Of Gods and Men Description: Under threat
by fundamentalist terrorists, a group of Trappist monks stationed with an impoverished Algerian community must decide whether to leave or stay.
The only way your analogy can be made relevant is if all of Islam is represented
by the fundamentalist terrorists we are all so familiar with.
Not exact matches
Here's a link to an authoritative source — the Quilliam Foundation was founded
by a former Islamic
fundamentalist: http://www.quilliamfoundation.org/press-releases/the-attack-on-the-us-consulate-was-a-planned-
terrorist-assault-against-us-and-libyan-interests/ It says: «We at Quilliam believe the attack on the US consulate in Benghazi was a well planned
terrorist attack that would have occurred regardless of the demonstration [about the film], to serve another purpose.
They may be called «extremists» or «
fundamentalists»
by muslim appeasers like yourself but, at the end of the day, they are always the more dedicated to the koran and following the path of Jihad as mandated
by terrorist / pedophile mohammad.
Given the restrictions placed
by successive governments on the foulard (headscarf) and the burka, together with the large French Muslim population (around 10 % of the 64 million total), the country would seem to have been fertile ground for
fundamentalist anger and
terrorist outrages.
Also noteworthy, in the category of cinema ruled
by cultural concerns and actual political events, was Carlos (d. Olivier Assayas), which kept a packed auditorium of critics in their seats for over five hours with a glossy, but intelligent action film version of the 1970s exploits of a
terrorist born Illich Ramirez Sanchez, but known internationally as the Jackal, also
by the code name Carlos; and Des Hommes et des dieux (Of Gods and Men, Xavier Beauvois), a film, elegantly minimalist in design, based on a real - life encounter between Algerian
fundamentalist Islamic
terrorists and a community of ascetic Christian monks.