According to many Muslims the word "crusade" is a serious insult. How dare the West, those Christians, speak of the attempts to REGAIN "The Holy Land".
The fact Islam swept across North Africa and The Middle East converting with the sword, the fact they invaded Europe, held much of what is now Spain, and were constantly invading from the east is forgotten.
If the much maligned Westerners were as "sensitive" as are many Muslims we would consider the very word ISLAM as an attempt to invade, colonize, and control us all here in the much maligned West.
In any case, here's a little tid-bit from "The Guardian" -- please follow link to original.
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http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/24/iraqi-christians-mosul-isis-convert-islam-or-be-executed
Iraqi Christians who were forced to flee the northern city of Mosul
under threat of forced conversion or execution by jihadists have spoken
of their terror as churches were turned into mosques and their homes and
property confiscated.
The expulsion of one of the world's oldest
Christian communities provoked condemnation and anguish from figures as
diverse as the pope and Iraq's prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, who lambasted the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis) for its "criminality and terrorism".
Last weekend Isis gave the city's Christians a stark choice: convert to Islam,
pay a religious tax, or face death. "They said there is no place for
Christians in the Islamic state," one distraught refugee said from the
safety of Bashiqa, 16 miles from Mosul. "Either you become Muslim or you
leave." Mosul's last 1,500 Christian families were reportedly robbed at
Isis checkpoints as they fled.
Hundreds have found shelter in
areas between Mosul and Irbil – the capital of the Kurdistan regional
government – that are controlled by Kurdish Peshmerga fighters – but
they face an uncertain future.
"If Isis stays, there is no way the
Christians can return," Father Boutrous Moshi told the Guardian from
Qara Qoosh, a Christian area southeast of Mosul. "It is up to God
whether we return or not. They have not burnt the churches but they did
set fire to the pictures, the books and broke the windows."
Monks
at the 4th century Mar Behnam monastery, a major pilgrimage site run by
the Syriac Catholic Church, were allowed to take only the clothes they
were wearing.
Sarab Hazem, from the Zehoor neighbourhood of Mosul, said that initially there were no attacks on Christians when Isis took the city in a lightning offensive in June,
though Isis fighters did capture and take away police, security agents
and soldiers. "No one knows what becomes of them," he said. Then,
statues of Christ and the Virgin Mary were destroyed. "They are
savages," Hazem said. "This is oppression for no reason. I believe it is
no longer possible for Christians to live in Iraq."
Bashar Nasih
Behnam, 52, who fled with his two young children last Friday, told a
similar story: "They (Isis) threatened us and said you can't stay in
Mosul and you have to leave," he said. "They said we have conditions:
either you comply with them or you leave. So we left."
Deprived by
Isis of Iraqi government rations (a legacy of the sanctions imposed in
the Saddam Hussein era) they were too frightened to go out to their
church, where the jihadis took down a statue of the Virgin Mary and put
their black flag in its place. A monastery was turned into a mosque. Two
nuns who were looking after three orphans were kidnapped but later
released. The Arabic letter "N" for Nasrani (Christians) was daubed on
the doors of houses – to show that they had been seized as the property
of the Islamic state declared by Isis.
"There is not a single
Christian family left in Mosul, Behnam said. "The last one was a
disabled Christian woman. She stayed because she could not get out. They
came to her and said you have to get out and if you don't we will cut
off your head with a sword. That was the last family. There is not a
single family that left and was not robbed. They took our money, gold,
even the earrings from their [women's] ears. They took everything, even
mobile phones.
"We don't know if we are going to go back. Until
now we have no idea if there can be a return. We don't know what our
destiny is. They have even taken our houses in Mosul."
Bassem
Fadel Zarghit, a shopkeeper from Mosul's Al-Rifa'i neighbourhood, said
the city's Christians had felt doomed despite initial reassurance from
Isis. "There is no one left," he said. "It's not just the Christians.
It's also the Shia that are being targeted."
Mosul, the largest
city in northern Iraq, was once among the country's most mixed. Waves of
attacks on Christians since the 2003 US-led invasion to topple Saddam
eroded its once sizeable Christian population, mainly from the Assyrian
and Chaldean denominations.
The decree issued by Isis in Mosul
mirrored one that its fighters issued in the north-eastern Syrian city
of Raqqa in February, demanding that Christians pay the "jizya" levy in
gold and curb displays of their faith in return for protection.
Human Rights Watch has condemned Isis for its vicious campaign against minorities in the Mosul area.
Ten Economic Questions for 2025
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Here is a review of the Ten Economic Questions for 2024.
Below are my ten questions for 2025 (I've been doing this online every year
for 20 years!). These...
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