BNP and Vlaams Belang leaders hook up to produce book on the 'Islamization of Europe'

on Friday, April 20, 2012

The British National Party have announced that they are selling a "great new book on the Muslim tide, and how to turn it". The book is titled Inch'Allah? The Islamization of Europe, its author is Vlaams Belang leader Filip Dewinter, and the English version is translated and edited by none other than the BNP's own would-be führer Nick Griffin. Indeed, it would appear that Griffin's role in the production of the book went even further than that – he is now boasting about the new sections he introduced to improve Dewinter's original text.

Enthusiasm for Inch'Allah? evidently transcends the deep divisions within the BNP itself. Griffin's leading political opponent in the party, Andrew Brons, has published a glowing review of the book on his own Nationalist Unity Forum, hailing it as "one of the most comprehensive and well-researched works on the Islamic colonisation of Europe yet published on the continent". Mind you, that may have been before Brons realised Griffin had a hand in writing it.

Some of us will recall that the US Islamophobic bloggers Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer were sharply criticised by their former ally Charles Johnson of Little Green Footballs for their participation at the Counterjihad Brussels 2007 conference alongside Filip Dewinter. Johnson accused Vlaams Belang of being white nationalists with fascist links.

Geller and Spencer indignantly denied this. Geller argued that "Vlaams Belang is the only party that has gone out of its way to support Israel. No political party in Belgium has supported Israel. Vlaams Belang has been the only party staunchly behind Israel for the past 10 years." Spencer agreed that VB are "the only ones in Flanders standing against the jihad and for Israel".

Given these expressions of support for Vlaams Belang, and their shared views on the threatened "Islamization" of the West, will Geller and Spencer be promoting the English edition of Dewinter/Griffin's book in the US? And if not, why not? I think we should be told.



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