I assume that all who come to this blog have heard the word ‘madrassa’ before! For those in the dark, here is a short definition. Plus an article in the Sunday Mail
‘Madrassa’. A Sharia school for children of the Islamic religion. Nothing unusual there so cant be bad can it?
Brigitte Gabriel. Islamofascism its propaganda and how it kills the West. H/T Bertybert.
But what is it that lies behind the madrassa, who pays for them, and the burgeoning number of mosques throughout the UK?
The Chislehurst madrassa was the second Darul Uloom in Britain.
The first was in Bury, Greater Manchester. The Chislehurst site used to be an Army barracks. When the MoD decided to sell, Mufti Mustapha struck a deal, buying the complex for £2.7 million.
Mufti Mustapha said.
‘As I wrote the cheque and counted off the zero, zero, zero, zero, my friend said to me “Where will the money come from to run our school?” I told him, “The money will come from Allah.” And so it has been.’
Sources other than Allah were?
‘Everywhere. Britain, overseas. We have donations from around the world, just as our students come from around the world – Britain, America, Pakistan, India, Africa, Saudi.’ Edna Fernandes, Sunday Mail. 20th June 2010. (note that Saudi is mentioned last, it should be first because the Royal family of Saudi are the main source of donations, clever or what? Make out that most money comes from the British Muslims and the Saudis are sixth in line….Taqquya prevails over truth)
The basis of the madrassa curriculum is the Koran with added suras which supersede and/or over ride the original, this is the Holy book of the worshippers of the ‘Prophet’ Mohammed, whose words in the suras are accepted as the truth and no debate or discussion is allowed, so that all graduates of Darul Uloom are conversant in the way of Hadith.
Now the teachers in the Madrassa’ present themselves as moderate and understanding co-religionists, and their only concern is for the spiritual welfare of students, thereby increasing the number of Imams and Islamic scholars that will no doubt be needed by the UK in the near future.
MailOnline.
Edna Fernandes









