Monday, September 14, 2009
From Americans for Peace and Tolerance:
The film, "The Third Jihad" will be shown in Hunneman Hall at the Public Library of Brookline on Tuesday, September 15th at 7 p.m. Dennis Hale and Charles Jacobs will lead a brief discussion after the showing. Dr. Hale is a professor of political science at Boston College. Dr. Jacobs is president of Americans for Peace and Tolerance (APT). The program is free and open to the public. The library is located at 361 Washington St., Brookline.
The Third Jihad explores the phenomenon of radical Islam in America and the risk that homegrown jihad poses to national security and the American way of life. Narrated by Muslim-American Dr. M. Zuhdi Jasser, the 72-minutes film reveals how Islamic supremacists, driven by a religiously motivated rejection of western values, are engaging in a multifaceted strategy to overwhelm the West. In contrast to the use of violent jihad and terror to instill fear in "non-believers," cultural jihad is a means of infiltrating and undermining Western society from within, as the film shows.
The film is sponsored by Americans for Peace and Tolerance and co-sponsored by the Boston Israel Action Committee.
For directions to the library go to www.brooklinelibrary.org. For more information call 617-869-1202.
(Also on the Event Calendar)
Americans for Peace and Tolerance and the Boston Israel Action Committee are racist organizations who target Muslims. I'm surprised they haven't started wearing satin robes and pillowcases with little eyeholes cut in them, or started burning gas-soaked Mogen David in front of Muslim's houses. This is the kind of people they are. Why are hate laws not enforced against this kind of crap?
Daoud you little warmonger, who would have predicted that YOU would whine that "Peace and Justice" are RACIST concepts?
Thanks for running this, Martin. APT and Temple Reyim are also donating copies of the film to the Brookline and Newton libraries, respectively, as none of the libraries in the Minuteman network have ordered the film despite subscriber requests. (The library network does have the film "Obsession", by the same producers, which is also ecellent). So even if Boston-area readers cannot attend tonight's screening, they can still request the film from the library.