Hi a_person,
I was in tears when I read the following. My tears were one of laughter...Let me repeat your thread subject,
"The Swiss got it right on Islam AND JUDAISM...finally. You reap what you sow my friend, you reap what you sow!
I always knew that your hate promotion will one day come to haunt you. Enjoy it my friend...I hope the following will teach you a lesson;
BY Neil Nagraj
On the heels of a ban on minarets at mosques, one Swiss politician is proposing to extend government intrusion into religious matters beyond the grave.
In a television interview two days after the passage of the minaret ban, Christophe Darbelly, head of the Christian Democratic People's Party of Switzerland, called for a ban on separate cemeteries for Muslims and Jews, according to a report on JTA.org.
Existing cemeteries would not be affected by the ban, Darbelly reportedly said. The Web site reports his plan would, however, prohibit the construction of separate cemeteries in the future.
The pol also has called for a ban on burkas, according to reports posted in an online Swiss newspaper, JTA.org writes.
The Swiss ban on minarets at mosques - approved by nearly 60% of Swiss voters - sparked global shock and condemnation, with many saying Switzerland has irreparably harmed its long-held reputation as a bastion of tolerance.
http://khilafah.com/index.php/news-...itician-seeks-ban-on-jewish-muslim-cemeteries
And
The Swiss got it right on Judaism...finally
Swiss anti-semitism 'deeply rooted'
It indicates that 16% of Swiss people are fundamentally anti-semitic, while 60% have anti-semitic sympathies.
The US and Swiss Jewish organisations behind the survey say it shows the wave of anti-semitism that hit Switzerland in 1998 over the return of dormant bank accounts to Holocaust survivors has not died down.
Switzerland's two biggest banks agreed to pay Holocaust survivors $1.25bn compensation for wartime losses after prolonged international pressure from Jewish groups.
"In the main the Swiss are untroubled by Switzerland's conduct toward Jews in the context of the Holocaust," said the New York based American Jewish Committee, which joined with Geneva's Inter-Community Co-ordination against Anti-Semitism and Defamation to commission the survey.
A majority of those questioned accepted the December 1999 conclusion of a government-appointed panel that Switzerland, which took in nearly 30,000 Jewish refugees during the Holocaust, "turned away refugees who were in danger of being killed".
But only 35% thought Switzerland took in too few Jews, while 43% said the number accepted was the "right amount."
The telephone survey was carried out by the Swiss-based GFS polling organisation among 1,210 adults in January.
Town rejects immigrants
The survey result followed a Swiss town's rejection of all but eight of 23 applications from foreigners for Swiss citizenship in a procedure which allows applications to be decided by citizens.
Voters in Emmen near Lucerne were sent photographs of the applicants and other personal details - including taxable income - as a basis on which to make their decision, which took place along with a range of other national and local votes.
Eight Italians were the only applicants to obtain Swiss citizenship while families from the former Yugoslavia, Poland, Hungary and Turkey were rejected.
It was the second time that Emmen had decided directly on such applications, after the procedure was put forward last year by the Swiss Democrats, a small nationalist party.
Direct votes on citizenship have been used for some time in other parts of central Switzerland.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/678669.stm
Yes a_person,
The Swiss got it right...finally!
Regards,
Sameeh