Saturday, February 16, 2008

Fjordman on the Muslim Brotherhood

I’ve been meaning to get to this one for several days now — better late than never.

Fjordman’s latest post, “The Muslim Brotherhood’s Infiltration of the West”, is an extensive and detailed account of the history and current status of the Muslim Brotherhood in Islam and the Middle East. Some excerpts:

Research analyst Lorenzo Vidino writes about The Muslim Brotherhood’s Conquest of Europe: “Since the early 1960s, Muslim Brotherhood members and sympathizers have moved to Europe and slowly but steadily established a wide and well-organized network of mosques, charities, and Islamic organizations.” Their ultimate goal “may not be simply ‘to help Muslims be the best citizens they can be,’ but rather to extend Islamic law throughout Europe and the United States. With moderate rhetoric and well-spoken German, Dutch, and French, they have gained acceptance among European governments and media alike. Politicians across the political spectrum rush to engage them whenever an issue involving Muslims arises or, more parochially, when they seek the vote of the burgeoning Muslim community. But, speaking Arabic or Turkish before their fellows Muslims, they drop their facade and embrace radicalism.”
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Moreover, “While the Muslim Brotherhood and their Saudi financiers have worked to cement Islamist influence over Germany’s Muslim community, they have not limited their infiltration to Germany. Thanks to generous foreign funding, meticulous organization, and the naïveté of European elites, Muslim Brotherhood-linked organizations have gained prominent positions throughout Europe. In France, the extremist Union des Organisations Islamiques de France (Union of Islamic Organizations of France) has become the predominant organization in the government’s Islamic Council. In Italy, the extremist Unione delle Comunita’ ed Organizzazioni Islamiche in Italia (Union of the Islamic Communities and Organizations in Italy) is the government’s prime partner in dialogue regarding Italian Islamic issues.”

The irony, according to Vidino, is that “Muslim Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna dreamed of spreading Islamism throughout Egypt and the Muslim world. He would never have dreamed that his vision might also become a reality in Europe.”

This is just a small sample of a comprehensive report. Go over to Jihad Watch and read the rest.

2 comments:

rickl said...

Western politicians who embrace the Muslim Brotherhood should be regarded as traitors and treated accordingly.

davod said...

I have been saying for some time that Ossama and the open terrorists were the worst thing that could have happened for the Muslim Brotherhood.

While most government agencies are still enamoured of the Brotherhood's guile, the job of the Brotherhood has become immeasurable harder.