Hungary’s Jews have formally welcomed the Third World Muslim invasion of that country, in stark contrast to that government’s official policy of forcibly blocking the invasion.
The Jewish announcement—made by András Heisler, the Chairman of the Federation of Jewish Communities in Hungary in a Euronews interview—may mark the beginning of a split between Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and the Jews in that country.
Previously Orbán had gone out of his way to grovel before Hungary’s Jews, and earlier this year even addressed the World Jewish Congress’s annual general meeting held in Budapest, telling more than 500 delegates from around the world that he condemned anti-Semitism and that “the Hungarian Government’s response to growing anti-Semitism is to recall and reinforce the examples and tradition of good Christians.”
The day before the WJC meeting, the Hungarian police, acting on Orbán’s orders, banned a Jobbik party demonstration against the WJC meeting. Jobbik overturned the banning order through the courts, so Orbán instructed the Minister of Interior to “use all lawful means” to prevent the event and requested the Supreme Court to “examine what legal means Hungary had at its disposal to enforce its Constitution.”
Orbán clearly believed that all this pro-Jewish posturing would win him the support of the Jewish community—an illusion which has now been shattered with the latest announcement from Heisler.
According to the Euronews report, the Hungarian Jewish leader said that if “we look at history, we find many examples when Jews and Muslims lived together in peace and harmony, a valuable community. I don’t think we should be afraid of living together again.”
This was a reference to the time when the Islamic world militarily invaded Spain and southern Europe, and Jews and Muslims actively worked together to attack Europeans. In Spain, for example, when the Muslims were finally expelled in 1492, that country’s Jews were kicked out as well, after it was shown that they had actively cooperated with the Muslim invaders.
A similar scenario played itself out during the time of the Ottoman Empire, and for many hundreds of years the Ottoman capital of Istanbul (previously the Eastern Roman Empire’s city of Constantinople before the Muslims violently seized it in 1453), was the scene of the single largest and most influential Jewish center in the world, with Jews holding important government posts under the Sultans.
Heisler went on to say that he did “not think that we should be afraid of others’ religion. We should be afraid of terrorism. And that is the government’s and the European Union’s responsibility—to pick out terrorists from the crowd of migrants and refugees. It is their job to minimize the risk and danger.”
Orbán’s publicly-declared opposition to the invasion has been primarily based on religion—he earlier warned against the specifically Muslim nature of the Third World invasion.
Writing an opinion piece in the Frankfurt Allgemeine Zeitung, Orbán said at the time that the growing Muslim influx was threatening Europe’s “Christian roots” and that his “country did not want to admit large numbers of Muslims.”
“Those arriving have been raised in another religion, and represent a radically different culture. Most of them are not Christians, but Muslims. That is an important question, because Europe and European culture have Christian roots. Or is it not already and in itself alarming that Europe’s Christian culture is barely in a position to uphold Europe’s own Christian values?
“Is it not worrying in itself that European Christianity is now barely able to keep Europe Christian? There is no alternative, and we have no option but to defend our borders.”
His position is now openly at odds with the official pronouncement of the Hungarian Jews, and of the WJC, which in a formal statement announced that the “Hungarian Jews pledge support for refugees.”
According to the WJC statement, the Federation of Hungarian Jewish Communities (Mazsihisz) and the Hungarian Autonomous Orthodox Jewish Community (MAOIH) said that “supporting refugees is a commandment of Judaism” and that they were “shocked about racist hate speech often directed against those arriving to Hungary.”
For the Jewish communities it is of high importance to help those in dispair.[sic] Supporting outcasts and refugees is a commandment of Judaism. We are concerned and shocked about racist hate speech often directed against those arriving to Hungary.
“We are grateful for the help civil society is providing and we ourselves offer further assistance in order to ease the trouble of those in need.”
Of course, the WJC has been silent about Israel’s refusal to take in any “refugees”—a move which came as no surprise to observers already conversant with Jewish hypocrisy on race and immigration.
Orbán has therefore, probably inadvertently, set himself up for a conflict with organized Jewry both at home and internationally, and it can be expected that the Jewish lobby will, through its controlled Western media and governments, soon turn up the pressure to get him and his party removed from power.
Source Article from http://newobserveronline.com/hungarys-jews-welcome-third-world-invasion-set-stage-for-showdown-with-orban/
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