http://www.raymondibrahim.com/11824/greatest-church-soon-to-be-mega-mosque

Greatest Church Soon To Be Mega Mosque?
by Raymond Ibrahim
FrontPage MagazineJune 8, 2012

Ostensibly dealing with a building, a recent report demonstrates how Turkey's 
populace—once deemed the most secular and liberal in the Muslim world—is 
reverting to its Islamic heritage, complete with animosity for the infidel West 
and dreams of Islam's glory days of jihad and conquest. According to Reuters:

       
      Thousands of Turks pray for the reconquest of Christendom's greatest 
church.
     
  Thousands of devout Muslims prayed outside Turkey's historic Hagia Sophia 
museum on Saturday [May 23] to protest a 1934 law that bars religious services 
at the former church and mosque. Worshippers shouted, "Break the chains, let 
Hagia Sophia Mosque open," and "God is great" [the notorious "Allahu Akbar"] 
before kneeling in prayer as tourists looked on. Turkey's secular laws prevent 
Muslims and Christians from formal worship within the 6th-century monument, the 
world's greatest cathedral for almost a millennium before invading Ottomans 
converted it into a mosque in the 15th century.

Hagia Sophia—Greek for "Holy Wisdom"—was, in fact, Christendom's greatest 
cathedral for a thousand years. Built in Constantinople, the heart of the 
Christian empire, it was also a stalwart symbol of defiance against an ever 
encroaching Islam from the east. After parrying centuries of jihadi thrusts, 
Constantinople was finally sacked by Ottoman Turks in 1453. Its crosses 
desecrated and icons defaced, Hagia Sophia—as well as thousands of other 
churches—was immediately converted into a mosque, the tall minarets of Islam 
surrounding it in triumph. Then, after the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, 
as part of several reforms, Ataturk transformed Hagia Sophia into a "neutral" 
museum in 1934—a gesture of goodwill to the then triumphant West from a then 
crestfallen Turkey.

Even though Hagia Sophia is a Christian center under Islamic domination, 
several Christian authorities are content seeing it remain a museum, including 
the Ecumenical Patriarchate, spiritual leader of Orthodox Christians: "We want 
it to remain a museum in line with the Republic of Turkey's principles," 
adding, "if it became a church it would be chaos."

True enough; one need only recall how back in 2006, when Pope Benedict was 
scheduled to visit Hagia Sophia, Muslims were outraged. Then, Turkey's 
independent paper Vatan wrote: "The risk is that Benedict will send Turkey's 
Muslims and much of the Islamic world into paroxysms of fury if there is any 
perception that the Pope is trying to re-appropriate a Christian center that 
fell to Muslims." Before the Pope's visit, a gang of Turks stormed and occupied 
Hagia Sophia, screaming "Allahu Akbar!" and warning "Pope! Don't make a 
mistake; don't wear out our patience." On the day of the Pope's visit, another 
throng of Islamists waved banners saying "Pope get out of Turkey" while 
chanting Hagia Sophia "is Turkish and will remain Turkish."

All this is yet another reminder of the Islamic world's double standards: when 
Muslims conquer non-Muslim territories, such as Constantinople and its 
churches—through fire and steel, with all the attendant human suffering and 
misery—the descendents of those conquered are not to expect any apologies or 
concessions. However, once the same Muslims who would never concede one inch of 
Islam's conquests, including buildings, are on the short end of the 
stick—Palestinians vis-à-vis Israel, for example—then they resort to the United 
Nations and the court of public opinion, demanding justice, restitutions, 
rights, and so forth. (See this 2006 LA Times Op-Ed for more on this theme.)

Even in the brief Reuter's report, evidence of such "passive-aggressive" 
behavior emerges. First, this is not about Muslims wanting to pray; it's about 
Muslims wanting to revel in the glory days of Islamic jihad and conquest: 
Muslims "staged the prayers ahead of celebrations next week marking the 559th 
anniversary of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmet's conquest of Byzantine 
Constantinople." According to Salih Turhan, a spokesman quoted by Reuters, "As 
the grandchildren of Mehmet the Conqueror, seeking the re-opening Hagia Sophia 
as a mosque is our legitimate right."

Sultan Mehmet was the scourge of European Christendom, whose Islamic hordes 
seized and ravished Constantinople, forcibly turning it Islamic. Openly 
idolizing him, as many Turks do, is tantamount to their saying "We are proud of 
our ancestors who killed and stole the lands of Christians." And yet, despite 
such militant overtones, Turhan, whose position is echoed by many Turks, still 
manages to blame the West: "Keeping Hagia Sophia Mosque closed is an insult to 
our mostly Muslim population of 75 million. It symbolizes our ill-treatment by 
the West."

If merely keeping a historically Christian/Western building—that was stolen by 
Islamic jihad—as a neutral museum is seen as "ill-treatment by the West," on 
what basis can Muslims and non-Muslims ever "dialogue"?


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