O Papa Francisco é jesuíta, o padre Samir Khalil Samir também é. Padre Samir é egípcio, conhece de perto o Islã e os muçulmanos, costuma dar palestras pelo mundo sobre isso, e deveria ter uma audiência com o Papa para explicar terrorismo islâmico.
Padre Samir deu uma entrevista para o jornal National Catholic Register, e ressaltou que os terroristas são sim alimentados pela religião islâmica. Padre Samir diz que quem nega o Islã dos terroristas está mentindo. Bom, muita gente nega, como o Papa Francisco e o Obama.
Padre Samir também diz que o Papa Bento XVI estava certo na Palestra de Regensburg.
Vejamos a entrevista do Padre Samir (não vou traduzir para não prejudicar as palavras dele).
Paris Terror Attacks: ‘What They Did Is in the Name of Islam’
BY EDWARD PENTIN
VATICAN CITY — The terrorist attack by Islamist
militants on the offices of the irreligious French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris on Jan. 7 brought
widespread condemnation. Twelve civilians, including two policemen, one of whom
was Muslim, were killed by two masked gunmen, and several others were wounded.
The atrocity was just the latest in increasingly
common attacks by Islamic fundamentalists around the world. On Jan. 10,
international media reported that up to 2,000 civilians in and around the town
of Baga, Nigeria, were slaughtered by the Islamist group Boko Haram.
In an extensive interview with the Register on Jan. 8,
Jesuit Father Samir Khalil Samir, a native Egyptian, explains
the connection between Islam and the attacks, the need for control over what
imams preach and the importance of a recent call from Egypt’s President
Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi for Islam to undergo a reformation.
This is Part I of the interview.
Father Samir, what was your reaction to the attack? Were you in
any way surprised?
It was a shock. How, in the heart of Paris, could they
do something like that? It is all really incredible. So it was, really, a shock
for everyone, and the reaction was very clear: Thousands of people in every
city protested, and so on.
Also, the fact that it was two French people of
Algerian origin who did it means that integration has not been achieved. This
is a major point: the problem of integration of Muslims in Western culture.
There’s a kind of rejection, not by all people, but some Muslims today — and I
stress today — to reject Western culture. They consider it bad, anti-Muslim or
not religious. It wasn’t like that in the past.
I remember when I studied in the early 1960s in
France, all the [other students] were Muslims, because it was an
Islamic-studies class at university. I was the only Christian, and there was
absolutely no difference in behavior. They were French but had the Muslim
religion. I wasn’t French, but I was a Christian. They were Muslims. That was
all.
So what has changed since then?
In the 1970s, we saw that, in the Middle East — I was
in upper Egypt in 1971, 1972 — Saudi Arabia started introducing the veil in
girls’ schools. … It started like that. Then, we have seen this movement
spreading to other Arab countries, to other Muslim countries, such as
Indonesia, which was the model of a kind of secular city and certainly open to
all religions. Slowly, they became fanatics more and more. In Malaysia, too,
and in other parts of Asia, and now in Europe, there’s that same movement.
What has fueled that fanaticism over the past 40 years?
We could say the Palestinian conflict with Israel was
one factor, but this was long ago. What has changed is that Europe, and the
West in general, has become viewed as irreligious, and this perception has
grown more and more, especially through new legislation and matters concerning
sexuality, which are seen as totally unacceptable.
But another reason is that the rise of this
fundamentalist movement has been helped by the money of oil-producing countries
— they could buy anybody — nations and groups.
The
Muslim Brotherhood started in Egypt in 1928, but under [Egyptian President]
Abdel Nasser and his revolution in 1954 until his death [in 1970], he tried to
work with them because the Muslim Brotherhood was more popular. They helped the
poor in the suburbs of Cairo. So he tried, but then the Brotherhood became more
and more fanatical. They said that women should not work but stay at home, that
they should wear the veil, and so on. Nasser finally said: “We cannot work
together. We are a normal society. We just want the development of Egypt.” So
he then put them in prison, because they started to get aggressive; and many of
them went to Saudi Arabia, where they started their propaganda and also
absorbed the ideas of the Wahhabi Islamic movement, which is very
fundamentalist. This is how the movement developed.
Back
in Europe, what is happening? Charlie Hebdo published
the caricatures, which were first published in Denmark. You remember, at that
time, there was a strong reaction. I was in Beirut then, and they attacked the
Christian quarters there, even if Christians had nothing to do with it. But
they protested in that way because they considered the West as Christian — “A
Western publication committed a blasphemy, so we avenge any Christian.”
Now, Charlie Hebdo, which is well known as a satirical
journal with caricatures, did with Muhammed what they do with other religious
leaders.
As with similar atrocities carried out by Islamists, many blame
Islam and see such attacks as making a mockery of it being described as a “religion
of peace.” What’s your view of this?
It
must be clear that what they [fundamentalist Islamists] do, what they’ve done
and what they did yesterday is in the name of Islam. To deny this is a lie. Why? Because every fundamentalist group had an imam or
two issuing a fatwa [authorizing
acts of violence] that gave them the permission. It’s not automatic. Someone
who has authority — a religious person who has studied it — has the right to
decide whether it’s permitted, is allowed to attack or not.
In
Islam, you cannot attack simply anyone in the name of Islam. There must be a
reason for that. The mufti — which means the one who gives the fatwa — has the right and task to say now it’s halal [permitted by Islamic law] or the opposite,
that it’s haram [prohibited]. So they
don’t do this in the name of Islam, but in the name of the Quran and Islam.
To
go back to Charlie Hebdo and the Danish
cartoon: They depicted Muhammed with a turban, and in the turban, there was a
bomb. I asked my Muslim friend: How does Islam depict Muhammed? Usually with
his sword. And we know there are two swords attributed to him, each one with a
name, preserved in museums, one in Istanbul and the other somewhere else. And
what is the symbol in Saudi Arabia? Two swords.
And
how was Saudi Arabia born? It came about through an alliance in 1745 between
Muhammed ‘Abd al-Wahhab (1703-1792), a very rigorist Islamic preacher, and
Muhammed Ibn Saud, a tribal chief, as Hamadi Redissi explains
in his book. They fought against other Arab tribes and succeeded in dominating
the whole of Arabia and in creating the Saudi Arabian state.
That
means the development of Islam, in the beginning with the Prophet Muhammed and
today with other countries, is continuing through violence, through the sword. Why do they criticize others for
such images when they depict their religion as they do?
But,
more deeply, this is a question of liberty of conscience, and this is something
totally unknown. I can understand their wish to react, certainly. If someone is
depicting Christ, St. Paul or any saint or pope in a bad way, I will react. But
react how? In the same way? That’s the problem. We don’t have in the Arab and
Muslim world the concept of liberty of conscience, that is, religious liberty.
If you want to protest, do so, but according to the law. What happened on
Wednesday was something very, very important, and it’s very dangerous. It means
that these people, especially the two who did it, are two French people who
didn’t integrate into the French system or vision. Instead of reacting against Charlie Hebdo by writing a rebuttal, they
killed all journalists they could find!
Could you say that, on the contrary, the culture they lived in
radicalized them?
Yes. And here is my question to Europe, whether it
might be England, Belgium or France (I’m more careful to speak about the U.S.,
as I’m not used to it).
In
Europe, the tendency is to speak of tolerance, and I find this word awful,
really, because if I were a Muslim, I would not want to be “tolerated,” because
I would not want to be “tolerated” as a Christian in my own country, Egypt. I
am a citizen, full stop.
Whatever my religion, either I am a citizen or I am
not. If I am a citizen, I agree and adopt the constitution, norms and culture
of my country, whether I was born here or I chose it; but it’s my own choice,
and I have to respect it.
But the problem is that, on one side, Muslims have
difficulty accepting this vision. For them, Islam can only have the best law,
because they think it’s coming from God. We know historically that it’s very
human and that there is no law coming from God, but they pretend. They pretend
that it’s the best one, that it surpasses any constitution. But I say, “No, it
does not.”
On the other side, the West often has a problem with
Islam. Westerners fear what they call today “Islamophobia.” I’m against this
word because, etymologically, it means fear of Islam, not the aggression of
Islam. Most people fear Islam when we see what is happening. But there are a
lot of people in the West who are against Islam, and so governments are trying
to reverse the situation, but in the wrong way.
The
only way to solve the question is to say: “Here, we have certain norms. If you
want to live here, whoever you are, whether you were born here or not, if you
want to live here, you have to observe them; and not only the laws, but also
what is considered normal.”
How
much of what happened in Paris is evidence of what Pope Benedict XVI alluded to
in his Regensburg
address: Anti-religious, postmodern sentiment based on positivism
and reason without faith is clashing with fundamentalists who have faith, but
without reason?
Yes,
and the question here is: Can we distinguish between faith and society?
The problem here not only involves Muslims, but, also,
I see this in India, with Hindus, and elsewhere with other religions. They
identify religion as a totality, and for that reason, it could become a
totalitarianism, which is obviously a bad thing. This is happening with Islam,
and it once happened with Christianity. It meant that to be Christian one had
to act in certain ways in everything.
I am free to choose my culture and my way of life and
free to sin every day if I want. This is my problem. If I pretend to be
Christian, I am supposed to follow some norms, but nobody can oblige me to do
so. If a person pretends to be Muslim, then he should follow his laws. He
follows his fasting, tithing — that is his problem.
But Muslims don’t have this liberty, even today in the
21st century. If someone is eating during Ramadan and others see him, then he
goes to prison. I’m not speaking here of the Middle Ages, I’m talking of 2015 —
in Egypt, Morocco, Libya, Saudi Arabia, and so on.
The distinction is between religion and faith:
Religion is a totalitarian system; faith is a spiritual one. I’m free to do
what I want, to write what I want, as long as I am not doing anything against
the common law.
If someone writes a book to show that God is a man’s
invention, I have the right to write another book against him. But I cannot say
that I have the right to kill him or to hurt him because he is an atheist.
===
A entrevista vai ter Parte 2, aguardemos.
Detalhes sobre o pedido de Putin para que a Rússia fosse consagrada ao Sagrado Coração de Maria, e muito mais...
ResponderExcluirPe. Kramer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WehqTwn600Q
A Igreja que aí está, há décadas é a igreja da apostasia.
Bem disse o Pe. Marcel Lefebvre
http://apocalink.org/2015/01/capa-2015-jornal-economist-esta-cheia-de-simbolos-enigmaticos-com-terriveis-previsoes/#sthash.fnfwNo36.UO6YYU4i.dpbs
ResponderExcluirEuropa está refém do islã.
ResponderExcluirhttp://pt.euronews.com/2015/01/18/alemanha-movimento-anti-islao-ameacado-de-morte/
Quem inadmitir que o Islã maquina o terror - é uma religião pagã, como qualquer outra, equivalente à de Baal, Moloc... - seria: agente do Islã, satanista, cego, mas dos que não quererem ver - ou se ignorante ao extremo seria perdoável, apenas aos desprovidos de qualquer estudo e vivendo alienadamente aos fatos.
ResponderExcluirHenoc