Female cop in the UK tells a woman she’s not allowed to sing church songs outside of actual church grounds. She keeps repeating it, getting more worked up, while another officer stands by.
“You are outside of church grounds… not allowed to sing church songs outside of church.”
When did this become acceptable?
Khola Maryam Hübsch gab gestern in der Sendung "Lanz" an, dass Muslime ihr sagen würden, Deutschland soll verlieren.
Ähnlich hört es sich an aus Holland. Der Vertreter der Muslimpartei sagt: "Wir sind gegen die Niederlande."
Man sollte nicht mehr von Parallelgesellschaften sprechen, sondern von Gegengesellschaften.
We are constantly told that Turkey is the indispensable lynchpin of European security against the Russian threat. Judging by the smiles in Moscow, the Russians appear entirely comfortable with this plan.
Not a good day for the believers.
Let me see how many out there will complain but I’m ok with it
The food we call yogurt is much older than the Turkish language or the modern Turkish people.
Fermented milk products similar to yogurt were being made thousands of years ago by pastoral peoples in Central Asia and the Near East.
Ancient peoples such as the Greeks, Persians, Thracians, Scythians, and many nomadic groups consumed forms of fermented milk long before the arrival of the Turks in Anatolia.
The word “yogurt” comes from the Turkish word yoğurt, which entered many European languages through the language of Turks
The food itself is much older and does not belong exclusively to any one nation.
The ancient Greeks had fermented milk products and sour milk preparations.
The Persians also consumed fermented dairy products.
Similar foods existed across the Caucasus, Central Asia, and the Middle East for millennia.
The word “yogurt” is Turkish, but the food is far older than Turkey and was eaten by many ancient peoples, including Greeks, Persians, and Central Asian pastoral societies.
It’s similar to how the word “tea” may come from one language, but the drink itself has a much broader history.
One of the fascinating things about yogurt is that it shows how cultures are connected.
The name we use today comes from Turkish, but the food itself predates the Turks by thousands of years and was enjoyed in various forms by ancient peoples across Central Asia, Persia, the Caucasus, and the Greek world
A Turkish journalist has sparked intense debate after claiming that much of modern Turkey was once part of the Christian Greek world and that many people living there today descend from populations that were forcibly or gradually Islamized over the centuries.
According to her statements, vast regions of Anatolia were Orthodox Christian and Greek for centuries before the spread of Islam transformed the demographic and cultural landscape. She argues that many families of Greek and Armenian origin eventually lost their original faith and identity, adopting Islam and a Turkish national identity instead.
The journalist describes the disappearance of churches, the destruction of Christian cemeteries, and the gradual erasure of a civilization that had existed in Asia Minor for more than a thousand years. She also claims that many descendants of Islamized Greeks have been taught to view Orthodox Greeks as enemies despite their shared ancestry.
“I have seen firsthand what Islamization does to culture and freedom,” she stated, warning that Europe should learn from the historical experience of Anatolia and protect its cultural heritage and identity.
Her comments have reignited discussions about the forgotten Christian history of Asia Minor, the existence of Crypto-Christians, and the complex ethnic origins of many people in modern Turkey. For many Greeks, these remarks are seen as a rare acknowledgment from within Turkey of the deep historical roots of Hellenism in Anatolia and the dramatic changes that followed the Ottoman era.
#drthehistories