Muslim cleric: When women obey Islamic law, ‘the Jews will be disappeared and Jerusalem be ready for a new conquest’
August 17, 2020 3:00 PM BY ROBERT SPENCER
Imagine if a cleric of any other religion said something like this, which would never and should never happen. But this will receive no attention. It is taken for granted that Muslim clerics will say this sort of thing from time to time, and that it means nothing, nothing at all — taken for granted even among those who insist that Islam is a religion of peace and tolerance.

“Jerusalem will be conquered, Jews will be wiped out, says Turkish jihadist cleric Nurettin Yildiz,” Nordic Monitor, August 16, 2020:
Jerusalem will be conquered when Turkish women abide by the Charter of Medina (of the Prophet Muhammad in 622) instead of the Istanbul Convention on combatting violence against women, stated Nurettin Yildiz, a jihadist and anti-Semitic Turkish cleric who has called for armed jihad.
“When Turkish women abide by the Medina Charter instead of the Istanbul… and prefer the protection of God rather than human protection, the Jews will be disappeared and Jerusalem be ready for a new [Islamic] conquest,” Yildiz said during a conference titled “Jerusalem and the martyrs of the Mavi Marmara [flotilla]” and organized by the Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief (IHH) on February 20.
Yildiz, a radical imam who is close to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is a leading figure among conservative and pro-government groups claiming the Istanbul Convention undermines traditional family values and structure. He is a frequent keynote speaker at both youth events organized by the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and conferences and lectures sponsored by pro-government groups and foundations.
Yildiz openly advocates armed jihad, describes democracy as a system for infidels and says it can only be used as a means of deception to rise to power. He is the man who radicalized the young al-Nusra-affiliated police officer who assassinated the Russian ambassador to Turkey in December 2016….
Yildiz himself admitted his connections to jihadist groups in Syria in a letter he wrote right after the leader of Ahrar al-Sham, Hassan Abboud, also known by the nom de guerre Abu Abdullah al-Hamawi, was killed in September 2014 in a suicide attack on a high-level meeting in Syria’s Idlib province. In the letter, dated Sept. 10, 2014, Yildiz recalls how he made a trip to Idlib to meet Abu Abdullah and how they discussed the jihadist fight against the infidels. He described the killing of Abu Abdullah as “a great loss to the cause,” regretting that his invitation to host him in Istanbul had not come to fruition…. |