The Toulouse Massacre, Why Did It Happen? (GateStone Institute) by Mudar Zahran 03/29/12)
Source: http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/2979/toulouse-massacre
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Last week, Mohammed Merah, a Muslim-Frenchman killed three Jewish
children and a rabbi at a Jewish school in Toulouse, France. Merah
reportedly held one little girl, Myriam Monsonego, by her hair to
shoot her in the head. Three days before that, Merah shot dead three
French soldiers of North African heritage. Under siege in his
apartment by French counter-terrorism squad, France 24 reported Merah
told negotiators he was connected to al Qaeda and what he had done
was "only the beginning". He said that he was motivated by France´s
ban on wearing the burqa and that "the Jews have killed our brothers
and sisters in Palestine." According to French officials, Merah
expressed only one regret: "Not having claimed more victims," and
said he was proud of having "brought France to its knees."
As Merah himself confirmed it was "only the beginning," it might be
worth wondering: Why did Merah, born and raised in France to Algerian-
French parents, commit such a ruthless massacre? Was he just an
extreme fundamentalist who has taken Islamic teachings to the
extreme, or is it basic Islamic fundamentals themselves that lead him
to that? As a Muslim, and in an attempt to answer that question, I
thought looked to the factual teaching of Islam on Jihad or "Holly
war.".
Sahih Muslim, for example is a historically renowned book that
gathers teachings of Prophet Muhammad that are considered "Sahih," as
in "confirmed" and "authentic."
In Sahih Muslim, for example, and in the Book of Jihad, the first
chapter is entitled: "Regarding Permission to Make A Raid, Without An
Ultimatum, Upon The Disbelievers Who Have Already Been Invited to
Accept Islam", Book 19, Number 4292:
"Ibn ´Aun reported: I wrote to Nafi´ inquiring from him whether it
was necessary to extend (to the disbelievers) an invitation to accept
(Islam) before meeting them in fight. He wrote (in reply) to me that
it was necessary in the early days of Islam. The Messenger of Allah
(may peace be upon him) made a raid upon Banu Mustaliq while they
were unaware and their cattle were having a drink at the water. He
killed those who fought and imprisoned others. On that very day, he
captured Juwairiya bint al-Harith. Nafi´ said that this tradition was
related to him by Abdullah b. Umar who (himself) was among the
raiding troops."
Merah´s un-alerted and un-provoked attack therefore is perfect in
line with the Prophet´s teachings.
Nonetheless, where does Merah´s cold-blooded murder of children stand
within the teachings of the prophet?
Chapter two of Sahih Muslim´s book of Jihad speaks about Muhammad´s
advice to his military commanders sent on expeditions, Book 19,
Number 4294:
"It has been reported from Sulaiman b. Buraid through his father that
when the Messenger of Allah (may peace be upon him) appointed anyone
as leader of an army or detachment he would especially exhort him to
fear Allah and to be good to the Muslims who were with him. He would
say: Fight in the name of Allah and in the way of Allah. Fight
against those who disbelieve in Allah. Make a holy war, do not
embezzle the spoils; do not break your pledge; and do not mutilate
(the dead) bodies; do not kill the children..."
The prophet´s teachings of not killing women and children are re-
enforced in another chapter, Chapter 8: "Prohibition of Killing Women
and Children in War"; Book 19, Number 4319:
"It is narrated on the authority of ´Abdullah that a woman was found
killed in one of the battles fought by the Messenger of Allah (may
peace be upon him). He disapproved of the killing of women and
children."
Sounds humane, right? Not so fast. Right after Chapter 8 comes
Chapter 9, which reads: "Permissibility of Killing Women and Children
in the Night Raids Provided It Is Not Deliberate," Book 19, Number
4321:
"It is reported on the authority of Sa´b b. Jaththama that the
Prophet of Allah (may peace be upon him), when asked about the women
and children of the polytheists being killed during the night raid,
said: They are from them."
Merah killed three Jewish children who were "from them," the "evil
Jews." As Merah explained to the France 24 news channel -- while he
was under siege by French counter-terrorism police -- that it had not
been his original plan to kill those children, that he was originally
planning to kill another French soldier but missed him, so he took
the next possible target. Was Merah thinking that this made the
murders "Not deliberate"?
While Merah fulfilled his wish by taking away the lives of infidels
and their children, and was killed himself after that, he still
succeeded in executing an equally noble goal in Islamic warfare:
creating "´Terror,´ which is more far-reaching than the actual body
count."
In a Hadith, Prophet Muhammad said he was given things that no other
prophet has been given before including "I was supported with terror."
The concept of what Islamists terrorists do, therefore, is simple:
create fear and terror -- which far surpass the size of the actually
committed terrorist act. The expense of counter-terrorism, fr
instance, is far beyond the cost of terrorist acts, and has created
huge US expenses to counter terrorism, and which is now facing cuts
as a result of the US economic crisis, despite threats still being
present.
On a social level, the BBC reported that since the shootings,many
Jewish children in France have been afraid to go to school; and
Jewish teenagers have reported fears of being recognized as Jews by
the way they dress.
Merah´s claim-- that he had not planned in advance to attack the
Jewish school — is disturbing, even if it were true. As he said, he
wanted to kill a French soldier, but when his plan to kill a French
soldier failed, he chose the next available target. In other words,
the Jews in Toulouse were a soft target, like fish in a pond, for
Merah. It does matter what the fish do: the fish do not need to do
anything to "provoke" the fisherman; they are simply there for him.
The fish may think that if swims more slowly or with prettier loops,
that these actions might not "inflame" the fisherman, but of course
there is nothing that he can do to influence the fisherman or to
change how the fisherman will view him.
The image of Jews being "a soft target" seems evident in the UK as
well, at least according to one British Jewish mother writing in the
British newspaper, the Daily Mail, last week. In her account of anti-
Semitism in the UK, she says, "In the end, I´m afraid I believe that
our children are a target because no one fears a Jewish reprisal. Or,
as the comedian Jackie Mason once said, "Nobody ever crossed the
street to avoid a group of Jewish accountants." She then adds
significantly, "We (Jews) don´t make excessive demands for the State
to absorb our culture. We just want to live a peaceful coexistence."
Ironically, unlike the Islamists to which Mohammad Merah belonged,
Jews accept the culture of the nations they live in and do not try to
impose their ways, yet it is people like Merah who get acceptance and
tolerance.
More alarming were the comments made by the European Union foreign
policy chief Catherine Ashton last week. At an event in Brussels on
Monday organized for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for
Palestinian refugees -- a UN entity, known as UNRWA, with an appetite
for supporting anti-Zionism — Ashton paid tribute to children around
the world, including a coach crash in Switzerland which killed more
than 20 Belgian children, the Syrian conflict, the Toulouse shooting
and "what´s happened in Gaza." Ashton´s comparison of children under
ten years of age dragged by the hair and then killed at point-blank
range in their school merely for being Jewish, to children killed in
the conflict in Gaza, displays the most staggering duplicity. she
knows, or should know, perfectly well that the children in Gaza are
not targeted by the Israeli army, but, on the contrary, that Hamas,
in deliberate violation the Geneva conventions as well as all
universal norms of human rights, places the children near ammunition
depots and the like, so that the children will be human shields, and
appear to the world as victims of Israel instead of Hamas, where the
blame actually belongs, while Israel tries to defend itself from
literally thousands of rocket attacks launched by Islamist militants
in densely-populated areas.
Later, Ashton said she "unreservedly" condemned the murders and said
she drew no parallel between the shooting in Toulouse and the
situation in Gaza. Still, the damage had done: Ashton had put the
deliberate crime in Toulouse at the same level as the deaths of
Palestinian children manipulated by Hamas´s malignity toward its own
young people; and she had put Israel on the same immoral level Merah
and Hamas. Ashton nevertheless received stout support from many
European parliamentarians who claimed that her comments "were taken
out of context"! – a claim that should probably tell you all you need
to know about many European Parliamentarians.
Looking farther into Mohamed Merah´s role in fundamentalism and
eventually terrorist acts, connections to other European courtiers
emerge, particularly in the UK and Belgium. Mohammad Merah´s brother,
Abdelkader, now in the custody of French authorities, may have met
radicals in the UK; and both Scotland Yard and the British internal
intelligence, the MI5, seem to believe he was in the UK to meet
British Muslim radicals.
Mohammad Merah and his brother were also both known to the French
authorities as members of the radical group, Forsane Alizza, ["The
Knights of Pride"], a radical organization associated with the
fundamentalist groups Sharia4UK and Sharia4Belgium, indicating that
Merah was probably right when said his attacks were "only the
beginning.
In the wake of Mohammad Merah´s killing spree, French intelligence
authorities have come under pressure for failing to detect such an
active Islamists who have been to Pakistan and Afghanistan and other
training centers. Further, Merah was a suspect of the first murder of
a French soldier days before he went on butchering Jewish children;
nevertheless he was not detained, or even questioned.
The question is, Was these oversights a mere intelligence failure
which even the best of intelligence entities might encounter? Or was
the fact that Mohammad Merah was a Muslim a major factor in causing
French authorities to be reluctant to point a finger at him? Is the
world reluctant at pointing the finger at Islamic terrorism and
Islamist fundamentalist in Europe simply because to some, it might
seem politically incorrect in the eyes of some? Should we come to
accept that the followers of one particular religion get a free pass?
When Mohammad Merah started his attacks by killing three French
soldiers who were Muslims, the French authorities suspected three
former French soldiers who had been dishonorably discharged because
of their affiliation with neo-Nazi groups.
Far-right French presidential candidate, Marine Le Pen, commenting on
the massacre, said, "Entire districts are in the hands of Islamic
fundamentalists and the danger is underestimated.". She is right
about the threat of Islamists in Europe being underestimated,
especially when entire British towns are becoming Islamic
fundamentalist strongholds.
Europe would do well to start calling things by their right names;
start recognizing that Islamist ideology is spreading throughout
Europe and is a threat to the European way of life. acknowledging
that many Muslims in Europe are falling to integrate or accept their
adoptive countries, and that anti-Semitism is still a problem in
Europe today.
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