12/03/2012
Belgium is deeply infected by the diversity delusion, the dangerous idea that all cultures are equally wonderful expressions of the human spirit. It doesnât help that the local Islam is particularly virulent, with jihadist groups like Sharia4Belgium urging the murder of infidels to further their goal of establishing a sharia-ruled planet.
As a result, the Brussels political leadership doesnât want any more trouble (e.g. Muslim rioting over burqas) and is willing to reject European customs to appease the immigrant invader. (See my earlier report, Brussels Axes Christmas Tree so Muslims Wonât Be Offended.)
Below, a traditional Christmas tree once beautified Brusselsâ historic town square.
Now the city has replaced the tree with an abstract rendition designed not to offend any of Brusselsâ 250,000 resident Muslims.
Brussels has promoted its new non-tree as fun, colorful and modern. The gizmo has sparkly electronic bells and whistles to beguile the easily amused.
But some concerned citizens are not happy about their Christmas traditions being carelessly tossed aside. Thousands have signed petitions to object.
Abstract Christmas tree sparks protests in Brussels, BBC, November 30, 2012
Thousands of people have signed a petition against an abstract light installation replacing the traditional Christmas tree in Brussels city centre.
More than 11,000 signatures have been gathered in the online petition and a Facebook page attacking the new feature has been launched.
Critics accuse officials of opting for the installation for fear of offending non-Christians, especially Muslims.
But the mayorâs office said it was part of a theme this year of âlightâ.
Traditionally, a 20m (65ft) pine tree taken from the forests of the Ardennes has adorned the cityâs central square, the Grand Place.
This year, it has been replaced with a 25m (82ft) construction, though smaller real Christmas trees still decorate the square, a spokesman at the mayorâs office said.
The cityâs website said the new âtreeâ was one of five âlightâ installations around the Grand Place this year, offering visitors the chance to climb to the top and enjoy âbeautiful viewsâ of the city.
Tourism councillor Philippe Close at the mayorâs office said the aim was to show off the âavant-garde characterâ of Brussels by blending the modern and the traditional, to produce something new and different.
âOffensiveâ
Brussels hosts one of the most popular winter markets in Europe and many are worried that the contemporary construction is incongruous with the 17th-Century buildings that surround it, the BBCâs Maddy Savage reports from the city.The light installation has even been nicknamed The Pharmacy by some who say the glowing cubes resemble the green cross symbol you find outside many chemists around the world.
Bianca Debaets, a Brussels councillor from the Christian Democratic and Flemish party, said she believed a âmisplaced argumentâ over religious sensitivities had moved Brussels to put up the light sculpture.
âFor a lot of people who are not Christians, the tree there is offensive to them,â she told reporters.
Erik Maxwell, from Brussels, told BBC News: âWe think the tree has been put up for cultural reasons.
âA tree is for Christmas and Christians but now there are a lot of Muslims here in Brussels. So to avoid discussions they have just replaced a tree with a couple of cubes! I am more traditional, I prefer the usual tree. Thatâs better for the Belgian people.â
A recent estimate in the Belgian newspaper Le Soir suggested Muslims made up 22% of the population of Brussels and its region as of 2010.
âPleasure of winterâ
Parts of the Belgian press have been keen to suggest that the tree is an example of âpolitical correctnessâ, designed to be more appealing to non-Christian religious groups than a traditional fir tree, our correspondent says.However it seems likely that the media storm is influencing public opinion rather than reflecting it.
There was applause and plenty of oohs and aahs in the square at a preview of the nightly sound-and-light show that will take place there until the New Year, our correspondent reports, adding that the enthusiasm suggests some sceptics have been won over.
âWhat we want is just to modernise the pleasure of winter, of this Christmas market and all the image of Brussels,â said Councillor Philippe Close.
âThe Christmas tree is not a religious symbol and actually lots of Muslims have a Christmas tree at home.
âFor people who want a traditional religious symbol, we have the nativity scene here in the square. For people who want modernity, we have this new tree.â
Semsettin Ugurlu, chairman of the Belgian Muslim Executive, representing the Muslim community in Belgium, said his organisation did not mind any kind of Christmas tree.
âWe know we are living in a country with a Christian culture, we take no offence over a traditional Christmas tree,â he said.
Miryam Oostling, a visitor from Leeuwarden in the Netherlands, told the BBC: âI quite like the tree. Itâs a piece of modern art. Itâs cosy!â