Difference between revisions of "Ruth Dudley Edwards"

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==On British Muslims==
 
==On British Muslims==
On 21 August 2006 Dudley Edwards attended a seminar called, '[[Why Are Britain's Universities Incubating Islamist Extremism?]]' at the neoconservative orientated think-tank [[Policy Exchange]] . <ref>Tom Gallagher, '[[Media:Wrong Muslim voices on campus.pdf|Wrong Muslim voices on campus]]', ''The First Post'', 21 August 2006. [PDF created 25 February 2010]</ref> It was also attended by other right-wing figures including [[Anthony Glees]], the author of ''When Students Turn to Terror'' and the Scottish academic [[Tom Gallagher]]. Dudley Edwards wrote an article on the conference in the Irish ''Sunday Independent''. Starting with two anecdoates about how British students came home from university with more conservative religious views, she continued:
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On 21 August 2006 Dudley Edwards attended a seminar called, '[[Why Are Britain's Universities Incubating Islamist Extremism?]]' at the neoconservative orientated think-tank [[Policy Exchange]] . <ref>Tom Gallagher, '[[Media:Wrong Muslim voices on campus.pdf|Wrong Muslim voices on campus]]', ''The First Post'', 21 August 2006. [PDF created 25 February 2010]</ref> It was also attended by other right-wing figures including [[Anthony Glees]], the author of ''When Students Turn to Terror'' and the Scottish academic [[Tom Gallagher]]. Dudley Edwards wrote an article on the conference in the Irish ''Sunday Independent''. Starting with two anecdotes about how British students came home from university with more conservative religious views, she continued:
  
 
<blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">Such undergraduates are typical of those who have been and are being turned into extremists on university campuses in Britain. In some cases, they have become murderers. These days they don't have to go to Pakistan to learn how to kill people: there are several training camps in England. ... Easy prey for extremists, said [[Tom Gallagher|Gallagher]], are British students whose talents suit them to be plumbers or carpenters,  but whose parents are starry-eyed about their becoming professionals. With poor grades, they end up on a pointless  course at a mediocre university and realise that they'll end up in some dead-end job. This makes them perfect  recruiting material for those promising to give them a way of making sense of their lives. First, they are offered  brotherhood and, through Islamic teaching, clear instructions on how to live each minute of your life. Then comes the  indoctrination in the victim culture, the propaganda videos showing the suffering of brothers and sisters in Palestine  and Chechnya and Iraq at the hands of Christians and Jews: obviously, no one points out that more Muslims are killed by Muslims than by anyone else. Nor are they told of how the West rescued Kuwait, or saved Muslims in the Balkans. The  videoed sermons preaching the extermination of Jews and infidels come next. <ref>Ruth Dudley-Edwards, ‘[http://www.independent.ie/opinion/analysis/fundamentalist-lessons-to-be-learnt-by-irish-academe-133912.html Fundamentalist Lessons to be learnt by Irish Academe]', ''Sunday Independent'' (Ireland), 27 August 2006.</ref></blockquote>
 
<blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">Such undergraduates are typical of those who have been and are being turned into extremists on university campuses in Britain. In some cases, they have become murderers. These days they don't have to go to Pakistan to learn how to kill people: there are several training camps in England. ... Easy prey for extremists, said [[Tom Gallagher|Gallagher]], are British students whose talents suit them to be plumbers or carpenters,  but whose parents are starry-eyed about their becoming professionals. With poor grades, they end up on a pointless  course at a mediocre university and realise that they'll end up in some dead-end job. This makes them perfect  recruiting material for those promising to give them a way of making sense of their lives. First, they are offered  brotherhood and, through Islamic teaching, clear instructions on how to live each minute of your life. Then comes the  indoctrination in the victim culture, the propaganda videos showing the suffering of brothers and sisters in Palestine  and Chechnya and Iraq at the hands of Christians and Jews: obviously, no one points out that more Muslims are killed by Muslims than by anyone else. Nor are they told of how the West rescued Kuwait, or saved Muslims in the Balkans. The  videoed sermons preaching the extermination of Jews and infidels come next. <ref>Ruth Dudley-Edwards, ‘[http://www.independent.ie/opinion/analysis/fundamentalist-lessons-to-be-learnt-by-irish-academe-133912.html Fundamentalist Lessons to be learnt by Irish Academe]', ''Sunday Independent'' (Ireland), 27 August 2006.</ref></blockquote>

Revision as of 21:41, 9 April 2010

Irish historian and journalist.

On British Muslims

On 21 August 2006 Dudley Edwards attended a seminar called, 'Why Are Britain's Universities Incubating Islamist Extremism?' at the neoconservative orientated think-tank Policy Exchange . [1] It was also attended by other right-wing figures including Anthony Glees, the author of When Students Turn to Terror and the Scottish academic Tom Gallagher. Dudley Edwards wrote an article on the conference in the Irish Sunday Independent. Starting with two anecdotes about how British students came home from university with more conservative religious views, she continued:

Such undergraduates are typical of those who have been and are being turned into extremists on university campuses in Britain. In some cases, they have become murderers. These days they don't have to go to Pakistan to learn how to kill people: there are several training camps in England. ... Easy prey for extremists, said Gallagher, are British students whose talents suit them to be plumbers or carpenters, but whose parents are starry-eyed about their becoming professionals. With poor grades, they end up on a pointless course at a mediocre university and realise that they'll end up in some dead-end job. This makes them perfect recruiting material for those promising to give them a way of making sense of their lives. First, they are offered brotherhood and, through Islamic teaching, clear instructions on how to live each minute of your life. Then comes the indoctrination in the victim culture, the propaganda videos showing the suffering of brothers and sisters in Palestine and Chechnya and Iraq at the hands of Christians and Jews: obviously, no one points out that more Muslims are killed by Muslims than by anyone else. Nor are they told of how the West rescued Kuwait, or saved Muslims in the Balkans. The videoed sermons preaching the extermination of Jews and infidels come next. [2]

Website

www.ruthdudleyedwards.co.uk

Affiliations

Connections

Notes

  1. Tom Gallagher, 'Wrong Muslim voices on campus', The First Post, 21 August 2006. [PDF created 25 February 2010]
  2. Ruth Dudley-Edwards, ‘Fundamentalist Lessons to be learnt by Irish Academe', Sunday Independent (Ireland), 27 August 2006.