When did you last see a poppy on a burka?

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Another brilliant article from my favourite newspaper columnist Richard Littlejohn, who today has been writing about the fact that stalls selling poppies have been set up at British mosques, in conjunction with the Royal British Legion, and that Julie Siddiqi, the executive director of the Islamic Society of Great Britain, said: ‘British Muslims should be wearing poppies not burning them.’

After all, almost half a million Muslims fought for the British Empire in WWI alone....

RICHARD LITTLEJOHN: When did you last see a poppy on a burka?

By Richard Littlejohn
4 November 2013
Daily Mail


Julie Siddiqi says that the anniversary of the outbreak of World War I affords an opportunity to tell younger Muslims that 'we are in this together'

First, the good news. Islamic leaders across the nation are urging members of their congregations to wear the poppy in the run-up to Remembrance Sunday.

Stalls selling poppies have been set up at mosques, in conjunction with the Royal British Legion. Julie Siddiqi, the executive director of the Islamic Society of Great Britain, said: ‘British Muslims should be wearing poppies not burning them.’

We should never underestimate the frustration most British Muslims feel at having their religion perverted by head-bangers like the welfare junkie Ram Jam Choudary and his bloodthirsty sidekicks in Al Jolson, or whatever they call themselves this week.

Nor should we forget the millions of Muslims from the Commonwealth, formerly the Empire, who volunteered to fight for Britain in two world wars.

An estimated 400,000 served with distinction in World War I alone, including the sepoy Khudadad Khan who was awarded the Victoria Cross for bravery in Belgium in 1914.

Hero: The Muslim Sepoy Khudadad Khan, of the 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis, British Indian Army, was the first native-born Indian to receive the Victoria Cross for his bravery in Belgium on 31st October 1914

More than 3.5 million soldiers from the Asian subcontinent fought for Britain in both wars, not just Muslims, but Sikhs and Hindus, too. Tens of thousands were killed in action. Julie Siddiqi says that the anniversary of the outbreak of World War I affords an opportunity to tell younger Muslims that ‘we are in this together’.


She is rightly furious that maniacs such as Choudary purport to speak for her co-religionists and incite an unfair, but wholly understandable, anti-Islamic backlash.


‘How can you question a whole community’s loyalty when thousands of their forefathers died serving this country?’ she said. Amen to that.


It is fervently to be hoped that this year there will be no repeat of the disgusting poppy-burning antics of Ram Jam’s ‘Muslims Against Crusades’ outside the Albert Hall in 2010.


So, the good news is also that Julie Siddiqi represents the overwhelming majority of our Muslim fellow citizens.


Now for the bad news. Unfortunately, there is a sizeable minority of Muslims who appear to hate their adopted homeland.


Well, I say ‘adopted’. Many of the most extreme elements of Islamism were born in Britain and have been radicalised by deranged preachers from both home and overseas. It doesn’t help when rabble-rousers like Choudary are indulged by pusillanimous police chiefs, terrified of appearing to lack cultural ‘sensitivity’.



The Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association is trying to surpass the £20,000 it raised in last year's appeal. The Fazl Mosque, also known as the London Mosque, in Southfields, south west London, was used as a bomb shelter in World War II and is hosting the launch of the appeal


More than 3.5 million soldiers from the Asian subcontinent fought for Britain in both world wars, not just Muslims, but Sikhs and Hindus, too, with tens of thousands killed in action


Frankly, I’ve always believed Choudary, like his oppo Captain Hook, before he was given a one-way ticket to Orange Jump-Suit Land, gets away with it not because he manages to stay a cigarette paper’s-width within the law but because he’s a paid informant for the Old Bill and the Funny People.


That’s what keeps him out of the slammer.


There are others whom the security services believe pose much more of a clear and present danger.


One of those individuals is Somali-born Mohammed Ahmed Mohamed — so bad, they named him twice.


He is considered such a menace that he has been subject to a control order called a Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measure, which allows the police to keep him under constant surveillance.


Last Friday, he was observed entering the An-Noor Masjid Mosque, in Arthur Daley’s old stamping ground of Acton, in West London, the spiritual home of Mr Mukerjee. He went in at 10am and was seen inside the mosque at 3.15pm. After that, he vanished.



On the run: Mohammed Ahmed Mohamed went missing after visiting the An-Noor Masjid Mosque



Former EDL leader Tommy Robinson sends a message to the deranged Muslims headbangers


A Met Police spokesman said yesterday that ‘Mr Mohamed’ changed into ‘Islamic clothing and has not been seen since’.


By ‘Islamic clothing’ they mean the burka, so why didn’t they say that? CCTV footage shows someone assumed to be Mo emerging in the full pillar-box job. ‘Mister’ Mohamed went in the front door dressed like Ali G and came out the back looking like the Elephant Man.


We are told that: ‘Ports and borders were notified with his photograph and details circulated nationally.’ A fat lot of good that’s going to do. It would be a brave copper or border guard who asked anyone in Muslim garb to lift their veil. The yuman rites brigade would go ballistic.


This wouldn’t be the first time a suspected terrorist has had it away on his toes under cover of the burka. One of the July 21, 2005, London bombing conspirators made it to Birmingham clad from top to tail in ‘modest’ female Islamic clothing.


And some of those responsible for the Nairobi Mall massacre concealed their Kalashnikovs beneath burkas.


Frankly, I couldn’t care less what people wear and I’m not going to rehearse the ‘for and against’ the burka arguments in much detail.


I think the pretty headscarfs many Muslim women choose to wear are simply delightful, no more threatening than the Flo Capp headgear our mothers and grandmothers used to put on when they were doing the housework or heading outdoors in the rain.


Burkas are, however, a whole different order. They are a statement of rejection, of isolation from mainstream society. They are also, it would appear, a handy disguise for male terrorism suspects on the run.


I’m with Ken Clarke when he says that women should not be allowed to wear the full-face veil in court because it is difficult to give evidence from inside ‘a kind of bag’.


What always amuses me is the way in which so-called ‘liberal feminists’ contort themselves to defend the right of Muslim women to wear the burka. They try to pretend it’s somehow ‘racist’ or ‘anti-Islamic’ to ban the burka.


Women who opt to hide their ‘modesty’ in these ridiculous sackcloth bin-liners are no less patriotic than the rest of us, they insist.


Oh, yeah?


When I see a bird in a burka wearing a poppy, I might just agree with them.


Khudadad Khan



On 31 October 1914 at Hollebeke, Belgium, Sepoy Khudadad Khan, 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis, British Indian Army, was in the machine-gun section of his battalion and was working one of the two guns. The British officer in charge of the detachment was wounded and the other gun was put out of action by a shell. Sepoy Khudadad Khan, although himself wounded, continued working his gun after all the other five men of the detachment had been killed. He was left by the enemy for dead, but later managed to crawl away and rejoin his unit. For his heroic deeds, he was awarded Britain's highest medal for valour, the Victoria Cross. At 26, he was the first native-born Indian to win the medal. He later rose to the rank of Subedar.




Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association starts poppy appeal: BBC News - Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association starts poppy appeal







 
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Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
149
63
I can't remember the last time I saw anyone wearing a burka.
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
149
63
When was the last time you saw a poppy on a white wedding dress?
 

Machjo

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 19, 2004
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Ottawa, ON
Take a gander at Ottywaw or Taranna.

I'm starting a business selling fur lined burkas for those of the Islamic faith who decide to settle the North Bush.

Whadyathink?? a winner ??

I live in Ottawa and I see one person on occasion who wears a niqab. However, neither they nor burqas are common around here.