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August 23, 2022

Hindus are becoming more and more familiar with the Muslim doctrine of taqiyya

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A recent article reports that, on two separate occasions,  Muslims murdered two Hindu men by first deceiving them in an effort to get close enough to murder them.

In one incident, Muslims entered the shop of their targeted Hindu victim and pretended to be customers — before attacking and beheading him (on the accusation that he had somehow “insulted” their prophet). 

In the other incident, a Muslim man “befriended” his targeted victim on Facebook.  The murderer pretended to be himself a Hindu that wanted to join his intended victim’s organization.  When they eventually met, the trap was triggered and the Hindu man slaughtered, also on the charge of “blaspheming” against Muhammad.

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After giving more incidents of Muslims deceiving Hindus in order to subjugate or kill them, the article highlights and blames the Muslim doctrine of taqiyya:

Al-Taqiyya… means to lie, mislead, manipulate and create illusions for an ‘enemy of Islam’ when being persecuted. Except, in today’s day and age, it has been used by Islamists and their apologists to deceive ‘kafirs’ (non-believers of Islam) into believing they are a well-wisher only to stab them in the back (figuratively) or behead them (literally).  We’ve seen in [the] above two cases how the Islamists have used deception as a tool (posing as customer and Hindu on Facebook to befriend Hindutva leader) to come close to the victim and then eventually kill them.

While it’s good that this article is connecting the dots, the fact is, entering a store and posing as a customer, or pretending to be a Facebook friend, is child’s play compared to what other Muslims have done and are willing to do to get close enough to slaughter their victims.

Consider the assassination plot against a Christian pastor in Turkey that was thwarted: Police arrested 14 Muslim suspects; two of them had been members of the pastor’s congregation for over a year; three of them were women. 

“These people had infiltrated our church and collected information about me, my family and the church and were preparing an attack against us,” said the pastor in question, Emre Karaali: “Two of them attended our church for over a year and they were like family.”

And their subversive tactics worked: “The 14 [suspects] had collected personal information, copies of personal documents, created maps of the church and the pastor’s home, and had photos of those who had come to Izmit [church] to preach.”