Alabama store owner posts sign saying ‘BBQ PORK RESTURANT IS SAFEST NO MUSLIMS INSIDE’

Alabama 'No Muslims' signThe fuss over a sign in Alabama at an electronics store reading “BBQ PORK RESTURANT (sic) IS SAFEST NO MUSLIMS INSIDE” shocked its longtime owner who said he doesn’t understand why it’s such a big deal.

Electronic Repair Company owner Chuck Biddinger, who put up the sign last week, said he meant the message as a joke. After all, he said, it wasn’t even the most offensive one he had ever posted.

That award goes to a sign he posted last May that read “A dog is wiser than a woman – it does not bark at its master,” earned heat from domestic violence groups in Alabama. “The women’s groups went ballistic,” he told the Daily News when he picked up the phone at his East Lake, Ala., shop.

But he said this sign, which has garnered national attention, has gotten more positive reaction than negative – and he has no plans to apologize to anyone offended. “I have gotten a few complaints about it, but for every one complaint about it I’ve had, 10 people tell me that they like it and support it,” he said.

He told local television station ABC 33/40 that while it was meant as a lighthearted joke, it was true. “Muslims do not eat pork,” he told the television station. “It’s a known fact that Muslims have tried to commit crimes in this country.”

New York Daily News, 10 December 2010

Facebook racist avoids prison sentence

A father-of-two who set up a racist Facebook group was told he was fortunate to have escaped a jail term.

Kalum Dyson, of Frances Street in Brighouse, created a group called “Pakis Die” on the social networking website. The 21-year-old also posted messages including one which said: “Help me shoot all the Pakis.” One of his listed friends, who is believed to have had an Asian boyfriend, complained to police after he sent her an invitation to join the group.

He pleaded guilty to a charge of sending an offensive or indecent, obscene or menacing electronic communication at Calderdale Magistrates’ Court yesterday. Dyson, who has children aged two years and just five-weeks-old and works as a floor layer, was given a community order. But chairman of the bench Tim Cole told him the offence was so serious it could have merited a jail term.

Dyson admitted setting up the site, which Facebook immediately removed, and told officers Muslims “should understand what the British Army was fighting for”. But he also said he was not racist, claiming he had “black” friends.

Dyson, who lives with his parents, was given a 12-month community order, to include 150 hours of unpaid community work, and a 30-day curfew. He must stay at home between the hours of 9pm and 5am. He was also ordered to pay £85 court costs.

Huddersfield Examiner, 10 December 2010

See also the Halifax Courier which reports Dyson’s lawyer as stating that her client “started the group to get people’s views on what they thought about the Army and ongoing protests against them by Muslims”.

Speak out against racism and Islamophobia conference tomorrow

Speak out against racism and Islamophobia

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Saturday 11 December

10am–6pm
Mary Ward House
5/7 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SN

• Ken Livingstone
• Doreen Lawrence OBE
• Shabana Mahmood MP, Shadow Home Office Minister
• Jack Dromey MP, Shadow Minister for Communities and Local Government
• Anas Altikriti British Muslim Initiative
• Sir Geoffrey Bindman
• Christine Blower General Secretary, National Union of Teachers
• David Smith London Citizens
• Kay Carberry Assistant General Secretary, TUC
• Rt.Rev Stephen Cottrell The Bishop of Chelmsford
• Dr. Edie Friedman Executive Director, Jewish Council for Racial Equality
• Dr. Jonathan Githens-Mazer Co-Director, European Muslim Research Centre (EMRC)
• Billy Hayes General Secretary, Communication Workers Union
• Diana Holland Assistant General Secretary (Equalities), Unite the Union
• Talha Jamil Ahmad Muslim Council of Britain
• Bruce Kent Vice President, Pax Christi
• Jean Lambert MEP Green Party
• Claude Moraes MEP Labour Party
• Lisa Nandy MP Labour Party
• Peter Oborne Daily Telegraph‘s chief political commentator
• Ismail Patel You Elect
• Kanja Sesay NUS Black Students’ Officer
• Martin Smith Love Music Hate Racism
• Hywel Williams MP Plaid Cymru
• Salma Yaqoob Leader, Respect Party

Conference themes include:
• Reversing the tide of reaction – racism and Islamophobia today
• Muslims under siege
• No racist concessions to the BNP and EDL
• Defending our freedoms – no to religious bans
• One Society Many Cultures

Media partner: New Statesman

Supported by:
• TUC
• Unite the Union
• CWU
• POA
• BECTU
• Unite Against Fascism
• British Muslim Initiative
• NUS Black Students Campaign
• Left Foot Forward
• Liberal Conspiracy

Registration fees:
Organisation delegates £20
Individuals £10 (waged) £5 (unwaged)

To register online please visit http://www.onesocietymanycultures.org/2010/11/conference-register/

Church cuts bishops where Muslims outnumber Christians by seven to one

Thus the headline in today’s Daily Telegraph. The recommendation by the Church of England’s Dioceses Commission that three dioceses in the Yorkshire area should be merged into one was flagged up well in advance. This issue has already been hammered to death by the Mail on Sunday back in October followed by the Daily Express and the Daily Star (see the response by ENGAGE).

Still, you can never have too many scaremongering articles about the Muslim threat to Christian civilisation, can you?

Elsewhere in the Torygraph, under the heading “A tipping point for religion in Britain?“, the Sunday Telegraph‘s Religious Affairs and Media Correspondent, Jonathan Wynne-Jones, tells us that it is

difficult not to see the merger – or axing depending on which way you’re looking at it – in the context of the rise of Islam in Britain. In Bradford, one of the dioceses that is being subsumed, Muslims make up as much as three-quarters of the population in some parishes.

A report published by the Church earlier this year discussed the issues facing clergy trying to minister in areas with high numbers of ethnic minorities. It revealed the percentage of Christians is as low as 10 per cent in some parishes.

When Michael Nazir-Ali, the former Bishop of Rochester, warned of “no-go areas” in Britain for non-Muslims, he was widely ridiculed and criticised, but the Church’s report suggests that his critics have their heads in the sand. Bleak and rather extreme it may have been, but statisticians have already predicted that by 2035 there will be more active Muslims in Britain than church-going Christians.

The claim that “Muslims make up as much as three-quarters of the population in some parishes” in Bradford is clearly an exaggeration. There is no parish in Bradford where the Muslim population reaches that figure, and there are just two parishes in which Muslims make up over 70% of the population (see below). With regard to the UK as a whole, to put Wynne-Jones’ claim that “the percentage of Christians is as low as 10 per cent in some parishes” in proportion, the CofE report that he cites, Sharing the Gospel of Salvation, found that there are only 1,000 parishes, out of a total of 13,000, in which more than 10% of people are of non-Christian faiths. Among these 1,000 parishes, the report identified one in Leicester where the Christian population was 10.8% and one in Bradford where the figure was 10.9%. As the tables below illustrate, the two parishes were hardly typical, even of these two cities with their untypically large populations of South Asian origin:

SGS table Bradford

Wynne-Jones writes that “statisticians have already predicted that by 2035 there will be more active Muslims in Britain than church-going Christians”, but the key phrases here are “active Muslims” and “church-going Christians”. Even if you accept the statistical analysis in the 2008 Christian Research Religious Trends report that Wynne-Jones cites (and the CofE dismissed its findings as “flawed and dangerously misleading”), the report stated that there were only 1.6 million Muslims living in Britain today compared with 41 million Christians. By 2035, Christian Reseach predicted, there would be 1.96 million active Muslims in Britain, compared with 1.63 million church-going Christians. So, if the number of active Muslims in the UK were to exceed the number of active Christians, then that would be primarily due to a decline in the number of Christians who practise their faith, rather than because there had been a dramatic increase in the number of Muslims.

As for Nazir-Ali’s disgraceful nonsense about “no-go areas”, he defined them as areas in which “a strict Muslim ideology” prevails and consequently “people of a different race or faith face physical attack”, although it was notable that he failed to specify where these areas were to be found. That was bad enough, but Wynne-Jones’ position is even worse. What he appears to be arguing is that non-Muslims face the threat of violent assault not just in areas supposedly dominated by “a strict Muslim ideology” but in areas where “active Muslims” outnumber church-going Christians. The CofE’s Sharing the Gospel of Salvation report of course suggested nothing of the sort, and its authors would undoubtedly be appalled to have their research misrepresented in this way.

See also the comments by ENGAGE.

Stoke-on-Trent Council rejects BNP motion against halal slaughter

Yesterday’s meeting of Stoke-on-Trent City Council debated a motion from the British National Party condemning halal slaughter. The BNP motion called for “a change in the law to minimise or prevent any further animal cruelty as a result of this barbaric method of slaughter” and for “an immediate ban on the use of all halal meat products in our schools”. It was heavily defeated.

Pits n Pots reports.

Catalan town becomes first in Spain to ban veil

LleidaA northern Spanish town brought into force Thursday a ban on Islamic face-covering veils in municipal buildings, the first such decree in the country.

The town of Lleida, population 120,000, approved in July a municipal ban on body-covering burqas or face-covering niqab garments at about 130 locations, ranging from civic centres to swimming pools. The law, implemented Thursday, was the first of its kind in Spain, where face-covering Islamic garments are seldom seen despite a sharp rise in immigration from Muslim countries over the past decade.

“I believe the burqa and the hijab, as well as similar garments that completely cover the face are an attack against equality between men and women, they are an attack against women’s dignity,” Lleida mayor Angel Ros said. “I believe also that equality is something which our society has fought several years for and there can be no reason, not religious, not cultural, that attacks this basic principle.”

The law prohibits the “use of the veil and other clothes and accessories which cover the face and prevent identification in buildings and installations of the town hall.” Repeat offenders face fines of €600.

AFP, 9 December 2010

Police arrest five men following disturbance at a Scunthorpe mosque

Scunthorpe Social Cultural and Islamic CentreFive arrests were made after a disturbance at a Scunthorpe mosque following a funeral.

Mourners were leaving the Pakistan Social Cultural And Islamic Centre in Parkinson Avenue at about 8.30pm on Tuesday, when a group approached them and are alleged to have shouted abuse and made threats. After being asked to leave the scene, they are then said to have forced their way into the building, where about 25 mourners, some of who had travelled long distances to attend the funeral, remained.

Abid Khan, member of the South Humber Racial Equality Council (SHREC) board, was at the funeral, but left before the disturbance. He said: “A lot of people there were from out of the area and started to panic. One minute you are mourning the loss of a loved one and the next, something like this happens.”

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Switzerland: federal committee recommends burqa ban in schools, offices

A government-appointed committee has supported a partial ban on the traditional Islamic burqa and the niqab. The Federal Commission on Women’s Issues calls for traditional full-face veils to be banned in government offices and in public schools. It is a move, the group says, to prevent gender discrimination. But the burqa is not alone in what the commission wants banned. WRS’s Alex Helmick asks Etiennette Verrey, president of the commission, whether women living in Switzerland should have the right to wear the burqa to work even if they work for the state.

WRS, 8 December 2010