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Germany's Pegida anti-Islamisation group says it has a new hero: Narendra Modi

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Group's leader says he'd like to invite the Indian prime minister to address one of its infamous Monday rallies in Dresden.
Anuradha Sharma · Today · 04:30 pm
3a260384-c7c8-49c0-a53f-82fa47a4b0c7.jpg

Photo Credit:Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s overseas fan club is swelling. Among his new fans are the leaders of Germany’s Pegida ‒ a German acronym for the Patriotic Europeans Against Islamisation of the West group that was formed in Dresden in October. The organisation hit the global headlines in January when, in the wake of theCharlie Hebdomassacre in France, 25,000 sympathisers turned out to protest Muslim immigration to Germany.

Pegida has since inspired the formation of me-too groups in other parts of Germany (Legida in Leipzig, Bogida in Bonn, Fragida in Frankfurt) and abroad (US, Canada and UK). It has continued to make its presence felt by organising street demonstrations in Dresden every Monday.

WhenScroll.ininterviewed the two top Pegida leaders ahead of their rally in Dresden last Monday, they were effusive in their praise for India’s prime minister. “We need a leader like him in Germany here,” declared Lutz Bachmann, Pegida’s head and founder. Bachmann had quit Pegida late in January after a photo of him styled as Adolf Hitler went viral but rejoined a month later. His aide Tatjana Festerling added, “Not only in Germany, but the whole of Europe. We need courageous leaders who are positioning themselves against Islamisation.”

Old India hand

As it turns out, Festerling is a yoga practitioner who visits India regularly for meditation retreats. This, she insisted, gave her some insight into the challenges faced by the subcontinent. “I know you have a lot of problems there, wherever you are in your country,” she said. “We have lots of troubles with these people [Muslims] like you have.”

She added: “We are speaking against losing our culture. All northern European cultures are fading away. We have mosques all over. We have muezzins calling five times a day. In some cities, you will find totally different parallel societies. There is no concept of integration among them.”

In the first round of the mayoral elections in Dresden held on June 7, Festerlingpolledalmost 10% of the vote. The surprising performance comes as a shot in the arm to Pegida, which critics has already been writing off as a fading movement. Both Bachmann and Festerling were ecstatic and believe that the result is evidence that they have a political future not only in Dresden, but in other German cities as well. In the next one or two years, Bachmann hopes, Pegida will be able to have a strong footing as a political party.

Despite a heavy downpour, last Monday’s rally at Dresden’s historic palace square saw more than 1,500 supporters. The aged and disabled in wheelchairs, office-goers still in their ties, teenagers with tattoos and piercings, sympathisers from other Germany regions, and also from neighbouring countries, all gathered amidst heavy security presence to listen to their leaders. A procession meandering through the city.

A fixture

While the number of participants is falling, the demonstrations have become a fixture in Dresden. “It’s become a weekly city event,” said Alexander Schnieder, a senior journalist with the local newspaperSächsische Zeitung. “But the movement in itself has lost its fervour.”

Hans Vorländer, the professor of political science at Dresden Technical University who was part of a team studying Pegida, said that they group had lots its political purpose: now, he said, the demonstrators rally together for the company of like-minded souls, just like members of a sports club or revellers at a beer party. The gains it made in the city elections came not because voters were especially enamoured of Pegida’s ideals but because they were upset with the system. “It’s like a game they are playing, without purpose, or end, or strategy,” Vorländer said. “At some point it has to end.”

A major factor that will cause Pegida to fail, Vorländer said, is Germany’s strong civil society. Ever since the Pegida protests began, Germany has been witnessing counter-demonstrations all through the country. “Compared to other countries, in Germany it [Pegida] cannot be organised as a steady political party or movement just because of, for historical reasons, the strength of civil society and there are some social mechanisms of setting up taboos on certain issues, and these taboos can be considered as historical lessons from Nazism,” Vorlander said.

In the meantime, Bachmann has been trying several strategies to fuel the movement, which he says is not “anti-Islam”, but anti-Islamisation”. He has been inviting right-wing speakers from other countries to address the Dresden rallies. Geert Wilders, the right-wing leader from Netherlands, attended the demonstration on April 14 in which heheaped praiseson Pegida supporters.

“We would like to get in touch with Indian politicians,” Festerling said.

Bachmann’s keen desire is to have Prime Minister Narendra Modi at one of his events. “Tell him that we invite him here in Dresden,” he said.
 
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Group's leader says he'd like to invite the Indian prime minister to address one of its infamous Monday rallies in Dresden.
Anuradha Sharma · Today · 04:30 pm
3a260384-c7c8-49c0-a53f-82fa47a4b0c7.jpg

Photo Credit:Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s overseas fan club is swelling. Among his new fans are the leaders of Germany’s Pegida ‒ a German acronym for the Patriotic Europeans Against Islamisation of the West group that was formed in Dresden in October. The organisation hit the global headlines in January when, in the wake of theCharlie Hebdomassacre in France, 25,000 sympathisers turned out to protest Muslim immigration to Germany.

Pegida has since inspired the formation of me-too groups in other parts of Germany (Legida in Leipzig, Bogida in Bonn, Fragida in Frankfurt) and abroad (US, Canada and UK). It has continued to make its presence felt by organising street demonstrations in Dresden every Monday.

WhenScroll.ininterviewed the two top Pegida leaders ahead of their rally in Dresden last Monday, they were effusive in their praise for India’s prime minister. “We need a leader like him in Germany here,” declared Lutz Bachmann, Pegida’s head and founder. Bachmann had quit Pegida late in January after a photo of him styled as Adolf Hitler went viral but rejoined a month later. His aide Tatjana Festerling added, “Not only in Germany, but the whole of Europe. We need courageous leaders who are positioning themselves against Islamisation.”

Old India hand

As it turns out, Festerling is a yoga practitioner who visits India regularly for meditation retreats. This, she insisted, gave her some insight into the challenges faced by the subcontinent. “I know you have a lot of problems there, wherever you are in your country,” she said. “We have lots of troubles with these people [Muslims] like you have.”

She added: “We are speaking against losing our culture. All northern European cultures are fading away. We have mosques all over. We have muezzins calling five times a day. In some cities, you will find totally different parallel societies. There is no concept of integration among them.”

In the first round of the mayoral elections in Dresden held on June 7, Festerlingpolledalmost 10% of the vote. The surprising performance comes as a shot in the arm to Pegida, which critics has already been writing off as a fading movement. Both Bachmann and Festerling were ecstatic and believe that the result is evidence that they have a political future not only in Dresden, but in other German cities as well. In the next one or two years, Bachmann hopes, Pegida will be able to have a strong footing as a political party.

Despite a heavy downpour, last Monday’s rally at Dresden’s historic palace square saw more than 1,500 supporters. The aged and disabled in wheelchairs, office-goers still in their ties, teenagers with tattoos and piercings, sympathisers from other Germany regions, and also from neighbouring countries, all gathered amidst heavy security presence to listen to their leaders. A procession meandering through the city.

A fixture

While the number of participants is falling, the demonstrations have become a fixture in Dresden. “It’s become a weekly city event,” said Alexander Schnieder, a senior journalist with the local newspaperSächsische Zeitung. “But the movement in itself has lost its fervour.”

Hans Vorländer, the professor of political science at Dresden Technical University who was part of a team studying Pegida, said that they group had lots its political purpose: now, he said, the demonstrators rally together for the company of like-minded souls, just like members of a sports club or revellers at a beer party. The gains it made in the city elections came not because voters were especially enamoured of Pegida’s ideals but because they were upset with the system. “It’s like a game they are playing, without purpose, or end, or strategy,” Vorländer said. “At some point it has to end.”

A major factor that will cause Pegida to fail, Vorländer said, is Germany’s strong civil society. Ever since the Pegida protests began, Germany has been witnessing counter-demonstrations all through the country. “Compared to other countries, in Germany it [Pegida] cannot be organised as a steady political party or movement just because of, for historical reasons, the strength of civil society and there are some social mechanisms of setting up taboos on certain issues, and these taboos can be considered as historical lessons from Nazism,” Vorlander said.

In the meantime, Bachmann has been trying several strategies to fuel the movement, which he says is not “anti-Islam”, but anti-Islamisation”. He has been inviting right-wing speakers from other countries to address the Dresden rallies. Geert Wilders, the right-wing leader from Netherlands, attended the demonstration on April 14 in which heheaped praiseson Pegida supporters.

“We would like to get in touch with Indian politicians,” Festerling said.

Bachmann’s keen desire is to have Prime Minister Narendra Modi at one of his events. “Tell him that we invite him here in Dresden,” he said.

Scroll.in
 
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What better hero than a man who massacred tens of thousands of Muslims! Perfect choice, Pegida!
 
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We are speaking against losing our culture. All northern European cultures are fading away.

I think Germans lost thier culture because of the first, second world war and then cold war.
 
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What better hero than a man who massacred tens of thousands of Muslims! Perfect choice, Pegida!

It's actually 100 trillion - official statistics from Bangladeshi statistical association for delusional propaganda.

We are speaking against losing our culture. All northern European cultures are fading away.

I think Germans lost thier culture because of the first, second world war and then cold war.

Not really, Germans value their culture a LOT and have a massively rich history of contributing and influencing pretty much every field in history. To be linking PEGIDA to "Germany" is quite silly.
 
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Not really, Germans value their culture a LOT and have a massively rich history of contributing and influencing pretty much every field in history. To be linking PEGIDA to "Germany" is quite silly.

How come then Germans like PEGIDA from Dresden forget the contributions of other Nations in the rebuilding of Germany after the Second World War.
 
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What better hero than a man who massacred tens of thousands of Muslims! Perfect choice, Pegida!
Why not claim he massacred millions of Muslims !! Anyway Millions suits better for your propaganda. Just because 900 people (Muslims + Hindus) died in a riot during his tenure doesn't mean Modi ji massacred Muslims but we can't expect Jammatis to understand it. And your Islamic terrorism is solely responsible for rise of Radical organizations like Pegida . Blaming Modi ji , Netanyahu or Obama won't get you anywhere. It's time for Muslims to introspect and see where you people have gone wrong. Actually you would be surprised to know that many Europeans openly support anti-Muslim radical orgs like this guy @MarkusS
 
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Why not claim he massacred millions of Muslims !! Anyway Millions suits better for your propaganda.
Just because 900 people (Muslims + Hindus) died in a riot during his tenure doesn't mean Modi ji massacred Muslims but you can't expect Jammatis to understand it. And Islamic terrorism is solely responsible for rise of Radical organizations like Pegida . Blaming Modi ji , Netanyahu or Obama won't get you anywhere. It's time for Muslims to introspect and see where you people have gone wrong.

We do know about the history behind the groups like Pegida who are from Dresden and even we are aware what type of rallies are taken out from Dresden and how groups were operating before and after the fall of Berlin Wall.

Goal is the same but just tactics have been changed. :)
 
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We are speaking against losing our culture. All northern European cultures are fading away.

I think Germans lost thier culture because of the first, second world war and then cold war.

Europeans lost their culture long before Muslims came over, kicking Muslims out will not solve this issue for them.
 
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We are speaking against losing our culture. All northern European cultures are fading away.

I think Germans lost thier culture because of the first, second world war and then cold war.

What is German culture?

Oh yeah, and the thing called Pegida is pretty much dead
 
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