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Focus on the Family Feb. 5: Patrick Sookhdeo Interview

February 5, 2008 by frontinus | Counter-terror, Denmark, Europe, Islamification, Sharia, UK, USA, clash of civilizations | 07:47:19 | Comments [0] |

On February 5 and 6, Patrick Sookhdeo of the Barnabus Fund will be interviewed on Focus on the Family - a must-hear interview:

Radical Islam’s Threat to the Western World (Part 1 of 2)

Global Jihad
Patrick Sookhdeo, a renowned authority on radical Islam, discusses the threat jihadist ideology poses to Christianity and western society. (Part 1 of 2)……[.........]

Guest Biography

Patrick Sookhdeo is an international authority on Islamic jihadist ideology, serving as a consultant for the British and NATO militaries. He is also an author, a lecturer and the International Director of the Barnabas Fund, a relief and development agency supporting persecuted Christian minorities around the world. Sookhdeo holds a Ph.D. from London University’s School of Oriental and African Studies and two Doctor of Divinity degrees from other institutions. His books include Global Jihad, A Christian’s Pocketguide to Islam, and Islam: The Challenge to the Church.

Get Sookhdeo’s best-selling book Global Jihad here:


Finley: Global jihad is not a cyclical threat

by frontinus | Counter-terror | 04:36:10 | Comments [0] |

From Nolan Finley at forums.detnews.com/blogs/

Don’t let terror slip from radar screen

While American voters and their presidential candidates are singularly focused on the national economy, Pete Hoekstra still has his eyes on global Islamic jihad.And sometimes the congressman from Holland feels like he’s the only one watching.

“Global jihad is alive and well,” says Hoekstra, the ranking Republican on the House Intelligence Committee. “I am not taking my eye off that ball.”Radar Screen

Hoekstra says the presidential candidates, as well as President Bush in last week’s State of the Union address, do the nation a disservice by not keeping the spotlight tightly on the terrorism threat.

“We are as much at danger today as we were on 9-11,” he says. “When the politicians ignore or downplay the threat, it just makes us all more complacent about our security.”

Right now, Hoekstra is looking toward the Netherlands, where a right-wing Dutch politician and filmmaker plans to release a short documentary linking the Quran to violence. The film reportedly ends with a copy of the Muslim holy book ablaze.

Hoekstra worries that the film, if allowed to air, will spark a wave of violence similar to the one that erupted after Danish newspapers published cartoons depicting images of Mohammed.

Few American newspapers reprinted the cartoons when writing about the controversy. Borders-Waldenbooks refused to stock a magazine that included the images out of fear of inciting violence.

But Hoekstra is more fearful that Western countries will suppress the film in the interest of keeping the peace.

Accommodating Muslim sensibilities to keep the radicals from exploding, he says, is dangerous because doing so will ultimately erode Western values.

“They’re using our values against us,” Hoekstra says. “We want to be tolerant of other religions and sensitive to people’s feelings, but in doing so we toss out our commitment to free speech.”

Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende confirmed the values struggle when he urged filmmaker Geert Wilders to exercise restraint, saying, “The Netherlands has a tradition of freedom of speech, religion and beliefs. The Netherlands also has a tradition of respect, tolerance and responsibility.”

Hoekstra says the obsessive European urge not to offend is giving rise to isolated Islamic communities, where Muslims demand to be allowed to live under strict sharia law.

“They’re pleading for religious tolerance, but what they’re really asking for is to impose their values on the West,” Hoekstra says.

Hoekstra says the reason presidential politics are now so preoccupied with the economy is that it’s something real to voters, while terrorism, as the distance from Sept. 11 grows, is becoming more concept than reality.

The economy will go up and down. And obviously a president unschooled in economic matters can cause a lot of damage.

But global jihad is not a cyclical threat. A president unprepared or unwilling to deal with it could move America closer to the European model of suppressing its own traditions to keep the jihadists from erupting.

Nolan Finley is editorial page editor of The News. Reach him at nfinley@detnews.com or (313) 222-2064. Read his blog at forums.detnews.com/blogs/, and watch him at 8:30 p.m. Fridays on “Am I Right?” on Channel 56