on 03-10-2015 02:24 PM
YEP! I warned over 5 years ago that this was coming also.It gets worse.All of this is in the Bible.There is a religious war coming soon.Sorry to advise but the atheists lose.
It turns nuclear.
on 08-10-2015 12:27 PM
The replicas are made of plastic, wood or blunt metal, so obviously, not a real sword
the one confiscated was not made of
wood or plastic. it was metal. pls refer
to the senate hearing details.
on 08-10-2015 12:54 PM
the unescapable fact remains that if Australians were not fighting ISIS then ISIS would not be encouraging disaffected teenagers to kill Australians
that is similar to what the
hizb ut-tahrir are preaching.
thankfully, the muslim community
have someone like dr rifi
Dr Jamal Rifi: The Aussie doctor taking on IS
I WAS dismayed to hear this morning’s report about a Melbourne schoolboy being identified as the ‘white jihadi’.
Likewise, the story on the weekend that two teenagers had been arrested at Sydney Airport on their way to support IS. Congratulations to the Immigration and Border Protection for preventing those boys from making a deadly mistake, but it just shows what a big task it is to fight against radicalisation when it is happening to our children in our homes, via social media, without parents even knowing. It’s a scary prospect, but one that we have to face.
I am not an expert on terrorism, nor do I claim to be. Likewise I am not a religious scholar or leader.
I am merely a suburban general practitioner who is lucky enough to speak to dozens of my community members each day and where I can offer them help or advice.
When I saw the picture of Khaled Sharouf’s son holding the severed head I was deeply shocked, perhaps more than most, because I had known his family both in Lebanon during the civil war and in here in Australia.
I knew that he was diagnosed with a mental illness during his trial following Operation Pendennis, which led to his imprisonment. I knew that he fled Australia fearful for his life after two of his associates were shot dead.
Yet above all this — and indeed because of it — I knew then I had to speak out against his actions and those of the so-called Islamic State.
For it was clear to me that Sharouf, like his IS brethren, was a rogue and violent aberration. I didn’t want his actions to be seen as condoned by Australian Muslims just as I didn’t want the general public to think that any true Australian Muslims are supporters of the barbaric IS.
Moreover, I didn’t want my community to be seen as a risk to the safety and security of Australia and its citizens, as I know the majority are grateful, responsible and law abiding citizens of this great country.
I was even more shocked when I became aware of the death threat to myself and my family.
The hardest thing to stomach was that it was from Mohamed Elomar, who is also fighting with IS, and I have known the Elomar family all my life — his father, Mamdouh Elomar, is one of my oldest friends.
After consulting with my family, we all decided that we should take precautions but that I needed to be even more vocal in exposing the true nature of IS and its Australian supporters.
I have always believed that actions speak louder than words, yet in this case my words have become actions.
For someone who has always shielded my family from the rough and tumble of public life, I now have to rely on them to publicly support me. This meant I had to get them to participate in Australian Story, a long and intrusive process where minute details of our daily lives were being filmed for public display and scrutiny on ABC TV (the program airs tonight).
I know I made the right decision and hope this conviction remains true after watching the episode.
The core of my belief is that our world must be expunged of the obscene actions and ideology of Islamic State and its ilk. I feel a personal responsibility in making this happen as this is done in the name of my religion.
This is a struggle for the soul of our Islamic faith, which has been hijacked by IS. I pray that one day their barbarity and belief systems will be something we recoil at in horror as we read it in the history books, just as we do at Nazi Germany or the Spanish Inquisition.
But to put them in the past, we have to continue to build a future for Muslims that places religious totalitarianism, political violence, and vulgar extremism as immiscible with the Islamic mindset worldwide. Defending and celebrating the successes of the multiculturalism, tolerance, acceptance and pluralism that we enjoy in Australia is not just the other side to Islamic extremism, it is the solution to it.
I know I speak the truth and am supported by the overwhelming majority in the Australian Muslim community. We need to speak up about the beautiful principles by which we purport to live, and which demand that far from harming our fellow Australian citizens, we are bound to serve and protect them.
We have a beautiful faith tradition, that teaches us to be exemplary and compassionate human beings. Unfortunately our communities have been contaminated with misanthropic peoples with destructive views and behaviours.
I personally feel that the best way to decant Islam and Muslim communities of these contaminants is by passing it through the filter of Western pluralism and democratic values. Our traditions and beliefs are most compatible with freedom and liberty and opposed to intolerance and totalitarianism.
And so, to action. This means not just military operations abroad and police operations at home, but also tackling the problem at its very foundation. We need a comprehensive counter-radicalisation strategy in which the focus is on young Muslim minds who will shape the future of the Muslim community not just in Australia but around the world.
This has to come from a position of religious and moral strength, not weakness. Instead of just shielding vulnerable minds from radical preachers and slick recruitment propaganda — which may be all but impossible — we must enable them to see extremism for what it is by teaching them that it has no place in our peaceful religion or any civilised society. We may not always be able to protect our young from the influence of evil but we can empower them to reject it.
Talk isn’t always cheap, as I know from personal experience, but action is what builds change. We must not just speak noble words but live by them.
http://www.australianoftheyear.org.au/honour-roll/?view=fullView&recipientID=300
on 08-10-2015 01:07 PM
Julia whether it was made of plastic .wood or blunt metal... it was still only a replica or fake.. ( which is the main point) lots referred to it as a plastic sword
https://www.google.com/search?q=terrorism+sydney+plastic+sword&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8
on 08-10-2015 01:08 PM
'replicas' usually resemble the real thing.
on 08-10-2015 01:09 PM
also of interest is that the sword is only relevent to Shia, not sunni so nothing to do with IS who are Sunni
on 08-10-2015 01:11 PM
anyway apart from all that , I hope they catch the people involved in the shooting of an innocent man
on 08-10-2015 01:14 PM
Dr Jamal Rifi had an Opinion piece in one of this weekend's papers in Sydney.
I can't find it online - maybe a Subscription only piece.
A beautifully written piece in which he (Father of the Year 2015) pleads for more fathers to become involved in the raising and guiding of their sons particularly in the matters relating to Friday's events.
DEB
on 08-10-2015 01:16 PM
Julia whether it was made of plastic .wood or blunt metal... it was still only a replica or fake.. ( which is the main point)
not really.
if it was plastic, it would seem rather
unusual for the police to confiscate it
and you kept insisting it was plastic.
replicas are meant to resemble the
real thing.
replica guns are only fake, right?
08-10-2015 01:18 PM - edited 08-10-2015 01:18 PM
the gun used last week was obviously real but the sword was obviously fake
on 08-10-2015 01:19 PM
@debra9275 wrote:also of interest is that the sword is only relevent to Shia, not sunni so nothing to do with IS who are Sunni
since a lot of resources were being
used at the time, perhaps the police
did not have enough arabic speaking
offices at the time to recognise what
the sword symbolised.