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Islam at school: a question of self-defense

Don’t tell me you’re surprised.

After the Bedford, La Voie and other schools in Montreal, it is now the Saint-Maxime school in that is making waves.

Islamic prayers in classes, refusal to discuss sexuality, discussions in Arabic in the corridors, delays justified by attending the mosque, virulent and uninhibited homophobia, etc.

Conquest

And how many other under-the-radar schools where the situation is similar?

When it is not the irruption of militant Islam into the daily life of the school, what is illegal is a school which rents its premises on weekends so that Islamic values ​​are taught there. , which is just as illegal.

Immensely courageous, the director of a daycare reported the penetration of the same Islamic radicalism in her environment.

I said to an acquaintance from Quebec City: get ready, it’s coming to you.

He answers me: we’re probably already there, it’s just that we haven’t searched.

Tuesday of this week was the graduation ceremony at HEC Montréal, where I taught for years.

Two students took to the podium wearing a keffiyeh, while the toga during these ceremonies aims to erase differences to highlight the common condition of graduates.

The students were asked to remove it. They refused. Management let it happen. They even had their official photo.

Bernard Drainville says he wants to tighten legal provisions around secularism. He is quite right. He fights admirably.

However, I feel that he is alone in this government on these questions.

And what are the laws worth if local officials everywhere look the other way and let it go so as not to get into trouble?

This religious radicalism works through intimidation and guilt, and it is clear that the courage to resist it is rare.

Imagine a school principal when teachers share the same religious ideology as students.

We are facing a categorical, virulent, assumed, determined rejection of the basic values ​​of our society.

Useful idiots

We must say things as they are: it is a declaration of cultural war made against our society, and this offensive finds relays in political, media and intellectual circles.

When Ruba Ghazal says that the government “makes her feel too much” as soon as it talks about immigration, when Haroun Bouazzi says that Parliament, every day, works to build “this Other” whose culture would be “dangerous and inferior”, they harm, they undermine, they undermine instead of helping.

In the coming days, also look at the useful idiots in the commentary industry who will try to drown out the fish.

We are confronted with an aggressive, conquering, self-confident ideology.

All the more sure of herself as she sees the moral degradation of our society, which has difficulty admitting that there is a right to self-defense.

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