Thursday, June 23, 2016

Islam (and Muslims) is Gaining a Foothold in Mayan Chiapas in Southern Mexico

Islam Is Gaining a Foothold in Mayan Chiapas in Southern Mexico


Islam Is Gaining a Foothold in Chiapas
Islam Is Gaining a Foothold in Chiapas
PRAYING TO ALLAH IN MEXICO
By Jens Glüsing

Islam (and Muslims) is Gaining a Foothold in Mayan Chiapas in Mexico

New Links:

1) https://isisandislaminlatinamerica.wordpress.com/

2) https://isisandislamlatinamerica.blogspot.com

3) https://islamandisisinlatinamerica.blogspot.com

4) https://mrkowalzki21.wordpress.com/2016/07/22/the-isis-islamic-state-invasion-and-islam-of-latin-america-through-central-america-like-mayan-southern-mexico-and-guatemala/
 

Long a bastion of Catholicism, southern Mexico is quickly turning into a battleground for soul-savers. Islam, too, is gaining a foothold and the indigenous Mayans are converting by the hundreds. The Mexican government is worried about a culture clash in their own backyard.
Islam in the Philippines started in 1380. The Spanish Pigs fight the Filipino Moro Muslims of Mindanao Southern Philippines since 1521. Even Americans, Filipinos and Japanese lost to them. Even Chinese want more headache.


Even the Mexican Drug Cartels like the Sinaloa and Los Zetas Drug Cartel have no defense to the Future Maya Jihadist Warriors of Southern Mexico.’



 Anastasio Gomez, a Tzotzil Mayan from Mexico, fondly remembers his pilgrimage to Mecca. He circled around the Kaaba, the highest sanctuary of Muslims, seven times. At Mount Arafat he prayed to Allah and then he, together with 15 other Indians, sacrificed a sheep before boarding the flight back to their Mexican home.


“In Islam, race plays no role,” the young man says joyously. His enthusiasm is understandable. After all, in his home state of Chiapas, Mexico’s poorest, the indigenous people are viewed as second class humans, and whites and Mestizos treat the Indian majority as if they weren’t there. In the southern Mexican provincial metropolis San Cristóbal de las Casas, the descendants of the Maya even have to move onto the street if a white person approaches them on the sidewalk.
Gomez, 23, converted to Islam eight years ago; ever since then, he has called himself Ibrahim. On his first pilgrimage seven years ago, the Indian was still something of an anomaly. Today, however, Muslim women in headscarves have become a common sight on the streets of San Cristobal.

Conquerors from Spain

About 300 Tzotzil-Indians have converted to Islam in recent years and it’s a development that is beginning to worry the Mexican government. Indeed, the government even suspects the new converts of subversive activity and has already set the secret service onto the track of the Mayan Muslims. Mexican President Vincente Fox has even gone so far as to say he fears the influence of the radical fundamentalists of al-Qaida.











But the Indians have no interest in political extremism. Rather, they belong to the Sunni, Murabitun sect that was founded by the Scotsman Ian Dallas and is seen as an offshoot of a Moroccan religious order. The Murabitun followers represent a sort of primal Islam: Earning interest profits through money lending is a no-no and they preach a literal interpretation of the Koran.



“The see themselves as restorers of Islam,” says the anthropologist Gaspar Morquecho, author of a study of the Muslims of Chiapas. “Their defiance of capitalism is similar in many respects to the critique of globalization espoused by many left-wingers.”












While the Mayan Muslims in Chiapas have been receiving extra attention of late, the Tzotzil conversion has been underway for some time. In the mid 1990s, a group of Spanish Muslims embarked to Latin America to spread the word; their leader was Aureliano Perez, who is now worshipped by the Maya-Muslims as Emir Nafia. He offered the Zapatista rebels fighting under Subcomandante Marcos, whom Perez supported, an ideological-religious alliance. Marcos was hesitant to enter the odd pact, but the Muslim missionaries were unperturbed: They discovered that the Tzotzil Indians made up the majority of the Zapatista rebels and were quite open to the teachings of the prophet Mohammed.


The battle for the souls of Chiapas is nothing new. In the 16th century, the Spanish conquistadors used brute force to convert the Indians to Catholicism. Half a millennium later, evangelical pThe battle for the souls of Chiapas is nothing new. In the 16th century, the Spanish conquistadors used brute force to convert the Indians to Catholicism. Half a millennium later, evangelical preachers from the US have turned Latin America into a religious battleground in their efforts to lure Catholics away from the Church. In the town of San Juan Chamula alone — whose church is seen as something of a spiritual center by the Tzotzil Indians and attracts thousands of tourists a year — there are 11 different congregations seeking to save the souls of the Indians.reachers from the US have turned Latin America into a religious battleground in their efforts to lure Catholics away from the Church. In the town of San Juan Chamula alone — whose church is seen as something of a spiritual center by the Tzotzil Indians and attracts thousands of tourists a year — there are 11 different congregations seeking to save the souls of the Indians.The battle for the souls of Chiapas is nothing new. In the 16th century, the Spanish conquistadors used brute force to convert the Indians to Catholicism. Half a millennium later, evangelical preachers from the US have turned Latin America into a religious battleground in their efforts to lure Catholics away from the Church. In the town of San Juan Chamula alone — whose church is seen as something of a spiritual center by the Tzotzil Indians and attracts thousands of tourists a year — there are 11 different congregations seeking to save the souls of the Indians.

The loss of cultural roots
The Catholics, however, are still, for the most part, in control. They belong to the mafia-esque former state party PRI run the town hall and the lucrative weekly market. In face of the advance of the evangelists, however, they fear that their influence may be waning and they have chased out more than 30,000 protestant Indians out of San Juan Chamula in the last three decades and hundreds have been killed or assaulted. Most of the refugees settled down in the slums on the outskirts of San Cristobal. Cut off from their cultural and religious roots, the Indians are easy prey for all manner of soul-savers.








“In Islam, the Indians rediscover their original values,” claims Esteban Lopez, the Spanish secretary general of the Muslim community. “The Christians destroyed their culture.” He presents the use and abuse of alcohol as proof. Alcoholism is wide-spread under Tzotzil Indians and the strict ban on spirits in Islam helps many to break the vicious circle of addiction and poverty.
In San Cristobal, the Mayan Muslims run a pizza shop and a carpenter workshop and they are seen by the whites as hard-working and diligent. In a Koran school, children learn Arabic and five times a day they pray in the backroom of a residential building. Empty congregation halls are not a problem for the new Muslims: Converted Muslims vow to witness the teachings of Mohammed among their families.

Anastasio Gomez — aka Ibrahim — for example, has managed to convert his entire family. He is especially proud of the conversion of his 100-year-old grandfather who was member of a Christian sect. “He was wandering from religion to religion all his live. Now he has found his peace of mind with Allah,” says Ibrahim.

The Taino Muslim Martyrs and Islamic Martyrdom/genocide is now avenged by Muslims against Spanish Kuffars in Madrid Bombing and Barcelona Truck Attack

The Taino Muslim Martyrs and Islamic Martyrdom/genocide is now avenged by Muslims against Spanish Kuffars in Madrid Bombing and Barcelona Truck Attack

The Taino Muslim Martyrs and Islamic Martyrdom/genocide is now avenged by Muslims against Spanish Kuffars in Madrid Bombing 
Bismillah:
To all Taino and Arawak Jihadists and Martyrs.
Hahaha. Tainos and Arawaks of Caribbean and Latin America choose and will choose Islam. ISIS will take the Caribbean and Latin America to save the Indigenous peoples who converted to Islam from the Western Kuffar Colonialists.

Oh Spanish Colonialist Kuffars:    The Madrid Bombing is a payback for the Indigenous Peoples you killed in Latin America for suspecting them as MUSLIMS. 
Oh Tainos, Allah heard your prayers and your martyrdoms of your Muslim Taino ancestors because the Spanish and Europeans in Europe feel the Muslim Jihaddist attacks like Paris and Brussels. Allah avenges the Taino martyrs by sending Muslims Suicide bombers in Madrid, Paris, London and Brussels.
Turkey tell the truth that Islam came to Caribbean before the Kuffars; the Tainos are Muslims before the Kuffars, so the Spanish Kuffars Killed (Martyred) the Taino Mujaheedin and their Caciques (Caliphs) who choose Martyrdom for Allah than Apostasy to Spanish Crusader Kuffars that the Muslims , Al Qaeda, Boko Haram and ISIS must NEVER ever forget. Allahu Akbar!!!

Now. The Tainos and Arawaks are going back to their original roots by returning to the first and true monotheistic Religion of their pre-colonial ancestors, Islam.
The Caribbean like Taino-Meztizo Cuba will become a Muslim territory by Turkey and Morocco. Arawak Suriname is now member of the OIC or Organization for Islamic Cooperation Countries.
All the indigenous peoples of Latin America must convert to Islam and become Muslim Suicide Bombers (Martyrs) to be sent to the Cities of Latin America and Spain to reconnect to your Martyred Muslim Ancestors and Achieve Revenge (Jihad). Allahu Akbar!!!
Madrid in Spain will experienced more Bombing and killing attacks against the Spanish Kuffars by the Islamized Tainos, Mayans, Mapuches and etc of Latin America for every Taino, Maya, Mapiche and etc that the Spanish Kuffars Killed in the Past.
Insallah!!
Takbeer!!!
Allahu Akbar!!!
Update: The people of Taino ancestry in Puerto Rico embraced ISLAM

The people of Taino ancestry in Puerto Rico and Caribbean embraced ISLAM

The people of Taino ancestry in Puerto Rico and Caribbean embraced ISLAM

The people of Taino ancestry in Puerto Rico embraced ISLAM 

Spanish crusaders deserved it, the Madrid Bombing. Why? 

Allah never forget what the Spanish Kuffars did on Taino Jihaddists: 

Arawak of Guyana, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago are now Muslims and OIC members

Arawak of Guyana, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago are now Muslims and OIC members

Arawak of Guyana and Suriname are now Muslims and OIC members 
The Arawak are a group of indigenous peoples of South America and historically of the Caribbean. Specifically, the term “Arawak” has been applied at various times to the Lokono of South America and the Taíno, who historically lived in the Greater Antilles and northern Lesser Antilles in the Caribbean, all of whom spoke related Arawakan languages 

From the
In a Stabroek News editorial comment to my letter, titled “Least developed countries like Guyana can benefit from the Organization of Islamic Conference,” Saturday, March 15th 2008, on the just concluded OIC Summit in Dakar, Senegal it was stated that “We have been informed that Guyana’s Ambassador to India Mr. Ronald Gajraj and Mr. Fazeel Ferouz President of the Central Islamic Organisation of Guyana (CIOG) attended the Summit.” I was informed by the OIC and Senegal’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs that Mr. Ronald Gajraj was expected in Dakar, however he did not attend the summit.
Here again we have witnessed was another diplomatic fiasco by the Guyana Ministry of Foreign Affairs due to bad planning and micro-management. If the Guyanese delegation was formalized in advance and arrangement was made for them to travel in a timely manner this poor image of Guyana could have been avoided.

Thirty-Seven heads of states attended the summit, and according to the OIC office in Jeddah and ISESCO in Rabat, Morocco, CIOG’s Fazeel Ferouz was there only on the final day of the summit, March 14, 2008. This is another embarrassing diplomatic blunder especially after Senegal sent a three-member delegation to invite President Bharrat Jagdeo personally to the Heads of State Summit.

Tehuelche Peoples will be Key of Islam in Patagonia and the Falklands

Tehuelche Peoples will be Key of Islam in Patagonia and the Falklands

Tehuelche Peoples will be Key of Islam in Patagonia and the Falklands 
The Tehuelche people is the generic name given to a group of indigenous peoples of Patagonia and the southern pampas regions of Argentina and Chile

Tehuelche is a Mapuche language word meaning “Fierce People”. They were also called Patagones by Spanish explorers, who found large footprints made by the tribes on the Patagonian beaches.[4] These large footprints were actually made by the guanaco leather boots that the Tehuelche used to cover their feet. 

It is possible that the stories of the early European explorers about the Patagones, a race of giants in South America, are based on the Tehuelche, because the Tehuelche were typically tall, taller than the average European of the time.[5] According to the 2001 census [INDEC], 4,300 Tehuelche lived in theprovinces of Chubut and Santa Cruz, and an additional 1,637 in other parts of Argentina. There are now no Tehuelche tribes living in Chile, though some Tehuelche were assimilated into Mapuche groups over the years.[6]

Guarani People will embrace Islam and Tri Border Region

Guarani People will embrace Islam and Tri Border Region

Guarani are a group of culturally related indigenous peoples of South America. They are distinguished from the related Tupí by their use of the Guaraní language. The traditional range of the Guaraní people is in present-dayParaguay between the Uruguay River and lower Paraguay River, the MisionesProvince of Argentina, southern Brazil once as far as north as Rio de Janeiro, and parts of Uruguay and Bolivia.[1] Although their demographic dominance of the region has been reduced by European colonisation and the commensurate rise of mestizos, there are contemporary Guaraní populations in these areas. Most notably, the Guaraní language, still widely spoken across traditional Guaraní homelands, is one of the two official languages in Paraguay, the other one being Spanish.[2]
The language was once looked down upon by the upper and middle classes, but it is now often regarded with pride and serves as a symbol of national distinctiveness.[citation needed] The Paraguayan population learns Guaraní both informally from social interaction and formally in public schools. In modern Spanish, Guaraní is also applied to refer to any Paraguayan national in the same way that the French are sometimes called Gauls.

Guaraní people today
Paraguay
The Guaraní people and culture persist. Nearly all the forest tribes on the borders of Paraguay are Guaraní. Many are descendants of mission exiles. In Paraguay, Guaraní lineage predominates in the population and the Guaraní language is spoken in most departments to this day.
Bolivia
The Guaraní ethnic group in Bolivia lives in a region of the country near the Paraguayan and Argentine borders, including portions of Santa Cruz,ChuquisacaTarija Departments. This region reaches nearly as far north asSanta Cruz de la Sierra and includes portions of the GuapayParapetí, andƗtɨka Guasu (or Pilcomayo) River valleys.[12] Bolivian Guaraní are represented by the Assembly of the Guaraní People.

There are three principal subgroups of Guaraní in Bolivia,[13][14] marked by dialectical and historical differences:
  • Around fifty thousand Ava Guaraní principally in the Andean foothills.Ava means man in Guaraní, and thus Ava Guaraní has become the name for numerous Guaraní ethnic groups in Paraguay and Brazil.[15]
  • Simba (Quechuabraid) Guaraní who live near the Pilcomayo River and have been identified by men maintaining a tradition of braided hair, although most young men no longer uphold this practice.[16] They are sometimes called Guaraní katui (GuaraníGuaraní par excellence)
  • The Izoceño Guaraní or Tapɨi of Izozog who live in the region of Ɨsoso or Izozo on the Parapetí River
Islamist TeThe tri-border region—formed by the cities of Puerto Igauzu, Argentina; Foz do Iguazu Brazil; and Ciudad del Este, Paraguay—has a reputation for lawlessness and an historical presence of terrorist elements. For decades the region has been home to various smugglers, terrorists, drug traffickers, arms dealers, and organized crime figures from Russia, Japan, China, and Nigeria, among other countries. Terrorists from the Middle East have also been found in the area, particularly from Lebanon and Syria. Former FBI director Louis Freeh described the area as a “free zone for significant criminal activity, including people who are organized to commit acts of terrorism.”[1]
Approximately 630,000 people live in the tri-border area, of which roughly 25,000 are Arabs or of Arab descent.[2] The dynamics of the area make it a haven for the outlaws who live and work among its law-abiding citizens. Political corruption allows the multitude of criminal activities and illegal markets to overlap with legitimate economic activities. Paraguay has been especially culpable in maintaining lax security and border controls in the area, helping to fuel a huge underground economy. The Brazil-Paraguay border can be crossed on foot, often with no documents, which helps to propagate illegal activities.
Terrorist Threat in the Tri-Border Region