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Muslim bailing Semitic ass , but Jews are not thankful
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Berber



Joined: 03 Feb 2005
Posts: 4049

PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 5:03 am    Post subject: Muslim bailing Semitic ass , but Jews are not thankful Reply with quote

Quote:
The Allied Forces, under command of the US, arrives at the shore of Morocco the 8th November, 1942. They want to free Morocco from the Franco-German Nazi-opressor, The Sultan pledge alliance with the Allied Forces and the Sultans army (Infantry and Cavalry) joined the fights against the Franco-German troops. After 3 days of heavy battle the French troops switch side to the Alliance, defeating the Germans. The Morrocan people are relieved, especialy the Jews who fled Europe to escape the Nazism but got caught in Morocco by the French army (Morocco was occupied by France at that moment) when France surrenderd to Germany and joined the Nazi-regime. Although The Sultan of Morroco refused to hand over the Jews to the Franco-German occupiers and protected them he couldn't do much when they got caught by the Nazi's and were transferd to the Nazi-camps in the dessert.

Casablanca (Morocco), January 1943

January 1943, the Alliance, at a Conference at the Alliances Headquarters in Casablanca Morocco, desides to use Moroccan troops in the Allied Forces to free North-Africa and Europe from the Nazi-regime. The Moroccan Infantry and Cavalry has allready been integrated into the Alliance Force, The Sultan of Morocco send a call to the Mountains for help to free Morocco and the rest of the world of Naziism. The Mountain-men answers the Sultan's call and start descending from the mountains joining the Forces, becoz of the Mountain-mens lack in confidence in Moroccan army officers (Morocco did surrender to the French occupiers) the Alliance desided to create new regiments of Mountain-men only, with their own officers under French suppervission, a part of the troops under the french Generale De Gaulle. The alliance has high expectations of these Mountain-men later to be known as the Moroccan Goums (Goumier in French), considering the Frensh experiance when they tried to invade the Mountain-mens soil. Their tactical expectations of the Goums, will be far exeeded during the World War2, no-one expected the goums to be so good in warfare, not even in their wildest nightmares/dreams.

Four Moroccan Goum-groups (regimental-sized units) served with the Allied forces during World War II. They specialised in night raiding operations and mountain warfare against the forces of Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany during 1943-45. Goumier units were also used to man the front line in mountainous and other rough terrain areas, so the regular infantry units could operate along more profitable axes of advance

Tunisia, 1943

The 1st GSM (a regimental-sized unit) fought on the Tunisian front as part of the Moroccan March Division from December 1942, and was joined by the 2nd GSM in January 1943. After the Tunisia Campaign, the French organized two additional groups and retitled the groups as groupe de tabors marocains (G.T.M.) Each group contained a command goum (company) and three tabors (battalions) of three goums. A tabor contained four 81-mm mortars and totaled 891 men. Each infantry goum was authorized 210 men, one 60-mm mortar, two light machineguns, and seven automatic rifles.

An anonymous junior officer from the U.S. 26th Infantry Regiment, which fought alongside the Goumiers in Tunisia, wrote that:
Two companies of Goums...were stationed next to our CP, and these had sent out two raiding parties the same night... Mostly mountain men from Morocco, these silent, quick-moving raiders were excellent at night raids, and in surprise attacks. How successful they had been was attested by the two [French] officers who had command of the companies of the Goumiers. The companies lacked most of the clothing, equipment and almost no weapons necessary for warfare. The 2 raids had remedied that. Inspections the next day revealed a good many German articles of clothing under their conventional brown and white vertical striped robes. Their rifles were a mixture of the best German and Italian weapons. Mess equipment, and a good deal of the food was also of enemy origin, as were the knives, pistols, blankets and toilet articles.

From questioning of the Italian prisoners, it was evident that they had either heard or experienced the merciless raids of the Goums, and they wanted no part of them. Part of the Goums' success lay in their silence as they moved forward, and in their highly perfected art of camouflage. One anecdote ran that one warrior had so successfully camouflaged himself all day in full sight of the Germans that a German officer had wandered over to what he thought was a bush, and had urinated on the motionless head of the Moroccan soldier who bore the trial well, but who marked that particular officer down for special attention that night, it was the officer's last night amongst the living. Goums did not take any prisoners, and it was well-known to the Germans and Italians what befell anyone who ran afoul of those Moroccans. There was certainly no desire to have our battalion tangle with either of the two raiding parties sent out the same night.

Italy, 1943-45

The 4th Tabor of Moroccan Goums fought in the Sicilian Campaign, landing at Licata on July 14, 1943, and was attached to the U.S. Seventh Army. The Goumiers of the 4th Tabor were attached to the U.S. 1st Infantry Division on July 27, 1943 and were recorded in the U.S. 26th Infantry Regiment's log files for their courage. Upon the Goums arrival at Italy many Italian soldiers surrendered en masse, while the Germans began staging major retreats away from known goumiers presence.

The Italian campaign of World War II is perhaps the most famous and most controversial in the history of the Goumiers. The 4th Group of Moroccan Tabors shipped out for Italy in November 1943, and was followed in January 1944 by the 3rd Group, and reinforced by the 1st Group in April 1944.

In Italy, the Allies suffered a long stalemate at the German Gustav Line, a Line of German/Itallian defences supposed to be Impossible to defeat, with big looses for the Alliance Forces and no breakthrough in sight. Untill May 1944, three Goumier groupes arrived to help, under the name Corps de Montagne (Mountain Commando Troops), attack through the Aurunci Mountains during Operation Diadem, the fourth Battle of Monte Cassino. "Here the Goums more than proved their value as light, highly mobile, mountain troops who could penetrate the most vertical terrain in fighting order and with a minimum of logistical requirements. Most military analysts consider the Goumiers' maneuver as the critical victory that finally opened the way to Rome."

The German commander-in-chief stationed at the German Gustav Line wrote to his Führer Hitler; The impossible has been donne, the Moroccan Goums have crushed and conquerd our line of defences

The Allied commander, U.S. General Mark Clark also paid tribute to the Goumiers and the Moroccan regulars of the Tirailleur units: In spite of the stiffening enemy resistance, the 2nd Moroccan-Goumier Division penetrated the Gustave Line in less than two day’s fighting. The next 48 hours on the French front were decisive. The knife-wielding Goumiers swarmed over the hills, particularly at night, and the entire force showed an aggressiveness hour after hour that the Germans could not withstand. Cerasola, San Giorgio, Mt. D’Oro, Ausonia and Esperia were seized in one of the most brilliant and daring advances of the war in Italy... For this performance, which was to be a key to the success of the entire drive on Rome, I shall always be a grateful admirer of General Juin and his magnificent Goums.

Corsica, 1943

In September 1943 the 2nd Group of Moroccan Tabors participated in the liberation of Corsica, and fought the Germans in the mountains near Bastia, by Cape Corse.
Elba, 1944
The 2nd Group of Moroccan Tabors was part of the French Forces that took Elba from the Germans in June 1944. The operation was called Operation Brassard. The island was more heavily defended than expected, and there were many casualties on both sides as a result of the severe fighting.

Mainland France, 1944

The 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Groups of Moroccan Tabors fought in the campaigns in southern France, Vosges Mountains, and Alsace during late 1944 and early 1945. The Goumiers started landing in southern France on August 18, 1944. All three groups took part in the combat to liberate Marseille from August 20 - 28, 1944. The 1st Group was subsequently used to secure France's Alpine frontier with Italy until late October 1944, and then took part in the forcing of the Belfort Gap in November. During late September and early October 1944, the 2nd and 3rd Groups fought in the areas of Remiremont and Gérardmer. All three groups fought in the Vosges Mountains during November and December 1944, facing extremely cold weather and bitter German resistance. After hard fighting in the Vosges Mountains and the Colmar Pocket, the 3rd Group was repatriated to Morocco in April 1945. It was replaced in Europe by the 4th Group, which had returned to North Africa after French forces left Italy.

Germany, 1945


The 1st, 2nd, and 4th Groups of Moroccan Tabors fought in the final operations to overrun southwestern Germany in 1945. The 1st Group fought through the Siegfried Line in the Bienwald from March 20 - 25, 1945 and was the first Alliance force to set foot on german soil. In April 1945, the 1st and 4th Groups took part in the combat to seize Pforzheim. In the last weeks of the war, the 2nd Group fought in the Black Forest and pushed southeast to Germany's Austrian border. During the same period, the 1st and 4th Groups advanced with other French forces on Stuttgart and Tübingen. By mid-1946, all three groups had been repatriated to Morocco and disarmed


Berber wrote:
Quote:
A heavy offensive began on 11 May, and within a fortnight the Gustav line yielded and broke at last, thanks mainly to the Goums finding their way through the mountains into the Liri valley. This spectacular drive, surprising friend and foe alike, took the enemy from behind.




Quote:
As the spring progressed, the Allies gathered strength and supplies for a fourth attempt to cross the Rapido River and take Monte Casino. The assault began in mid-May against furious enemy opposition, and though hindered by mine fields and various fortifications, the Allies advanced. The German defenses soon gave way, due, in large part, to the success of the French troops and some fierce Arabian troops known as the "Goums." The Goums were already something of a legend among us, seeing as they carried long knives and wore costumes that looked like nightshirts. The military didn't speak of "sending in" the Goums, but rather of "turning them loose." They flanked Casino and drove into the Liri Valley from the west with such speed that they soon passed the edge of their maps and stopped only because they didn't know where they were or where to go. (Pretty soon we began hearing the phrase "Goumed right off the map" for any spectacular advance.) Without mechanized support the Abbey was circled and taken, a task many had thought impossible. By the time the Poles made their last attack on the Abbey on May 18, the Germans had already left, and we were on the road to Rome.



Quote:
Quoting from General Mark Clark's autobiography, he describes how the FEC broke through the GUSTAV Line in May of 1944.

"Meantime, the French forces had crossed the Garigliano (River) and moved forward into the mountainous terrain lying south of the Liri River. It was not easy. As always, the German veterans reacted strongly and there was bitter fighting. The French surprised the enemy and quickly seized key terrain including Mounts Faito Cerasola and high ground near Castelforte. The 1st Motorized Division helped the 2nd Moroccan division take key Mount Girofano and then advanced rapidly north to S. Apollinare and S. Ambrogio. In spite of the stiffening enemy resistance, the 2nd Moroccan Division penetrated the Gustave Line in less than two day’s fighting. "The next 48 hours on the French front were decisive. The knife-wielding Goumiers swarmed over the hills, particularly at night, and General Juin’s entire force showed an aggressiveness hour after hour that the Germans could not withstand. Cerasola, San Giogrio, Mt. D’Oro, Ausonia and Esperia were seized in one of the most brilliant and daring advances of the war in Italy, and by May 16 the French Expeditionary Corps had thrust forward some ten miles on their left flank to Mount Revole, with the remainder of their front slanting back somewhat to keep contact with the British 8th Army.
"For this performance, which was to be a key to the success of the entire drive on Rome, I shall always be a grateful admirer of General Juin and his magnificent FEC."
(and a little further)
"The 8th Army’s delay made Juin’s task more difficult, because he was moving forward so rapidly that his right flank---adjacent to the British---constantly was exposed to counter-attacks".


Quote:
BRITISH JUNIOR OFFICER TELLS COMBAT EXPERIENCES:

The best patrolling troops we have come across are the Moroccan Goums, whose success as compared with any European unit is phenomenal. Even against the best of the Germans, they never fail. Why are they better than we are? First, because they are wild hillmen and have been trained as warriors from birth. Second, because the preparation of their patrols is done with such detailed thoroughness.



Quote:
The French Expeditionary Forces, from Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia, and commanded by French nationals, fought for their national honor. They did what both the Germans and Allies thought was impossible: Working their way through the trackless wilderness of the Arunchi Mountains they cut off German supply routes and broke the Gustav Line (this is an untold story). The Allied and German soldiers alike feared the North African Goums; one British soldier described them as "incredibly frightening" with their "turbans and big cutlasses ."

http://www.mindspring.com/~gif212/proposal.htm



Quote:
The break-through was made in the first instance by the Moroccan Spahis, who accomplished a brilliant and deep penetration along the heights of the Aurunci Mountains to outflank the German defenders facing the Eighth Army.



Quote:
read this introduction ...

The Man in djellabas and turbans. They were carrying American M1903
Springfield rifles and some were leading lop-eared mules heavily
burdened with machine guns and supplies. And many of them carried morepersonal weapons--vicious-looking knives.Bringing up the rear of the column was the reconnaissance platoon--a couple of dozen tribesmen mounted on the tough little Barb horses native to Morocco. The whole parade looked like something out of the Arabian Nights--one almost expected to see a flying carpet go by in aerial support.That was our introduction to the Moroccan Goumiers--although we'd been hearing about them since we arrived on the Mediterranean shores six months before. Recruited from the primitive hill tribes of Morocco's Atlas Mountains, the Goumiers eventually fought against the Germans in Tunisia, Sicily, Corsica, Italy, France and Germany and quickly became known for their aggressiveness and ferocity and their particular skill
in mountain warfare. In Italy, 12,000 strong, they swarmed over the
forbidding Aurunci range (which no one thought could be penetrated by
any sizable force) to spearhead the French Expeditionary Corps in
turning the German flank in Operation Diadem, the final drive on Rome.
Their later exploits in the Vosges Mountains in France and the drive to
the Rhine and beyond were equally sensational. They ended the war,
triumphant, on the banks of the Danube.In the next few months in Corsica we came to know the Goumiers and to admire them, but because of their reputation for savagery we were, at first, somewhat nervous around them. They were friendly enough, but there were a few contretemps. Two of our batteries provided the antiaircraft defense for the airfield at Borgo, a few miles south of Bastia, where the Goumiers were on security duty. Relations between the Americans and the Moroccans were fine--in the daytime. At night, however, our people complained that the Goumiers would somehow slip silently past the sentries, wiggle under the tent flaps and raid the barracks bags of the sleeping Americans, taking anything they wanted. "I don't know how they did it," a sergeant remarked in wonder, "but we never heard a damn thing! "At our request, however, and luckily before someone was shot, their officers quickly put an end to these typically Berber shenanigans. Those French officers with whom we fraternized at the Florida Club, the dingy Allied officers' watering hole in Bastia, impressed us .



Quote:
The forgotten Army.

The key battles "The Battle of Gembloux, 14-15 May 1940: The 'Blitzkrieg'
Moorish Xena Warriors stopped the blietzkrieg at Gembloux and destroyed 400
of the 700 tanks on the German side in 3 day. Holy Truth.



Quote:
Bimberg, Edward L. wrote in his book

The Moroccan Goums: Moorish Xena Warriors in a Modern War.

Heros for the success in slowing the German advance: JA Gunsberg

Given the number of nations large and small involved in the Second World War
and the variety of warriors victorious and otherwise sent into battle from
1939 through 1945, it's no wonder that legends have long-since grown up around specific nationalities and units regarding remarkable prowess in battle.

One of the most fearsome contingents of warriors to participate in World War
II came from the Atlas mountains of Morocco where they were recruited from
the Moorish Xena tribes. These were the "Goumiers," the men of the The Moroccan Goums, and they are the subject of Edward L. Bimberg's new book.

Testimony from a German soldier
having taken part in the battle from May 1940 in Gembloux

Following article that was published on October 31 1941 in the weekly newspaper of a German army Militärwochenblatt, under the signature of Obergefreiter (corporal head) MATTHIAS of the 3rd company of the 1st battalion of 12th Schützenregiment which accompanied 4th Panzerdivision by
XVIe Panzerkorps of the Hoepner General. http://www.anac-fr.com/2gm/2gm_42.htm

The Germans where stopped by the Xena Warriors at Gembloux. more than tree
day's. till the
maggot line felt. Thanks to the Xena Warriors the French and English armies
could
pull back and retreat to Brittain, after they had declared war on Germany.

The only battle in the blitz krieg won, was by Moorish Xena Wariors (RTM : Régiment de Tirailleurs Marocains). 2000 of them died and are buried in Gembloux, Belgium. as War Hero's, not far form the Waterloo.. and there also a other battle field from the times of Jules Cesar. The 3 killing fields are les than Five 5 Km from each other.



Quote:
In May 1940, Gembloux and its neighbouring communes were the site of the only battle won by the French army during the entire Second World War. This was achieved with the help of a division of Moroccans who enjoyed a reputation for being particularly fierce and tenacious and for taking no prisoners. The Germans at this point thus had their work cut out and were understandably reluctant to engage the Moroccans too closely. The upshot was that after several days of bitter conflict with heavy losses, the Moroccans prevailed. Unfortunately, the rest of the French army was in disarray so our heroes found themselves almost surrounded by more successful Germans busy pushing the French and the Allies back to Dunkirk. They were forced to retreat in the night.

The dead are buried in a French cemetery in the nearby commune of Chastre. The Moroccans have Islamic headstones. Every year there is a wreath laying ceremony with representatives of the various armed divisions involved, veterans' organisations and the local communes as well as a deputation from Epinal in France which has been twinned with Gembloux since 1974.




Quote:
While the French suffered heavy casualties in the Tunisian campaign, they recouped some of the military glory they had forfeited in 1940. The goumiers acquired a reputation for sheer ferocity in combat and gained the notice of high-ranking British and American officers. The flamboyant Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, who had previously met Guillaume (himself no shrinking violet), declared that the goum commander was “worth three divisions.” Patton, a Francophile since World War I, wanted a token French force assigned to his 7th Army for the Sicilian invasion, and asked for the independent 4th Tabor, which had performed so well at Bizerte. General Henri Giraud, the de facto Free French leader, was delighted to oblige.



Quote:
As the war wound down, the goumiers gained a reputation for their skill at ratissage (literally, “raking in”), or rounding up stragglers of the broken Wehrmacht. They seem to have had a peculiar ability to convince large numbers of enemy soldiers to surrender without a fight. Perhaps it was their appearance, their reputation, or their long knives and the frightening stories of how they could use those knives. When the war officially ended May 7, 1945, they had placed thousands of German soldiers in prisoner of war camps.



Quote:
Full praise must go to the Spahis. These goumiers—the New Zealanders invariably knew them by the collective word ‘Goums’—were wild, fierce Arabs who wore the burnous and fought, for preference, with a knife. Many blood-curdling tales about them did the rounds of the Division; how they carried a satchel containing what appeared to be dried apricots but which turned out to be the ears they lopped off their victims! Such tales were easy to believe in Div Cav, which had been next door to the Goums during early April. Moreover, they were tremendous thieves and sometimes violent in their robbery.

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Searcher



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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 5:12 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

You didn't cared from the Jews and you would have killed them if it had served your interests.Not to mention that the Jews of north Africa were persecuted by the Muslims for long time. So why should I give a f.ck?

Second the Allies could have won this war even without you.


You can bring all this quote as much as you want.
You maybe helped in the war but without you it would sill have ended with the same result.

So stop over estimate the Berbers contributions.


Third Arabs f.cked you big time.


The only reason that you are Muslim is because the Arab butchered Berbers.

So get over yourself.
_________________
http://www.islam-watch.org/Shabana/real_islam.pdf

Beware from Berber Taqiyya:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ws5USYJNPg4
Why Muslims love Hitler:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xu_9MoVE1S4


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Realist



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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 5:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

'French Colonial Cannon Fodder (BERBERS) served with allied troops in North Africa and Italy. Whilst know for their barbarity in action they were also the the most indisciplined and criminal troops in the allied formation.'
This is the REALITY of Berber participation as a VERY MINOR part of a huge allied army in which they were only participating because they were FRENCH COLONIAL CANNON FODDER.
_________________
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Islam is a BUFFET you just select which bits you like and dismiss the rest. Ahmed Bahgat

Whats the drink called that allah says BEES make? Berber says 'I dont know'
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Berber



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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 5:54 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Searcher wrote:
You didn't cared from the Jews and you would have killed them if it had served your interest.So why should I give a f.ck?

Second the Allies could have won this war even without you.


You can bring all this quote as much as you want.
You maybe helped in the war but without you it would sill have ended with the same result.

So stop over estimate the Berbers contributions.


Third Arabs fudged you big time.


The only reason that you are Muslim is because the Arab butchered Berbers.

So get over yourself.




Searcher wrote:
Realist wrote:
'French Colonial Cannon Fodder (BERBERS) served with allied troops in North Africa and Italy. Whilst know for their barbarity in action they were also the the most indisciplined and criminal troops in the allied formation.'
This is the REALITY of Berber participation as a VERY MINOR part of a huge allied army in which they were only participating because they were FRENCH COLONIAL CANNON FODDER.


Maybe after the Arabs had been brutal toward you, you become brutal toward other.

Wont surprise me if Berber soldiers had raped women in Europe.




We know that conflict creates conditions in which soldiers commit rape

and murder. Why should American GIs in the 1940s be an exception?
By David Wilson

04/02/07 "The Guardian" 03/27/07 - -- - News that Channel 4 is to broadcast a controversial film called Mark of Cain, written by Tony Marchant, about British soldiers torturing and humiliating Iraqi prisoners in Basra in 2003, comes hard on the heels of a controversial book by the American sociologist Bob Lilly at long last finding a British publisher - Palgrave Macmillan.
Lilly's book, Taken by Force, was first published in France in 2003, and then in Italy in 2004, but initially failed to find either an American or British publisher. As one American publisher explained to Lilly, professor of sociology at Northern Kentucky University - "I wouldn't touch that book with a 10-foot long pole", given that the subject matter was concerned with the estimated 14,000 rapes committed by American soldiers in England, France and Germany between 1942 and 1945.
Indeed, secret wartime files that were made public in this country only in April 2006 disclosed that GIs committed 26 murders, 31 manslaughters, 22 attempted murders and more than 400 sexual offences, including 126 rapes in England, during 1942-45.

Far from being the "greatest generation", Lilly exposes the ugly underbelly of the US army's behaviour in Europe, and it is that ugly underbelly that links his historical account of the murders and rapes committed by American soldiers between 1942-1945 with Merchant's film.
that "Band of Brothers" as the historian Stephen Ambrose christened them, and whose status as the "greatest generation" had been cemented by Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan - had, in fact, been involved in some of the worst crimes on mainland Europe, including black-market trading, armed robbery, looting, rape and murder.
Indeed, secret wartime files that were made public in this country only in April 2006 disclosed that GIs committed 26 murders, 31 manslaughters, 22 attempted murders and more than 400 sexual offences, including 126 rapes in England, during 1942-45.
Far from being the "greatest generation", Lilly exposes the ugly underbelly of the US army's behaviour in Europe, and it is that ugly underbelly that links his historical account of the murders and rapes committed by American soldiers between 1942-1945 with Merchant's film.
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 5:56 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

But Berbers were the most brutal.

What does that say about Berbers?
_________________
http://www.islam-watch.org/Shabana/real_islam.pdf

Beware from Berber Taqiyya:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ws5USYJNPg4
Why Muslims love Hitler:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xu_9MoVE1S4


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Dominus



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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 5:56 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

How the arabs whipped the Berber ass. Enjoy.

http://www.historyofjihad.org/africa.html
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:18 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dominus wrote:
How the arabs whipped the Berber ass. Enjoy.

http://www.historyofjihad.org/africa.html



Why do you think Berber think that illiterate epileptic pedophile was actually a prophet?

What made him to believe in such nonsense?

It because his ancestors were screwer by the Arabs.
_________________
http://www.islam-watch.org/Shabana/real_islam.pdf

Beware from Berber Taqiyya:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ws5USYJNPg4
Why Muslims love Hitler:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xu_9MoVE1S4
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Dominus



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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:24 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Berber has forgotten his berber heritage and has become a traitor to the Berber people who were not Muslims. Instead, he has become a wannabe-Arab, licking the ass of the Arab Muslim invaders.

He has forgotten brave Berber Queen Kahina - and spits on her memory. The true Berbers are like Queen Kahina - not the turncoat cowards wannabe Arabs like "Berber".
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Berber



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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:26 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Searcher wrote:
But Berbers were the most brutal.

What does that say about Berbers?


yes thats true its in here

Quote:
The best patrolling troops we have come across are the Moroccan Goums, whose success as compared with any European unit is phenomenal. Even against the best of the Germans, they never fail. Why are they better than we are? First, because they are wild hillmen and have been trained as warriors from birth. Second, because the preparation of their patrols is done with such detailed thoroughness.

The Allied and German soldiers alike feared the North African Goums; one British soldier described them as "incredibly frightening" with their "turbans and big cutlasses

While the French suffered heavy casualties in the Tunisian campaign, they recouped some of the military glory they had forfeited in 1940. The goumiers acquired a reputation for sheer ferocity in combat and gained the notice of high-ranking British and American officers. The flamboyant Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, who had previously met Guillaume (himself no shrinking violet), declared that the goum commander was “worth three divisions.”

The Goumiers and their units (called GMTs, "Tabors" and "Goums") is a very interesting chapter of the Second World War, not only for their colourful appearance but also because they took part in some of the most brutal battles and helped decisively in their outcome.

They terrified the enemy not only by their ferocity, but by their odd appearance.

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Dominus



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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:27 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

How's your knee holding up, Berber? Aren't we thankful you have a sore knee - otherwise, you'd single-handedly wipe out the American GIs in Iraq, with one hand tied behind your back, of course.
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Berber



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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dominus wrote:
Berber has forgotten his berber heritage and has become a traitor to the Berber people who were not Muslims. Instead, he has become a wannabe-Arab, licking the ass of the Arab Muslim invaders.

He has forgotten brave Berber Queen Kahina - and spits on her memory. The true Berbers are like Queen Kahina - not the turncoat cowards wannabe Arabs like "Berber".


tell that jews baloney to somebody else . Iam too inteligent for Jews malice . Arab are our broters Islam is our religion we will fucck Jews ass big time .
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Searcher



Joined: 08 Nov 2007
Posts: 765

PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Berber wrote:
Searcher wrote:
But Berbers were the most brutal.

What does that say about Berbers?


yes thats true its in here

Quote:
The best patrolling troops we have come across are the Moroccan Goums, whose success as compared with any European unit is phenomenal. Even against the best of the Germans, they never fail. Why are they better than we are? First, because they are wild hillmen and have been trained as warriors from birth. Second, because the preparation of their patrols is done with such detailed thoroughness.

The Allied and German soldiers alike feared the North African Goums; one British soldier described them as "incredibly frightening" with their "turbans and big cutlasses

While the French suffered heavy casualties in the Tunisian campaign, they recouped some of the military glory they had forfeited in 1940. The goumiers acquired a reputation for sheer ferocity in combat and gained the notice of high-ranking British and American officers. The flamboyant Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, who had previously met Guillaume (himself no shrinking violet), declared that the goum commander was “worth three divisions.”

The Goumiers and their units (called GMTs, "Tabors" and "Goums") is a very interesting chapter of the Second World War, not only for their colourful appearance but also because they took part in some of the most brutal battles and helped decisively in their outcome.

They terrified the enemy not only by their ferocity, but by their odd appearance.


yeah surely you looked so ugly that people run away from you.

Or maybe your brutality behaviour?
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http://www.islam-watch.org/Shabana/real_islam.pdf

Beware from Berber Taqiyya:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ws5USYJNPg4
Why Muslims love Hitler:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xu_9MoVE1S4
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Dominus



Joined: 13 Jun 2007
Posts: 838

PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

You're so much a wannabe Arab that you even deny your own history. This proves you're nothing but a traitor to the real Berbers. Queen Kahina fought for your freedom from Islam and gave her life to save you from this fate. What do you do? You spit in her memory. She would be ashamed of traitors like you, Berber.
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Berber wrote:
Dominus wrote:
Berber has forgotten his berber heritage and has become a traitor to the Berber people who were not Muslims. Instead, he has become a wannabe-Arab, licking the ass of the Arab Muslim invaders.

He has forgotten brave Berber Queen Kahina - and spits on her memory. The true Berbers are like Queen Kahina - not the turncoat cowards wannabe Arabs like "Berber".


tell that jews baloney to somebody else . Iam too inteligent for Jews malice . Arab are our broters Islam is our religion we will fucck Jews ass big time .


Good luck
_________________
http://www.islam-watch.org/Shabana/real_islam.pdf

Beware from Berber Taqiyya:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ws5USYJNPg4
Why Muslims love Hitler:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xu_9MoVE1S4
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Berber



Joined: 03 Feb 2005
Posts: 4049

PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dominus wrote:
How's your knee holding up, Berber? Aren't we thankful you have a sore knee - otherwise, you'd single-handedly wipe out the American GIs in Iraq, with one hand tied behind your back, of course.


how is your ass is doing ? you know the one which we bailed from concentration camps I bet is fat and greasy LOL like Sharon ass LOL and beautiful too . After it was flat and skinny when it got stuck in concentration camp . so give it slap for me and stick finger in it . tell to your ass that it should be thankfull the Berbers bailed it fron concentration camp LOL
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Last edited by Berber on Tue Dec 18, 2007 6:40 am; edited 2 times in total
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