Alan Caruba / Oct 09, 2003

Ramadan, the month-long period of fasting from dawn to sunset, beings on October 26 this year. "The fast is performed to learn discipline, self-restraint and generosity, while obeying God's commandments," says CAIR.

Tell me, please, what kind of Islamic discipline, self-restraint and generosity was being exercised on October 4 in a Haifa restaurant famed for its joint ownership by both Moslems and Jews? Yet another "martyr" blew herself up and took nineteen lives while wounding sixty people, among the dead, four infants.

The Haifa killings occurred on the eve of Yom Kippur, the holiest day in Judaism. In 1973, Yom Kippur was the date selected by Egyptian and Syrian forces to launch a surprise attack on Israel. The utter contempt of Judaism and Jews is central to Islam and it is extended to people of all other faiths.

Louis Rene Breses, a Perdue University professor of political science, notes that "Israelis have endured nearly one terror attack every hour of every day for thirty-one consecutive months. These attacks, with knives, guns, hatchets, acid bottles and bombs filled with razor blades dipped in rat poison, have had absolutely nothing to do with Palestinian 'self-determination.' Rather, they have expressed barbarism as an end in itself…"

This is the legacy of a "religion" that demands the same respect as Judaism and Christianity. What kind of "religion" authorizes suicide for the purpose of killing anyone? Islam's holy book says, "Do not consider those who are slain in the cause of Allah as dead. They are living by their Lord."

Permit me to remind you about last year's Ramadan. In September 2002, Christians were murdered in a church as they worshipped in Karachi, Pakistan. Later that month as Hindu worshippers gathered in a temple in western India, Muslim gunmen killed at least thirty of them, wounding another forty-five. In Russia, Chechen Islamic warriors took over a theater full of people, threatening to blow it up. Their rescue resulted in a hundred and fifty dead. In October 2002, a bus in northern Israel was bombed, killing fourteen people. This carnage occurred in the weeks leading up to and including Ramadan.

"This year, Ramadan will not only be a time of spiritual reflection and renewal, but also a time to reach out to people of other faiths to education them about Islam and the American Muslim community," says CAIR. Meanwhile, in September, one of its former officials pled guilty to terrorist-related crimes in federal court.

Americans are being "educated" about Islam, but the lessons are written in the blood of those who died on September 11, 2001 and the craven murders of our brave soldiers putting their lives on the line to liberate Iraqis and help rebuild that plundered Muslim nation. American blood has been spent to protect Muslims in Afghanistan, in Kuwait, in Serbia, and in Somalia.

Even as this is written, Muslim members of the US military have been detained on suspicion of spying and one faces the prospect of a firing squad for having killed his superior officers during the Iraq invasion. In the prisons of America, Muslim imams are hard at work converting the criminal population to do Islam's bloody work.

As to the American Muslim community, I have no doubt that many are utterly appalled by what their fellow Muslims have done and are planning to do to further harm America in the name of Allah. I also have no doubt, either, that its mosques, its schools, and so-called charities are places where the darkest plots are being hatched.

Every CAIR news release begins "In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful." I cannot find any evidence of Islamic compassion or mercy. What I see are Muslims who, in the name of Islam, kill Muslims, Muslims who kill Christians, Muslims who kill Jews, Muslims who kill Hindus.

No thanks, I don't want to be educated about a "religion" that sanctions murder, contrary to every other faith on Earth.  What I need to know is how to defend myself against it.


Alan Caruba is the author of "Warning Signs" and his commentaries are posted at www.anxietycenter.com, the Internet site of The National Anxiety Center.

© Alan Caruba 2003

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