Monday, January 12, 2015

Muslim Leader Outrage: Genuine or Taqiyya? - Ari Lieberman



by Ari Lieberman


France, through indifference and cognitive dissonance, has allowed its radicalized Muslim citizens to run amok and engage in an orgy of violence, anti-Semitism and anti-Israelism. It has allowed a cancerous malignancy to fester and metastasize to the point where it is now nearly uncontrollable.

Cologne_rally_in_support_of_the_victims_of_the_2015_Charlie_Hebdo_shooting_2015-01-07-(2322)
Photo credit: Elya
As I write this article, France is set to hold a massive vigil for the 17 innocent victims killed in the recent spate of Muslim terror attacks that have paralyzed the country and shocked the Western world. The Jewish community of France has especially suffered, sustaining fatalities very disproportionate to their small numbers.
Just prior to the Charlie Hebdo and related attacks, France was hit with three separate acts of Muslim terror which barely garnered any attention. Two involved car attacks (similar to those committed by Palestinian Muslims in Jerusalem) and a third was a knife attack against French soldiers. All of the perpetrators were Muslims and in at least two of the attacks, the culprits invoked the Muslim battle cry of Allahu akbar. Yet cowardly French leaders chose to ignore the obvious signs, stuck their collective heads in the sand and attributed the incidents to uncoordinated “lone wolves” and “mental illness.”

France, through indifference and cognitive dissonance, has allowed its radicalized Muslim citizens to run amok and engage in an orgy of violence, anti-Semitism and anti-Israelism. It has allowed a cancerous malignancy to fester and metastasize to the point where it is now nearly uncontrollable.

During Operation Protective Edge this past summer, France’s Muslims took to the streets and engaged in what could only be described as modern day pogroms. They were joined by neo Nazis and radical leftists, groups possessing vastly opposing views on nearly all issues but finding common ground on the issue of Jew-hatred.

Jewish synagogues were attacked and business ransacked. Jewish children attending school were set upon by mobs of frenzied Muslims out for blood. French Muslim leaders and imams stoked the flames of hate through malevolent “religious” sermons and speeches, encouraging their flock to do “The Prophet’s” bidding and seek vengeance against the infidel – the Jews and Crusaders.

French officials watched and waited, and when the violent demonstrations reached the tipping point, issued an emergency declaration banning protests. Just days later, Muslim demonstrators flaunted the ban and were out in force again chanting anti-Semitic and anti-Israeli slogans while others burned Israeli flags. Some attacked local businesses as French policemen tried to contain the violence with mixed results.

The Charlie Hebdo and related outrages clearly demonstrate that France’s radicalized Muslim population, now constituting some 10% of the French population, feels emboldened. But their leaders recognize that at times, the flock moves quicker than the shepherd and they must intervene and slow the pace.

As I predicted, like clockwork, France’s Muslims have invoked the Muslim doctrine of Taqiyya (a concept by which Muslims are permitted to lie when in a position of weakness) to express sympathy with the victims of the Paris massacres and condemn the barbarous actions of the perpetrators. A litany of condemnations and expressions of empathy with the victims poured forth from various Muslim leaders as rage in France and Europe following the terrorist attacks has gained momentum.

These Muslim leaders are keenly aware that they are in a position of weakness, inferior in numbers and political clout and are compelled to issue contrition and condemnation. But the sad reality of the matter is that they don’t mean what they say and their words are as hollow as Muhammad’s signed treaty with the Quraish tribe in 628 in Hijaz. He was compelled to come to terms with the Quraish because of military weakness but once achieving military parity, he abrogated the treaty and went to war to kill, rape and plunder.

How can I be so certain that these condemnations, these expressions of sympathy and outrage are fake? The answer to this question lies in a synagogue situated in a quiet, peaceful neighborhood of Jerusalem called Har Nof. That peaceful quiet was shattered on November 18, 2014 when two Palestinian terrorists, armed with pistols and hatchets burst into the Kehilat Bnei Torah synagogue during prayer services and engaged in an orgy of depravity, shooting and hacking anyone they saw all while shrieking, you guessed it, “Allahu akbar.” That attack claimed the lives of five innocent people and seriously injured many others.

The silence of the Muslim world over the attack was deafening. There were a few half-hearted condemnations — and I’ll get to those shortly — but by in large, Muslim leaders either stood by in silence or actually praised the attackers.

The Jordanian parliament held a moment of silence in memory of the terrorists while other Jordanian parliamentarians went on Jordanian national TV to spew forth anti-Semitic venom. It should be noted that Jordan is a nation ostensibly at peace with Israel. Palestinian Authority TV hailed the terrorists as victims of Israeli aggression against the Palestinian people and Jordan’s Prime Minister, Abdullah Ensour, sent condolence letters to the terrorists’ families, and these good folks belong to the so-called “moderate” camp.

Muslim condemnation of the terrorist attack was universally qualified and tempered with banal references to the “cycle of violence” and “injustice to the Palestinian people.” They simply could not bring themselves to issue an unqualified condemnation of barbarism.

Bahrain’s foreign minister, Khalid Bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, took to his Twitter feed to note that, “the murder of innocents in the synagogue will not be worth the price paid for it, (which will be) more collective punishment of the Palestinian people and more injustice and aggression.” That “condemnation,” if it can even be characterized as such, in addition to tacking on the usual moral equivalency baggage, implies that if Israel did not respond with collective punishment, the murderous actions at Har Nof might be worth the price.

Palestinian “president” Mahmoud Abbas belatedly condemned the attack after some arm-twisting from John Kerry and even then, came woefully short of expectations. Abbas condemned the “killing of worshipers in a synagogue and all acts of violence regardless of their source.” He then added a call for an end to “incursions and provocations by settlers against the Aksa Mosque.” In Abbas’s warped mind, the slaughter of five innocent people is akin to a perceived trespass.

On Saturday, Abbas announced that he would fly to Paris (on the backs of the US and EU taxpayer) to attend the vigil and express solidarity with his political backer, the spineless François Hollande.  Abbas, a confirmed Holocaust denier who could barely bring himself to condemn the Har Nof massacre, has suddenly grown a moral conscience. The same holds true for Turkey’s Islamist Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu who announced that he too would be attending. Paradoxically Turkey plays host to the notorious Hamas organization, the group responsible for orchestrating the kidnapping-murder of three Israeli teens this past summer and which continues to plan attacks on Israelis from Turkish soil.

So what has suddenly transformed Muslim leaders into instant humanitarians? Why are they so outraged over the Charlie Hebdo atrocity while at best, indifferent to the massacre at Har Nof? The answer lies in an analysis of the balance of power and the doctrine of Taqiyya.

France maintains a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council and is an extremely influential member of the European Union. As such, France holds much political clout. Moreover, at present, Muslims are currently a minority in France and could potentially be vulnerable to a backlash, one that would involve immigration curbs, tougher criminal sanctions, greater surveillance, citizenship revocations, deportations and other measures designed to stymie the emerging Islamist threat. French Muslim leaders are cognizant of this possibility and have invoked the doctrine of Taqiyya in an effort to distance themselves from the Charlie Hebdo attack and stave off negative repercussions.

By contrast, Muslims in the Mideast, who constitute the majority don’t face these challenges. 

Moreover, Israel lacks the same political clout as France and there is therefore no need to demonstrate empathy with Israeli victims of terror. To the extent that some qualified condemnation was forthcoming, it was disingenuous and designed to placate the United States and other Western powers rather than offer real empathy.

So there you have it. Two equally heinous acts of depravity, one targeting the French and the other, Israelis, but the Muslim reaction to the two is markedly different and dictated not by what is morally correct but what is politically expedient and necessary for survival. When Muslims in France reach sufficient numbers and attain the necessary political clout and muscle, Muslim reaction to a future Charlie Hebdo-like atrocity, which will surely be forthcoming, will be decidedly different and not dissimilar to their reaction to the Har Nof massacre.


Ari Lieberman

Source: http://www.frontpagemag.com/2015/ari-lieberman/muslim-leader-outrage-genuine-or-taqiyya/

Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

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