In this
mailing:
by Soeren Kern
• March 12, 2017 at 5:00 am
- Muslim pupils
outnumber Christian children in more than 30 church schools,
including one Church of England primary school that has a
"100% Muslim population." — Sunday Times.
- Six Muslim men
shouted "Allahu Akbar" as they were sentenced at
Sheffield Crown Court for a total of 81 years for sexually
abusing two girls — including one who became pregnant at age
12 — in Rotherham.
- "By 2030, one
in three people will be a Muslim in the world — that is a huge
population." — Romanna Bint-Abubaker, founder of modest
fashion website Haute Elan.
- A Chatham House
survey of more than 10,000 people from ten European countries
found that an average of 55% agreed that all further migration
from mainly Muslim countries should be stopped.
On February 1 ("world hijab day"), UK
Prime Minister Theresa May said that women should feel free to wear
the hijab, a traditional Islamic headscarf, stating: "What a
woman wears is a woman's choice." Pictured above: Theresa May
(then Home Secretary) wears a headscarf while attending an
interfaith event at Al Madina Mosque in East London, in February
2015. (Image source: Imams Online video screenshot)
February 1.
Jim Walker, a 71-year-old volunteer at Carnforth Station, was
banned from the premises after someone complained about an alleged
racist comment. Walker, who, for more than a decade, has been
winding a famous clock at the station, was overheard discussing a
newspaper article about young migrants entering Britain from the
French port of Calais. Walker said:
"Carnforth
Station Trust received a complaint from a visitor who was not happy
about me speaking to somebody about the issue.... What they are
doing is outrageous. It is absolutely unbelievable, it is a
violation of free speech....
"I
must be the only man in Carnforth who has a document saying where
he can and can't walk and all for expressing a point of view and
quoting an editorial from a newspaper. Now [winding the clock] is
no longer possible."
by Raymond Ibrahim
• March 12, 2017 at 4:00 am
- "Nothing has
been done by Pope Francis or the Bishop of Abu Dhabi to get me
released, in spite of contact being made by my captors."
— Rev. Tom Uzhunnalil, a Catholic priest who was kidnapped on
March 4, 2016 in Yemen, when Islamic terrorists raided a
nursing home and killed 16 people, including several nuns and
aid workers.
- "Christians
continue to be the most persecuted believers in the world with
over 90,000 followers of Christ being killed in the last
year." — Massimo Introvigne, prominent statistician and
researcher, interviewed on Vatican Radio.
Police confer at the site of the December 19, 2016
truck-ramming attack in Berlin, Germany. Anis Amri, a Muslim asylum
seeker from Tunisia, murdered a Polish truck driver and 12 shoppers
at a Christmas market. (Image source: RT video screenshot)
As in previous
years, the month of Christmas saw an uptick in Islamic attacks on
Christians — much of it in the context of targeting Christmas
festivities and worship.
The one
that claimed the most lives took place in Egypt. On Sunday,
December 11, 2016, an Islamic suicide bomber entered the St. Peter
Cathedral in Cairo during mass, detonated himself, killed at least
27 worshippers, mostly women and children, and wounded nearly 70. A
witness said:
"I
found bodies, many of them women, lying on the pews. It was a horrible
scene. I saw a headless woman being carried away. Everyone was in a
state of shock. We were scooping up people's flesh off the floor.
There were children. What have they done to deserve this? I wish I
had died with them instead of seeing these scenes."
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