Under the Veil in Italy

Below is another report by the journalist Eugenia Fiore about the ongoing Islamization of Italy and the resulting oppression of women. It begins with an account of a parricide by a young Muslima, and then visits various cities to look at the compulsory veiling of very young girls, and the de-facto institution of purdah to keep Muslim women secluded.

Many thanks to HeHa for the translation, and to Vlad Tepes and RAIR Foundation for the subtitling:

Video transcript:

00:01   We are in Nizza Monferrato, province of Asti.
00:06   Here, on March 1st, a Muslim girl, Makka, killed her father.
00:12   “Whoever finds this note will understand.
00:15   Either I will be dead or he will be dead.”
00:18   Makka, an 18-year-old girl, lived in this apartment with her family,
00:24   and according to the initial reconstruction, she killed her father to defend her mother.
00:30   She killed him with two knife cuts, one in the abdomen and the other in the back.
00:35   We heard people screaming, shouting.
00:41   When they took him away inside the bag, we understood it was him.
00:49   He, the father, was an Islamic man. Makka, in her diary, describes him
00:55   as a man who hated women because of his own culture.
00:58   This abuse has lasted for a long time, because it is part of his culture, of the way
01:03   he views relationships with women. I’m afraid my brothers will copy my father’s behavior.
01:08   Sometimes he takes my mother, drags her in front of my brothers
01:12   and teaches them how to treat a woman.
01:17   She was a very quiet girl. —Yes. And no one expected her to do something like that.
01:22   But she said she was not free to go out, to have social relations with friends.
01:26   Yes, because there are some parents who do not let girls go out with males. Something like this.
01:34   Muslim girls who like Makka live in Italy but cannot adopt the Western way of living.
01:42   From Nizza Monferrato, we moved to Turin, a city that has about twenty mosques.
01:48   We meet completely veiled women. —Nice to meet you, my name is Eugenia.
01:52   My name is Danisa. This girl, for example, has to ask her husband
01:56   for permission to leave her house. Listen.
01:59   Before doing something or before going out, we ask for permission.
02:05   Where are you from originally?
02:08   Bangladesh. —Ah, Bangladesh.
02:11   It is impressive to be told something like that, in our streets, in the heart of our cities.
02:17   I ask for permission. —Do you have to ask for permission? —Yes, permission.
02:20   Permission. —You ask him “can I go out?” —Yes, yes, yes, I ask.
02:23   And he says either yes or no? —Yes. —Ah, I understood.
02:27   How long have you been living here in Italy, sir? —Twenty-four years.
02:34   But can your wife go out? —She goes out rarely.
02:38   Why rarely? —But she is a Muslim. —Women can go out alone?
02:42   No. —Why not? —No.
02:45   We are a different thing. —“We are a different thing”, this Muslim tells us.
02:50   A little further on, look what happens just because we try to talk to a lady.
02:58   Get away from here. —He takes a chain and tries to hit our cameraman.
03:04  
03:09   Get your a** out of here! She is my sister. I am going to kill him!
03:15   Then, he grabs an iron crowbar and threatens us again.
03:18   When you speak to the young lady…
03:23   Look me in the eyes.
03:26   Yes, yes, easy, easy. —Now we’re leaving.
03:29  
03:32   Women, girls, forced into a rigorous form of Islam.
03:35   But also children. We move to the entryway of an elementary school.
03:39   We see very little girls who are already veiled.
03:42   One of them even has a mask to hide her mouth.
03:47   Just a few days ago, in Pordenone, a concerned teacher reported the case of a girl
03:54   who showed up at school with her face completely covered.
03:57   A worrying fact. A sign of an Islamic fundamentalism that has been keeping these children
04:03   away from our culture since they were little.
04:07   And so we try to report the problem to a teacher.
04:10   With the surgical mask that they use to cover their mouths?
04:13   No, children don’t wear it. No, I mean girls. —Yes, madam teacher,
04:16   yes, they do. They wear the mask, yes.
04:19   I have seen many of them in our…
04:22  
04:26   What about your parents? If you don’t want to wear the veil, do they leave you free to…?
04:29   I mean, in the end it’s you who decide. —No, now that I put it on, I can’t take it off any more.
04:35   Ah, so you can’t take it off anymore? —No, I will have to cover my whole face.
04:39   So, you will soon be covered fully? —Yes, because it’s the right outfit.
04:46    

2 thoughts on “Under the Veil in Italy

  1. The only way in Italy is for Muslims to provoke mafia.Mafia is the only solution to control and get rid of Muslims in Italy.

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