Saturday, May 28, 2011

Muslim Ad Campaign In Australia Teaches Christians That Jesus Isn't the Son of God but Merely the Opening Act For Mohammed


You know, if you look back at Australia about 10 years ago and then chronicle the growth of Muslim immigration and the onset of political correctness and then the introduction of the islamophobia weapon....well, I can't think of a single country where the progress...the "creep" of Islam is more defined in a single country. It hasn't taken long, believe me. The Australians, long known for their ties to Europe but their rabid independence of the motherland is falling right in line with Europe in its surrender to Islam.

I would put forth that what has happened in Australia and is going to continue to happen is a better model of what will happen in America than what happened with the islamic infestation of Europe. Afterall, Australia and America have a certain independence quality that you just won't find elsewhere.

Well, the Aussies now find themselves staring at a new ad campaign by the Muslims that is designed to teach them about Islam ...including the fact that Jesus isn't really the Son of G_d, but merely an opening prophetic act to the real head liner....Mohammed.

From the article at the Sydney Morning Herald:

CHRISTIANS in Sydney will have their core beliefs challenged by provocative advertisements due to appear on billboards and buses in the next month.

The ads, paid for by an Islamic group called MyPeace, will carry slogans such as ''Jesus: a prophet of Islam'', ''Holy Quran: the final testament'' and ''Muhammad: mercy to mankind''.

A phone number urges people to call to receive a free Koran and other Islamic literature.
Advertisement: Story continues below

The organiser of MyPeace, Diaa Mohamed, said the campaign was intended to educate non-Muslims about Islam. He said Jesus was a prophet of Islam, who was to come before Muhammad. ''The only difference is we say he was a prophet of God, and they say he is God,'' Mr Mohamed said. ''Is it thought-provoking? Yes, it is. We want to raise awareness that Islam believes in Jesus Christ,'' he said.

Mr Mohamed said he hoped the billboards would encourage Christians and Muslims to find common ground. They were not intended to downgrade the significance of Jesus. ''We embrace him and say that he was one of the mightiest prophets of God.''

Now, I certainly don't have a problem with these billboards going up in Australia and also if they went up in America. What I would want assurance of is that I can put up billboards that say "Allah is a moongoddish lie" and "Mohammed wrote the Qur'an during a blackout." What do you think would happen at that point in time? Do you not think CAIR would sue to have those billboards taken down or not even put up in the first place?

We all know by now that the islamists in Australia and America have one thing in common...they want their right to say and do anything in their countries upheld but they also want the right to dictate what other religions can say and do.

You see, it is simple. The Muslims believe theirs is the one true religion and since their prophet demanded of them to conquer the other religions, they must go on the attack ...whether that is with 20 foot billboards or suicide bomb belts or road side bombs. One other thing that needs to be pointed out here because you will hear this crock from many Muslims...that "yes, we believe in Jesus! He was a prophet!" Well, as you can see here, that might sound good to a Christian wanting to believe that Islam isn't evil, but the fact of the matter is that these Muslims are blasphemously really making the claim that Jesus carried water for Mohammed.



He's not the son of God, just the support act



CHRISTIANS in Sydney will have their core beliefs challenged by provocative advertisements due to appear on billboards and buses in the next month.

The ads, paid for by an Islamic group called MyPeace, will carry slogans such as ''Jesus: a prophet of Islam'', ''Holy Quran: the final testament'' and ''Muhammad: mercy to mankind''.

A phone number urges people to call to receive a free Koran and other Islamic literature.
Advertisement: Story continues below

The organiser of MyPeace, Diaa Mohamed, said the campaign was intended to educate non-Muslims about Islam. He said Jesus was a prophet of Islam, who was to come before Muhammad. ''The only difference is we say he was a prophet of God, and they say he is God,'' Mr Mohamed said. ''Is it thought-provoking? Yes, it is. We want to raise awareness that Islam believes in Jesus Christ,'' he said.

Mr Mohamed said he hoped the billboards would encourage Christians and Muslims to find common ground. They were not intended to downgrade the significance of Jesus. ''We embrace him and say that he was one of the mightiest prophets of God.''

MyPeace plans to extend the campaign, funded by private donations, to television.

The Anglican Bishop of South Sydney, Rob Forsyth, said it was ''complete nonsense'' to say Jesus was a prophet of Islam. ''Jesus was not the prophet of a religion that came into being 600 years later.''

But the billboard was not offensive, he said. ''They've got a perfect right to say it, and I would defend their right to say it [but] … you couldn't run a Christian billboard in Saudi Arabia.''

The bishop said he would pay for billboards to counter those of MyPeace if he could afford it, and ''maybe the atheists should run their billboards as well''.

A spokesman for the Australian Islamic Mission, Siddiq Buckley, said the campaign would increase awareness of the positive facts of Islam. ''I would be looking at this as a good opportunity to explain what we mean.''

2 comments:

Kirly said...

Holger, check this out... if you've been getting more hits from downunder lately, this might be why. :-)

http://falfn.com/CrusaderRabbit/?p=6528

A. Morgan said...

Hi Holger

I found it hard to find the group behind this. They are SYdney-based, and this is the website. http://mypeace.com.au/
Note the video on the right - with Ahmed Deedat (he died of a stroke a few years back). Deedat claimed to be a scholar of the Bible, but used aggressive da'wa techniques in S. Africa, Australia and elsewhere. But watch the video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rK0padoAc8w&feature=player_embedded
There is obviously an Islamic supremacist subtext at work in what he is saying.