"Lisa R." wrote:
Pulver <redlen@gta.igs.net> wrote in message news:<3F537288.FDCD3961@gta.igs.net>...
"Lisa R." wrote:
habshi@anony.com (Habshi) wrote in message news:<3f47613e.6242546@news.clara.net>...
Now why arent these publications prosecuted for inciting
murder? The Danish Muslim who made these leaflets got a 90 day
suspended sentence. Trouble is many Muslims read this and believe in
it ,Stupid Hindu seculars please read and realize what is waiting for
you and your families when Hindus become a minority in India soon.
http://www.hizb-ut-tahrir.org/english/
The Arab and Muslim rulers' betrayal of the issue of Palestine and its
people
O Muslims: Your brothers in Palestine are calling you, and you feel
the pain to help them. But the treacherous rulers stand in the way of
your help. They obstruct you from undertaking the obligation Allah has
obliged upon you, the Jihaad and the eradication of the Jews. For how
long will we be patient with these traitors? How long will they
recklessly commit their sins with no one to restrain them
I have a lovely video for you to watch:
http://www.iacnet.org/gateway/islamvsinfidels/index.htm
Click on "Kill the Jews Everywhere." It's a sermon given by a Palestinian.
BTW, Hizb ut tahrir is supposed to be nonviolent. Pretty unbelievable, huh?
Where did you get that? They do not expect to
establish a Khalifa without bloodshed. it has never
happened before.
Lisa
I read it in the Boston Globe. A NY Times propaganda sheet.
For the low down on HT, founded by a radical militant
palestinian arab, read:
Ahmed Rashid:
Jihad: The Rise of Militant Islam in Central Asia,
New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 2002
Here is a brief portion —
"One of the most intriguing questions about Islamic
movements in Central Asia today is how a highly secretive,
pan-Islamic movement [Hizb ut-Tahrir] that originated
in the
Middle East and largely does not even address pertinent
issues of public concern in Central Asia has become the most
popular, widespread underground movement in Uzbekistan,
Kyrgizstan, and Tajikistan. ... Government crackdowns
against the HT have become fiercer and more widespread, even
as the regimes try to figure out how the movement has spread
so far, so fast.
"... The HT has a vision of uniting Central Asia, Xingjiang
Province in China, and eventually the entire umma (Islamic
world community) under a khilafat (caliphate) that would
reestablish the Khilafat-i-Rashida which ruled the Arab
Muslims for a short time after the Prophet Muhammed's death
in 632. Under the Khilafat-i-Rashidi, which lasted until
661, the message of Islam spread rapidly across the Middle
East and Africa through conquest and conversion. ..."
"The HT was founded in Saudi Arabia and Jordan in 1953 by
diaspora Palestinians led by Sheikh Taqiuddin an-Nabhani
Filastyni. ... 'The minds of Muslims ... only conceptualize
the system of government through the depraved democratic
regimes foisted upon Muslim countries. ... The point at hand
is not establishing several states, but one single state
over the whole world.'"
HT and al Qaeda are organized in similar fashions. 5
to 7 men to a cell and each required to recruit and form
new cells. Although they have differing perspectives,
particularly on methodology and tactics, they have one
objective — a global caliphate.
"An-Nabhani's concept of the future Islamic state envisages
a political structure in which a caliph elected by an
Islamic shura (council) would have dictatorial powers
in a highly centralized system. The caliph would control
the army, the political system, the economy, and foreign
policy. Sharia would prevail, Arabic would be the language
of the state, and the role of women would be severely
restricted.
The defense minister, whose title would be amir of jihad,
would prepare the people for jihad against the non-Muslim
world. Military conscription and training in preparation
for this jihad would be mandatory for all Muslim men
over 15."
The HT has offices in Germany and England. In London, HT
raises funds and trains recruits to spread the movement in
Central Asia. It held a conference in London, August 2001,
that was extremely well organized, well funded, and — well
attended, with busloads arriving from all over England.
In Tashkent alone, they claim 60,000 supporters.
.
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