Because They Hate "Because They Hate: A
Survivor of Islamic Terror Warns America," is written by Brigitte
Gabriel. This is an edited version of our interview.
Larry Elder: You are of Christian Lebanese descent. When you
heard what Rosie O'Donnell said, that Christian extremism is as bad as
Islamic extremism, how did you react?
Brigitte Gabriel: Well, I do not know what land she is living
in, but I do not recall when the last time I saw a Christian behead
anybody on television, or behead somebody and advertise it on the
Internet. I do not recall hearing a Christian preach that Muslims are
apes and pigs because they are cursed by Jesus, the way that Muslims
are teaching that we are apes and pigs. I do not recall the last time a
Christian went into an elementary school, hijacked children and started
shooting them in the back like the Muslims did in Beslan in Russia when
they went into a schoolyard and took over the children and started
butchering them and killing them. [Rosie] better be thankful that she
is living in America because if she were living in Iran and spoke
against her country -- or any Arabic country -- she would be beheaded
or actually buried halfway in the ground, to be stoned to death. Elder: Did you study Islam?
Gabriel: No, I did not study Islam; I lived Islam. I lived in the
Middle East. I read the Koran in the Arabic language -- I do not need
translation. There is something about living in a place and being an
eyewitness and coming from a culture and blowing the whistle on that
culture, and that is very different from someone majoring in Islam and
living in the Middle East for two months so they can write their
thesis. Elder: You were raised in Lebanon, you were 10
years old and living in southern Lebanon when militant Muslims . . .
poured into your country and declared jihad against Lebanese Christians
such as yourself. Gabriel: Yes, my 9/11 happened to me in 1975 when
I was a 10-year-old child, living and minding my own business, [in] a
small town in south Lebanon. I was an only child to a businessman and
his wife. I was blessed with a wonderful childhood . . . they showered
me with love and everything life had blessed them with. However, our
lives were turned upside down because in 1975, the Muslims declared
Holy War on the Christians of Lebanon. My home exploded around me,
buried in the rubble, wounded as the perpetrators shouted "Allahu
Akbar" [God is great]. My only crime was that I was a Christian living
in a Christian town. I learned at 10 years old the meaning of the word
"infidel." I had a crash course in survival not in the Girl Scouts, but
in the bomb shelter that I lived for seven years of my life in freezing
cold, pitch darkness, drinking stale water and eating grass to live. I
remember at the age of 13, I dressed in my burial clothes going to bed
at night, waiting to be slaughtered. By the age of 20, I had buried
most of my friends who were slaughtered by Muslims. Elder: You
call your book a wake-up call. Tell us what the West does not
understand about what I call Islamofascism. And, do you think
"Islamofascism" is an appropriate term?
Gabriel: Yes, it is an appropriate term. We are fighting
Islamofascism, we are fighting a war that is much worse than Nazism,
anything we have fought before because even the Nazis did not encourage
their children to strap bombs onto their bodies and then rejoice at
their deaths, as well as the deaths of their victims. Islamists are
encouraging their children to die.
Elder: There are 1.2 billion Muslims in the world. I want you to analyze them by ideology.
Gabriel: Not all of them are radicals. We estimate that the radicals
are between 15 and 25 percent; that translates to between 180 and 300
million people like Mohammad Atta who are willing to strap bombs to
their bodies and commit martyrdom operations. Now, that is still a
minority, 15 to 25 percent, but 300 million Mohammad Attas ready to
unleash their blood upon the West. . . . Now, the rest of them . . .
despise the West, they hate our westernization, they think we are
morally corrupt, that we are corrupting the world, and they think we
are such a bad influence on the world that we need to be stopped at any
cost. They may not be willing to commit martyrdom operations
themselves, but they will sit there and cheer on and rally those who
are willing to kill us.
Elder: Are we winning?
Gabriel: No, we are losing. Next week, part two: seven steps necessary to fight Islamofascism.
By Larry Elder
Thursday, April 12, 2007

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