"As a leading colonial power and slave trader, Britain had had a pervasive 
influence on black society as lingering as the smell of a skunk: "They are 
here in the way we think, they are here in the way we act, so we need a 
complete washing. You have to wash from having an intercourse with Satan."

Citizens: 
I  have to agree with minister Louis Farrakhan on this one!!. Indeed  one has 
to wash after having intercourse with Satan. The Brits have messed up every 
african country they once colonolized. 

In Uganda the Brits brought Idi Amin into power.

 As you know the dictator killed  hundreds of thousands of Ugandans.  and now 
it the the some Brits supporting Musevenni and his NRM. Linda  Charker(sp) 
says Museveni  is the blue eyed boy who is the favorate of western powers. 
You and I and indeed african in the Great Lakes Region  have witnessed time 
and time again the havoc Museveni has caused against our people.

The Goddamn Brits neeed to be kicked out of Africa ...  you Know we need to 
do A Mugabi on thier A!@#

Matek




Banned Farrakhan reaches UK audience via satellite 

The Guardian Unlimited

December 23, 2002




Guardian Unlimited � Guardian Newspapers Limited 2002


The controversial American black leader Louis Farrakhan yesterday tried to 
undermine the government's ban on him entering Britain by speaking live by 
satellite to a 1,700-strong audience in London.

Mr Farrakhan, banned for 17 years by successive home secretaries, used his 
first live address to Britain to lambast his exclusion. The Nation of Islam 
leader said Britain's colonial history was satanic, and that the government 
had banned him because it feared his presence would set black people free 
from white oppression.

The audience, overwhelmingly black and young, watched the transmission beamed 
from a mosque in Phoenix, Arizona, on a giant screen at the Apollo Theatre in 
Hammersmith. Unfortunately for Mr Farrakhan, who forbids his followers from 
drinking, the theatre is sponsored by the Carling lager.

As he appeared on the screen the audience gave him a standing ovation. Mr 
Farrakhan, at times quoting from the Koran and Bible, compared himself to a 
messenger carrying particular truths, feared by Britain, "that will free the 
black man and free white people from the sick mentality of white supremacy".

As a leading colonial power and slave trader, Britain had had a pervasive 
influence on black society as lingering as the smell of a skunk: "They are 
here in the way we think, they are here in the way we act, so we need a 
complete washing. You have to wash from having an intercourse with Satan."

Mr Farrakhan is accused of being anti-semitic and is banned from Britain 
because ministers fear his presence would lead to disorder.

In May the court of appeal reinstated the ban on Mr Farrakhan entering the UK 
which a lower court had overturned.

Yesterday he countered that the Nation of Islam, which has several thousand 
UK followers, was peaceful.

"You can't show one person that those who follow me have harmed," he said. 
"We have not plucked a nail or one strand of hair from one white person, a 
Jewish person, or from our own brothers."

Mr Farrakhan, 69, said yesterday's live transmission gave Britons the chance 
to make up their own minds. Some of those in his audience yesterday, who paid 
up to �25 for the privilege, said they wanted to hear the man alleged by some 
to be a preacher of hate for themselves.

Christine Muhammad, 32, a bank cashier from London said: "It was inspiring to 
hear him live, and enlightening."

Chris Obi, 34, an actor from London, said: "The idea that he is banned in an 
age of free expression and free speech is wrong. There's a white fear of 
black empowerment."

Mr Farrakhan said there were strong similarities between the American and 
British black experience: "The British system, like the American system, is 
designed to create in us a subject mentality."

Supporters of Mr Farrakhan said they hoped yesterday's event would show that 
his message preached black empowerment, not hate, and that its effect on 
supporters was to inspire them to help themselves, not provoke disorder.

Reply via email to