PRINCE CHARLES URGES BRITS AT CHRISTMAS TO REMEMBER “WHEN THE PROPHET MUHAMMAD MIGRATED FROM MECCA TO MEDINA”

 CHOOSING TO FORGET HISTORY
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 Prince Charles warns against Trump and “the dark days of the 30’s” during Holocaust
PRINCE CHARLES URGES BRITS AT CHRISTMAS TO REMEMBER “WHEN THE PROPHET MUHAMMAD MIGRATED FROM MECCA TO MEDINA”
BY ROBERT SPENCER
republished below in full unedited for informational, educational, and research purposes:
 

According to Islamic tradition, when Muhammad migrated from Mecca to
Medina, he wasn’t just “seeking the freedom for himself and his
followers to worship.” He became at that point for the first time a
political and military leader as well as a religious one. He began for
the first time to get Qur’anic “revelations” exhorting Muslims to wage
war against unbelievers.

Just as Charles is ignoring the historical context and circumstances
of Muhammad’s hijrah, so now he is also ignoring the manifest fact that
all too many Muslim migrants are not “seeking the freedom…to worship,”
but are coming to Europe to conquer and Islamize the land, emigrating,
after Muhammad’s pattern, “for the sake of Allah” (cf. Qur’an 4:100).

Charles also says: “We are now seeing the rise of many populist
groups across the world that are increasingly aggressive towards those
who adhere to a minority faith.” This is the familiar “Muslims are the
new Jews” theme. This is a common Leftist talking point. Many, many
others have made this claim before Chomsky, including Noam Chomsky; Bernie Sanders; the notorious non-Muslim Islamic apologist Karen Armstrong; Jeffrey Goldberg, the journalist at The Atlantic who some time ago interviewed Barack Obama about why he won’t call Islamic terrorism Islamic; liberal media pundit Reza Aslan; Muslim Brotherhood-linked Congressman Keith Ellison; Nicholas Kristof, one of the New York Times’ Mideast pontificators; Canadian Muslim leader Syed Sohawardy; and Philadelphia chapter leader of the Council on American-Islamic Relations Jacob Bender. Many others have repeated it.
The blazingly brilliant Daniel Greenfield takes it apart in this video.
The idea that Muslims are the new Jews is put forward by the Left,
but it also has opponents on the Left. In 2014, as part of his ongoing
awakening to the nature and reality of the jihad threat, Bill Maher noted:

Jews weren’t oppressing anybody. There weren’t 5,000
militant Jewish groups. They didn’t do a study of treatment of women
around the world and find that Jews were at the bottom of it. There
weren’t 10 Jewish countries in the world that were putting gay people to
death just for being gay.

Indeed. Further, no one is calling for or justifying genocide of
Muslims. No individual or group opposed to Islam is remotely comparable
to the National Socialists. Not that facts have ever gotten in the way
of a good meme.
Maher isn’t alone on the Left in having pointed out the absurdity of
likening opposition to jihad to the lead-up to the Holocaust. The late Christopher Hitchens also refuted this idea when writing a few years ago about the notorious Ground Zero Mosque proposal:

“Some of what people are saying in this mosque
controversy is very similar to what German media was saying about Jews
in the 1920s and 1930s,” Imam Abdullah Antepli, Muslim chaplain at Duke
University, told the New York Times. Yes, we all recall the
Jewish suicide bombers of that period, as we recall the Jewish yells for
holy war, the Jewish demands for the veiling of women and the stoning
of homosexuals, and the Jewish burning of newspapers that published
cartoons they did not like.

“Prince Charles Urges Brits To Think Of Muhammad This Christmas, Speaks Out Against ‘Aggressive Populism,’” Breitbart London, December 22, 2016:

Britain’s Prince of Wales has spoken out on national
radio in an appeal for persecuted Christians and minorities across the
world, but the Royal also moved to criticize “populist groups”.
Speaking on Thought for the Day,
a short early morning slot on BBC Radio 4 dedicated to faith issues,
the son of Britain’s reigning Monarch urged listeners to think of
persecuted religious figures — singling out Jesus Christ and Muhammad —
this Christmas. He said:

Normally at Christmas we think of the Birth of our Lord
Jesus Christ. I wonder though if this year we might remember how the
story of the nativity unfolds, with the fleeing of the holy family to
escape violent persecution. And we might also remember that when the
prophet Muhammad migrated from Mecca to Medina he was seeking the
freedom for himself and his followers to worship.

Whichever religious path we follow, the destination is the same – to
value and respect the other person, accepting their right to live out
their peaceful response to the love of God.

The future King spent much of his short radio appearance discussing
the persecution of Christians without going so far as to name the main
source of this persecution — radical Islam. Referring to “insidious
forms of extremism… which aim to eliminate all types of religious
diversity”, the Prince also mentioned the Yazidis who are coming under
extreme persecution from Islamic State, Jews who have been leaving
Europe in record numbers to escape Islamist persecution, and the Muslim
Ahmadis who are treated as apostates by many mainstream Muslims.
Speaking of his recent interactions with persecuted Christians, Prince Charles said:

In London recently I met a Jesuit protest from Syria…. He
told me of mass kidnappings in parts of Syria and Iraq and how he
feared that Christians would be driven en masse from the lands described
in the Bible. He thought it quite possible there would be no Christians
in Iraq in five years.

While he was speaking to promote the receiving of asylum seekers into
Europe, the Prince also criticized what he called “populist” movements.
Britain’s Guardian newspaper claimed
of the comments: “His address will be seen by some as a veiled
reference to the election of Donald Trump in the US, the rise of the far
right in Europe, and increasingly hostile attitudes to refugees in the
UK”.
The Prince said, implying a relationship between Europe’s growing
pro-borders movement with European Fascism of the last century:

We are now seeing the rise of many populist groups across
the world that are increasingly aggressive towards those who adhere to a
minority faith. All of this has deeply disturbing echoes of the dark
days of the 1930s.
I was born in 1948, just after the end of World War Two, in which my
parents’ generation had fought and died in a battle against intolerance,
monstrous extremism and an inhuman attempt to exterminate the Jewish
population of Europe.
That nearly 70 years later we should still be seeing such evil
persecution is, to me, beyond all belief. We owe it to those who
suffered and died so horribly not to repeat the horrors of the past….