Posted on 11/17/2006 5:18:23 PM PST by Fred Nerks
There they go again. The story is so old already. Arab militia or Arab army or Arab terrorist attacks non-Arab. Or was that Muslim fanatic attacks non-Muslim? This time, it's happening in Sudan.
While we're sitting and talking, probably a few hundred more black Africans in Sudan have starved to death, or been brutally killed, raped, enslaved, or simply pushed off their land by 7th century Arab imperialist invaders, or more rightly "Arab settlers".
Oh yes, that's right. "Arab settlers".
Like the ones Saddam Hussein brought into Kurdistan - i.e., the Kurdish areas of northern Iraq - in the 1970s to displace the indigenous Kurds during his forced Arabization campaign. Forcibly relocating many Kurds from the Kurdish heartland in the north, he razed all Kurdish villages along a 1,300-kilometer stretch of the border with Iran.
Now Sudan is doing the same thing.
While Arab militiamen known as the Janjaweed, rape, slaughter and drive out over a million black Africans from their homes in western Sudan, the government in Khartoum turns a blind eye. The Janjaweed have killed about 30,000 people and left some two million in desperate need of aid, or there will be humanitarian disaster. The Janjaweed has been described as an Arab Islamic group that has targeted mostly black Christians. According to some reports, the Sudanese government itself armed and paid the militia of Arab raiders, and authorized them to slaughter and drive out members of the Zaghawa, Masalit and Fur tribes.
This has all taken place under the watchful eye of Kofi Annan, the UN, Colin Powell, the US, the European Union, and 20-something Arab League states. I can understand the Arab states turning a blind eye to the ethnic cleansing campaign underway (or impending genocide?), it doesn't look good having "Arab settlers" butchering people. But why haven't Annan and Powell, sons of the African continent, gone ballistic? After all, it is their black brothers who are getting it, from the Arabs this time. And what about the Europeans, who are always so "human rights"-oriented when it comes to Israel? Why not when it comes to the African continent?
Sudanese President Omar Bashir pledged to US officials to disarm the Janjaweed and other militias, but he's promised that before.
Jan Egeland, the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, complained that the United Nations was slow to act in Darfur, where aid workers say about 350,000 people could die this year of disease or malnutrition. He also blamed Khartoum for lack of action in aiding the refugees.
A typical UN do-gooder, Egeland seems to have overlooked the fact that the Sudanese government might have deliberately caused this problem. It's a typical Arab/Muslim land grab. It's happened in Iraq, it's happened in Lebanon, with Syria occupying Lebanon and persecuting the Christians there, and it's happened in Israel, where 7th century Arab imperialist invaders and 20th century Arab squatters have tried to displace the indigenous Jewish population.
Arab settlers, and they're violent, at that...
Describing the pogrom-like atmosphere, one woman told how the Janjaweed entered the village. She said, "The Janjaweed shouted, 'We will not allow blacks here. We will not let Zaghawa here. This land is only for Arabs.'"
Another woman described how the Janjaweed took her and her two sisters away on horses and gang-raped them. The raiders shot one sister, and cut the throat of the other, they then discussed how to mutilate her. "One Janjaweed said, 'You belong to me. You are a slave to the Arabs, and this is the sign of a slave,'" she recalled. He slashed her leg with a sword before letting her hobble away, stark naked.
"First the planes were flying over us and bombing us. Then the Janjaweed came," a third woman described. "They started to shoot and burn. They took all our belongings. They took men and slit their throats with swords. The women they took as concubines."
The situation is so horrendous that Abd Al-Rahman Al-Rashed, the former editor of the prestigious Arabic daily Al-Sharq Al-Awsat (London), recently published an op-ed titled, "The Death of 300,000 People". In the article, Al-Rashed decried the Arab media's apathy to the violence in Sudan.
Al-Rashed wrote, "They are not the victims of Israeli or American aggression; therefore, they are not an issue for concern... Is the life of 1,000 people in western Sudan less valuable, or is a single killed Palestinian or Iraqi of greater importance, merely because the enemy is Israeli or American?"
He continued, "It is a grave matter that government-sponsored forces or militias should be allowed to carry out the annihilation of people in order to achieve quick or decisive victory... As for Arab intellectuals who see nothing in the world but the Palestinian and the Iraqi causes, and who consider any blood not spilled in conflicts with foreigners to be cheap and its spilling justifiable, they are intellectual accomplices in the crime."
What does all this have to do with Israel?
Well, as I wrote in an article entitled "Israel Should Support the Kurds Against Syria":
"As the discussion of democratization of the Middle East continues, an important point that must be made time and time again, is the importance of building structures that liberate the minorities of the region from oppression.
"Non-Arab and non-Muslim minorities live throughout North Africa and the Middle East. Contrary to the propaganda that the region is Arab/Muslim, these minorities are remnants of the indigenous peoples, from before the great Arab imperialist wars of the 7th century, and the 'Islamicization process' that followed. Non-Arab Muslims like the Kurds in Iraq, Syria, Turkey and Iran; the Berbers - known as Amazighs - in Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya, have all resisted Arabization for over 1,000 years. Non-Muslims like the Assyrian Christians in Iraq - who are not Arabs - the Copts in Egypt, Christian Lebanese - many who claim not to be Arab, but Phoenician - the Christians in Sudan, and other Christians throughout the region, have been persecuted minorities since the rise of Islam. Others, like the Druze and Jews, have also been persecuted by Arab/Muslim regimes throughout history....
"Only Israel, the Jewish State, has fully liberated itself - in the political sense - from this Arab/Muslim oppression, although it still suffers from physical violence against her people. Israel should take the lead - in its foreign policy - to support democratization and regime change throughout the region. Israel shouldn't wait until countries of the region reform, but should pro-actively support the legitimate aspirations of the oppressed minorities of North Africa and the Middle East, and build alliances with them."
Since writing those words, news of Israeli security cooperation in the Kurdish areas of Iraq has leaked out. Although denied by all involved, I can only hope that it's true and that the Mossad is listening. It should begin to branch out to work with other minorities throughout the region as well.
I haven't yet mentioned the so-called "Palestinians", and I won't, beyond saying that they are part of the problem, not part of the solution. Aren't they an oppressed minority? No, as Arabs, they are part of the greater Arab nation that, since the 7th century, has conquered, oppressed and occupied everyone else in the Middle East and North Africa. As radical Muslims, everyone can see that Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the other terror groups are continuing down the same path as Osama Bin Laden. In fact, not long before his assassination, Hamas "spiritual leader" Sheikh Ahmed Yassin had begun speaking about the "Global Jihad" in Bin Laden- and Al-Qaeda-type terms. Hezbullah has also been working in the "Palestinian" administered territories for a while already, as evidenced by Israel's recent capture of a Hezbullah cell in Gaza. So they are part of the regional oppression network, not part of the future liberty and freedom alliance that Israel should work to build with other minorities in the area.
Like that Arab murderer in Sudan who said, "This land is only for Arabs," the late Hamas leader Abdel Aziz Rantisi said not long before his demise, "We will continue with our holy war and resistance until every last criminal Zionist is evicted from this land. By G-d, we will not leave one Jew alive in Palestine. We will fight them with all the strength we have. This is our land, not the Jews'." Most of the so-called "Palestinians" agreed with him.
Arab racism marches on....
Israel should speak out strongly against the ethnic cleansing and potential genocide taking place in Sudan today, just as I've urged it do about the atrocious Syrian occupation in Lebanon. Israel should support the rights of the Kurds to an independent state, and encourage other indigenous peoples and their liberation movements.
A major element of Israel's strategic foreign policy should be based on supporting the rights of minorities in the region. Only that way, based on democratization, liberation from oppressive regimes and encouragement of freedom, will the Middle East and North Africa be transformed into a region worthy of its millennia-old history.
A pre-Arab and pre-Muslim history, I might add.
While we're sitting and talking, probably a few hundred more black Africans in Sudan have starved to death, or been brutally killed, raped, enslaved, or simply pushed off their land by 7th century Arab imperialist invaders, or more rightly "Arab settlers".
A typical UN do-gooder, Egeland seems to have overlooked the fact that the Sudanese government might have deliberately caused this problem.
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The U.N. continues its state of uselessness. It always "overlooks" anything that would require any SERIOUS action, especially against one of its FINE MEMEBERSHIP. What a sick joke these wretches are...
Reminding us that Islam is an Arab religion. Proof: the Koran is in Arabic, and Muslims think that no translation is the "real" word of God.
re the UN. Sorry,I meant to ping you to #4.
I can't express my disgust at the UN without using expletives that would require deletion.
"I can't express my disgust at the UN without using expletives that would require deletion."
Why we continue to be a member of this disgusting organization has always been a mystery to me.
Why we continue to be a member of this disgusting organization has always been a mystery to me.
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I feel the same way. I think once one joins, it's hard to get out of...?
Must do some research!
In any case, the history of Islam is like the early, bloodthirsty history of Israel, as depeicted in Joshua and the books of the kings, and which western skeptics have always pointed to as reprehensible. Yet, when they look at the same deeds done by Mohammed and his followers, they see merely a colorful past.
http://www.hrweb.org/legal/unchartr.html
I'm reading this...
They obviously need more 'peacekeepers'; damned shame the US hasn't coughed up enough money to pay africans to provide them....(yes - sarc!)
"...they see merely a colorful past."
And now, they can see the 'colorful' present, also.
They only do these evil deeds because they are desperate.(hah). Of course, the leaders do not blow themselves up, do they. Thw word assassin comes straight out of Islamic history; these guys are drawing from that past.
The numbers seem to be with the 'islamic nations' - here's an example:
© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com
U.N. Human Rights Commission meeting
Islamic United Nations representatives blocked an attempt to have the world body condemn killing in the name of religion.
The International Humanist and Ethical Union said it submitted the request to the U.N. Human Rights Commission in Geneva in response to moves by Islamic clerics to legitimize the current wave of terror attacks.
IHEU representative David Littman tried to deliver a prepared text in the names of three international NGOs the Association for World Education, the Association of World Citizens and the IHEU but was blocked by the "heavy-handed intervention" of Islamic representatives of the panel.
Littman said that after repeated interruptions, he was unable to complete his speech.
The Muslims members said they saw the text as an attack on Islam.
The IHEU argued Littman's speech was a report on recent critical comment on Islamist extremism by a number of notable Muslim writers.
The intent was for the U.N. Human Rights Commission "to condemn calls to kill, to terrorize or to use violence in the name of God or any religion."
The text referred to recent decisions by high-ranking Muslim clerics to confirm that those who carry out suicide bombings remain Muslims and cannot be treated as apostates.
A Saudi cleric, for example, issued a fatwa saying that innocent Britons were a legitimate target for terrorist action. Also, Yusuf al-Qaradawi, dean of the College of Sharia and Islamic Studies at Qatar University, who has visited Britain, said terror attacks are permissible.
Roy Brown, president of IHEU, said the censorship is "part and parcel of the refusal by the Islamic representatives at the U.N. to condemn the suicide bombers, or to accept any criticism of those who kill innocent people in the name of God."
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=45479
Need we ask who rules the UN?
Now there's an interesting story:
The Assassin movement, called the "new propaganda" by its members, was inaugurated by al-Hasan ibn-al-Sabbah (died in 1124), probably a Persian from Tus, who claimed descent from the Himyarite kings of South Arabia. The motives were evidently personal ambition and desire for vengeance on the part of the heresiarch. As a young man in al-Rayy, al-Hassan received instruction in the Batinite system, and after spending a year and a half in Egypt returned to his native land as a Fatimid missionary. Here in 1090 he gained possession of the strong mountain fortress Alamut, north-west of Qazwin. Strategically situated on an extension of the Alburz chain, 10200 feet above sea level, and on the difficult by shortest road between the shores of the Caspian and the Persian highlands, this "eagle's nest," as the name probably means, gave ibn-al-Sabbah and his successors a central stronghold of primary importance. Its possession was the first historical fact in the life of the new order.
From Alamut the grand master with his disciples made surprise raids in various directions which netted other fortresses. In pursuit of their ends they made free and treacherous use of th dagger, reducing assassination to an art. Their secret organization, based on Ismailite antecedents, developed an agnosticism which aimed to emancipate the initiate from the trammels of doctrine, enlightened him as to the superfluity of prophets and encouraged him to believe nothing and dare all. Below the grand master stood the grand priors, each in charge of a particular district. After these came the ordinary propagandists. The lowest degree of the order comprised the "fida'is", who stood ready to execute whatever orders the grand master issued. A graphic, though late and secondhad, description of the method by which the master of Alamut is said to have hypnotized his "self-sacrificing ones" with the use of hashish has come down to us from Marco Polo, who passed in that neighborhood in 1271 or 1272. After describing in glowing terms the magnificent garden surrounding the elegant pavilions and palaces built by the grand master at Alamut, Polo proceeds:
"Now no man was allowed to enter the Garden save those whom he intended to be his ASHISHIN. There was a fortress at the entrance to the Garden, strong enough to resist all the world, and there was no other way to get in. He kept at his Court a number of the youths of the country, from twelve to twenty years of age, such as had a taste for soldiering... Then he would introduce them into his Garden, some four, or six, or ten at a time, having first made them drink a certain potion which cast them into a deep sleep, and then causing them to be lifted and carried in. So when they awoke they found themselves in the Garden.
"When therefore they awoke, and found themselves in a place so charming, they deemed that it was Paradise in very truth. And the ladies and damsels dallied with them to their hearts' content...
"So when the Old Man would have any prince slain, he would say to such a youth: 'Go thou and slay So and So; and when thou returnest my Angels shall bear thee into Paradise. And shouldst thou die, natheless even so will I send my Angels to carry thee back into Paradise.'"
(from 'The Book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian', translated by Henry Yule, London, 1875.)
The Assassination in 1092 of the illustrious vizir of the Saljug sultanate, Nizam-al-Mulk, by a fida'i disguised as a Sufi, was the first of a series of mysterious murders which plunged the Muslim world into terror. When in the same year the Saljug Sultan Malikshah bestirred himself and sent a disciplinary force against the fortress, its garrison made a night sortie and repelled the besieging army. Other attempts by caliphs and sultans proved equally futile until finally the Mongolian Hulagu, who destroyed the caliphate, seized the fortress in 1256 together with its subsidary castles in Persia. Since the Assassin books andrecords were destroyed, our information about this strange and spectacular order is derived mainly from hostile sources.
As early as the last years of the eleventh century the Assassins had succeeded in setting firm foot in Syria and winning as convert the Saljug prince of Aleppo, Ridwan ibn-Tutush (died in 1113). By 1140 they had captured the hill fortress of Masyad and many others in northern Syria, including al-Kahf, al-Qadmus and al-'Ullayqah. Even Shayzar (modern Sayjar) on the Orontes was temporarily occupied by the Assassins, whom Usamah calls Isma'ilites. One of their most famous masters in Syria was Rachid-al-Din Sinan (died in 1192), who resided at Masyad and bore the title shakkh al-jabal', translated by the Crusades' chroniclers as "the old man of the mountain". It was Rashid's henchmen who struck awe and terror into the hearts of the Crusaders. After the capture of Masyad in 1260 by the Mongols, the Mamluk Sultan Baybars in 1272 dealt the Syrian Assassins the final blow. Since then the Assassins have been sparsely scattered through northern Syria, Persia, 'Uman, Zanzibar, and especially India, where they number about 150000 and go by the name of Thojas or Mowlas. They all acknowledge as titular head the Aga Khan of Bombay, who claims descent through the last grand master of Alamut from Isma'il, the seventh imam, receives over a tenth of the revenues of his followers, even in Syria, and spends most of his time as a sportsman between Paris and London.
Indeed. I suspect that the leaders of the modern assassins are really religious skeptics who believe in nothing except power.
I am now reminded of a tale told by the travel writer Paul Theroux...paraphrased from memory...
Paul came across an afghan fellow on a ferry. He asked him who he was and where he came from. The man said he was afghani and lived in the mountains. He killed and robbed travellers as a mode of life...he had only come down from his abode for medical treatment.
And what will you do, when you return to your home, Paul asked him.
Rob people and kill them, the afghan replied.
Somewhere I have read that Arabs castrated their black slaves to keep them from reproducing.
This is what I think about whenever I read posts to FR about how we should feel sorry for moslem women, try to help them, try to empower them, posts assuring us that they'd love to strike off their shackles, etc etc.
"...And as the black women are being tortured, the moslem women dance and sing songs ridiculing the victims."
Following the tradition of the women of the followers of mohammad, who stripped and mutilated the bodies of the slain as islam was spread across the middle east by the sword.
I agree with you. It would be a great mistake to trust the women. The women and girls are no less brainwashed by islam than are the men and the boys.
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