
Mosques @ MindSay 
Once again thanks to Act! For America more of the Islamist agenda is being exposed. Brigitte Gabriel’s grass roots organization has shown a link that is a six part YouTube rebroadcast of a UK television station’s infiltration of a Mosque in Britain demonstrating that Mohammedans lie (they call it taqiyya or various spellings). Mohammedan organizations in the West will tell the public and the government they are an interfaith or Muslim rights group dedicated to protecting the rights of Muslim and to being moderate good citizens of the nation they live in. It is all a lie!
Islamists have a two pronged attack on Western Culture (Wake-up Americans): the use of terrorism to create fear and Fifth Column infiltration to infest Western Culture from within utilizing Freedom and Liberty as a weapon against the West.
The Six Part YouTube videos of the UK television station’s exposé shows what really goes on in Islamofascist Mosques. My fellow Americans, if it is happening in the United Kingdom be assured the same heinous agenda to bring down the American Way and thus our beloved Constitutional Freedoms is hideously alive in America.
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Undercover Reporter in United Kingdom Films Islamofascism in Action !!
Act! For America
Email Sent: April 28, 2008 3:39:33 PM
Over a year ago, a United Kingdom television station dispatched a reporter to go undercover into mosques in the UK.
In a series of blockbuster video reports that have been posted on YouTube, viewers get to see for themselves what Brigitte Gabriel and others have been warning about for years.
In just the first installment, you will see imams proclaiming:
“Allah has created the woman deficient…If she doesn’t wear the hijab, we hit her.”
“You have to live like a state within a state until you take over.”
“The pinnacle, the crest, the summit of Islam, is jihad.”
In that same installment you will see how a large Muslim organization in the UK has a “special” chat room for communication not meant for non-Muslims to see.
You will see how imams despise non-believers and call for jihad against them.
But what is most relevant for us in America, is that the Saudi Arabian religious establishment that provides the materials and the teaching that is going on inside these British mosques also provides the materials and the teaching for many – if not most – mosques here in the United States.
So when you click on the link below to view these undercover videos, remind yourself that this is what is happening in mosques right here in America — perhaps in your community, and even right down the street from you!
http://uk.youtube.com/results?search_query=dispatches+undercover+mosque
If you aren’t able to see these videos on your computer, find someone who can.
Words alone do not do justice to the reality of the threat we are facing. Please click on the link above, view one or more of the videos, and then forward this email to everyone you know.
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ACT for America
P.O. Box 6884
Virginia Beach, VA 23456
www.actforamerica.org
ACT for America is an issues advocacy organization dedicated to effectively organizing and mobilizing the most powerful grassroots citizen action network in America, a grassroots network committed to informed and coordinated civic action that will lead to public policies that promote America’s national security and the defense of American democratic values against the assault of radical Islam. We are only as strong as our supporters, and your volunteer and financial support is essential to our success. Thank you for helping us make America safer and more secure.
The Six Day War between Israel and hate filled Arab nations in 1967 culminated with a Jewish victory after being attacked. The important outcome of the victory was that Jerusalem was no longer a divided city; Israel had won the City of David from hateful Mohammedans.
It has always been a wonder to me as to why Israel did not immediately control the land Al-Aksa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock were located. Those blaspheming pieces of architecture were built smack dab on the location of the holiest site to the Jewish people – the Holy Temple first built by Solomon, rebuilt by Zerubbabel and beautified by Herod.
If Israel had immediately taken control of the management of the Temple Mount at worst there would be no difference in hostilities today and at best the beginning of yet another restored Jewish Temple. Now it would be difficult to impossible to establish management of the Temple Mount. The Arabs have convinced the West that those Mosques are in the realm of Mohammedan holiness as Mecca and Medina. Israel would have to deal with the public outrage of Western Lefties and Mohammedan faithful.
The only way that Israel could fully control the Temple Mount today is if yet another invasion by the surrounding Arab and Mohammedan nations transpire to once again obliterate Israel. Then I hope (pending an Israeli victory) someone in the Israeli government will do something to satisfy the heritage of observant Jews and expectant Christians.
One last thing: It boggles my mind that Western nations that are the cradle of Christianity do not recognize the city of Jerusalem as Israel’s Capitol city. Not even the United States of America maintains their Ambassador in Jerusalem. This is a cruel snub in the face of constant Arabic and Mohammedan attacks through the years.
I pray that peace be upon Jerusalem the City of David and Capitol of the returning King Jesus (Father I pray in Jesus' Name). Yeah I know, the “King Jesus” part is not exactly the same Jewish expectation, yet the Temple Mount under Jewish control is a united Evangelical Christian and Observant Jewish goal.
Just like yesterday, much of today was spent in activities that connected to Egypt’s past as my group and I toured mosques and then rode a boat along the Nile at night.
Being inside the mosques that we toured was quite a surreal experience. The two mosques we toured were the Amr Ibn al-Ass Mosque and the Sultan Hassan Mosque. Both mosques were amazing in both their size and the detailed artistry that covered both the exterior and interior of the buildings.
Overall, mosques have a pretty basic structure: there is an outdoor courtyard with a fountain in the interior for Muslims to cleanse themselves before prayer, and then there is an interior for prayer that includes a pulpit on which the imam orates. Because there are no pews like in a church, the interior of a mosque seems much more massive because of all the open space. I do not know why, but compared to any other things that I have done since being in the Middle East, standing inside a mosque makes me feel like I am in a foreign land and culture the most. I think the main reason for this fact is because when inside a mosque, I am inside a building whose design and reason for standing is completely devoid of any Western influence. The architecture is not Western. The interior design is not Western. The values and ideas preached inside the mosque are not Western. Foreignness is the pervasive feeling of the environment when I am inside a mosque, and I love it as this is the feeling you should have when going abroad.
Later that day I was able to interact with the source of the civilization that these mosques came from. Riding along the Nile was an experience I will never forget. I mean this was the same body of water on which the great civilization of Ancient Egypt depended on. This was the same body of water on which the baby Moses is said to have ridden along inside a wicker basket. In addition to the realization that I was riding along Egypt’s lifeline, I also marveled in the way modern Egypt has made the riverside quite beautiful. Cafes and docks line the sides as the lights of Cairo’s hotels and skyscrapers color the night sky.
All in all, this was not a bad day.
The remainder of Cairo was a lot of fun. We visited the Cairo Antiquities Museum, which is a must see. The museum feels like it's frozen in time, but not the time of the Pharoh's. Instead, it's like stepping into the eighteen hundreds. The museum has a very Victorian feel to it--it's stuffed wall to ceiling with antiquities with very little organization. There are wooden and glass cases filled with coins and jewlery and the aisles of the museum are crammed with stray sarcophagi and statues, and you can't help but stub your toe on pieces from thousands of years ago. There was a special room just for mummies. Not mummies in sarcophagi, but mummies that had been removed from their cases, and in some case their wrappings. There were several Pharohs including Ramses, who still had some hair. I have to say, I found the whole thing incredibly creepy. The museum also houses Tutamkamens treasure, which I'd grown up seeing pictures of. I kind of felt about seeing it the same way I felt when I saw the Mona Lisa--you're so familiar with it that you don't get anything from actually looking at it in the flesh, but you're filled with this amazing reverence none the less. The only difference was that when I saw the Mona Lisa I didn't have Steve Martin's rendition of "King Tut" in my head. The treasure itself is really amazing, though it kind of sickens me to think of all that wealth for one person, and one dead person at that. I was a bit suprised that so many things were made out of wood, including two or three of his outer sarcophagi (he had a bunch and they fit into each other like Russian dolls) but my friendm, who came equipped with a guide book, told me that trees were so scarce in Ancient Egypt that wood was more valuable than gold. My favorite part of the museum, though, was a display case that housed ancient Egyptian wigs. They were huge and very wooly, they reminded me a little bit of over sized afros with braids attached to the back, sort of a cross betweeen and Afro and a mullet, I couldn't imagine wearing one, let alone keeping a straight face while others wore them!
The other highlight of Cairo was the time we spent in Islamic Cairo. Islamic Cairo is a portion of the city that houses the majority of Cairo's mosques (the actual number is quite impressive, but I don't know it off of the top of my head, try Wikipedia). In order to be respectful the girls tried to dress conservatively for our time there. That meant long pants, long sleeves, closed toed shoes and I carried a head scarf with me for when we actually entered the mosque. It turns out that most people didn't really care, as long as you wore long pants and had your shoulders covered. That was good because it meant I could take off my long sleeve shirt, which was not conducive to the Cairo heat.
The inside of the mosques reminded me a lot of Cathdrals I've been in. They have the same degree of ornateness--stained glass windows, tiled walls and ceilings and those high domed ceilings that make you feel really tiny and insignificant. You have to take off your shoes to go inside, and in some places you carry your shoes with you. It's disrespectful to let the soles of your shoes point at anybody, or to have them point up, so it's safer to carry them with their soles together.
My favorite part of the mosques were the minorets, which you could climb up from the roof. The roofs themselves offered great views of Cairo and Cairo's roof tops, but the minorets made you feel like you could see forever. Climbing up the minorets was frightening because they are all very narrow, and steep and have spiral staircases. At some point in all the minorets we went up there were portions of the staircase which were so dark I could not see in front of me. This is frightening on the way up, but paralyzing on the way down. The stairs are different heights, so you step off one and never know if you will reach another one or not. At one point my friend Caroline was ahead of me, and I called out to her to see if she had reached the light yet. She said no, and I put out my hand in front of me and touched her back. She was on the step right in front of me and I couldn't see her. Once when we were at the top of a minoret, it was time for the call to afternoon prayers. The mosque started its recorded chant that calls Muslims to prayer, but we were in the middle of Islamic Cairo, so all the mosques started their chants at the same time. The noise combined with the street sounds of Cairo and was magnificent, echoing everywhere.
I have to go because my time at the internet cafe is almost out, but I'll try to make it back later tonight to write up Aswan and Luxor. Keep tuned!
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