|
Ferdinand and Isabella at the Gates of Granada |
From
Yahoo:
When
the ominous maps first appeared two years ago, residents of Barcelona
scoffed, if they noticed the tabloid news about their home at all. Drawn
by ISIS, the maps showed Spain and Portugal in black, signifying
territory controlled by the jihadi terror group. And the maps came with a
promise: “We will take Spain back” — by 2020, ISIS said.
The
threat centered on the long-ago empire of al-Andalus — the Islamic
caliphate that began when Muslim warriors from North Africa, known as
Moors, arrived on Spanish soil in the early eighth century, quickly
running out the ruling Visigoths and extending Muslim rule across the
Iberian peninsula, including Barcelona, on the Mediterranean coast close
to present-day France.
Historians
are enamored of Moorish culture and art, but for many Spaniards, the
al-Andalus era is the nadir of their country’s history. The caliphate’s
influence in southern Spain, Andalusia, where it lasted nearly eight
centuries, is evidenced in both the region’s name and in stunning
Islamic architecture such as Granada’s Alhambra palace. But the
eighth-century Muslim occupation in the Northeast region of Catalonia
lasted but 80 years and is nearly as forgotten as the chilling ISIS
maps.
The
maps suddenly seemed relevant again on Thursday, when, on one of
Barcelona’s most-photographed and tourist-traveled sites, the wide
pedestrian way called La Rambla, a white rental van jumped the curb and
raced along the median walkway, swerving back and forth on a lethal ride
that created a stampede of terrified tourists. Thirteen people were
killed and scores injured in the attack, for which ISIS claimed
responsibility.
Not
long after, five suspected jihadis were killed by Spanish police in
Cambrils, some 75 miles to the southwest, after they drove into a crowd
of pedestrians, injuring seven. The attackers reportedly wore explosive
belts, and police believe the original plan for La Rambla may have
included explosives as well. Even with three alleged perpetrators
arrested — the suspected van driver, 18-year-old Moussa Oukabir,
whose Facebook page is said to have expressed a desire to “kill the
unbelievers,” was still being sought Friday morning — the Rambla rampage
raises troubling questions. How can authorities secure a
pedestrian-friendly city famous for fiestas in huge squares and for
streets like La Rambla, flanked by flower stalls and terraces serving up
pitchers of sangria, where at any given moment, thousands of tourists
can be found strolling along the tree-lined median of land that leads to
the famous statue of Columbus pointing over the sea? (Read more.)
Share
2 comments:
I have found it interesting how terrorists single out people who are unarmed. Cowardice of the highest order! ...and they consider themselves brave worriers of Allah.
Read the Myth of the Andalusian Paradise.
I address the Myth of the Muslim,paradise in my upcoming alternate history Isabella Unashamed with my co author Carolina Casas.
Post a Comment