Threats
have forced the German city to cancel the Rose Monday children's
carnival parade. The reason: the terrorists named potential targets,
including carnival parades. No carnival in Munich. āRamadan instead of carnival: the failure of the multicultural project,ā writes Anna Diouf with the necessary irony.
In
cities across Europe, concrete bollards are intended to prevent cars
with famous mentally disturbed people at the wheel from hurtling into
the celebrating crowd. In places where this is not possible or where
fear of attacks prevails, parades and events are canceled, as in
Nuremberg.
For several years, Jews in Germany have been
advised not to be recognizable on the street with yarmulkes, fringes,
and words in Hebrew.
While carnival revelers and fools
have to limit themselves, Ramadan can take place undisturbed. And so in a
Germany stunned by the attacks, Islam turns on its lights. There must
be a moment when we understand the logic of multicultural madness. And
this should be one of them.
The traditional carnival
parade in Kempten has been cancelled because there are not enough
concrete barriers and the high costs of the alternative measures are not
āsustainableā.
Beatrice Achterberg, editor of the Neue ZĆ¼rcher Zeitung,
attacks the appeasement of Islam: āNow that Germany has been shaken by
several terrorist attacks, often of Islamist origin. Perhaps it is more a
sign of submission than of toleranceā.
All this is
accepted as the new ānormalā. And since the famous ālocal customsā have
to adapt, Ramadan can be celebrated undisturbed, with the lights of
Ramadan in Frankfurt, Cologne and Berlin.
Thatās how the
West is. Culture is being sold off. And suddenly there is nothing more
important than culture, but of course not your own, but foreign culture.
And
in the context of the global rise of political Islam, the dispossession
of European culture is an act of grabbing tolerated with great naivety.
The
model is London, which under the leadership of its Muslim mayor
embarked on this type of Islamization last year and inaugurated the
Ramadan lighting near the famous Piccadilly Circus. More Ramadan lights in London, while it is āwinter holidayā in France instead of Christmas. One day they will introduce Ramadan as a national religious holiday in Europe.