All About Muhammad

ONGOING GENOCIDE



For several years now, the United States has placed itself as a willing accomplice, as directed by our political leaders, and well implemented through our State Department, on the side of Muslim Jihad, to pursue systematic genocides against defenseless societies.  And, in many instances, other Western nations have been guilty.  For most of the world  media these atrocities are non-events.  In several cases, this “ethnic cleansing” has been directed against Christian and Jewish societies, though Islam has always been an equal opportunity oppressor, and other infidels have suffered as well.  Though certainly not limited to the Sudan, Mauritania, and Indonesia, these three countries of the world are perhaps the best examples of the ongoing genocide of Islam.  The ending of colonial rule in Sudan and Mauritania marked the re-establishment of slavery and the beginning of systematic genocide and in Indonesia as well, but with a lesser emphasis on slavery.      

THE SUDAN:  In 1983 the Muslim controlled government of Sudan instituted the strict Islamic Law, the Shari’a, in the entire Country.  Black Christians, principally of the Nuba tribe, and other non-Muslims were of course subject to this decree.  In 1992, a “fatwa”, or religious edict, was issued giving justification for the Sudanese military to commence an ongoing persecution of all non-Muslims.  A fatwa, once issued, can not be rescinded or amended!    

The ongoing genocide in the Sudan was well planned by the leaders in Khartoum, the capital.  It uses systematic attrition of the non-Muslims to slowly convert the Sudan into a totally Islamic state.  First, soldiers attack villages and indiscriminately kill.  They are unpaid except by the value of the loot and slaves they can obtain.  The elderly and sick are slaughtered and food stores are set afire.  The main objective of these raids against villages is to obtain healthy slaves.  The following is an excerpt from a paper, entitled,  “Facing Genocide: The Nuba of Sudan”, published by African Rights on July 21,1995.

Thousands of men, women, and children are captured when their villages are surrounded, or are snatched while tending their crops, herding their animals, or collecting water.  Many people run to hide in caves to avoid Government attacks, but they are driven even from these refuges by hunger or thirst, or by attacks using tear gas.  Captives are taken to garrisons, forced to carry their own looted possessions, or drive their own stolen animals in front of them.  These captives or “returnees”, as the Government calls them—usually never see their families or villages again.  Men are either killed or forcibly conscripted into a militia known as the “People’s Defense Force”.  Many are tortured.  Women are raped and 
forced to work, often in special labor camps.  All but the youngest children are separated for “schooling”, (i.e.- conversion to Islam and training for a role in the new, extremist Islamic Sudan).      

The American Anti-Slavery group also published a recent expose of current conditions in the Sudan:  Women and children abducted in slave raids are roped by the neck or strapped to animals and then marched north.  Along the way, many women and girls are repeatedly gang-raped.  Children who will not be silent are shot on the spot.  In the north, slaves are either kept by individual militia soldiers or sold in markets.  Boys work as livestock herders, forced to sleep with the animals they care for.  Some who try to escape have their Achilles tendons cut to hamper their ability to run.  Masters typically use women and girls as domestics and concubines,     cleaning by day and serving the master sexually at night.  Survivors report being called “abeed” (“black slave”), enduring daily beatings , and receiving awful food. Masters also strip slaves of their religious and cultural identities, giving them Arabic names, and forcing them to pray as Muslims. 

According to hearings held by the first session, of the 107th U.S. Congress, 
(H. CON. RES. 113), “Regarding human rights violations and oil development in Sudan”, over 2,000,000 black Sudanese have been killed since the Country became subject to Islamic law.” This report is available in most public libraries.  

MAURITANIA:  Slavery has flourished there since the first Muslim invasions of the 7th century.  Slavery was supposedly abolished several times, the last time in 1982.  Nevertheless, slavery is alive and well, combined with a systematic genocide similar to that of the Sudan.  This is accomplished by slave armies, the Haratines.  These are blacks that were previously captured, enslaved, and then trained to kill and enslave their fellow countrymen.  After taking over a village, they remain as the new masters, and the systematic genocide continues.  

INDONESIA:  This country has also provided its share of martyrs to the avarice of Islam.   In approximate chronological order, they are:

Indonesia (1965):  The then dictator Suharto unleashed an orgy of killing which took a minimum of 500,000 lives in less than a year.  Actually, no accurate records were kept; some estimates were much higher; U.S. newspapers of the day gave estimates of up to 2,000,000.  The U.S. public, told that most were Chinese Communists, applauded this genocide, but there were many Christians and other faiths represented in this massive genocide.  Perhaps needless to say, the lands and possessions of the murdered were confiscated by Indonesians.     

Dutch New Guinea (1962 – 1990):  This territory was re-named Irian Jaya after being handed over to Indonesia in 1962.  By September 1973, an estimated 30,000 had been killed, and by 1990, an estimated 100,000.  Most were animists, but a considerable number of Christians were among the murdered.      

East Timor (1975 – 2003):  East Timor was invaded on December 7, 1975.  Using the words of Franklin Roosevelt, this was a “day of infamy”.  But in this case, the “day of infamy” was not of Japan, but of the United States.  Gerald Ford and Henry Kissinger, his Secretary of State, were in Jakarta, and knew that Indonesia was on the brink of its invasion of East Timor.  They only asked that the invasion be delayed, until their departure.  Kissinger told reporters, “the United States understands Indonesia’s position on the question of East Timor”, and the U.S. abstained from a United Nations vote condemning the invasion.  Our then Ambassador to the United Nations, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, said in a cable to Secretary of State Kissinger, on January 23, 1976, “The United States wished things to turn out as they did and worked to bring this about.  The Department of State desired that the United Nations prove utterly ineffective in whatever measures it undertook.  This task was given to me, and I carried it forward with no inconsiderable success.”  Mr. Moynihan seems to have taken pride in his “laudable” accomplishment. 
           
Perhaps an article by Lorrie Goldstein, entitled, “Our Selective Morality”, which appeared in the Toronto Sun, on September 14, 1999, might be appropriate.
          
         “If East Timor was Kosovo, we all know what would have happened by now.  U.S. President Bill Clinton would have gone on national television to denounce  Indonesian President B.J. Habibie as a new Hitler and a threat to world peace!  There would have been American led cries,....to indict Indonesia’s generals for war crimes.  The media would be referring to what is now happening as a “new Holocaust”.  The reason none of this is happening is obvious.  The United States, the key player in both conflicts, regards Serbia as a pariah state and Indonesia as a valued trading partner..…(It) pursued its’ interests by minimizing Indonesian       atrocities and portraying the Indonesian military and political leadership as positively as possible.  In both cases, the dead are still the dead.”   

A quotation of Serge Trifkovic, from his book, “Sword of the Prophet”, epitomizes the situation:  “In the motivation, patterns, and perceptions of the actors on the ground—killers and victims alike---East Timor was an Islamic jihad against Christian infidels, identical in form and purpose to other tragedies caused by Islam’s insatiable appetite for other people’s land, property, bodies, and souls.”  

Muslim genocide is presently ongoing in Indonesia, Sudan, Mauritania, Ivory Coast and the Philippines, but to a lesser extent wherever Muslims have absolute or even partial control of a country.