---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Zenaan Harkness <zen@freedbms.net>
Date: Tue, 8 Sep 2015 07:09:24 +0000
Subject: Do ethnic Germans have the right to racial and cultural
strength? - was Re: At a Berlin church, Muslim refugees converting in
droves.
Hi Jim, a good question indeed. At Germany's 6% Islamic population set
to grow to 12% in the next few years, there is going to be quite the
shift there in the next couple of years.
Some questions which Germans might ask themselves:
1) Do ethnic Germans, who are citizens of Germany have:
- the right to racial strength, and or
- the right to cultural strength, and or
- the right to political strength, and or
- the right to religious strength,
in their own country (Germany)?
2) Is it racist for ethnic Germans of Germany to want to maintain
their political majority in Germany?
3) We note that Islamic Muslims strongly practice and proclaim their
rights to racial strength, cultural strength, religious strength, and
political strength, and more than this, the right to change/ convert
any and all non-Muslim jurisidictions (countries or part thereof) to
Sharia Law and Muslim religion. So:
- Are German citizens so naive to think that Muslims will change, just
because they crossed a "border"?
Regards,
Zenaan
On 9/7/15, Jim <jim.sovereign@optusnet.com.au> wrote:
FW: REFUGEE INVASION OF EUROPE.I wonder if Germany is committing cultural
and social suicide by allowing almost unrestrained admission of Islamic
migrant refugees. Many European countries are not as welcoming as Germany
towards the massive influx of refugees, and with good reason given the
problems caused by Muslims refusing to assimilate into their host country.
Jim
------ Forwarded Message ------
From: Frank & Halina <ffultiak@websurf.net.au>
Date: Mon, 7 Sep 2015 18:07:27 +1000
Subject: REFUGEE INVASION OF EUROPE.
At a Berlin church, Muslim refugees converting in droves
Hundreds embrace Christianity in possible effort to boost chances of winning
asylum, although most claim to be true believers
THE TIMES OF ISRAEL
By Kirsten Grieshaber
September 5, 2015
Iranian asylum-seeker Aref Movasaq Rodsari stands in the Trinity Church in
Berlin, Germany, Aug. 13, 2015. (AP/Gero Breloer)
Related Topics
a.. Germany
b.. migrant crisis
c.. Syria
BERLIN (AP) - Mohammed Ali Zonoobi bends his head as the priest pours holy
water over his black hair. "Will you break away from Satan and his evil
deeds?" pastor Gottfried Martens asks the Iranian refugee. "Will you break
away from Islam?"
"Yes," Zonoobi fervently replies. Spreading his hands in blessing, Martens
then baptizes the man "in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy
Ghost."
Mohammed is now Martin - no longer Muslim, but Christian.
Zonoobi, a carpenter from the Iranian city of Shiraz, arrived in Germany
with his wife and two children five months ago. He is one of hundreds of
mostly Iranian and Afghan asylum seekers who have converted to Christianity
at the evangelical Trinity Church in a leafy Berlin neighborhood.
Like Zonoobi, most say true belief prompted their embrace of Christianity.
But there's no overlooking the fact that the decision will also greatly
boost their chances of winning asylum by allowing them to claim they would
face persecution if sent home.
Martens recognizes that some convert in order to improve their chances of
staying in Germany - but for the pastor motivation is unimportant. Many, he
said, are so taken by the Christian message that it changes their lives. And
he estimates that only about 10 percent of converts do not return to church
after christening.
"I know there are - again and again - people coming here because they have
some kind of hope regarding their asylum," Martens said. "I am inviting them
to join us because I know that whoever comes here will not be left
unchanged."
Being Christian alone does not help an applicant, and Chancellor Angela
Merkel went out of her way this week to reiterate that Islam "belongs in
Germany." But in Afghanistan and Iran, for example, conversion to
Christianity by a Muslim could be punished by death or imprisonment, and it
is therefore unlikely that Germany would deport converted Iranian and Afghan
refugees back home.
None will openly admit to converting in order to help their asylum chances.
To do so could result in rejection of their asylum bid and deportation as
Christian converts. Several candidates for baptism at Martens' church would
not give their names out of fear of repercussions for their families back
home.
Most said their decision was based on belief, but one young Iranian woman
said she was convinced most people had joined the church only to improve
their chances for asylum.
Congregation member Vesam Heydari initially applied for asylum in Norway and
converted there in 2009. But his case was rejected because the Norwegian
authorities did not believe he would be persecuted as a Christian in Iran,
so he moved to Germany to seek refugee status here - and is awaiting a
decision. He criticized many of the other Iranian church members, saying
they were making it much harder for "real, persecuted Christians" like
himself to get approved for asylum.
"The majority of Iranians here are not converting out of belief," Heydari
said. "They only want to stay in Germany."
Meanwhile, as other churches across Germany struggle with dwindling numbers
of believers, Martens has seen his congregation swell from 150 just two
years to more than 600 parishioners now - with a seemingly unending flow of
new refugees finding the way to his congregation. Some come from cities as
far away as Rostock on the Baltic Sea, having found out by word-of-mouth
that Martens not only baptizes Muslims after a three-month "crash course" in
Christianity, but also helps them with asylum pleas.
Other Christian communities across Germany, among them Lutheran churches in
Hannover and the Rhineland, have also reported growing numbers of Iranians
converting to Christendom. There are no exact numbers on how many Muslims
have converted in Germany in recent years - and they are a tiny minority
compared to the country's overall 4 million Muslims. But at least for
Berlin, Martens describes the number of conversions as nothing short of a
"miracle." And he says he has at least another 80 people - mostly refugees
from Iran and a few Afghans - waiting to be baptized.
Germany is witnessing an unprecedented surge of asylum-seekers this year,
with the number of migrants expected to reach 800,000 this year, a fourfold
increase on last year.
Pastor Gottfried Martens prays with people from Iran during a baptism
service in the Trinity Church in Berlin, Aug. 30, 2015. (AP/Markus
Schreiber)
Many of the new arrivals come from Muslim countries such as Syria, Iraq,
Afghanistan or Pakistan. While refugees from civil-war-torn Syria will
almost definitely be receiving asylum status, the situation is more
complicated for asylum seekers from Iran or Afghanistan, which are seen as
more stable. In recent years, roughly 40-50 percent from those two countries
have been allowed to stay in the country, with many of those getting only
temporary permission to remain.
Germany's Federal Office for Migration and Refugees said it does not comment
on the reasons individual applicants give when they apply for asylum, or on
how many people receive refugee status in Germany based on religious
persecution.
Zonoobi, who dressed all in white for his baptism on Sunday, said he had
attended secret religious services in Iran ever since friends introduced him
to the Bible at age 18. He decided to flee to Germany after several
Christian friends were arrested for practicing their religion.
For Zonoobi and his wife Afsaneh - who since her baptism goes by the name of
Katarina - the christening marks a new beginning.
"Now we are free and can be ourselves," she said. "Most important, I am so
happy that our children will have a good future here and can get a good
education in Germany."
http://www.timesofisrael.com/at-a-berlin-church-muslim-refugees-converting-i...