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Jihad in an English churchyard

Saturday, 15th March 2008

 

Blink and you could have missed it. Today’s Daily Telegraph carried this tiny item (so insignificant is it considered to be that it doesn’t even seem to be on the Telegraph’s website):

A vicar was left seriously injured after he was attacked in his own churchyard by three Asian youths who taunted him about his Christianity. Canon Michael Ainsworth, 57, needed hospital treatment after he was repeatedly hit in the face and body by the gang at St George-in-the-East church in Whitechapel, east London, on March 5. Police are treating the incident as a ‘faith-hate’ crime.
We know the faith that was the target of the hate. But which was the faith whose adherents were doing the hating? We all know, even though no-one is saying. Just as under Stalinism, we are now taking it for granted that we must read between the lines.
Doubtless this is yet further proof that the 'no-go areas’ about which the Bishop of Rochester recently warned, but which everyone else from Westminster to Lambeth Palace assured us were a figment of the Bishop’s imagination, don’t exist.
 

It so happens that Canon Ainsworth has in the past spoken up in public in defence of maintaining the integrity of Christian churches as places unique to Christian worship. In March 2006, giving evidence to the Commons Select Committee on Media, Culture and Sport, he replied to the suggestion that other religions might use churches as places for their own religious worship:

There are some issues about using Christian churches of all denominations for worship by other faiths but there is very extensive community use by other faith groups in many areas. That is something to be encouraged. If there is very clear evidence that other faith groups are actively looking to use church buildings for worship, and on the whole my experience is that they would prefer to have their own buildings, then that is something that will always be carefully and sympathetically considered but at the end of the day there must be an issue about other faith worship in a Christian church.
Was Canon Ainsworth actually targeted for attack?


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Steve

March 15th, 2008 8:45pm

Have you no tolerance. Churchyards are offensive to our multicultural friends. So the Canon brought it upon himself. The Archbishop will explain it all to him.

Barry

March 15th, 2008 9:28pm

"three Asian youths?" O really? Chinese? Vietnamese? Hindu? Or is this a euphemism, weasel words, for members of the "Religion of Peace" that the media are too cowardly, too PC (the same thing)to name directly?directly?

Commondog

March 15th, 2008 11:01pm

Three young Asian men and a baseball bat versus one 57 year old vicar.
The RAF dictated to regarding where they can wear their uniform. (By 'members of the public' as reported by the BBC)
Aah the sweet fruits of mulitculturalism or should it be transculturalism?

Alex Bensky

March 15th, 2008 11:02pm

"Asian youths?" Those damn Buddhists.

Roy

March 16th, 2008 5:18am

It was from random attacks like this that people used to carry swords, hidden pistols etc. Perhaps the time has come when at least a knobbly stick would be a good defence. Carried or hidden at strategic parts of a Canon's walk. Personally, with a suitable stick I would be looking forward to an attack.

March 16th, 2008 11:52am

March 16th, 2008 1:04pm

Water

March 16th, 2008 8:45pm

To hell with that Asian or not such behaviour cannot be tolerated. As an damn proud British Asian I can tell you with absolute certainty this is in no way indicative of the Asian community. Barry has hit the nail on the head.

Antoine

March 16th, 2008 8:57pm

Without justifying this incident one jot - I do hope that the author is equally concerned by the attack on an Immam in Falkirk a year or two ago, + by the various other indiscriminate attacks on Muslims that have occurred in recent times...

Roy

March 17th, 2008 7:59am

The Imams of Falkirk or anywhere else in Britain should feel themselves very lucky the British people are as tolerant as they are, and would be well advised not to press their luck.

A Chaffey

March 17th, 2008 10:08am

So the article didn't say what the religion of the perpetrators was. Could it be, just maybe, that the writer of the article didn't know? And could it also be that, not knowing, they are the Telegraph were right not to identify them as coming from any particular religious group? I can't help thinking that if they didn't know, then this was the only sensible approach to take. Is MP saying she would have taken a different approach?

Helen Oster

March 17th, 2008 2:27pm

Well, what a surprise.............I spend about 1 -2 hours each day, responding to hate-filled diatribes on "Yahoo Answers", from people who apparently believe that ALL the problems in the Middle East are caused by Israel & the Jewish presence. I try in vain to disseminate the facts - that the "Palestinians" as a nation of Moslems, were a creation of Egyptian-born Yasser Arafat, in 1964, with the main goal of destroying the Jewish people living in the Land of Israel. - still the defined goal of Hamas, Hezbollah & the government of Iran today. I offer facts & figures that detail how many disputed pieces of land which are claimed by the "Palestinian" Moslems, were in many cases not owned, but rented from absentee Arab landlords. The land was then purchased by Jewish philanthropists & charitable organisations, piece by piece from these absentee Arab landlords. I try to raise awareness of how the Jewish effort in the 1800s to revitalise the land attracted a large immigration of Arabs from neighbouring areas who were drawn by employment opportunities and healthier living conditions. There was never any attempt to "rid" the area of the few Arabs that there were, or of those Arabs that immigrated into this area along with the Jews. I focus upon how this contrasts with the actions of the governments of Morocco, Egypt, Iran (then Persia), Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon Syria & Yemen, who caused thousands of Jewish people to flee the homes that had been owned & lived in by their families for generations. They ended up in pre-State 'Palestine'. (Even a cursory glance at the general Jewish population of Israel today, reveals a majority of dark-skinned Israelis, bearing testimony to their Middle-Eastern roots). Nevertheless, I continue to read the same messages of hate, every single day. Not just from "Palestinians", but from people who ally themselves with the "Palestinian" cause. In Jerusalem, out walking with my children aged 8 & 10, I've had stones thrown at me by Arab youths, but we've come to not only expect that here, but to expect the face of the civilised world to turn against us. The writing is on the wall for Britain, too. By 2010, if current census predictions are accurate, there will be more Moslems in Birmingham - the UK's second city - than non-Moslems. Maybe in 3 or 4 generations, when ordinary Britons are being accused of having "stolen" a Moslem country, those who are currently blind supporters of Islam & detractors of Israel, will recall how it all began.

A Chaffey

March 17th, 2008 4:16pm

"Was Canon Ainsworth actually targeted for attack?" Well not, Melanie, if you believe the report in your own newspaper, the Daily Mail - more a case it seems of mindless individuals under the influence of drink and drugs, attacking someone who confronted them for rowdy behaviour. But hey sow the seed, won't you? Suggest there are organised groups of muslims out there targeting Anglican clergymen "for attack", why not? Of course don't actually say so; you don't have any evidence for it. But hey, sow the seed, eh? eh? This is nasty and invidious stuff.

stanley Jerusalem

March 18th, 2008 2:09pm

Helen Oster- well said. It was however Ahmed Shukairy, an Egyptian and Arafat's predecessor, who used the expression "Palestinian people" for the first time in 1964.Before that they were all Arab refugees left to 'rot' by the surrounding Arab nations who had attacked Israel in 1948 and thereby brought about their migration to areas not subsequently under Israeli control.They remain to this day a scar on the face of mostly Arab mankind who steadfastly desist from helping them [ apart from suppling their militant leaders with armaments.]

Ann

March 18th, 2008 6:51pm

The word you are looking for is not militant but terrorist, Stanley. 'Militant' is a cowardly cop-out by disgraceful appeasers like Al Beeb and its ilk, straight out of the Ministry of Truth.

stanley Jerusalem

March 18th, 2008 9:23pm

Ann, you are quite right. i was using pre-PC English for which I feel thoroughly ashamed- and youare still right.Perhaps we should all repeat the Mantra - "When they love their kids more than they hate us there will be peace"

Ann

March 19th, 2008 12:21pm

Right you are, Stanley ;-) (not sure if smileys come out here, but we'll see). --- While I'm at it: how does get hard line breaks to work? Mine don't.

Parasite

March 22nd, 2008 5:03pm

Three Muslims beat up a Christian clergyman. Well done Melanie on spotting a global jihadi conspiracy, eh? Because similarly every time a gang of white lads boozed up decide to indulge in a bit of "P*ki-bashing", that is also part of a wider crusade on the part of the entire white population. What utter rot. And as for Stepney being a "no go" area I invite you out to the East End so you can see for yourself what tripe that is too. Perhaps though you're too paranoid about the colour of other people's skins to come.

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Melanie Phillips is a Daily Mail columnist. She also writes for the Jewish Chronicle and is a panellist on BBC Radio Four's Moral Maze. Her most recent book is 'Londonistan', published by Encounter and Gibson Square.

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