Jihad Watch : The family of the murdered MP David Amess has issued a statement
which I wish they hadnāt. It expresses a belief commonly shared, part of
the zeitgeist in the advanced Western world, the spirit of a forced
ātoleranceā that tries to suppress all natural feeling or human
understanding. Here is a Reuters report about it:
The family of British lawmaker David Amess, who
was stabbed to death as he met constituency voters, on Sunday urged
people to be tolerant regardless of race, religious or political
beliefs.
āWhatever oneās race, religious or political beliefs, be
tolerant and try to understand,ā they said in a statement released via
London police.
David Amess, the ākindest, gentlest man in politics,ā as Prime
Minister Boris Johnson said, was stabbed 17 times while he was meeting
with his constituents in a Methodist church in Leigh-on-Sea. His
murderer was a Somali who did not know him. This Somali, Ali Harbi Ali,
lacked for little, thanks to his father, Harbi Ali Kullane. Ali Kullane
had been an adviser to the Somali prime minister, and was likely given
ample government funds which would come in handy when he later moved to
England and acquired an expensive property in old Londinium. Harbi Ali
Kullane bought a property on a street where the houses sell for at least
two million pounds.
When contacted by the police, Harbi Ali Kullane told British media that he was shocked and ātraumatizedā by his sonās arrest.
āIām feeling very traumatized. Itās not something that I expected or
even dreamed of.ā Yes, he was ātraumatizedā by his sonās arrest. But not
by the murder, apparently, of David Amess. About his sonās victim, he
had nothing to say.
We still do not know what David Amess had done to deserve, in the
eyes ā the dead eyes, the same eyes as Mohammed Atta had ā of Ali Harbi
Ali, being killed, but it surely had to do with Amessā work as an M.P.
He was well known as a supporter of Israel. He served from 1998 on as
the Honorary Chairman of the Conservative Friends of Israel. He was the
driving force, in Parliament, behind the statue that was finally put up
in 1997 of Raoul Wallenberg, the Swede who saved the lives of tens of
thousands of Hungarian Jews during the Nazi period.
Amess was āregarded as a longtime friend of the UK Jewish community.ā
āAlthough I myself am not a Jew but a Catholic, there is
Jewish blood in each and every one of us. I would certainly have been
proud to have been born a Jew, and I stand shoulder to shoulder with our
local Jewish community,ā he said in a speech this past January.
āHe always stood with the Jewish community and was a true friend of Israel. May his memory be for a blessing,ā Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said.
Or perhaps Ali Harbi Ali, whose name suggests he may be Shiāa, knew
about David Amessā decades of support for the Iranian dissidents in
Europe. It was only a month ago that Amess addressed a meeting of the
National Council of Iran:
āOne of the proudest things I have ever done in my political
career is to support the National Council of Resistance of Iran which
calls for the Iranian regime to be replaced with a safer and more
democratic government,ā he declared on September 6, 2021.
Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, the president-elect of the National
Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), described Sir David as āan enemy
of dictators, especially the mullahsā dictatorship in Iran.ā
āFor forty years, he stood relentlessly with the Iranian people for freedom and against religious fascism,ā Mrs. Rajavi said.
āAfter four decades of full and humble [sic] support of Sir David Amess
for the Iranian Resistance and people, he will be remembered among the
martyrs of freedom.ā
But letās return to that statement released by the family of the murder victim on October 17:
āWhatever oneās race, religious or political beliefs, be tolerant and try to understand.ā
What if oneās religious beliefs make it impossible to be ātolerantā of others? What then? Are we to tolerate those who will always be
intolerant, sometimes murderously so, toward us? Muslims are taught that
they are the ābest of peoplesā(3:110), while non-Muslims are āthe most
vile of created beings.ā (98:6). Why would one wish to be ātolerantā of
those who see us as āthe most vile of created beingsā? Muslims are
further instructed not to take āJews or Christians as friends, for they
are friends only with each otherā(5:51).
Donāt ātolerateā them; shun
them. The Qurāan is full of such commands to Believers, that they should
āfightā and ākillā and āsmite at the necks ofā and āstrike terror in
the hearts ofā Unbelievers. Can a good Muslim ignore all those verses
(as, e.g., 2:191-193; 4:89, 5:51, 8:12, 8:60, 9:5, 9:29, 47:4, 98:6)?
And if he cannot, must we really be ātolerantā of those who are taught
to attack us, to kill us, to terrify us (Muhammad in a famous hadith
boasts that āI have been made victorious with terrorā), and in far too
many cases, as that of Ali Harb Ali, they not only read the Qurāanic
commands but try, as faithful Muslims, to dutifully follow them?
If we really ātry to understandā the religious beliefs of Muslims,
instead of being satisfied with the assumption that all religions āat
bottom teach the same thingā (they donāt) and the comforting pollyannish
nostrums about how āpeople are the same the whole world overā (they
arenāt), we will come to some melancholy conclusions. We canāt afford to
ātolerateā those who take Islam to heart; they are commanded to think
very badly of us, the āmost vileā Infidels, and instructed in the
immutable Qurāan to do us harm. Some ignore those instructions but,
around the world, too many Muslims take them to heart. A good example of
this is Ali Harbi Ali, with the 17 knife wounds he thrust into the
chest of ākind, gentleā David Amess.
We can feel sympathy for the family of David Amess, but must not let
that sympathy lead us astray, cause us to accept their request,
well-meaning and wrong, that āwhatever oneās race, religious or
political beliefs, be tolerant and try to understand.ā āTry to
understandā ā why certainly, no one can argue with that ā but once you
have understood the hair-raising essence of Islam, you have a duty to
yourself and to others not to be tolerant, but to resist, resist,
resist.