The people united


Thousands of people marched in an Oslo demonstration against ISIS organized by young Muslims.

The demonstration, organized by young Muslims in Norway, gathered people of different religious and ethnicities together in Oslo against religious extremism and the crimes of ISIS in Iraq and Syria. The crowd filled the entire Grønland square as the demonstration started at 17.00.

After short talks by the organizers, demonstrators marched through Oslo streets towards Norwegian Parliement (Stortinget) with slogans of “No to ISIS”, “ISIS is not in Islam’s Name”, “Against ISIS terror for Peace”.

When the protestors arrived at Eidsvold space, in front of Stortinget, the number has reached to almost ten thousand, according to the organizers.

That’s good. More of that!

A young demonstrator Ali (16) said being in the demonstration is important to take away from extremists people and ideologies and say that we do not share the same principles and values with those extremists.

Among other politicians and stakeholders, Prime Minister Erna Solberg also had a speech during the demonstration. Solberg said all stand together against extremists.

– Today it is about what we believe. We all believe in freedom of speech, democracy, freedom of religion and the political discussion to take place without violence, said she in her speech in the end of the demonstration.

The crowd was apparently much bigger than expected.

@JudeRoze tweeted some photos:

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Comments

  1. Tim Harris says

    I am very glad to see this. I hope it will lead those who reduce the whole of the Muslim world to the worst aspects of Islam, and complain that moderate Muslims do not stand against the excesses of Islamists, to think again. As Amartya Sen has said, such a reduction enables the Islamists, and, I think I should add, encourages anti-Muslim sentiments among the non-Muslim population, which in turn feeds… but William Blake said it better than I can.

  2. Kevin Kehres says

    It seems clear to me that the Muslim world is right now, as we speak, undergoing its “reformation”. Which is a pretty scary thing if compared against the Christian reformation — with its centuries of bloody, useless, futile wars and inquisitions.

    One hopes it burns itself out a bit more quickly and that a “kinder, gentler” Islam will be left in its place — or at least a largely de-fanged Islam. But my bet is not. We have decades of this to go.

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