Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Holland Prepares to Dam Up Jihad
FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | 11/15/04 | Alexis Amory

Posted on 11/15/2004 12:41:04 AM PST by kattracks

The Dutch have suspected for some time that in Holland, their world famous attachment to tolerance was turning into a one-way street. There was an assumption that the indigenes of tiny Holland (population 16 million), would tolerate large-scale Islamic immigration without a mew of protest because they were so famously tolerant. That the immigrants owed a duty to their host country to acculturate themselves, learn the language, and adopt the tolerance they had made their way to Holland to enjoy seems never to have occurred to anyone in government.

Writing shortly after the murder and public butchering of filmmaker Theo van Gogh, Anthony Daniels wrote in London’s Telegraph that the "habit of toleration is an integral part of Dutch identity. Van Gogh's death, like that of the politician Pim Fortuyn two years ago, echoed the assassination in 1584 of the Prince of Orange, William the Silent, who is still seen as a martyr not only to the Protestant cause, but also to that of freedom of conscience."

Freedom of conscience has always been critical to Dutch thinking. Wrote Daniels, "In the 17th century, Holland was the only country in Europe where a Jewish apostate, Spinoza, could publish philosophical works challenging the very basis of revealed religion. The Jewish community could expel and curse Spinoza, but neither Jew nor Christian dared to harm him.

"Only under German occupation was this tradition of toleration interrupted and temporarily crushed."

Unlike the French, although their small country was occupied, the Dutch never became collaborators. And it was in Amsterdam that, under the noses of the occupying Nazis, the family of Anne Frank and her family were sheltered and fed for four years.

Pim Fortuyn, rich, successful, enjoying a flamboyant homosexual lifestyle, was the first to publicly sound the warning that, having gotten rid of the Nazis after WWII, there was a danger that a new fascism was being introduced into Holland by stealth: the fascism of Islamic intolerance. Politically liberal, Fortuyn sensed in the Muslim intolerance of homosexuality a threat to his own liberal lifestyle and the freedoms of his easygoing countrymen and women, and he formed a political party to fight it. He found a quick response among the voters. He expressed what they had been thinking privately and had been reluctant to voice because they didn’t want to sound, well, intolerant.

Despite his murder, the party he had so recently founded enjoyed a runaway success at the polls. At last the fact that the immigrants had no intention of acculturating, but instead were set on imposing their narrow, bigoted beliefs on the liberal-minded Dutch had been noted out loud.

Fortuyn’s associate Aayan Hirsi Ali – a Somali woman who had fled from an arranged marriage 12 years previously, made her way to Holland, earned a degree in political science, then won a seat in Parliament – became famous, not only for her achievements and articulate speech, but for the fact that she is a Muslim apostate. Fatally, her friendship with Theo van Gogh, led them to collaborate on the movie Submission, now on the internet around the world; and two weeks ago Theo van Gogh was murdered in broad daylight, as he cycled along a busy street in the Dutch capital.

The murderer was a Moroccan primitive holding dual nationality. Like the millions of other Muslims who have found their way into European countries, he brought his traditions with him. He murdered van Gogh by shooting him six times then, as Theo lay dying, calmly bent over him and slit his throat in the northern African way, as calmly as someone gutting a fish, and impaled two knives, one with a note attached, through his chest. Old habits die hard.

The shock of this murder was even greater than Fortuyn’s two years earlier, and the phlegmatic Dutch seem to have decided they have had enough.

So far 20 mosques and schools have been attacked or burned to the ground. There have been some retaliation by Muslims damaging churches, but by and large the Muslims are keeping an extremely low profile this time around. One resident of the great ancient Dutch port of Rotterdam, which now has an immigrant population of 47 percent, said he went out on market day and there was not one Muslim face to be seen. "It was like going back to the Fifties," he wrote.

The right-of-center government has been blamed for trying to sweep the threat of Islamofascism under the carpet in the name of "tolerance." The Dutch are now asking why the burden of tolerance is always on them, rather than the immigrant population. Why, for example, were immigrants not required to learn to speak Dutch? Why were their children educated in the language of their parents rather than the language of their host country? Why were Dutch taxpayers paying the salaries of imams? These hyper-tolerant attitudes have allowed a parallel population, which owed no allegiance to Holland, to thrive and fester.

The government has had to admit that the murderer had been under surveillance as a possible terrorist and that they didn’t act to restrain him soon enough.

But I wrote in FPM last week that the Dutch government has had a Sleeping Beauty moment, awakened by a venomous kiss, and this gruesome and repellent murder has ramped up anti-terrorism activities and adjustments to social programs. Already they have announced that holders of dual nationality who are found guilty of a crime will have the Dutch half of their nationality revoked.

An opinion poll has shown that 40 percent of the Dutch no longer consider Muslims welcome in their country and 47 percent said they are now less tolerant of Muslims. A woman at van Gogh’s funeral was quoted as saying, "Under the Nazis, you were killed if you spoke out. Now it is happening again." To emphasize that if the Dutch are accused of "intolerance" if they speak out against the Islamification of their country yet the intolerance is all on the Islamic side, at the funeral a sarcastic letter addressed to the murderer was read out promising "we will do our very best to learn more about your beliefs to prevent further ‘misunderstandings’" and apologizing that the murderer had been provoked to kill "during Ramadan."

Although the security services declined to say whether it was related to the murder, two days later, Dutch police fought in a 14-hour shootout at a house in The Hague in which four officers were injured when a terrorist lobbed a hand grenade from a window. It was the biggest anti-terrorist operation since the 1970s, and police evacuated the entire neighborhood. Two suspected terrorists have been arrested and charged with conspiracy to commit murder.

At the same time, police said four people were detained in Amsterdam and one in Amersfoort as part of the same investigation into a network of radical Muslims. Six suspects, including van Gogh’s murderer, 26-year-old Mohammed Bouyeri, who was part of the group, have been arrested. The evidence would seem to suggest that Bouyeri got his orders to murder van Gogh from a terrorist cell in Spain.

Apparently, Samir Azzouz was a frequent visitor to Bouyeri’s apartment. A teenager who didn’t lack for ambition, Azzouz has been charged with planning attacks on a nuclear reactor, Amsterdam’s giant Schiphol Airport, and Dutch government buildings.

Last Thursday, in an emergency debate, the government agreed on new proposals to deal with Muslim extremism, adopting a wide-ranging package of new counter-terrorism measures. The size and mandate of the General Intelligence and Security Service (AIVD) will be expanded, and measures will be taken against radical imams and mosques. Begging the question of course, of why action against radical imams and mosques was not taken years ago. What is this curious somnolence in so many European countries towards Muslim immigrants?

At the same time there is a stated intention to do more to assimilate the disaffected, the assumption being that the process of assimilation is somehow the duty of the host country rather than that of the people who got off a plane – or the back of a truck – with their suitcases and backpacks.

The large circulation Dutch newspapers TROUW, The Telegraaf, and Volkskrant seem to be broadly in agreement and supportive of the government, although TROUW reports that Prime Minister Balkender has been criticized for not having had enough discussions with disaffected Muslims.

Radio Nederlands says: "A conclusion which is warranted…is that for many years the Dutch political world has been naïve: naive in its approach to the encroaching radicalization of young Dutch Muslims; naive as regards the increasing social and other divisions in the underprivileged neighborhoods of the country's main towns and cities; naive in its response to the growing presence of Islamic terrorist cells on Dutch soil inside the country; and naïve once again even in the face of a string of warnings on that very subject from the intelligence and security service."

The Dutch had assumed that the whole world respected their tolerance. And indeed, the whole civilized world does so.

Now the Dutch parliament’s Speaker, Josiah van Arisen, warns: "Jihad has come to the Netherlands."

In the last week, the Netherlands has begun to demonstrate it is prepared to fight back.



TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: jihadineurope; netherlands
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-64 next last
To: Colosis
This is simply not true. I remember reading that the Dutch were more than willing to collaborate, and many eagerly joined the SS and rounded up Jews..

Wasn't the man who turned in the Frank family Dutch?

21 posted on 11/15/2004 3:46:46 AM PST by Diva
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 16 | View Replies]

To: MissyMa

Ping


22 posted on 11/15/2004 3:49:52 AM PST by MissyMa
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: foolscap
The EU is going to have to address this issue at some point

The "The EU would like to address this issue at some point," would, probably sound more realistic. I just don't see the EU as able to address any serious issues.

23 posted on 11/15/2004 4:05:33 AM PST by aliquis
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]

Comment #24 Removed by Moderator

To: kattracks

I think the Dutch (including me) have woken up from a dream of multi-culturalism and hope... hope... that the government shows no mercy to extremists.

I've always voted for the Green Party but if I would have to vote today it would be for Geert Wilders (Pim Fortuyn revisited) who left the liberal party a few months ago because he thought his part was not though enough on Islam extremism.

I am ready to let some civil liberties go and remove all the Islam fascists out of the country.

I must say though that every Arabist or other "expert" on tv/radio/papers does not have the solution to tackle the problem.... Most admit there is a problem but none of them has a solution. Some say that we should not be to though on extremists because this would make them more extreme...
But that is the world up side down!!!

Does anyone have links to articles about solutions for the problem? I'm dying to know! :-)


25 posted on 11/15/2004 4:28:46 AM PST by teezle
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Diva
Re 21

There are always collaborators in every war...no country is immune from this plight.

Muslims have unleashed a global killing machine, not limited to the Dutch....from throwing wheelchair invalids overboard to executing children in their classroom.

The world had better wake up!

26 posted on 11/15/2004 4:43:48 AM PST by squirt-gun
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies]

To: Californiajones

Agreed. And they will lump Christians into the same category as Muslims if they insist on truly believing the Scriptures, especially regarding abortion and homosexuality.


27 posted on 11/15/2004 4:46:38 AM PST by wjeanw
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: gubamyster; HiJinx; NewRomeTacitus; JustPiper
The American People Dutch have suspected for some time that in the Uninted Stated Holland, their world famous attachment to tolerance was turning into a one-way street. There was an assumption that the indigenes of the great United States tiny Holland (population 250 16 million), would tolerate large-scale illegal hispanic Islamic immigration without a mew of protest because they were so famously tolerant. That the immigrants owed a duty to their host country to acculturate themselves, learn the language, and adopt the tolerance they had made their way to the United State Holland to enjoy seems never to have occurred to anyone in government.
28 posted on 11/15/2004 4:49:06 AM PST by raybbr
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: kattracks
The Dutch had assumed that the whole world respected their tolerance. ...

Pollyanna must be a Dutch name.

29 posted on 11/15/2004 5:02:29 AM PST by Tom Bombadil
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: aliquis
The EU would like to address this issue at some point," would, probably sound more realistic. I just don't see the EU as able to address any serious issues

They will be forced to.

30 posted on 11/15/2004 5:18:56 AM PST by foolscap
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 23 | View Replies]

To: raybbr

Thank you. It would seem that the vast majority of people in this country also believe that tolerance of peoples not willing to assimilate into a hosts culture is to be encouraged. That idea is overwhelmingly a lie by those that rewrite history saying that "we were all immigrants at one time."


31 posted on 11/15/2004 5:32:32 AM PST by freeangel (freeangel)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 28 | View Replies]

To: elizabetty

You are aware that Dutch fighter (F-16s) pilots were flying in direct support of US troops in Afghanistan?


32 posted on 11/15/2004 5:42:45 AM PST by Tommyjo
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: ChristianDefender

Well... because the only thing Islam has built there is... hell holes...


33 posted on 11/15/2004 5:45:09 AM PST by Pitiricus
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: Montrose1688

Welcome to FR. Interesting about VanGoghs' anti-semitism. This fits neatly in with the Dutch protesters for Van Gogh saying that they were liberals and they were protesting the 'conservatave values' of the islamic groups. The fans at Dutch football matches are well known for theit anti-sematic chants.


34 posted on 11/15/2004 6:20:27 AM PST by Colosis
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 24 | View Replies]

To: Californiajones
"They'll enact laws in the name of fighting terrorism that would make our Patriot Act look like child's play."

No. Political correctness is what makes the Patriot Act so miserable in the US. Airport screeners only search blond white women. The Netherlands is small enough that they can turn on a dime compared to the US. If political correctness pops up in regard to their new laws it can be ridiculed mercilessly an quashed before it makes a mockery of their new laws. I suspect that it will be only Muslims who are inconvenienced by the new attitude of the Dutch.
35 posted on 11/15/2004 7:03:58 AM PST by monday
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: kattracks
"... the phlegmatic Dutch seem to have decided they have had enough."

We'll see! When they start deporting ship-loads, I'll believe them.

36 posted on 11/15/2004 7:14:58 AM PST by blam
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Montrose1688
There were Nazi sympathizers in every country the Nazis occupied, and in many they didn't, including the US. Fascism is a mind set. Anyone who believes in strong central authority in government, is susceptible to it's enticements.

To blame a whole country for the acts of it's Fascist citizens isn't any more fair than to call Americans or British Nazis, because of all the Nazi sympathizers that were in those countries. If the Nazis had come to power in either of those countries, you can be sure that there would have been plenty of collaborators.

People who make broad generalized assumptions about others based on their nationality are similar, in that respect, to the Nazis themselves.
37 posted on 11/15/2004 7:37:28 AM PST by monday
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 24 | View Replies]

To: teezle

Deport all Muslims who cannot speak Dutch is a start. Of course, many of the jihadists do speak Dutch so you will need to infiltrate those Muslim groups remaining.


38 posted on 11/15/2004 7:40:22 AM PST by expatpat
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies]

To: raybbr
Exactly! I see the resemblance.
39 posted on 11/15/2004 7:50:32 AM PST by beachn4fun (When in doubt, empty the tagline.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 28 | View Replies]

To: eagle11
"The most common first name registered at birth these days in Amsterdam is Mohammed,"

I'm not so sure that its not too late.

40 posted on 11/15/2004 7:55:00 AM PST by America's Resolve (Islam=USMC found the armless, legless body of a blonde woman,her throat slashed,her entrails cut out)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-64 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson