Monday, July 28, 2014

Historical Muslim Imperialism Vicious and Lethal

Jesus Crucixion vs MO death to infidel toon
John R. Houk
© July 28, 2014
 
A Google plus (G+) person sent me a video that explains the truth of the genocidal empire building of Islamic conquest prior to the Crusades. In case you are unaware Muslim Apologists and Left Wing sympathizers have made a revisionist history point to villainized Christianity and especially the Crusades as vicious murdering aggressors that eclipses any brutality to poor victim Islam ever perpetrated.
 

You have to understand that viciousness and the slaughter of innocents assigned by these historical revisionists does not compare to the genocidal conquests in the name of Islam. Historical revisionists leave out and fail to tell the full story of Islam. Well Muslim Apologists and Leftists, here’s a dose of one-sidedness to even the score a little.

 
JRH 7/28/14
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Finally an objective view on the crusades. Thanks so much for this production and for sharing it! it would be great if you could produce a part 5 about the present situation, Nigeria, Syria, Iraq, Nigeria, Egypt, Indonesia... the struggle continues!
 
[Blog Editor: Edited from the original by spellcheck.]
 
 
Posted by DivineSolja
Published on Feb 25, 2013
 
Historical highlights of Christianity's armed struggle of survival against Islam, will complete video series up to the 20th century.

This video goes through the centuries of major Islamic atrocities to the Christian world before any Crusade was launched. (632 AD - 1061 AD)
 
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[Blog Editor: This part two was not a part of the G+ share.]
 
 
Published by DivineSolja
Published on Apr 15, 2013
 
Christians strike back!

Historical highlights of Christianity's armed struggle of survival against Islam, will complete video series up to the 20th century.

This video concentrates on the era of the Crusades and how they helped prevent further Islamic advancements to the west. (1071 AD - 1291 AD)
 
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Published by DivineSolja
Published on Jun 2, 2013
 
Historical highlights of Christianity's armed struggle of survival against Islam, will complete video series up to the 20th century.

This video is mainly about the Ottoman wars in Europe, it includes the fall of Constantinople, the siege of Vienna and the battle of Granada. (1299 AD - 1683 AD)
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Published by DivineSolja
Published on Nov 19, 2013
 
Historical highlights of Christianity's armed struggle of survival against Islam, will complete video series up to the 20th century.

This video is mainly about the Greek, Serbian, Bulgarian and Romanian wars of independence. Also shows how much the Russian empire dedicated to helping oppressed Christians (1804 AD - 1878 AD)

Part 5 will be about the Armenian, Assyrian and Greek genocides and should also state the Islamic atrocities of the 20th century afterwards.
 
 
 
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[Blog Editor: I could not locate DivineSolja’s promised 5th part pertaining to Armenian, Assyrian and Greek genocides. So I did a search of each genocide separately on Youtube and I will select the best vids with the best condensed info.]
 
 
Published by 1915GenocidalTurks
Published on Jun 8, 2011
 
The Armenian Journey - A Story Of an Armenian Genocide /Documentary Film /"The Armenian Journey: From Despair to Hope in Rhode Island," a film by The Genocide Education Project (GenEd), tells the story of Armenian Genocide survivor Margaret Garabedian Der Manuelian, told through the narrative voice of her great-granddaughter, 21 year old Dalita Getzoyan. The film was funded by a grant from the Rhode Island Council for the Humanities and designed to support educators in the region and beyond.

For teaching resources on the Armenian Genocide: www.TeachGenocide.com

For More Information About The Armenian Genocide


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamidian...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armenian...
 
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Published by Stila08
Published on Feb 10, 2008
 
Assyrian Genocide
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Published by MagnificentCentury
Published on Jan 17, 2014
 
The Greek genocide, part of which is known as the Pontic genocide, was the systematic ethnic cleansing of the Christian Ottoman Greek population from its historic homeland in Asia Minor, central Anatolia, Pontus, and the former Russian Caucasus province of Kars Oblast during World War I and its aftermath (1914--23). It was instigated by the government of the Ottoman Empire against the Greek population of the Empire and it included massacres, forced deportations involving death marches, summary expulsions, arbitrary executions, and destruction of Christian Orthodox cultural, historical and religious monuments. According to various sources, several hundred thousand Ottoman Greeks died during this period. Some of the survivors and refugees, especially those in Eastern provinces, took refuge in the neighbouring Russian Empire. After the end of the 1919--22 Greco-Turkish War, most of the Greeks remaining in the Ottoman Empire were transferred to Greece under the terms of the 1923 population exchange between Greece and Turkey. Other ethnic groups were similarly attacked by the Ottoman Empire during this period, including Assyrians and Armenians, and some scholars consider those events to be part of the same policy of extermination.

The Allies of World War I condemned the Ottoman government-sponsored massacres as crimes against humanity. More recently, the International Association of Genocide Scholars passed a resolution in 2007 affirming that the Ottoman campaign against Christian minorities of the Empire, including the Greeks, was genocide. Some other organisations have also passed resolutions recognising the campaign as a genocide, as have the parliaments of Greece, Cyprus and Sweden.

At the outbreak of World War I, Asia Minor was ethnically diverse, its population including Turks, Azeris, Greeks, Armenians, Kurds, Zazas, Circassians, Assyrians, Jews, and Laz people.

Among the causes for the Turkish campaign against the Greek population was a fear that the population would aid the Ottoman Empire's enemies, and a belief among some Turks that to form a modern nation state it was necessary to purge from the territories of the state those national groups who could threaten the integrity of a modern Turkish nation state.

According to a German military attaché, the Ottoman minister of war Ismail Enver had declared in October 1915 that he wanted to "solve the Greek problem during the war... in the same way he believe[d] he solved the Armenian problem."
Origins

The Greek presence in Asia Minor has been dated to at least the time of Homer around 800 BCE. Prior to their conquest by the Turkic people the Greeks were one of several indigenous peoples living in Asia Minor. The geographer Strabo referred to Smyrna as the first Greek city in Asia Minor. Greeks referred to the Black Sea as the "Euxinos Pontos" or "hospitable sea" and starting in the eighth century BCE they began navigating its shores and settling along its coast. The most notable Greek cities of the Black Sea were Trebizond, Sampsounta, Sinope and Heraclea Pontica. In medieval times Trebizond became an important trade hub and capital of its own state, the Empire of Trebizond.

In the summer of 1914 the Special Organization (Teşkilat-ı Mahsusa), assisted by government and army officials, conscripted Greek men of military age from Thrace and western Anatolia into Labour Battalions in which hundreds of thousands died. Sent hundreds of miles into the Interior of Anatolia, these conscripts were employed in road-making, building, tunnel excavating and other field work but their numbers were heavily reduced through either privations and ill-treatment or by outright massacre by their Ottoman guards. This program of forced conscription later expanded to other regions of the Empire including Pontus

Conscription of Greek men was supplemented by massacres and by deportations involving death marches of the general population. Greek villages and towns would be surrounded by Ottomans and their inhabitants massacred. Such was the story in Phocaea (Greek:
Φώκαια
), a town in western Anatolia twenty-five miles (40 km) northwest of Smyrna, on 12 June 1914 where the slain bodies of men, women and children were thrown down a well.

In July 1915 the Greek chargé d'affaires explained that the deportations "cannot be any other issue than an annihilation war against the Greek nation in Turkey and as measures hereof they have been implementing forced conversions to Islam, in obvious aim to, that if after the end of the war there again would be a question of European intervention for the protection of the Christians, there will be as few of them left as possible."

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