13 December 2012

Felled by political correctness



Rico is all for squashing Christmas, but in BrusselsSoeren Kern has the story in Radicalislam.org:

More than 25,000 people in Belgium have signed a petition denouncing a decision to remove the traditional Christmas tree (photo, left) in the central square in Brussels and replace it with a politically correct structure of abstract minimalist art (photo, right).
Critics accuse the Socialist mayor, Freddy Thielemans, of declaring war on Christmas by installing the "multicultural" structure of lights to placate the city's burgeoning Muslim population. Historically, a twenty meter fir tree taken from the forests of the Ardennes has adorned the city's main square, the Grand-Place. This year, however, it has been replaced with a 25 meter new-age-like structure of lighted boxes. Moreover, the traditional Christmas Market in downtown Brussels is no longer being referred to as a Christmas Market; instead, it has been renamed Winter Pleasures 2012.
The mayor's office, where more than half of the city's eleven councilors are either Muslim or Socialist or both, said the structure was part of a theme this year of "light". City Councilor Philippe Close, a Socialist, said the aim was to show off the "avant-garde character" of Brussels by blending the modern and the traditional to produce something new and different. He added: "The Christmas tree is not a religious symbol and lots of Muslims have a Christmas tree at home."
But critics say the non-tree, which was inaugurated on 30 November and will be on display through 6 January, was installed to avoid offending Muslims. They also point to a recent fatwa (an Islamic legal pronouncement), which states that Muslims are prohibited from having anything to do with Christmas trees. The fatwa states: "It is not permissible to imitate the kuffar (a highly derogatory Arabic term used to refer to non-Muslims) in any of their acts of worship, rituals or symbols, because the Prophet said: 'Whoever imitates a people is one of them.'" The fatwa continues: "So it is not permissible to put up this tree in a Muslim house, even if you do not celebrate Christmas, because putting up this tree comes under the heading of imitating others that is haram, or venerating and showing respect to a religious symbol of the kuffar. What the parents must do is protect their children and keep them away from what is haram, and protect them from the Fire as Allah, may He be exalted."
The conflict over the traditional Christmas tree comes as two Muslim politicians, who won municipal elections in Brussels on 14 October, have vowed to implement Islamic shari'a law in Belgium.
The two candidates, Lhoucine Aït Jeddig and Redouane Ahrouch, both from the fledgling Islam Party, won seats in two heavily Islamized municipalities of Brussels, Molenbeek-Saint-Jean and Anderlecht, respectively.
During a post-election press conference in Brussels on 25 October, the two councilors said they regard their election as key to the assertion of the Muslim community in Belgium. "We are elected Islamists but, above all, we are Muslims," Ahrouch said. "Islam is compatible with the laws of the Belgian people. As elected Muslims, we embrace the Quran and the tradition of the Prophet Mohammed. We believe Islam is a universal religion. Our presence on the town council will give us the opportunity to express ourselves.
Speaking to a reporter from Radio Télévision Belge Francophone, the public broadcasting service of the French-speaking part of Belgium, Ahrouch said: "I think we have to sensitize people, make them understand the advantages to having Islamic people and Islamic laws. And then it will be completely natural to have Islamic laws and we will become an Islamic state."
The reporter interjected: "An Islamic State in Belgium?" Ahrouch replied: "In Belgium, of course! I am for the shari'a. Islamic law, I am for it. It is a long-term struggle that will take decades or a century, but the movement has been launched."
The rise of the Islam Party comes amid a rapidly growing Muslim population in the Belgian capital. Muslims now make up one-quarter of the population of Brussels, according to a book recently published by the Catholic University of Leuven, the top Dutch-language university in Belgium.
In real terms, the number of Muslims in Brussels-- where half of the number of Muslims in Belgium currently live--- has reached three hundred thousand, which means that the self-styled Capital of Europe is now the most Islamic city in Europe.
Sociologist Felice Dassett, the author of The Iris and the Crescent, a book that is the product of more than a year of field research, predicts that Muslims will make up the majority of the population of Brussels by 2030.
Meanwhile, critics of the "electronic winter tree" have called on Muslims in Belgium to sign a petition to show that they do not have anything against the traditional Christmas tree. The petition reads: "The removal of the Christmas tree on the Grand-Place in Brussels aroused strong controversy about the role of Muslims in this decision. I hereby would like to see Muslims sign this petition to show that they are not against this tree. I would like to gather as many signatures as possible to show that Muslims comply with Belgian traditions and do not want to remove this joy at home."
Fewer than eighty of Belgium's six hundred thousand Muslims have signed the petition.

Rico says there's an old story about letting the camel put his nose under the tent that seems to apply here...

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