L | A (translated with DeepL)
Several battles are now being fought over Poland, there is a ubiquitous information war going on (because we have heard about conventional wars to the point of boredom). We are being tested in various ways - and that is whether we will accept newspeak, abortion, the negation of the existence of two sexes, the omnipotence of the German aristocracy, beetles instead of meat, and so on.
Few people, however, are paying attention to the fact that supporters of a dangerous version of Islam are beginning their installment of the test - whether an increasingly secularized Poland will step by step begin to tolerate the Muslim social and legal order. For now, it's just a preview, but what will happen soon?
Before we start spinning this tale, let's recall that just a decade ago, certain influential conservative circles around Law and Justice were forming interesting alliances (in the forum of EU organizations) with representatives of Turkey's ruling AKP party. (Turkey is not a member of the EU, but has had candidate status since 1999 and cooperating partner status.)
At the time, it seemed that Muslim "conservatives" were an obvious and natural companion in the fight against the liberal-left hydra, which at the time still fooled everyone into thinking that it was, at most, perhaps a lizard of agility.
In any case, it was already glaring that the Polish representatives apparently understood neither what Turkish nationalism is, nor even less what an order based on the Koran is based on.
Just one small example will suffice: abortion. Well, in the religion propagated by Muhammad, a person has no soul for the first four months of pregnancy (120 days). Yes, he doesn't! Therefore, it can be "removed", because although in some ways some imams condemn such an act, it is, in their view, a "lesser evil" than killing a "fetus with a soul" less than 4 months after conception... Why, then, are Muslims not allies of Marta Lempart or Klementyna Suchanow?
The roots of Islam
In practice, Islamic conservatism has nothing in common with the Christian and, above all, Catholic social order: it is not universalistic, it does not proclaim the sanctity of life from conception, nor does it emphasize the special role of women, so much affirmed in the encyclicals of Saint John Paul II (for the best reference is the Mother of God, whose cult is present in Poland and all Catholic countries, as well as in the Orthodox Church; needless to say, in its very essence, Islam has never had and does not have such reverence for women).
At its very core, Islam, created and adopted by the Arabs in the seventh century after Christ, is founded on the idea of conquest and plunder. In addition to their dynamic expansion in Africa and southern Europe, the Arabs' unsurpassed dream was to conquer Constantinople - a vitally important symbol of Christian Europe and heir to Rome - although it was eventually accomplished by the Ottoman Turks in 1453.
Besides, it is worth being aware that within the framework of this monotheistic religion, Arabs feel predisposed to "manage" Islam, as demonstrated, for example, by the Polish Tatars (let us emphasize, for centuries faithful and devoted to the Republic, loyal and ready to die for it). It was from them that we learned that Arab imams came to them and tried to supervise and control their religious practices.
So much for the Arabs themselves. And yet they make up only one-fifth of all Muslims! On the streets of Polish cities there are also Turks, Uzbeks, Kurds, Indonesians, Indian residents and even Afghans - theoretically they are legal newcomers in Poland. However, a very important phenomenon must be noted here, at least in the Warsaw area: until a few years ago, people coming from Muslim countries were mainly employees of kebabs, possibly slightly more sophisticated restaurants.
Since 2021, for example, employees of cab apps - Uzbeks, Georgians, Indians - began to flow into Poland. Around 2022, halal stores began to open with meat prepared according to the principles of so-called ritual slaughter. Since there is supply, there must be demand as well. Business is booming. Not much time has passed, and not only men and not only male or female students of the academy founded by a Turkish cleric (incidentally, an enemy of the current Turkish authorities) are appearing around these stores.
For some time now, women in hijabs have been circulating on the streets of Warsaw, pushing strollers with children in front of them, and since 2023, there has even been a private kindergarten with a Muslim focus, officially presented as "multilingual," where children are taught Arabic (as well as Russian and Ukrainian).
At the same time, let's emphasize, an application for the construction of a new, third mosque has been submitted to the Warsaw authorities, as revealed by the media in April this year. Of course, all this is not supposed to be so radical, but rather "welcoming", because the mosque is also supposed to be a non-mosque: a kindergarten, a school, a conference room, and probably some kind of library, a sports field, and so on and so forth. Doesn't all this sound "joyful"? So what is there to cling to? Just watch how a representative of the left will jump out and accuse any critics of hate speech.
The construction of the magnificent house of worship is reportedly supported by an Islamic cleric who apparently likes al-Qaeda. And, not at all surprisingly, this man, on the other hand, does not like atheists - a fairly common trait of the followers of this religion, by the way; for they can bestow some form of respect on believers in Christ, but have none for non-believers.
And here is the key of the whole matter, which needs to be explained to all anti-clerics, leftists, abortionists and other people possessed of hatred for the Catholic Church - as long as Poland is Catholic, as long as the Resurrection procession passes through the streets of our cities, as long as there are crosses and shrines along small and large roads in our country, we have a strong weapon in the spiritual battle against Islam.
However, if we turn away from Christ as a society and as a nation, we will also fall prey to social upheaval on the part of Muslims - those who believe in the expansion of their religion (because, after all, not everyone is the target of criticism here).
No to the mosque
Linked to the above is a mentality that must also have a strong foundation: Poland hosts the Pole - followers of other religions can come to Poland legally, they can work here, but they are obliged to respect our laws and, above all, our customs. We must not, under any circumstances, accomodate them and bow down to them, even less for free!
Faced with a request to build a mosque, the answer should be no - so that these people feel respect for us. It is not a matter of banning them from legitimate business activities. But first, as Poles, we should respect ourselves - without this, within thirty years we will have mosques and minarets springing up like mushrooms after rain, just like in the English countryside. This is where Poland is. First, please show us proof of loyalty - and this applies to all newcomers.
Why don't we agree to erect another mosque? If only because of political symmetry. For example, in Turkey (which is very "liberal" compared to fundamentalist Saudi Arabia) no synagogue or church can be directly adjacent to the street - they must be surrounded by an outer wall or fence. Even in Polonezkoy, a former village of Polish immigrants founded in the 19th century near Istanbul, no Corpus Christi procession is allowed to go outside the area belonging to the local church.
Yet it doesn't stop there - in this very city in early 2024, armed assassins murdered an innocent man in cold blood in a Catholic church... add that he was a Turk who had reportedly been attending mass for several months and was about to be baptized. Is it still necessary to describe examples of countries where the death penalty is officially in force for faith in Christ?
To better understand the mentality of the expansive Arabs let's also use a story about Arab tourists - let's quote their comments about the ban on entry to Kalatówki in the Tatra Mountains near Zakopane. According to the media, despite a clear sign forbidding cars to enter this beautiful clearing, Arabs ignore it and arrive in cars, only to be fined moments later.
What do they say in their justification? "It's your bans, not ours," although they are allegedly meticulously taking five hundred zlotys out of their wallets. The phrase, however, quite efficiently shows their mentality, so different from ours. It is worth bearing in mind.
Other nations adhering to the religion of the Prophet Muhammad may seem much less imposing on their traditions or beliefs about the law, but even if they seem to come from maximally secularized countries, there is a need for our Polish state institutions to make extensive analyses of the impact of their mentality on our customs and our social life.
Uzbekistan is a good example: despite the fact that the authorities of this country officially try to reduce the importance of Islam, it still creates a second, parallel legal system. Time will tell whether the influx of so many Uzbeks to Poland will be something at least neutral for us.
Even the leftist media, laughing at the division of immigrants into Muslims and non-Muslims, admit that the Polish state does not have a coherent immigration strategy developed. Indeed, Poland is at the forefront of EU countries in terms of the influx of foreigners from outside the zone. In 2023 alone, more than 320,000 work permits were issued to foreigners. In the lead were India (nearly 46 thousand), Nepal 35 thousand, the Philippines 29 thousand, Uzbekistan and Bangladesh nearly 28 thousand each, Turkey nearly 26 thousand.
And finally, the inexorable demographics. By 2050, the number of Muslims is expected to equal the number of Christians worldwide. In Europe alone, the fertility rate among followers of Allah is 2.1, and among all others combined - 1.6. And according to the Pew Research Center, the sheer number of children among different religious groups does not determine the dominance of Islam; what does determine it is the phenomenon of immigration, such as to Europe.
So if Polish women are discouraged from having children by marches of feminists and activists, then at the same time girls from Turkey or Uzbekistan will come here and give birth to three, four, five children... the ratio of Poles to foreigners will change radically, especially to those who live a thoroughly different life than we do. What awaits us in thirty, fifty years? No one will care about Tusk or Kaczynski by then - so Poles must think about their future right now and right now.
Post Script
For now, there is talk of legal gainful employment and a normal visa process, even if there were abuses in this procedure under the PO and PiS governments. But what will happen after the so-called migration pact comes into force? What will happen to our society when aggressive and demanding young men, the same ones who premeditatedly attack our Soldiers, Border Guards and policemen, invade? The answer is "either Poland will be Catholic, or there will be no Poland at all."
Several battles are now being fought over Poland, there is a ubiquitous information war going on (because we have heard about conventional wars to the point of boredom). We are being tested in various ways - and that is whether we will accept newspeak, abortion, the negation of the existence of two sexes, the omnipotence of the German aristocracy, beetles instead of meat, and so on.
Few people, however, are paying attention to the fact that supporters of a dangerous version of Islam are beginning their installment of the test - whether an increasingly secularized Poland will step by step begin to tolerate the Muslim social and legal order. For now, it's just a preview, but what will happen soon?
Before we start spinning this tale, let's recall that just a decade ago, certain influential conservative circles around Law and Justice were forming interesting alliances (in the forum of EU organizations) with representatives of Turkey's ruling AKP party. (Turkey is not a member of the EU, but has had candidate status since 1999 and cooperating partner status.)
At the time, it seemed that Muslim "conservatives" were an obvious and natural companion in the fight against the liberal-left hydra, which at the time still fooled everyone into thinking that it was, at most, perhaps a lizard of agility.
In any case, it was already glaring that the Polish representatives apparently understood neither what Turkish nationalism is, nor even less what an order based on the Koran is based on.
Just one small example will suffice: abortion. Well, in the religion propagated by Muhammad, a person has no soul for the first four months of pregnancy (120 days). Yes, he doesn't! Therefore, it can be "removed", because although in some ways some imams condemn such an act, it is, in their view, a "lesser evil" than killing a "fetus with a soul" less than 4 months after conception... Why, then, are Muslims not allies of Marta Lempart or Klementyna Suchanow?
The roots of Islam
In practice, Islamic conservatism has nothing in common with the Christian and, above all, Catholic social order: it is not universalistic, it does not proclaim the sanctity of life from conception, nor does it emphasize the special role of women, so much affirmed in the encyclicals of Saint John Paul II (for the best reference is the Mother of God, whose cult is present in Poland and all Catholic countries, as well as in the Orthodox Church; needless to say, in its very essence, Islam has never had and does not have such reverence for women).
At its very core, Islam, created and adopted by the Arabs in the seventh century after Christ, is founded on the idea of conquest and plunder. In addition to their dynamic expansion in Africa and southern Europe, the Arabs' unsurpassed dream was to conquer Constantinople - a vitally important symbol of Christian Europe and heir to Rome - although it was eventually accomplished by the Ottoman Turks in 1453.
Besides, it is worth being aware that within the framework of this monotheistic religion, Arabs feel predisposed to "manage" Islam, as demonstrated, for example, by the Polish Tatars (let us emphasize, for centuries faithful and devoted to the Republic, loyal and ready to die for it). It was from them that we learned that Arab imams came to them and tried to supervise and control their religious practices.
So much for the Arabs themselves. And yet they make up only one-fifth of all Muslims! On the streets of Polish cities there are also Turks, Uzbeks, Kurds, Indonesians, Indian residents and even Afghans - theoretically they are legal newcomers in Poland. However, a very important phenomenon must be noted here, at least in the Warsaw area: until a few years ago, people coming from Muslim countries were mainly employees of kebabs, possibly slightly more sophisticated restaurants.
Since 2021, for example, employees of cab apps - Uzbeks, Georgians, Indians - began to flow into Poland. Around 2022, halal stores began to open with meat prepared according to the principles of so-called ritual slaughter. Since there is supply, there must be demand as well. Business is booming. Not much time has passed, and not only men and not only male or female students of the academy founded by a Turkish cleric (incidentally, an enemy of the current Turkish authorities) are appearing around these stores.
For some time now, women in hijabs have been circulating on the streets of Warsaw, pushing strollers with children in front of them, and since 2023, there has even been a private kindergarten with a Muslim focus, officially presented as "multilingual," where children are taught Arabic (as well as Russian and Ukrainian).
At the same time, let's emphasize, an application for the construction of a new, third mosque has been submitted to the Warsaw authorities, as revealed by the media in April this year. Of course, all this is not supposed to be so radical, but rather "welcoming", because the mosque is also supposed to be a non-mosque: a kindergarten, a school, a conference room, and probably some kind of library, a sports field, and so on and so forth. Doesn't all this sound "joyful"? So what is there to cling to? Just watch how a representative of the left will jump out and accuse any critics of hate speech.
The construction of the magnificent house of worship is reportedly supported by an Islamic cleric who apparently likes al-Qaeda. And, not at all surprisingly, this man, on the other hand, does not like atheists - a fairly common trait of the followers of this religion, by the way; for they can bestow some form of respect on believers in Christ, but have none for non-believers.
And here is the key of the whole matter, which needs to be explained to all anti-clerics, leftists, abortionists and other people possessed of hatred for the Catholic Church - as long as Poland is Catholic, as long as the Resurrection procession passes through the streets of our cities, as long as there are crosses and shrines along small and large roads in our country, we have a strong weapon in the spiritual battle against Islam.
However, if we turn away from Christ as a society and as a nation, we will also fall prey to social upheaval on the part of Muslims - those who believe in the expansion of their religion (because, after all, not everyone is the target of criticism here).
No to the mosque
Linked to the above is a mentality that must also have a strong foundation: Poland hosts the Pole - followers of other religions can come to Poland legally, they can work here, but they are obliged to respect our laws and, above all, our customs. We must not, under any circumstances, accomodate them and bow down to them, even less for free!
Faced with a request to build a mosque, the answer should be no - so that these people feel respect for us. It is not a matter of banning them from legitimate business activities. But first, as Poles, we should respect ourselves - without this, within thirty years we will have mosques and minarets springing up like mushrooms after rain, just like in the English countryside. This is where Poland is. First, please show us proof of loyalty - and this applies to all newcomers.
Why don't we agree to erect another mosque? If only because of political symmetry. For example, in Turkey (which is very "liberal" compared to fundamentalist Saudi Arabia) no synagogue or church can be directly adjacent to the street - they must be surrounded by an outer wall or fence. Even in Polonezkoy, a former village of Polish immigrants founded in the 19th century near Istanbul, no Corpus Christi procession is allowed to go outside the area belonging to the local church.
Yet it doesn't stop there - in this very city in early 2024, armed assassins murdered an innocent man in cold blood in a Catholic church... add that he was a Turk who had reportedly been attending mass for several months and was about to be baptized. Is it still necessary to describe examples of countries where the death penalty is officially in force for faith in Christ?
To better understand the mentality of the expansive Arabs let's also use a story about Arab tourists - let's quote their comments about the ban on entry to Kalatówki in the Tatra Mountains near Zakopane. According to the media, despite a clear sign forbidding cars to enter this beautiful clearing, Arabs ignore it and arrive in cars, only to be fined moments later.
What do they say in their justification? "It's your bans, not ours," although they are allegedly meticulously taking five hundred zlotys out of their wallets. The phrase, however, quite efficiently shows their mentality, so different from ours. It is worth bearing in mind.
Other nations adhering to the religion of the Prophet Muhammad may seem much less imposing on their traditions or beliefs about the law, but even if they seem to come from maximally secularized countries, there is a need for our Polish state institutions to make extensive analyses of the impact of their mentality on our customs and our social life.
Uzbekistan is a good example: despite the fact that the authorities of this country officially try to reduce the importance of Islam, it still creates a second, parallel legal system. Time will tell whether the influx of so many Uzbeks to Poland will be something at least neutral for us.
Even the leftist media, laughing at the division of immigrants into Muslims and non-Muslims, admit that the Polish state does not have a coherent immigration strategy developed. Indeed, Poland is at the forefront of EU countries in terms of the influx of foreigners from outside the zone. In 2023 alone, more than 320,000 work permits were issued to foreigners. In the lead were India (nearly 46 thousand), Nepal 35 thousand, the Philippines 29 thousand, Uzbekistan and Bangladesh nearly 28 thousand each, Turkey nearly 26 thousand.
And finally, the inexorable demographics. By 2050, the number of Muslims is expected to equal the number of Christians worldwide. In Europe alone, the fertility rate among followers of Allah is 2.1, and among all others combined - 1.6. And according to the Pew Research Center, the sheer number of children among different religious groups does not determine the dominance of Islam; what does determine it is the phenomenon of immigration, such as to Europe.
So if Polish women are discouraged from having children by marches of feminists and activists, then at the same time girls from Turkey or Uzbekistan will come here and give birth to three, four, five children... the ratio of Poles to foreigners will change radically, especially to those who live a thoroughly different life than we do. What awaits us in thirty, fifty years? No one will care about Tusk or Kaczynski by then - so Poles must think about their future right now and right now.
Post Script
For now, there is talk of legal gainful employment and a normal visa process, even if there were abuses in this procedure under the PO and PiS governments. But what will happen after the so-called migration pact comes into force? What will happen to our society when aggressive and demanding young men, the same ones who premeditatedly attack our Soldiers, Border Guards and policemen, invade? The answer is "either Poland will be Catholic, or there will be no Poland at all."