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satanizm i judaizm sa to krewne religie

IP: *.marketscore.com / 10.100.2.* 27.07.02, 00:56
ale mimo wszysko mam wiecej respektu dla satanistow
bo do swojej macy nie uzywaja krwi chrzescijasnkich
dzieci ale krwi kota.
Obserwuj wątek
    • Gość: MIRMAT A OTO WSPANIALA RELIGIA ISLAMU: IP: *.dialup.eol.ca 27.07.02, 02:40
      FAITH UNDER FIRE
      Sudan jihad forces Islam
      on Christians
      Women refusing to convert gang-raped, mutilated, says relief worker
      Posted: March 4, 2002 1:00 a.m. Eastern By Art Moore
      © 2002 WorldNetDaily.com

      Sudan's militant Muslim regime is slaughtering Christians who refuse to
      convert to Islam, according to the head of an aid group who recently returned
      from the African nation.

      The forced conversions are just one aspect of the Khartoum government's self-
      declared jihad on the mostly Christian and animist south, Dennis Bennett,
      executive director of Seattle-based Servant's Heart told WorldNetDaily.
      Villagers in several areas of the northeast Upper Nile region say that when
      women are captured by government forces they are asked: "Are you Christian or
      Muslim?"

      Women who answer "Muslim" are set free, but typically soldiers gang-rape
      those who answer "Christian" then cut off their breasts and leave them to die
      as an example for others. Bennett says these stories are corroborated by
      witnesses from several tribes in the region. Upon returning to the U.S., he
      wrote a letter to influential members of Congress and activists.
      "After witnessing once again the situation on the ground there," Bennett
      wrote, "I must ask 'How long will the United States government allow the
      Government of Sudan to continue its jihad against the Black African
      Christians of South Sudan?'"

      Backed by Muslim clerics, the National Islamic Front regime in the Arab and
      Muslim north declared a jihad, or holy war, on the south in 1989. Since 1983,
      an estimated 2 million people have died from war and related famine. About
      4.5 million have become refugees.

      Sudan's holy war against the south was reaffirmed in October by First Vice
      President Ali Osman Taha. "The jihad is our way, and we will not abandon it and
      will keep its banner high," he said to a brigade of mujahedin fighters heading
      for the war front, according to Sudan's official SUNA news agency. "We will
      never sell out our faith and will never betray the oath to our martyrs."

      The U.S. House of Representatives adopted a resolution finding that Khartoum
      is "systematically committing genocide," but current legislation that would
      impose sanctions has been stalled. The Sudan Peace Act is opposed by both the
      White House and Wall Street.

      Sanctions in the House version of the bill target oil revenues that Khartoum
      is using to fuel its war effort. Bennett, with 20 years experience in
      international risk management and banking, said he was the first to probe the
      link between oil and jihad that is now documented and publicized by human
      rights groups. His research began in 1996 when he asked: If you're the
      government of Sudan and you're broke, how are you paying for your war?

      In his letter urging action by the U.S., he points out that Sudan's military
      continues to decorate and promote known war criminals such as Commander Taib
      Musba, who in the mid-1980s killed an estimated 15,000 unarmed, civilian,
      ethnic Uduk Christians. In 1986, Musba entered the Uduk tribal capital of Chali
      and declared to its Christians: "You are all going to convert from Christianity
      to Islam today, because here is what's going to happen to you if you don't."
      Musba then killed five church leaders in front of the gathered villagers.
      When they refused to convert, he began killing unarmed men, women and
      children. Some were herded at gunpoint into a hut then run over by a 50-ton,
      Soviet-made tank.

      He also herded groups of about a dozen people into a hut, where he asked the
      first person "Do you renounce Jesus Christ?" Anyone who refused was killed by
      a three-inch nail driven into the top of the head.
      The U.N. high commissioner for refugees granted the Uduks international
      refugee status in 1992 after investigating the atrocities, but almost as many
      died during the six years they waited for the declaration.
      Islam also is forced on Sudanese in the Muslim north. Security police in
      Khartoum are pursuing a local convert to Christianity who went into hiding
      three weeks ago to escape arrest and possible death, the Compass Direct news
      service reports. Aladin Omer Agabni Mohammed, who left Islam 11 years ago to
      become a Christian, is subject to the death penalty under Sudanese criminal
      law for "apostasy." According to a church leader, two other converts face a
      similar situation.

      Forced starvation

      Bennett says that in addition to the more immediate, readily apparent
      atrocities taking place, there is a slower, less perceptive persecution that
      is equally deadly. Forced starvation is one of the primary tools of the
      Khartoum regime, he says. When government forces attack a Christian village,
      they kill everyone they catch, but those who flee lose everything necessary for
      survival.
      "The government comes in and burns the crops, burns grain stored if there was
      any excess, burns houses down," Bennett said. "Now you have only the clothes
      on your back, no tools, no cooking pots, no buckets for water, and you have
      to run two days through the bush in 115-degree temperatures in order to
      escape."

      In the arid wilderness, escapees try to survive on tree leaves and stagnant,
      dysentery-infested water. If a women is breastfeeding, her milk dries up,
      Bennett said, and the baby starts dying. Small children, just weaned, also
      start dying.
      "But all the family has to do is change their name to Muhammad or Ramadan,
      convert to Islam and walk the two days back to the government of Sudan who
      will care for them," he said.
      Last year, the government of Sudan burned all the crops in the area where
      Bennett's group works.
      "There wasn't anything to harvest," he said. "Literally we saw people eating
      roots and tree leaves. It's like eating the nutritional properties of
      cardboard. It's enough to put something in your stomach but not enough to
      feed you." A food drop came from the U.N. World Food Program, he said, "but
      they never came in to do an assessment; they just dropped it from the air."

      As the "hungry season" approaches – the rainy period of June, July and early
      August – emergency food supplies become critical. Servant's Heart believes it
      will need to feed 50,000 people in its area during that time.

      Slavery as tool of terror

      Slavery is another tool of the National Islamic Front regime, though Bennett
      says it is not known in the northeast Upper Nile region, mainly because of
      lack of transportation.

      Western Bahr El Ghazal is one location where it persists because the railroad
      line allows captured men, women and children to be taken to slave markets in
      the north.

      "If you want to end systematic slavery, blow up the train line and keep it
      blown up," Bennett said.

      The ongoing controversy surrounding slave redemption – the practice of buying
      freedom promoted by some humanitarian groups – arose again in the past week
      when the Irish Times and Washington Post published exposes acknowledging the
      existence of slavery in Sudan but alleging that fake slave redemption is
      taking place.

      Bennett respects the work of groups buying back the slaves, but he believes
      it is inevitable that some will be conned. Engaging in the practice is a
      matter of individual conscience, he says.

      "Anytime you have tens of thousands of American dollars coming into an area
      you've got potential problems of corruption," Bennett said.

      He says the "jury is still out" on whether it fuels the market by increasing
      demand.

      "Slave-taking would still be happening even if nobody was buying back
      slaves," he said. "Maybe not to the full extent."

      But he believes it's important to keep in mind that taking slaves is "just one
      more facet of the jihad against the civilian population" in southern Sudan. The
      methods may vary in different parts of the country, but the aim is the same.
      "I
    • palesz Re: satanizm i judaizm sa to krewne religie 27.07.02, 20:09
      Gość portalu: drF napisał(a):

      > ale mimo wszysko mam wiecej respektu dla satanistow
      > bo do swojej macy nie uzywaja krwi chrzescijasnkich
      > dzieci ale krwi kota.
      To ma być dowcip? Czy TO MASZ W ?GłOWIE?. A może ty myślisz d...ą?

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