From the archive of Abdelrahim Ali
MB, Erdogan takes Islam hostage in France
The Muslim Brotherhood has long been trying to take control over Islam in France, taking advantage of Muslim French projects.
Causeur, a French magazine, has shed the light on researcher Dr. Abdul Rahim Ali’s article regarding Islam in France and how it got kidnapped by the Brotherhood and Turkey’s Erdogan.
During the last twenty years, France has seen many initiatives aimed at organizing Islam on its soil, according to the magazine.
It began in 1999 with the creation of a federation representing the Muslims of France following a suggestion by the French Minister of the Interior at the time Jean-Pierre Chevènement.
It was under the mandate of Nicolas Sarkozy that this project took shape in 2003 with the creation of the French Council for the Muslim Religion, to end with a speech by President Emmanuel Macron in which he declared that Islam was going through a world crisis.
On the other hand, France witnessed many failed attempts aimed at organizing French Islam, as it did not address the main issue, which relates to the fact that "Islam" in France was kidnapped by the "terrorist organization".
On the other hand, France witnessed many attempts aimed at the "French Islam" organization, but its fate is the family of failure, as it did not address the issue of the issue, which relates to the fact that "Islam" in France was kidnapped from the "terrorist organization".
The article pointed out that real issues would emerge with the arrival of Islamic political groups that believe that an Islamic State must be built across the universe. The realization of this plan is designed in six stages theorized by the founder of the brotherhood Hassan al-Banna and that each member of the Muslim Brotherhood has a duty to carry out in their countries of residences.
The plan has these six stages that include the Muslim individual, the Muslim family, the Muslim society, the Islamic government and the government of the world, while the last stage expresses the founder's ambition to establish a world caliphate regime, in other words, to dominate the world.
The article stressed that this doctrine is considered by them as a “Brotherhood Quran” instead of the Quran of God in which ordinary Muslims believe.
Moreover, the spider's web strategy has held Islam hostage in France. It benefits from all the initiatives of the authorities aimed at officially recognizing it, as well as its leaders and representatives.
This is how it happened with Sarkozy's project in 2003 which granted the group's representatives the right to represent Muslims in France before the French authorities, through free choice, mosques and federations.
The dismantling of this organization, according to the article, cannot be done only by prohibiting its structures and associations or by drying up its sources of financing. It must also refute the ideas used to recruit its members, bringing to light the maneuvers used by its leaders in serious debates, revolving around the ideological bases in which they believe and which ultimately lead to the concept of separatism.
To succeed in this strategy, the decision-maker must respect three fundamental principles, the first: not to confuse Islam as a religion with the organization in question. We must also deal with the crisis through the prism of foreign influence and not as a problem intrinsic to the Muslim religion itself.
Such treatment would avoid the victim discourse of persecution and Islamophobia to which executives and tenors of the organization will immediately resort in the media throughout the world.
The second: that this new policy be carried out on the grounds of national consensus; as the problem primarily affects national security, particularly through the problem of terrorism.
Finally, we must stop dealing with the problem of the construction of Islam in France as we dealt with the model of the emancipation of the Jews under Napoleon I as they are two different models.