Germany loves Muzzies.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7330119.stm
Islamism, fascism and terrorism (Part 1)
By Marc Erikson
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/DK08Ak03.html
excerpt
he Nazi (”national socialist”) movement was formed in reaction to the World War I destruction of the “Second Reich”, the “unequal and treasonous” Versailles Treaty and the mass social dislocation that followed, its racialist, corporatist ideology laid out in Hitler’s Mein Kampf (My Struggle). The Muslim Brotherhood (Al Ikhwan Al Muslimun), parent organization of numerous Islamist terrorist outfits, was formed in 1928 in reaction to the 1924 abolition of the caliphate by Turkish reformer Kemal Ataturk, drawing the consequences of the World War I demise of the Ottoman Empire. Ikhwan founder Hassan al-Banna, an Egyptian school teacher, wrote at the time that it was endless contemplation of “the sickness that has reduced the ummah (Muslim community) to its present state” which prompted him and five like-minded followers - all of them in their early twenties - to set up the organization to rectify it.
Hitler’s early 1933 accession to power in Germany was widely cheered by Arabs of all different political persuasions. When the “Third Reich” spook and horrors were over 12 years later, a favorite excuse among those who felt the need for one was that the Nazis had been allies against the colonial oppressors and “Zionist intruders”. Many felt no need for an excuse at all and simply bemoaned the fact that the Nazis’ “final solution” to the “Jewish problem” had not proved final enough. But affinities with fascism on the part of the Muslim Brotherhood and other segments of Arab and Muslim society went much deeper than collaboration with the enemy of one’s enemies, and collaboration itself took some extreme forms.