Difference between revisions of "SITAmnesty"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
Line 1: Line 1:
 
SITAmnesty (SITA), an acronym for Stop Islamisation and Terrorist Actions is a French [[counterjihad]] blog.<ref name="HnH">Hope Not Hate, [http://www.hopenothate.org.uk/counter-jihad/country/France#id-32 SITAmnesty], Counterjihad Report: France, accessed 5 February 2015</ref>
 
SITAmnesty (SITA), an acronym for Stop Islamisation and Terrorist Actions is a French [[counterjihad]] blog.<ref name="HnH">Hope Not Hate, [http://www.hopenothate.org.uk/counter-jihad/country/France#id-32 SITAmnesty], Counterjihad Report: France, accessed 5 February 2015</ref>
  
In February 2015 the website prominently displayed the words 'Je Suis Charlie Martel'. A play on the phrase Je Suis Charlie, popularised following the 7 January 2015 attacks in Paris on the offices of the magazine [[Charlie Hebdo]], it refernces Charles Martel, a stateman and military leader said to have 'halted the Islamic advance into Western Europe at the Battle of  Tours in 732.<ref>[http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/imperialism/notes/tours.html BATTLE OF TOURS (732 A.D.)], The Latin Library, accessed 5 February 2015</ref>
+
In February 2015 the website prominently displayed the words 'Je Suis Charlie Martel'. A play on the phrase Je Suis Charlie, popularised following the 7 January 2015 attacks in Paris on the offices of the magazine [[Charlie Hebdo]], it references Charles Martel, a stateman and military leader said to have 'halted the Islamic conquests' in Western Europe at the Battle of  Tours in 732.<ref>[http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/imperialism/notes/tours.html BATTLE OF TOURS (732 A.D.)], The Latin Library, accessed 5 February 2015</ref>
  
 
==Contact==
 
==Contact==

Revision as of 17:36, 5 February 2015

SITAmnesty (SITA), an acronym for Stop Islamisation and Terrorist Actions is a French counterjihad blog.[1]

In February 2015 the website prominently displayed the words 'Je Suis Charlie Martel'. A play on the phrase Je Suis Charlie, popularised following the 7 January 2015 attacks in Paris on the offices of the magazine Charlie Hebdo, it references Charles Martel, a stateman and military leader said to have 'halted the Islamic conquests' in Western Europe at the Battle of Tours in 732.[2]

Contact

Website: sitamnesty.wordpress.com

Notes

  1. Hope Not Hate, SITAmnesty, Counterjihad Report: France, accessed 5 February 2015
  2. BATTLE OF TOURS (732 A.D.), The Latin Library, accessed 5 February 2015