The Blood of Al-Fashir: When Islamist Genocide Meets Western Silence

Sudan’s Christians are slaughtered in silence as Islamist militias commit genocide — and the West looks away, obsessed with false moral causes.

In Al-Fashir, Sudan, the ground itself bleeds. Satellite images capture the crimson stains of mass graves — entire neighborhoods reduced to ash, churches set aflame, and the broken remains of a population wiped out by Islamist militias.

Hospitals overflow with corpses, and the few survivors who gasp for breath are executed where they lie. Villages have vanished — first by fire, then by famine. Tens of thousands have perished, not in crossfire, but in a systematic campaign of religious extermination.

“They came shouting against Christians, calling us ‘infidels.’ They burned the church and dragged the men out of their homes. I could hear the screams,” said one survivor, recounting a scene of apocalyptic terror to International Christian Concern, the NGO documenting these atrocities.

Yet from the so-called moral conscience of the West, there is only silence.
No UN emergency session. No Western outcry.
No “Free Darfur” banners.
No Greta. No flotilla. No social-media storm.

Videos of the massacres — with gunmen shouting “Allahu Akbar” — circulate briefly, then vanish into the algorithmic abyss. The same world that projects films about “occupation” and “colonialism” refuses to see real colonialism — Arab and Islamist — unfolding in Africa.


The West’s Hypocritical Selective Outrage

When Israel defends itself, universities erupt, and city halls are draped in flags.
But when black African Christians are slaughtered by Arab Islamist militias, there is no outcry, no protest, no hashtag.

Sudan’s agony does not fit the fashionable Western narrative. There is no “white oppressor,” no “Jewish settler,” no colonial villain. The killers are Islamist militias — the supposed “victims of the West.” Thus, the moral machinery of progressivism grinds to a halt.

As French analyst Sébastien Boussois wrote in Le Journal du Dimanche, “Our variable moral geometry collapses, and progressivism retreats into silence.”

The hypocrisy runs deep. The same circles that chant “From the river to the sea” ignore the rivers of blood in Africa. Evil is recognized only when it speaks English or Hebrew — never when it speaks Arabic.


Iranian Interference and the Poisoning of Western Minds

A new intelligence report exposes how Iranian influence operations have infiltrated French universities, media, and political parties — shaping Western discourse against Israel and in favor of Islamist narratives.

“Iranian infiltration has acted like a poison, drop by drop,” the report warns. “Now it spreads, exerts influence, and corrodes.”

This explains much: the West’s blindness to Islamist crimes, its obsession with “decolonization,” and its silence when Arab forces commit genocide.


Mamdani’s America and the Great Inversion

In New York, newly elected mayor Zohran Mamdani, son of an anti-Western academic, embodies this inversion of moral clarity.
Naturalized under the Trump administration, Mamdani was born in Uganda — yet his family chose not to live in any Muslim country, but in America, the very democracy he now vilifies as colonial and racist.

He rails against Israel — the only liberal democracy in the Middle East — while ignoring the Islamist tyranny that murders Christians, women, and dissidents across Africa and the Arab world.


Israel: The Singular Light Amid the Darkness

There is one liberal democracy in the Middle East.
One nation where Christians, Muslims, and Jews can vote, live freely, and speak without fear.
Israel.

The same ideological blindness that condemns Israel for defending itself has numbed Western empathy toward the true victims of Islamist violence — from Darfur to Baghdad, from Gaza’s tunnels to Sudan’s deserts.

When Israel fights back, the West awakens to protest.
When Islamists slaughter the innocent, the West falls asleep.

Al-Fashir’s silence is a mirror. It reflects not just Sudan’s suffering, but the moral collapse of a civilization that has forgotten how to tell good from evil.

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