A moderate Muslim talks about Islam [ism]'s racism disease

Thethingsz

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Now, the article posts about ISLAM, I changed and softened it to Islamism . I'm more about how they use it for bigotry than someone's personal belief.

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Labour won’t say it, so I will: Islam has an anti-Semitism problem.
The religion I grew up in was one of gentleness but a sectarian tendency has worsened over the past four decades

Fiyaz Mughal.
Published 02 May 2026 7:00am BST.

Anti-Semitism is a disease in the soul of British Islam today. The religion I grew up in was one of gentleness and deep spirituality. But the first thing I noticed when I came to Britain from East Africa was the fractured nature of ethnic minority communities here.

In Kenya – where I grew up – Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims shared religious events together, ate together, and regularly socialised together. In the England of 1983, though, I came to realise that identity politics was the norm and each community viewed the other with suspicion and hostility.

This sectarian tendency has worsened over the past four decades, and one of the nastiest expressions is the anti-Semitism that has infected British Islam – spread by Islamists and their useful idiots.

Merchants of hate have repeatedly used the Palestinian issue as a recruiting tool to encourage hostility to Jews, while successive British politicians have over decades failed to challenge and call out the anti-Semitism within the small but significant parts of my religious community. The reason is for fear of being called “divisive” or “racist” or “Islamophobic”.

As someone who set up Tell MAMA, the first government-backed national monitoring centre on anti-Muslim hate, I can tell you that there is nothing “Islamophobic” about calling out Jew hate; in fact, after six national anti-Semitic incidents in the last five weeks, we are all duty bound to call out what we see.

I have known for years that Islamist campaigners and activists have used support for Palestine as a rallying call to promote a set of repugnant and poisonous views. This has included calls for the Islamic takeover of Israel and the subjugation of Jews.

We are now seeing the decades-long effects of a supine unwillingness to challenge Muslim anti-Semitism for fear of a community backlash, or because of a passive unwillingness to “rock the boat”. With little challenge to these narratives, it was only time before anti-Semitism became a reality on the streets of our country.

Another indicator of the depth of anti-Semitism has been the range of conspiracy theories that have percolated among my co-religionists. One of these conspiracy theories is the idea that Mossad spreads disinformation within Muslim communities to control them.

Or consider the mad idea about 9/11 and 7/7 being the work of “Jews”, and the notion that terror attacks by Muslim perpetrators were conducted by Israel to smear Muslims.

You would have expected that such conspiracies would have fizzled out some decades ago, but in the two decades of working with Muslim communities I have had these ideas whispered to me, as though I was a “fellow brother in the fight against Israel”.

Little did they realise that I thought that such people needed to be locked up.

We have heard Sir Keir Starmer speak about the scourge of anti-Semitism, and the need for communities to stand with Britain’s Jews. I applaud and commend him for these public calls. However, have you ever heard Starmer speak about the other elephant in the room? The giant one that has “Muslim anti-Semitism” written across it?




BTW Any Islamic propagandists trying to use an excuse about Israel vs genocidal: Hamas/Iran/Hezbollah, is gaslighting.

No one really cares about "Palestinians" they are just used as ping pings by their Arab Muslim "brethren."


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Just as Hamas uses kids.

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Now, the article posts about ISLAM, I changed and softened it to Islamism . I'm more about how they use it for bigotry than someone's personal belief.

_


Labour won’t say it, so I will: Islam has an anti-Semitism problem.
The religion I grew up in was one of gentleness but a sectarian tendency has worsened over the past four decades

Fiyaz Mughal.
Published 02 May 2026 7:00am BST.

Anti-Semitism is a disease in the soul of British Islam today. The religion I grew up in was one of gentleness and deep spirituality. But the first thing I noticed when I came to Britain from East Africa was the fractured nature of ethnic minority communities here.

In Kenya – where I grew up – Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims shared religious events together, ate together, and regularly socialised together. In the England of 1983, though, I came to realise that identity politics was the norm and each community viewed the other with suspicion and hostility.

This sectarian tendency has worsened over the past four decades, and one of the nastiest expressions is the anti-Semitism that has infected British Islam – spread by Islamists and their useful idiots.

Merchants of hate have repeatedly used the Palestinian issue as a recruiting tool to encourage hostility to Jews, while successive British politicians have over decades failed to challenge and call out the anti-Semitism within the small but significant parts of my religious community. The reason is for fear of being called “divisive” or “racist” or “Islamophobic”.

As someone who set up Tell MAMA, the first government-backed national monitoring centre on anti-Muslim hate, I can tell you that there is nothing “Islamophobic” about calling out Jew hate; in fact, after six national anti-Semitic incidents in the last five weeks, we are all duty bound to call out what we see.

I have known for years that Islamist campaigners and activists have used support for Palestine as a rallying call to promote a set of repugnant and poisonous views. This has included calls for the Islamic takeover of Israel and the subjugation of Jews.

We are now seeing the decades-long effects of a supine unwillingness to challenge Muslim anti-Semitism for fear of a community backlash, or because of a passive unwillingness to “rock the boat”. With little challenge to these narratives, it was only time before anti-Semitism became a reality on the streets of our country.

Another indicator of the depth of anti-Semitism has been the range of conspiracy theories that have percolated among my co-religionists. One of these conspiracy theories is the idea that Mossad spreads disinformation within Muslim communities to control them.

Or consider the mad idea about 9/11 and 7/7 being the work of “Jews”, and the notion that terror attacks by Muslim perpetrators were conducted by Israel to smear Muslims.

You would have expected that such conspiracies would have fizzled out some decades ago, but in the two decades of working with Muslim communities I have had these ideas whispered to me, as though I was a “fellow brother in the fight against Israel”.

Little did they realise that I thought that such people needed to be locked up.

We have heard Sir Keir Starmer speak about the scourge of anti-Semitism, and the need for communities to stand with Britain’s Jews. I applaud and commend him for these public calls. However, have you ever heard Starmer speak about the other elephant in the room? The giant one that has “Muslim anti-Semitism” written across it?
Racism has always been a major problem in all religions however the fact that Gaza has been razed to the ground and government backed terrorism is a daily occurrence against Palestinians in the West Bank is a separate issue.
 
Racism has always been a major problem in all religions however the fact that Gaza has been razed to the ground and government backed terrorism is a daily occurrence against Palestinians in the West Bank is a separate issue.
Are you referring the reason your ISLAM's Hamas uses kids to blame Israel with?

As far as Israel is concerned, its leadership has always been SECULAR
 
Are you referring the reason your ISLAM's Hamas uses kids to blame Israel with?

As far as Israel is concerned, its leadership has always been SECULAR
Pretending to be secular (and absolutely NOT being secular, btw) doesn't excuse their constant and ongoing acts of depraved butchery. And Hamas wouldn't blame Israel for killing kids if Israel didn't kill so many kids. Hamas itself is mostly orphaned children who survived Israeli bombing campaigns long enough to grow up. Israel must be fine with this because of how much they fund Hamas.
 
This sectarian tendency has worsened over the past four decades, and one of the nastiest expressions is the anti-Semitism that has infected British Islam – spread by Islamists and their useful idiots.
Several of which infest this forum.
 
Pretending to be secular (and absolutely NOT being secular, btw) doesn't excuse their constant and ongoing acts of depraved butchery. And Hamas wouldn't blame Israel for killing kids if Israel didn't kill so many kids. Hamas itself is mostly orphaned children who survived Israeli bombing campaigns long enough to grow up. Israel must be fine with this because of how much they fund Hamas.
You lie in order to hate.
 
Are you saying that bigotry against Israel is different from antisemitism? If so, I agree.
1. Criticism of Israel's policies is valid.
2. Bigotry is usually associated with anti Jewish.
3. Islamic bigotry CAUSES conflicts, not result of.
 
Bibi is secular and so is IDF leadership.

Noth "palestine" leadership, Mahmoud Abbas' PA and Hamas are very ISLAMIST.
Pretending to be secular does not excuse the subhumans from their atrocities. Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas are both funded by Bibi and the IDF so Israel must be fine with that.
 
Now, the article posts about ISLAM, I changed and softened it to Islamism . I'm more about how they use it for bigotry than someone's personal belief.

_


Labour won’t say it, so I will: Islam has an anti-Semitism problem.
The religion I grew up in was one of gentleness but a sectarian tendency has worsened over the past four decades

Fiyaz Mughal.
Published 02 May 2026 7:00am BST.

Anti-Semitism is a disease in the soul of British Islam today. The religion I grew up in was one of gentleness and deep spirituality. But the first thing I noticed when I came to Britain from East Africa was the fractured nature of ethnic minority communities here.

In Kenya – where I grew up – Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims shared religious events together, ate together, and regularly socialised together. In the England of 1983, though, I came to realise that identity politics was the norm and each community viewed the other with suspicion and hostility.

This sectarian tendency has worsened over the past four decades, and one of the nastiest expressions is the anti-Semitism that has infected British Islam – spread by Islamists and their useful idiots.

Merchants of hate have repeatedly used the Palestinian issue as a recruiting tool to encourage hostility to Jews, while successive British politicians have over decades failed to challenge and call out the anti-Semitism within the small but significant parts of my religious community. The reason is for fear of being called “divisive” or “racist” or “Islamophobic”.

As someone who set up Tell MAMA, the first government-backed national monitoring centre on anti-Muslim hate, I can tell you that there is nothing “Islamophobic” about calling out Jew hate; in fact, after six national anti-Semitic incidents in the last five weeks, we are all duty bound to call out what we see.

I have known for years that Islamist campaigners and activists have used support for Palestine as a rallying call to promote a set of repugnant and poisonous views. This has included calls for the Islamic takeover of Israel and the subjugation of Jews.

We are now seeing the decades-long effects of a supine unwillingness to challenge Muslim anti-Semitism for fear of a community backlash, or because of a passive unwillingness to “rock the boat”. With little challenge to these narratives, it was only time before anti-Semitism became a reality on the streets of our country.

Another indicator of the depth of anti-Semitism has been the range of conspiracy theories that have percolated among my co-religionists. One of these conspiracy theories is the idea that Mossad spreads disinformation within Muslim communities to control them.

Or consider the mad idea about 9/11 and 7/7 being the work of “Jews”, and the notion that terror attacks by Muslim perpetrators were conducted by Israel to smear Muslims.

You would have expected that such conspiracies would have fizzled out some decades ago, but in the two decades of working with Muslim communities I have had these ideas whispered to me, as though I was a “fellow brother in the fight against Israel”.

Little did they realise that I thought that such people needed to be locked up.

We have heard Sir Keir Starmer speak about the scourge of anti-Semitism, and the need for communities to stand with Britain’s Jews. I applaud and commend him for these public calls. However, have you ever heard Starmer speak about the other elephant in the room? The giant one that has “Muslim anti-Semitism” written across it?
Thank you. I actually had one of the liberals on this forum accuse me of “Islamophobia” because I complained about all the “Death to Jews!!” chants on liberal campuses. She said I was pretending - yes, pretending!! - to be offended in order to silence the free speech of pro-Palestinians.

“The antisemite not only wounds the Jew, but mocks [or insults] him for bleeding too visibly.”
 
15th post
Thank you. I actually had one of the liberals on this forum accuse me of “Islamophobia” because I complained about all the “Death to Jews!!” chants on liberal campuses. She said I was pretending - yes, pretending!! - to be offended in order to silence the free speech of pro-Palestinians.

“The antisemite not only wounds the Jew, but mocks [or insults] him for bleeding too visibly.”
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