lördag, juli 04, 2009

Varför mörkar makthavarna islamiseringen som problem i svenska storstäder ?

islamiseringen i våra slumförorter väckte ett j-a liv i de
politiskt korrekta kretsarna. Islamisterna och deras vänner
lyckades snabbt styra debatten från sakfrågan till en massa
oväsentliga metoddiskussioner.
Vi som följt förfallet i Rosengård genom årtionden, kunde ju
däremot konstatera att rapporten väl stämmer med den
verklighet Malmöborna upplever.
En del pk-tyckare överraskar verkligen, som när SÄPO-chefen
Anders Danielsson förnekar islamiseringen i Rosengård......
Talar han aldrig med sina medarbetare ?
Frågan diskuterades igår i Almedalen. Magnus Ranstorp från För-
svarshögskolan, s-kvinnornas ordförande Nalin Pekgul och Maajid
Nawaz från Quilliam Foundation, grundad av avhoppade islamister,
jämförde erfarenheter från olika håll..
Tyvärr finns det bara ett reportage på engelska i nystartade
"Nawaz described Islamists as a tiny minority among Muslims and stressed that Islamism is not the same thing as Islam.
“We where chased away from the mosques when we were trying to recruit”, Nawaz said.

He thinks it is important to make a difference between religious extremist and the political extremism of Islamists. One could be a very orthodox and conservative Muslim, without wanting to kill people who do not share the same beliefs, and one could be a radical Islamist without being especially pious or having much knowledge about what the Koran says.

He took himself as an example, when he was an active Islamist, no one could for example tell that he was an Islamist by how he was dressed. An many of the Islamist in Europe is often very well educated.

“Islamism is a European and modern ideology that is more about extremism and fascism than devotion to religion”, Nawaz explained and took as an example how the group he was involved in started in Britain and exported itself to traditional Muslim countries as Pakistan, Malaysia and Egypt.

All in the panel agreed that there was something true about that.

“People think it comes from abroad, it is the other way around. People in Sweden can’t understand that it is easier for Islamist to recruit in segregated areas in our cities than in Muslim countries”, Nalin Pekgul said.

“Some of the Islamist I have meet in Great Britain have been more frightening than those I have encountered in the Middle East”, Magnus Ranstorp said."

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