http://frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=25240

 


Islam - What the West Needs to Know

 

By Jamie Glazov <http://frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/authors.asp?ID=3> 
FrontPageMagazine.com | November 3, 2006 

A new documentary  <http://www.whatthewestneedstoknow.com/index.asp> Islam:
What the West Needs to Know has recently been released. 

An examination of Islam, violence, and the fate of the non-Muslim world, the
documentary features numerous experts. Today we have invited three of them
to discuss the new film. Our guests are:

 

Walid Shoebat, a former PLO terrorist who has become an ardent Zionist and
evangelical Christian. He is the author of
<http://www.amazon.com/Why-Left-Jihad-Terrorism-Radical/dp/0977102114/ref=sr
_11_1/102-0484093-6997752?ie=UTF8> Why I Left Jihad. The Root of Terrorism
and the Return of Radical Islam.

 

 

 

Serge Trifkovic, a former BBC World Service broadcaster and US News & World
Report correspondent, foreign affairs editor of Chronicles, and author of
The Sword of the Prophet. The sequel,
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/192865326X/qid=1143759719/sr=2-1/ref=pd_bb
s_b_2_1/102-4283636-8581726?s=books&v=glance&n=283155> Defeating Jihad, was
published by Regina <http://www.reginaorthodoxpress.com/>  Orthodox Press in
April. Read his commentaries on ChroniclesMagazine.org
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/> .

 

 

 

and

 

Robert Spencer, a scholar of Islamic history, theology, and law and the
director of  <http://www.jihadwatch.org/> Jihad Watch. He is the author of
six books, seven monographs, and hundreds of articles about jihad and
Islamic terrorism, including
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1893554589/ref=ase_robertspencer-20/102-72
46771-5902527?s=books&v=glance&n=283155&tagActionCode=robertspencer-20>
Islam Unveiled: Disturbing Questions About the World's Fastest Growing Faith
and the New York Times Bestseller
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0895260131/ref=ase_robertspencer-20/102-72
46771-5902527?s=books&v=glance&n=283155&tagActionCode=robertspencer-20> The
Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam (and the Crusades). His latest book is
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1596980281/sr=1-1/qid=1153855439/ref=sr_1_
1/103-7948108-5943057?ie=UTF8&s=books> The Truth About Muhammad.

 

 

 

FP: Walid Shoebat, Serge Trifkovic and Robert Spencer, welcome to Frontpage
Magazine.

 

Walid Shoebat, let's begin with you. Tell us a bit about this new
documentary and your contribution to it.

 

Shoebat: Ever since I left radical Islam, I have consistently run into
westerners who are oblivious to the mind-set of radical Islamists, and being
on both sides of the fence, I have felt like I am Captain Spock of Star Trek
-- always having to explain to Captain Kirk how the aliens thought. Yet the
first problem I encountered when speaking to westerners is that they always
think that the Muslim world has the same aspirations as they do, seeking
liberty, equality, modernization, democracy, and the good life.

 

Today, Islamism, a forgotten giant that ruled the ancient world and was
finally wounded by the West, is now coming back to life - quickly. In many
countries with a Muslim majority, secularism and socialism is out of style,
and we have a new trend (actually very old) that is having a come-back, and
is growing like wild-fire -- radical Islam.

 

This documentary I participated in links Islam's history from it's beginning
until now showing the myths and facts. The documentary relies primarily on
Islam's own sources with the undeniable statements made by Muhammad, Islam's
founding father, and how his teachings still live in our modern time. While
all this evidence is discussed, many statements by world leaders and
politicians deny the undeniable - that Islam in its core teaching is not
simply a "beautiful and peace loving religion", but a system of government
as well to be forced on the rest of the world. 

 

While the East already knows Islam since it lived with it from the
beginning, the West is still oblivious not only to Islam's history, but its
growth in the West as well.

 

It's a documentary that every westerner must see, especially since we still
have our freedom to critique Islam, at least for now.

 

FP: Serge Trifkovic, how come I have a feeling this documentary won't be
part of the curriculum for too many university courses?

 

Trifkovic: I'd say that your feeling probably isn't entirely intuitive. It
is also based on ample empirical evidence that the elite class that controls
the education, media, and entertainment all over the Western world does not
want a serious debate about Islam's tenets, historical record, and
geopolitical designs. Worse still, since you ask about university courses,
our educators don't want to educate young people about Islam as it is - for
which purpose "What the West Needs to Know" would be an excellent tool - but
to indoctrinate them into accepting the elite consensus.

 

That consensus, as we see in the opening clips of Blair, Bush and Clinton,
rests upon the implacable dogma that there is something called "real Islam"
(peaceful, tolerant, and as American as apple pie), and then there is
"extremism" that is an aberrant and unrepresentative deviation of Muhammad's
faith. (Blair's assurances that the 9-11 attackers were not "Islamic
terrorists" but "terrorists plain and simple" would have been on par with
FDR declaring, after Pearl Harbor, that the attackers were not "Japanese
airmen," but "airmen" plain and simple.)

 

Let me offer a striking example of this dogma, lengthy for the symposium
format but useful as to what gets into college courses and school curricula.
It is provided by Houghton Mifflin, publishers of a history textbook, Across
the Centuries, that is compulsory for 7th grade students in California. It
employed one Shabbir Mansuri, a man with terrorist connections and a
founding director of the Council on Islamic Education in California, to help
with the book's chapter on Islam. The results, while predictable, defy
belief.

 

The first verses of the Qur'an, the textbook teaches 12 and 13-year-old
Americans, "were revealed" to Muhammad in AD 610, and the initial revelation
came from "a being he later identified as the angel Gabriel." Such
quasi-factual statements would befit a textbook used in a Pakistani
medressa, but not one used in an American public school. More egregiously,
Across the Centuries states that "some Jewish leaders would not accept
Muhammad as God's latest prophet," and blithely glosses over the fact that
Muhammad reacted to the Jews' refusal to accept his prophetic claims with a
host of violently Judeophobic "revelations" in the Kuran. Such injunctions
from Allah paved the way for the ethnic cleansing and eventual extermination
of all Jews under Muhammad's domain. To omit his Endloesung from the history
of early Islam is equal to the history of the rise of Nazism purged of the
Kristallnacht and the Nuremberg Laws.

 

Another bold misrepresentation is contained on p. 64, dealing with "an
Islamic term that is often misunderstood," jihad. The textbook provides only
one "true" definition: "The term means 'to struggle,' to do one's best to
resist temptation and overcome evil." It admits that "[u]nder certain
conditions the struggle to overcome evil may require action," but hastens to
add that the Kuran and Sunna "allow self-defense and participation in
military conflict, but restrict it to the right to defend against aggression
and persecution." American teenagers are also taught that Muslim women enjoy
"clear rights" in marriage and the right to an education, that the Muslims
were "extremely tolerant of those they conquered," that "Christians and Jews
had full religious freedom" under Islam, and a host of similar lies. The
exercises in the textbook require them to wear an Islamic robe, adopt a
Muslim name, memorize Kuranic verses, to pray "in the name of Allah, the
Compassionate, the Merciful" and to chant, "Praise to Allah, Lord of
Creation." 

 

The upholders of the mindset that promotes and mandates such rubbish in our
classrooms will naturally treat the truth about Islam as inadmissible, and
that's why "What the West Needs to Know" will be ignored by them. They
dominate the entertainment industry - just look at Ridley Scott's Kingdom of
Heaven, which conveyed the message that, in a conflict between Christians
and Muslims, the former attack, the latter react. The true hero of the movie
is Saladin, a wise warrior-king sans peur et sans reproche; its villains,
the coarse and bloodthirsty Europeans.

 

The manner in which the media routinely misrepresent Islam tends to be more
insidious, especially when it is wrapped in the guise of scholarship. Take
the 2002 PBS mini-series Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet, financed mostly with
our money, which offered an uncritical hagiography on par with the Soviet
state television's treatment of Lenin. Just as the comrades routinely
glossed over some two million innocent victims of the 1917-1921 Bolshevik
terror, the PBS glossed over the matter of slaughtered Jewish tribes, of the
razzias, murders, rapes, of poll tax and dhimmitude. All Muslim battles were
presented as defensive. Nine "specialists" vied with each other to praise
Muhammad in extravagant terms. The result bordered on the ridiculous: e.g.
"he deeply, deeply loved" his first wife Khadija, and each of his many
subsequent marriages was "an act of faith, not of lust" - nine-year-old
Aisha included for sure. Muhammad was presented as the liberator of women,
and no mention was made of many Kuranic verses and Hadiths that allow, even
sanctify rape, violence against wives, and discrimination. 

 

On each and every score "What the West Needs to Know" sets the record
straight, and that's why it is subversive and dangerous. I expect it will be
formally banned in the European Union, and I and my four fellow-"stars"
should think twice before boarding the next flight for Heathrow or Schiphol
lest we end up in a slammer with the book thrown at us for saying things
that must not be said. On balance that may well be a price worth paying to
alert our naive, complacent or manipulated fellow Westerners that their
house is on fire. 

 

In The Firebugs, Swiss playwright Max Frisch thus tells the story of
Gottlieb Biedermann, a prosperous, guilt-ridden businessman who responds to
an epidemic of arson in his town by letting two shady characters who look
like arsonists into his home, lodging them, feeding them, and finally
providing them with the incendiary materials. Even when he and his initially
uneasy wife realize who the visitors really are, they remain in denial about
their intentions. Biedermann tries to buy security by displaying generosity,
even when the writing is clearly on the wall. Far from being grateful, the
arsonists despise him and smugly state that "the best and safest method" for
hoodwinking people "is to tell them the plain unvarnished truth." 

 

"What the West Needs to Know" seeks to present that unvarnished truth
soberly, even dryly, with no bells and whistles, no dramatic music and no
special effects. It offers a breath of fresh air and an alternative to the
non-debate on Islam that we've had for over five years. 

 

Spencer: It all reminds me of Eugene Ionesco's delightful play Rhinoceros.
In it, human beings one by one become rhinoceri, and even those who
initially vow to hold out eventually succumb, out of the pressure of
conformism and the sheer weariness of holding out. The absurdist premise is
not so absurd when one looks at the global situation today: the free world
is under assault everywhere from the forces of jihad, working from the
teachings of the Qur'an and Sunnah, and notably the words and deeds of
Muhammad. Yet in America and the West, taking note of these rather obvious
facts only brings one opprobrium, if the chattering classes deign to take
notice at all: one is compelled in the mainstream of public discourse to
deny the obvious. Everyone is busy tossing away common sense, reason, and
basic powers of observation and becoming a rhinoceros, and vilifying those
who decline to do so.

 

Although the facts presented in Islam: What the West Needs to Know are
readily and easily verifiable, they are not to be spoken, not to be noticed,
and anyone who dares do so will in effect be read out of polite society. In
a sane West, interested in its own defense, such a documentary would not
have been produced by a small and indeed quixotic independent production
company - Quixotic Media - but would have been just one part of a larger
effort by Hollywood itself to educate the public about what we are facing,
and why our civilization is worth defending. It would not have seen limited,
quasi-furtive distribution, but nationwide, front-burner attention.

 

Nevertheless, however anxiously the media and political mainstream wish to
ignore the information in this film, and however successful they are in
diverting people away from seeing it or even hearing about it, they will
ultimately not be so successful in preventing jihad terrorists from
continuing to act upon the teachings of Islam we explain in the film. And
eventually it will become painfully clear to the politically correct
authorities that no matter how much it discomfits them, what we have
explained in Islam: What the West Needs to Know is simply the truth. The
sooner it is recognized and policies constructed accordingly, the safer we
will all be.

 

Shoebat: I share similar frustration as Spencer and Trifkovic. My last
episode speaking at Colombia was not only frustrating, but some of the
questions made by the student audience reveal a dangerous trend. In my
speech, I critiqued not only Islam, but Martin Luther, the Protestant
Reformer who wrote "The Jews and Their Lies." I also elevated Martin Luther
King Jr. for fighting for Black rights, yet students criticized my speech as
anti-Islam, racism and bigotry. Why is it that when I critiqued Martin
Luther I was not accused of bigotry against Christianity? 

 

When I was a terrorist the world labelled us as freedom fighters. When I was
a "freedom fighter", I was free to say that "Jews are shylocks, Israel is a
racist state, Jews run the Congress and the media.". In those days, I hated
Jews, but when the day came that I changed my mind and loved everyone, I was
labelled as a racist.

 

Yet similar statements to the things we said when we were terrorists are
made at our universities - Richard Falk taught that Iran is a model for a
humane government, Andres Steinberg "Israel destroys Christian shrines",
Rashid Khalidi "Israel is racist", DeGenova "Patriot Americans are white
supremacist", Hamid Dabashi "Jews are vulgar".

 

All these are so similar to what I learned as terrorist, yet these
professors are not labelled as terror supporters, and I am being labelled as
racist?

 

At another speech, one Rabbi critiqued the New Testament as "riddled with
violence," I had no problem with his right to state this, yet when I
confronted him I asked "Why do you feel free to critique the New Testament,
but afraid of critiquing Islam's well documented violence?" to which he
could not reply. 

 

It didn't matter that I stated in my speech that a Jew had the right to
critique Christianity, a Christian had the right to critique Mormonism and
Islam, and a Muslim had a right to critique the Bible and Christianity, I
was still accused of racism and bigotry against Islam. One can say almost
anything against any other religion but Islam. Why?

 

Our basic religious freedom is at stake. We might be going on the same road
as I witnessed in England while doing interviews in the media. In one
Christian TV show, the interviewer stated that he cannot critique Islam in
fear of closure. Only the interviewee can do so. He feared a shut down of
his Christian station.

 

The other dangerous trend is that all fundamentalists are being lumped as
fanatics. At the BBC in England during one interview the interviewer stated
to me that "the problem with today's world is fundamentalism" to which I
responded "Christian fundamentalists give the world a headache, I confess,
but Muslim fundamentalists will whack your head right off your shoulders,
sir" I was quickly thanked and escorted out of the BBC.

 

I concur with Trifkovic's findings in regards to Across the Centuries school
textbook. I remember the day I reviewed the same book my son brought from
school, the next day I walked into the vice principle's office when I threw
the book on the desk asking "do you know what is today's date/", to which he
replied "it's September 11". I replied him "I reject teaching Islam as fact,
while my son cannot learn Christianity. Islam is the religion of millions
who condoned 9/11." 

 

Fortunately for my son, he said "Sir, in this school we skip the whole
subject, the book is enforced on us, but we do not comply." Yet I doubt that
the rest of the school system was as wise as this one.

 

I also concur with Trifkovic's Kingdom of Heaven analysis. In one videotape
I have by Sheikh Qaradawi, who spent six years in the Middle East as
security adviser to the EU spreading his "peaceful Islam", was giving an
example to Muslim students in America about Salahuddin (Saladin). While
Saladin's Arab advisor was asked by Saladin that the Crusaders want a peace
treaty, in which his Arab advisor gave the example from Surah Al-Anfal:61
"And if they concede to peace, so shall you concede, and place your trust in
Allah", yet Saladin argued "I am a Kurd and you are an Arab, you should know
the Quran better then I" in which Saladin quoted Surat Muhammad verse 35
"And be not slack so as to cry for peace and you have the upper hand." 

 

Indeed, as Muhammad stated "Al-Harbu Khid'a" in English "War is deception",
yet, and while we try to fight the deception by Islamic terrorists from
outside, we need to first fight the Islamic terror support that is coming
from the inside.

 
This deception wants to change the next generation Americans. If they
succeed, it's all over -- they won.

Trifkovic: None of us should have any delusions about the prospects that
"What the West Needs to Know," or any other single book, movie, or TV
appearance, will alter the paradigm and change the terms of what is still a
very one-sided debate about Islam. This film nevertheless represents a
quantum leap from what we've had available in filmography so far, most
notoriously that disgraceful PBS series on Muhammad.

I'd hope the producers will come up with a shorter version that can be
marketed to some potentially friendly TV channels (they do exist), or
perhaps a 3-part mini-series of 30 min. each, and for the mass market the
material may need to be "jazzed up" a little with more documentary clips and
a more lively delivery of the voice-over reading Kuranic verses and Hadith,
all of which would broaden the film's potential appeal.

This would be well worth the Quijotic team's while, as the movie makes a
solid contribution to the effort to define the Enemy in the nebulously named
"War on Terror," and to grasp the nature of the threat. It brings us a
little closer to the day when the West will discard the taboos and start
analyzing Islam without fear, or guilt, or the shackles of mandated
thinking. "If you know the enemy and know yourself you need not fear the
results of a hundred battles," says Sun Tzu. Those who see this film will be
a step closer to knowing the enemy, his core beliefs, his role models, his
track-record, his mindset, his modus operandi, and his intentions.

But the main problem remains with ourselves, with those among us who have
the power to make policy and shape opinions, and who will wilfully ignore,
or else reject and condemn "What the West Needs to Know," and all of its
contributors, and all of their works. Let's face it: they are beyond
redemption, and the time for euphemisms and diplomatic restraint is over.
The elite class that continues to peddle the lie about the "Religion of
Peace and Tolerance," is composed of either idiots or evil traitors (and in
Tony Blair's case the two blend seamlessly). As I wrote in "Chronicles" a
week ago, the crime of which Jihad's Shabbos-goyim in the West are guilty
"far exceeds any transgression for which the founders of the United States
overthrew the colonial government."



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: osint@yahoogroups.com
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Reply via email to