Taking Over Paris Streets




Riposte Laïque posted the photos (above) of a Paris in the process of being colonized. The process may be slow, but it is steady, relentless. They were taken in the neighborhood of Barbès and rue des Poinssonniers. Barbès has been a type of black ghetto for a long time; now it is a Muslim enclave to boot. They show the streets gradually filling up with people as the carpets are laid down:
The next photo is of rue Léon - what a sight! More photos here. You can view the video version of this scene below.

Another page from Riposte Laïque relates the words and images picked up by author Maxime Lépante in various parts of the Barbès quarter, on Friday October 16:
The sidewalk on the right side of rue des Poissonniers is totally covered with Muslims kneeling on prayer rugs. The left sidewalk also begins to fill up. At that moment, a black Muslim wearing a djellaba and an orange arm band with the word "security", calls to the people who are standing around on the sidewalk watching the prayer: "Please get off the sidewalk. People will be praying there!"
In the Middle Ages they called that "being in charge of the street". It meant that those in a superior social position had reserved for their own use the part of the street closest to the houses, which was higher than the center of the street where the filthy waters flowed, while those in an inferior social position had to walk in those waters.
Closer to our own time, in North Africa until the 19th century, the Muslims forbade the Jews to walk in the clean part of the street, forcing them to use instead the part where the garbage was thrown.
And here we are today, in the middle of Paris, with Muslims reintroducing this barbaric practice, forcing non-Muslims to walk in the sewer, while the Muslims occupy the sidewalks! (...)
The prayer is over (...) The Muslims put their shoes back on, fold their rugs and take off in their cars. The visitor automatically looks at the license plates of the cars and notices with surprise that they come for the most part from the suburbs. We are informed that many Muslims who pray here do not live in the neighborhood. (...) It is not rare, we learn, to find cars with their doors wide open on rue Léon, as the owners rush to arrive before the end of the prayer.
So it isn't out of lack of space in the mosque that they pray in the open air every Friday, blocking the streets, but because so many of them come from the suburbs to pray in public, to occupy these Parisian streets that the French authorities turned over to them long ago!
What is this if not a deliberate Islamist strategy to take control of public spaces and impose their law on non-Muslims? (...)
This 3'40" video (without words) shows rue des Poissonniers as it fills up, and the non-Muslims walking in the middle of the street. Not much happens in the video, but it is a document testifying to the Islamization of the city. I found it repellent. Rue des Poissonniers was never "chic", but it was nothing like this.
Here is another one, about two minutes long, also wordless, of rue Léon, a narrower street. I found it thoroughly disgusting. I was surprised, however, to see some women without headscarves walking about. They appear to be European types. Are they in danger? Or are they perhaps used to making their way in this alien world? You'll see a red car that appears to be blocked by the kneeling Muslims.
Labels: Barbès, Dhimmitude, Islam, National Identity, Paris

6 Comments:
Sadly, this does not surprise me in the least. When I first visited Paris in 2005 I was staying in Montmartre, and when walking by the area of Barbes, I was taken aback by the number of Muslims from North Africa as well as black Africans. They really do outnumber the native French and other white people around there.
Later, when I was living in Paris (2006-7) I only occasionally went back there, and was often accosted by African "mystics" offering to tell my future when I did! There are also many stalls run by Maghrébin Muslims selling Islamic books and DVDs.
I'm sure the likes of the Parti Socialiste and other left-wing groups would celebrate this as an example of wonderful diversitybe. The UMP might agree, since they have embraced the same social-liberalism.
As for me, I hoped I wasn't seeing the future of Paris.
@ craig
I believe you said in another comment that you will be going to Paris soon. Please let us know your impressions. You have been there recently and you can perhaps gauge the rapidity (or slowness) of the Islamization process. I don't mean that you should go into dangerous neighborhoods. But you will have a sense of what is taking place. Write a post at your website - I'll be very interested. I know parts of Paris are still exquisite - but is the city a dying body, or is it very much alive and advancing in a worthwhile direction? I wonder if it is possible to know the answer.
This would look like such a marvelous opportunity to round up and confine many troublesome people. They are all there together, just waiting to be hauled off to jail and then deported.
Is there no law against blocking the street? Do the streets not belong to all? Why should the streets be given to any group for their exclusive use like this? If the French government had any backbone, it would seem to be a simple matter to prosecute these people for blocking the street. If they become violent, then they should be deported, which would really be much, much better. Why does it not happen?
@tiberge: Yes, I will be going back to Paris soon. November 10th-14th, to be exact. I am mainly looking forward to it as a leisure break - revisit my old haunts, the area I lived in, the college I studied at, etc. But I also intend to observe how the city has changed since I was last there. Perhaps on the way to Montmartre I will get off at Barbes station and go for a brief "walkabout" in the ghetto. And I certainly will write a post about my experiences, hopefully with some amateur photographs (emphasis on the "amateur").
You're right, by the way. Many parts of the city centre of Paris are exquisite, soaked in history and culture, and a joy to stroll through.
GET A LIFE YOU SAD JEALOUS AND SCARED KUFFAAR BASTARDS? TRY AND FIGURE OUT WHO YOUR FATHER IS BEFORE MAKING STUPID COMMENTS!!!
Regarding the previous comment, I have no idea to whom it is addressed. Am I a "kuffar bastard"? Are the Parisians "kuffar bastards" or is it addressed to someone else?
At any rate, I post it in the name of equal opportunity.
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