Jobbik Leader Gábor Vona: Islam is Humanity’s Last Hope, Turks are Our Brothers

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
December 9, 2013

Gábor Vona: What's next?  Is he going to put on a kufi, mary a 5-year-old and start burning churches and beheading infidels on the streets of Budapest?
Gábor Vona: What’s next? Is he going to put on a kufi, marry a 5-year-old and start burning churches and beheading infidels on the streets of Budapest?

I continue to be perplexed by Gábor Vona, the head of the Hungarian Jobbik party. Repeatedly, he has endorsed our blood enemies the Turks, and praised the enemy’s gross cult of Islam.

I am not going to ever agree with endorsing the subhuman Turkish race, which I have personally witnessed the savagery of, nor am I ever going to feel that Islam is anything other than fundamentally opposed to the White European value system. In fact, I fully support the position of the Golden Dawn: Anatolia belongs to the White race, and we have a duty to our ancestors to reclaim it from the monstrous fiends who stole it from them.

It is called Byzantium (Constantinople is also acceptable), and it is occupied by our enemies.
It is called Byzantium (Constantinople is also acceptable), and it is occupied by our enemies.  Will Gabor Vona stand in our way when the time comes to reclaim what has been stolen from us?

I hope that Vona’s positions on these issues are merely personality quirks, or some such thing, as I simply cannot grasp where he is coming from. As I understand it, he is opposed to immigration into Hungary. But why he would want to befriend a race who has done more than any other, save the Jew itself, to harm our people is beyond me. For hundreds of years the savage Turks occupied a large portion of our homeland, and they have yet to apologize for it.

What is going on here? How does Jobbik’s base feel about the party leader’s obsession with flirting with the enemy?

IBT reports:

The Morocco World News reported in early November that Vona even told a Turkish university audience that “Islam is the last hope for humanity in the darkness of globalism and liberalism.” On a speaking tour of Turkish colleges, Vona also highlighted Hungary’s ethnic and blood links with the Turks, recalling the once-enormous Ottoman Empire which conquered Hungary and stretched as far west as Vienna. “We’re not coming to Turkey to build diplomatic and economic relations, but to meet our Turkish brothers and sisters,” Vona declared, according to Islametinfo.fr. Vona praised the personal friendships he has enjoyed from various Muslims throughout his life, including a Palestinian who attended his wedding as a guest.

He also threw down the gauntlet by making a sharp distinction between his views on foreign policy and those of other Western nations. “The West does not tolerate seeing my party support Turkey and other Turanian peoples, such as Azerbaijanis, in international conflicts.” [Turanians refer to an allegedly mythical people who originated somewhere in Central Asia and migrated westward thousands of years ago. Many Turkish nationalists believe they are descended from these peoples and dream of forming a new Pan-Turanian empire stretching from Asia to Europe.]

In addition, Vona separated himself from other far-right European leaders who generally disdain Muslims, particularly Turks, who now form significant ethnic minority communities in several Western European states. “Africa has no power… South-America [suffers] from perplexed identity due to their much congested societies,” Vona said on his party’s website. “Considering all this, there’s only one culture left which seeks to preserve its traditions: It is the Islamic world.”