Wednesday 30 December 2015

The Fall of Constantinople

The other day, when talking about how islamofascists (salafist scum and so on) are destroying the French society (and the Syrian, Libanese, Egyptian, Tunisian, British, Belgian... societies) I had to listen once again one of those demented comments coming from "the collaborationist left" that always finds a way to justify whatever atrocity perpetrated by perverted, fundamentalist "muslims". This time the argument was based on the horrors of colonialism, so it seems that the bad doings during colonial times justifies that someone that has been living in France (and taking advantage of some parts of the French system: social aids, heath system... and rejecting others: educational system, cultural centers...) during all his life decides to join a sect of sociopaths and spread their sickness by preaching (and using) hate and violence against anyone that does not adhere to their sickening interpretation of the world.

I am fed up with this view where "the old" Europeans should be blamed for everything, and where the "new Europeans", the people from the old colonies that are now a proud an essential part of our societies should consider themselves as "traitors". The past is the past, and of course it needs to be known and used to understand the present, but not to justify everything.

This said, I'm going to enter the game for a few minutes, I'm going to talk about the horrors of colonialism, but another kind of colonialism, the one that "the collaborationist left" seems to forget or to be ignorant of. Europe has suffered different invasions over centuries, let's name some of them:

Regarding the Ottomans it would be interesting to note that their invasion still continues today. Just think about the city currently known as Istambul, its part lying on European soil used to be known as Constantinople, and during the times of Bizantium it was one of the great (or maybe the greatest) European cities. Then the Turks came, invaded, looted and murdered... and they have never been asked to decolonize and return the city to Greece... the big Turkish city is one of the greatest reminders of to what extent Turkey is not our alley, but just the contrary.

There's an imposing and beautiful painting in Toulouse's Augustins Museum by the Orientalist painter Benjamin Constant, The Entry of Mahomet II into Constantinople that gives us an exceptional glimpse into the tragic and painful day when the Ottoman hordes entered the magnificent Byzantine city.

No comments:

Post a Comment