right to speak. Every day, someone places flowers there.

E-mail: s.magister@espressoedit.it
Postal address: Sandro Magister, "L'espresso", via C. Colombo 90, 00147 Roma

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11 comments:

Br. Anthony, T.O.S.F. said...

The only Europe I want to see is a Europe under Catholicism.

Pray for the consecration for Russia!

mwh said...

"Islam teaches that all men are equal."As long as all men are Muslims, that is.

Tell me, is Islam really all that different than Judaism, which teaches in the Talmud that Jews are men and the rest of us are animals?

I don't see much difference. With Islam, the rest of us are infidels, which in their minds may even be LOWER than animals.

The end result is the same. The rest of us are deserving of death, unless we 'convert' of course.

To tell you the truth, I'm getting sick and tired of not only the Jews, but the Muslims too.

And let's face it. They're all part of the same 'family'.

Abraham foolishly listened to his wife and slept with his hand maiden and now this is what the rest of the world has to put up with - an ongoing Hatfield/McCoy feud that will never be settled without the direct intervention of God Almighty Himself.

What He's waiting for, I have no idea, but I must keep hoping that He not only exists, but also that He knows what He's doing.

With all this in mind, I'm sorry Michael, but I can't really drum up much sympathy for the so-called "Palestinians". That's a misnomer if there ever was one.

They're a bunch of squatters just like the Zionists are. Maybe worse, because they're going to end up trying to squat on every square inch of the earth in an attempt to convert us all to "Allah".

The Bible says that the offspring of Abraham and Hagar would be a "warlike people".

Well sure enough, that's exactly what they are. And guess what - they're getting exactly what they asked for in "Palestine" and maybe what they deserve. They certainly aren't innocent. Anybody who thinks otherwise is deluded.

Of course, the Zionists hijacked the land as a result of their successful con game, the HoloHoax, but lets face it, at least the "Jews" (whoever they are - will the real Jews please stand up?) have some kind of biblical claim on that particular portion of real estate.

If the 'Church' (represented by the Pope?) believes they are going to bring Peace and Church dominion to this world, then all I've got to say is: Good luck.

Michael Hoffman said...

To Br. Anthony

I would say in reply to pray rather for the consecration to God of the once Christian, but now Antichrist America, and for the conversion of the demonic Israeli state.

How are the Russians any threat to us? This perverse hatred for Russia distracts from American and Israeli iniquity.

Michael Hoffman

Anonymous said...

The Mystical Body of Christ consists of far more than just Europe or Western Christendom. Throughout history graces have been given to those who follow God's Word and taken from those who don't -- hence the remarkable growth of Catholics in Latin America, Asia, and Africa occurring in conjunction with the decline of Catholics in the United States and Europe. Consequently, looking at the state of global affairs through a judaic/zionist vs. western christendom lens darkly ignores a larger, far more mystical reality.

Moreover, the Lefebvrist approach to solving the problem the article addresses is an erroneous one which reduces the Catholic Faith to an ideology and makes it indistinguishable from judaic hegemony or islamic sharia law. In Lefebvrism, or Integralism (epitomized by the Action Francaise crowd), the Faith is diminished to little more than a temporal and political land grab fostering a structure that, while possessing the outward trappings of Catholicism, opposes free will and grace.

Fr. Gruner has a cash cow on his hands. The consecration was done, for Heaven's sake! Traditionalists clearly have their own phylacteries -- and their hallucinated version of the Third Secret is in one.

Br. Anthony, T.O.S.F. said...

Mr. Hoffman,

I am only reiterating what Our Lady requested of Sr. Lucia in 1929. She requested the consecration of Russia to Her Immaculate Heart by the Pope in union with the Bishops of the world. When this consecration is done, She promised an period of peace and that Her Immaculate Heart would triumph. It should be obvious to most that this consecration has not been done yet as Russia is still not converted to the Catholic Faith. She will be the one to crush the head of the serpent. It is the ONLY way to world peace.

James said...

As a traditionalist Catholic (but still a rotten sinner in need of Christ's mercy), I am certainly no apologist for Islam. That being said, permit me to mention something that took place in Portugal nearly 100 years ago.

Our Lady of Fatima (Interesting that she chose to appear on the outskirts of a little town called Fatima!) is reported to have said that most souls go to hell for sins of the flesh. It would be interesting to compare how many souls go to hell for sins of the flesh in an Islamic society as along side your typical so called Christian society which is judaized/sexualized to the max.

JBP

Anonymous said...

There are movements of population across the globe, not only into Europe.Sometime ago there was trouble in South Africa between locals and the huge migrant population from elsewhere in Africa. In Asia the few pockets of Christianity that once existed here and there have all but disappeared. In India these have been swamped by Hindus, In Vietnam and Sri Lanka by Buddhists and in Indonesia by Muslims.

Anonymous said...

" With Islam, the rest of us are infidels" Actually, Christians aren't considered infidels in Islam.

pclaudel said...

"Actually, Christians aren't considered infidels in Islam." Maybe not, but talk is cheap. Christians have been treated far worse than dogs in the dar al-islam since the time of the evil "prophet" himself.

Why, I wonder, has the word devshirme not become as infamous as Holocaust--and with infinitely more justice? Perhaps if the enslaved and deracinated and abused boys had been sons of the Chosen, it would have.

pclaudel said...

Mr. Hoffman: Apropos your comment, may I say with respect that I cannot see how embracing the sentiments of your first paragraph constrains one to endorse those of your second. Since the Blessed Mother herself insisted upon the consecration of Russia, I hardly think it an optional matter. The point is, not hatred of Russia, but love for souls lost to sin and error, the same motive that requires us to pray for Israel and America, which are (I certainly grant) seemingly in a position to do more harm to the rest of God's creatures than Russia ever was—or than Russia ever actually did, as horrendous as that is to write.

Anonymous said...

"RACISTS!" – WHO?

*Fr. Cedric Prakash, sj

The cry could not have been shriller! “You are racist!” was the message loud and clear, as thousands of Indians (mainly students) gathered in Melbourne, Australia, on Sunday, 31st May, to protest the wave of attacks on Indian students in various parts of Australia. The protest was legitimate. The growing feeling of insecurity was palpable and the genuine desire to live in a peaceful and integrated manner, in a multi-cultural society, can be denied by none.

At home, the media is definitely up in arms repeatedly highlighting the plight of Indian students in Australia. There are heart rending visuals of those brutally bashed up. The media are on the offensive and for good measure, yet another reality is made very emotive.

Xenophobia, racism, segregation, apartheid, discrimination, in any form is non acceptable. Civil society, all over the world needs to take a bold stand on this malaise and to nip it in the bud whenever its ugly head rears itself. A case in point, is the way Raj Thackeray and his MNS have decided that those from UP and Bihar do not “belong” to Bombay.

In Gujarat, the lines of division are even more pronounced where the Muslims are concerned. In several parts of the State, there are huge billboards erected which loudly proclaim a “Hindu Rashtra”. In several cities and villages, across the State, Muslims have been confined to ghettoes or have to live in the peripheral areas. Juhapura, on the outskirts of Ahmedabad is home to over four hundred thousand Muslims, which makes it one of the biggest Muslim ghettoes in the country. Inspite of the people’s demands, there are hardly any public facilities and utilities for the citizens there. Muslims in Gujarat are still treated as second class citizens with little or no access to quality education and employment opportunities.

Christians too in many parts of Gujarat are subject to the same fate. However, in the latter case, the intimidations and harassments are in more subtle forms. Dalits in Gujarat still continue to live in a very marginalized situation. It is an open secret that the practice of untouchability has become an accepted norm in several sections of society today.

What is happening in Australia has to be condemned in no uncertain terms! However, what we desperately need at this juncture are louder voices and shriller protests at home to set our own house in order. We have to protest when our rights are trampled upon when we are abroad; however we have a greater responsibility to protest when our own fellow-citizens are denied the rights and freedom which are legitimately theirs!

(* Fr. Cedric Prakash sj is the Director of “Prashant”, the Ahmedabad-based Jesuit Centre for Human Rights, Justice and Peace)
sjprashant@gmail.com


PRASHANT (A Centre for Human Rights, Justice and Peace)
Street Address : Hill Nagar, Near Kamdhenu Hall, Drive-in Road, Ahmedabad - 380052, Gujarat, India
Postal Address : P B 4050, Navrangpura PO, Ahmedabad - 380 009, Gujarat, India