In the middle of one square stands a mosque with Arabic writing outside. That used to be a church.
(Pictured: Muslim men in Prayer in an Amsterdam Mosque) 'When I arrived here, during the 1960's, religion was dying, a unique event in Europe, a collective de-Christianization. Then the Muslims brought religion back to the center of social life. Aided by the anti-Christian elite'.
ROME (Chiesa) - In Feyenoord, veiled women can be seen everywhere, darting like a flash through the streets of the neighborhood. They avoid any sort of contact, even eye contact, especially with men. Feyenoord is the size of a city, and there are seventy nationalities coexisting there. It is an area that lives on subsidies and residential construction, and it is here that it is most obvious that Holland – with all of its rules against discrimination and all of its moral indignation – is a completely segregated society.
Rotterdam is new, having been bombed twice by the Luftwaffe during the second world war. Like Amsterdam, it is below sea level, but unlike the capital it does not enjoy an image of reckless abandon. In Rotterdam, it is the Arab shops selling halal food that dominate the cityscape, not the neon lights of the prostitutes. Everywhere are casbah-cafes, travel agencies offering flights to Rabat and Casablanca, posters expressing solidarity with Hamas, or offering affordable Dutch language lessons.
It is the second-largest city in the country, a poor city, but also the economic engine with its huge port, the most important in Europe. Most of the population are immigrants, and the city has the tallest and most imposing mosque in Europe. Sixty percent of the foreigners who arrive in Holland come here to live. The most striking thing when one arrives in the city by train are the enormous and fascinating mosques framed by the vibrant green, luxuriant, wooded, watery countryside, like an alien presence compared to the rest. They call it "Eurabia." The Turkish Mevlana mosque is imposing. It has the tallest minarets in Europe, even higher than the stadium of the Feyenoord soccer team.
Many of the neighborhoods in Rotterdam are captive to the darkest, most violent form of Islamism. Pim Fortuyn's house stands out like a pearl in a sea of chador and niqab. It is at number 11 Burgerplein, behind the train station. Every now and then someone comes to put flowers in front of the home of the professor who was murdered in Amsterdam on May 6, 2002. Someone else leaves a card: "In Holland everything is tolerated, except for the truth." A millionaire named Chris Tummesen bought Pim Fortuyn's house so that it would remain intact. The evening before his murder Pim was nervous, and had said on television that a climate of demonization had been created against him and his ideas. And his fears came true, when he was shot in the head five times by Volkert van der Graaf, a militant of the animal rights left, scrawny, head shaved, eyes dark, dressed like an environmental purist in a handmade shirt, sandals, and goat's wool socks, a strict vegetarian, "a guy impatient to change the world," his friends say.
Not long ago in downtown Rotterdam, funerary photos of Geert Wilders were placed under a tree, with a candle to commemorate his upcoming death. Today Wilders is the most popular politician in the city. He is the heir of Fortuyn, the homosexual, Catholic, ex-Markist professor who had formed his own party to save the country from Islamization. At his funeral, only the absence of Queen Beatrice kept the farewell to the "divine Pim" from becoming a funeral fit for a king. Before his death they made a monster of him (one Dutch minister called him an "untermensch," an inferior man in Nazi parlance), afterward they idolized him. The prostitutes of Amsterdam left a wreath of flowers in his honor beneath the National Monument in Dam Square, a memorial to the victims of World War II.
Three months ago, "The Economist," a weekly publication far from Wilders' anti-Islamic ideas, spoke of Rotterdam as a "Eurabian nightmare." For most of the Dutch who live there, Islamism is now a threat greater than the Delta Plan, the complicated system of dikes that prevents flooding from the sea, like the flood in 1953 that killed two thousand people. The picturesque town of Schiedam, part of the greater Rotterdam area, has always been a jewel in the Dutch imagination. Then the fairy tale glow faded, when in the newspapers three years ago it became the city of Farid A., the Islamist who made death threats against Wilders and Somali dissident Ayaan Hirsi Ali. For six years, Wilders has lived under 24-hour police protection.
Muslim lawyers in Rotterdam also want to change the rules of the courtroom, asking to be allowed to remain seated when the judge enters. They recognize Allah alone. The lawyer Mohammed Enait recently refused to stand when the magistrates enter the courtroom, saying that "Islam teaches that all men are equal." The court of Rotterdam has recognized Enait's right to remain seated: "There is no legal obligation requiring Muslim lawyers to stand in front of the court, insofar as this action is in contrast with the dictates of the Islamic faith." Enait, the head of the legal office Jairam Advocaten, has explained that "he considers all men equal, and does not ...
Mister Meotti has a point, but also makes a lot of factual mistakes in his articles.
He forgets that many immigrants in Rotterdam are not muslims at all but Christian descendants of the slaves who where transported from Africa to the Americas by Dutch vessels. Many problems that arise from immigration in Rotterdam can therefore not be explained from religious differences.
Besides, it is simply not true that in Het Oude Westen most women wear veils or niqabs. Pim Fortuyn wasn't murdered in Amsterdam but in Hilversum.
Of course the Fortuyn statue is not the most beautiful monument in Rotterdam. That honour must go the statue of Erasmus, the Rotterdam born philosopher who criticised the Church of Rome.
I am an atheist who wants that all religions allow me to live my own life as I want to. I also don't like the signs of muslim presence in my beautiful city Rotterdam, but at the same time I have a feeling that the Meotti article has been published by Catholic online for one single reason. Roman Catholics have lost their fierce grip on society and they want to get it back. Muslims are their main competitors, but most people from Marocco or Turkey just want to live their life as they chose, just as I do.
Of course there should be no room for the sharia just like the excommunication to the third degree of one of my relatives by the church of Rome is insane.
All people should be free to live their own lives.
Sjaak, Rotterdam
Sjaak van der Velden | 7/21/2009
Enait was of course practising Taqiyya. One stands at the arrival of the judge to show respect for the LAW. Obviously, since islam has no respect for Dutch Law, it is necessary for him to talk about equality.
gsw | 7/10/2009
Right on the nose!The cowardly Europeans will sooner or later have realized what a terrible, fatal mistake they have made...Farewell,oh Europe!Welcome to Eurabia, contaminated and befouled by Islamofascist filth.You reek of 'green plague', but you can't smell it for your senses are dead, blocked by the stench rising to the heaven from the tops of their slender minarets!Islam is a modern-day fascism,if not even worse than that...Brace up,Good Old Europe for the dark clouds are descending upon thou and you're too blind to respond.You've been ousting Jews,who would promote humanistic values, such as tolerance towards others; they would advance your economy,they'd boost the development of commerce and trade, they contributed to your scientific progress, further adding to your prosperity. But you never liked them and in the name of the so-called democracy you have let those treacherous muslim snakes into your very heart, so don't be surprised if one day it stops beating and a new heart comes to replace it - the one made of rock, impervious and deaf to the moans of your own citizens,who are oppressed-day in, day out by the very democracy you are so damn proud of...Shame on you!Start praying G-d, because there's nothing else you can do...
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