The Palm Sunday Bombings are Part of Islam’s Religious War

Daniel Greenfield,

Islamic terrorists have a history of targeting Christians on religious occasions. The Palm Sunday bombings in Egypt are part of a pattern. 

Here’s Boko Haram in Nigeria in ’11.

Nigeria’s Christmas from hell began around 7:30 a.m. at St. Theresa’s Church in Madalla, a suburb of the capital Abuja, just as worshippers spilled outside from the popular service. “A man with a motorbike dropped a bag just outside the church,” a church member told TIME. “One of our officials went to check what was in the bag and at the same time he reached it — that was when there was an explosion. Everybody started running. You can imagine how many people were running around. We thought the explosion was from one car that was parked outside, but we now discover it was actually the bag that my colleague went to check.” The blast partially destroyed the church roof and shattered glass in nearby buildings. It turned out to be part of a wave of bomb blasts striking packed churches and towns across Nigeria as Islamist militants launched a Christmas Day bombing spree that left at least 39 dead and scores more wounded in Africa’s most populous nation.

Last year I documented an extensive list of just Christmas bombings in Muslim Terror for Christmas from Europe to Africa.

On the 5th of December, a 12-year-old Iraqi boy planted a nail bomb in a Christmas market in Ludwigshafen. The Muslim boy left the nail bomb in a marketplace filled with jolly plastic Santas bearing knapsacks of presents and booths full of chocolates built like cottages covered with twinkling lights. Inside was his Christmas present to the little boys and girls of this German city, a glass jar filled with powder and surrounded by nails. Islamic terror had come like a bitterly cold wind from Iraq to Ludwigshafen.

Now a truck smashed into the Christmas market near the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church crushing shoppers into a stand selling mulled wine. Visitors to the nearby Berlin Zoo picking out Christmas gifts or treating themselves to hot chocolate fled from the murderous carnage. Red fluid flowed through the market and the terrified crowds could not tell whether it was spilled wine or the blood of the dead. 

This latest Muslim Christmas present took the lives of twelve men and women who might have otherwise picked up some eggnog or a stuffed reindeer. It injured dozens more who went from munching waffles one moment to watching a truck barrel at them through the Christmas market in another. Its back wheel stopped against a market stand boasting of the Magic of Christmas.

The media doesn’t ask why Muslim terrorists target religious holidays of other religions. After all they’re somehow un-Islamic.

Then there were the Easter bombings in Pakistan last year. 

The group identified him as Salahuddin Khorasani, and described him as a martyr who “carried out the attack on the eve of the Christian festival Easter.”

There’s nothing coincidental about any of this. This is a religious war. And as much as the media and governments can deny the obvious, a religious war is fought between religions.

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