Actually the FFL forces were primarily troops from France's African colonies until the latter stages of the war, during the Hexagon's liberation. And of these troops, Muslims formed a plurality.
The reference to which you responded in the previous tu quoque was to the well documented support of Hitler by Muhammed Amin al Husseini, a leading mahometan cleric in Palestine who participated in the Holocaust for anti-semitic theological reasons.
A more likely explanation is that he gave theological reasons for his anti-Semitic stance against Jewish settlement in Palestine. Still, you've named one, and I've named tens of thousands.
Those theological reasons, of course, are the key distinction here. Muslim members of the FFL were fighting because their homes were under attack, and not for any theological reason.
No they weren't. They were fighting against Fascism and for freedom. There was nary a Nazi in upper French Guinea, western Niger, Chad, Centrafrique, etc.
The fact that they were muslim was purely incidental.
If Moslems heart Nazis as much as you say, the "purely incidental" number of Muslims fighting the Nazis should have been much, much smaller.
Al Husseini, by contrast, assisted in the Holocaust in his capacity as a mahometan cleric and for theological reasons stemming from his religious views. His hatred of the Jews was a direct product of his extremist theology.
Perhaps it was, but he was only one. There were many more Muslim theologians supporting the FFL and fighting the Nazis.
Yet in terms of numbers to the overall war, they were at best a minor player amidst the allies.
A more likely explanation is that he gave theological reasons for his anti-Semitic stance against Jewish settlement in Palestine. Still, you've named one, and I've named tens of thousands.
No you haven't. You've named ten thousand soldiers in a minor ally colonial force on the war's periphery who also happened to be muslims. I've named the highest ranking muslim CLERIC in the holy land at that time.
No they weren't. They were fighting against Fascism and for freedom. There was nary a Nazi in upper French Guinea, western Niger, Chad, Centrafrique, etc.
They were fighting because nazism was expanding onto their turf. And yes, there were plenty of Nazis running around in Africa and many more Nazi allies such as the Italians running around in subsaharan Africa. But again, all of that was in the war's periphery. Though they fought admirably when the fascist crowd moved into their neighborhoods, very few muslims ever landed at Normandy or marched on Berlin.
If Moslems heart Nazis as much as you say, the "purely incidental" number of Muslims fighting the Nazis should have been much, much smaller.
And why would that be? It's human nature to fight an invader who has sights on acquiring the place you live. Hitler, Mussolini, and their allies had sights on the French African colonies, so their residents responded. Meanwhile leading Islamic clerics in the middle east were advising Hitler's regime on how to kill Jews.
Perhaps it was, but he was only one.
No he wasn't. The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem was the highest ranking Islamic authority in the holy land at the time. Husseini had hundreds of clerics under him who followed his pro-Nazi allegiances. Rashid al-Kaylani, prime minister of Iraq at the outset of WWII, was one of Husseini's followers. When Husseini was in Europe running around with Himmler he made a trip to the Balkans where he organized the 13th Waffen-Schutzstaffel, a division consisting of over 20,000 Muslim Nazis. After the war Husseini continued to have significant influence in the middle east. One of his proteges was Yasser Arafat.