La vie bousillée de Yahya Hassan
La vie bousillée de Yahya Hassan, né au Danemark, d'une famille immigrée palestinienne musulmane, dans un pays qui l'a laissé être frappé par son père, vivant sans travailler au Danemark, qui l'a laissé être endoctriné dans l'islam.
A 13 ans, il est délinquant, à 18 ans, poête il dénonce l'islam, la violence contre les enfants, et l'attitude d'immigrés profitant du système. Il est menacé de mort.
Il ne tient pas : quoi d'étonnant ?
Il est aujourd'hui emprisonné, dans des conditions d'isolement ...
L'Europe cupide veut des immigrés, travailleurs pas chers, consommateurs, bosseurs "pour nos retraites". L'Europe cupide veut nier le problème idéologique de l'islam. Les violences qu'il engendre contre les enfants européens comme contre les enfants "musulmans", elle s'en fiche.
Yahia Hassan est autant la victime de l'islam que de la politique européenne.
L'Europe ce n'est pas le pouvoir "sioniste", comme le prétendent les antisémites complotistes, l'Europe c'est le choix de tous les électeurs, électrices, consommateurs, employeurs, qui ont voulu cette politique d'immigration ou ont négligé d'y prendre garde et préféré ne pas s'interroger sur le "business plan" européen.
Les "antisionistes" sont simplement des haineux antisémites qui ne veulent pas reconnaître leur part de responsabilité dans ce processus de décision COLLECTIF de l'Europe, dans lequel des juifs ont pris part mais comme tout le monde, la majorité des grands patrons français, des grandes fortunes françaises, faut il le rappeler, ne sont pas juives.
Who is jailed Danish poet Yahya
Hassan?
17 September 2016
Yahya Hussein was jailed on Friday for 21 months. Photo: Johan
Gadegaard/Scanpix 2016)
Danish-Palestinian
bad-boy poet Yahya Hassan, who stormed onto Denmark's literary scene in 2013
and quickly became a household name, was Friday sentenced to jail over a shooting,
casting a pall over a short, tumultuous career.
Hassan's debut poetry
collection sold a record 100,000 copies in just a few months in 2013, in a
country where poetry collections are usually printed in the hundreds.
Writing in all caps
without any punctuation, he used street slang and blunt word play to deliver a
damning indictment of his parents' generation of immigrants who came to Denmark
in the 1980s, describing domestic violence, benefits fraud and religious
hypocrisy on the Aarhus housing estate where he grew up.
In the poem
"Satellite dish" he writes: "WE HAD NO DANISH CHANNELS/WE HAD AL
JAZEERA ... WE HAD NO PLANS/BECAUSE ALLAH HAD PLANS FOR US."
But on Friday, an Aarhus
court handed the 21-year-old a one year and nine month prison sentence for
shooting and injuring a 17-year-old man and for 34 other offences ranging from
driving under the influence to stealing 64 kroner (8.6 euros, $9.7) worth of beer
in a bar.
The writer claimed to have
been acting in self defence after the unarmed 17-year-old hit him.
In 2013, Hassan, a tall,
gangly teenager with curly hair pulled back in a trademark ponytail, became an
instant media sensation after claiming the children of immigrants "were
not let down by the system, but by our parents."
The anti-immigration
Danish People's Party (DPP) hailed his message, which they saw as confirming
what they have said about immigrants all along.
"I think it's really
hypocritical that people who buy his books and praise him have previously been
so opposed to what the DPP has said for many years," the party's
co-founder, Pia Kjaersgaard, told tabloid Ekstra Bladet at the time.
Aged 13, Hassan was placed
in the first of a series of institutions for juvenile delinquents where social
workers said they were unable to handle him. At 16, he was introduced to
literature by a female teacher who was later fired for having had a sexual
relationship with him.
Two years later, living in
Copenhagen, he had won several literary prizes and had become the darling of
Denmark's cultural elite. But he seemed unwilling -- or unable -- to shake off
his past, moving back
to Aarhus a few months
after his breakthrough.
Many young Danes of
immigrant origin disliked Hassan for his negative views on their communities
and their religion. In November 2013, he was assaulted in Copenhagen's main
train station by a 24-year-old man previously convicted of trying to commit an
act of terror.
Death threats against him
began appearing in social media, meaning he had to live under the protection of
the Danish Security and Intelligence Service, which he later renounced.
An attempt to enter
parliament for a political party targeting the immigrant vote failed, and he
was kicked out of it following a series of controversies that included driving
under the influence of drugs.
Hassan began writing
increasingly aggressive Facebook posts, and a confused television interview in
February had many questioning his mental health.
Danish author Kaspar
Colling said the former wunderkind was living with a double threat: from
Islamists as well as immigrant youth who viewed him as a "traitor".
"I met him one day
when he had been assaulted three times. He had only been to (supermarket)
Netto," he told daily Politiken.
The writer's publisher
should have removed some of the wider criticism of Islam that was non-essential
to his work, since an 18-year-old was unable to foresee the consequences, he
argued.
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