Foul-mouthed PhD Muslim macho

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By Michael Ashcraft –

As an abrasive commentator, fiery debater and YouTuber with 1.24M subscribers, British-Egyptian Mohammed Hijab a is being hailed as the new face of Islam.

“They’re going to make comics about Hijab,” a fan commented on his channel. “He’s a modern day superhero.”

“Being Christian, I am impressed by Hijab,” says another on Hijab’s debate with David Wood. “I am planning to come into the circle of Islam.”

The Muslim man Christianity must face in the battle for souls offers striking contradictions. He’s a foul-mouthed trash talker who can machine-gun through anti-Trinitarian rhetoric in a suit and tie as smooth as his tongue can become.

His diatribe against a Muslim apostate was removed from YouTube for harassment and bullying. At the same time, he’s (reportedly) completing a PhD program at University of Birmingham, after completing his Master’s at Oxford University.

Against the YouTuber the Apostate Prophet, Hijab snarled: “He is a despicable character, a cantankerous individual. For the vulgar persons who promote him, when you see me, I’ll make sure you come inches away from excreting yourself. He’s a cockroach on the internet.” The 6-hour video is now banned on YouTube.

Later, Hijab tweeted (and then deleted) that Ridvan Aydemir (the Apostate’s real name) was an “incest endorsing Islamophobe who may be attempting to sexually lure his sister.” Even more lurid and unprintable obscenities followed, a video of Ridvan shows.

By distracting and flaunting his muscles, Mohammed Hijab attempted to win a debate with Dr. Jay Smith at Speaker’s Corner.

On video, he’s spoken with Piers Morgan, Noam Chomsky and Jordan Peterson. He has written six books and co-founded the Sapience Institute, which promotes Islam on an intellectual front.

In 2021, he and sidekick Ali Dawah riled up Muslims to hurl abuse on Jews who celebrated a ceasefire in Israel, requiring police intervention, according to videos and reports. The following year he whipped up a crowd of Muslims who were fighting Hindus in the Leicester neighborhood.

Hijab foreground left. Ali Dawah with his index finger pointing to the right.

With the Palestinian-Israel War, he’s led demonstrators into Jewish neighborhoods, shouting and hurling insults. He praised a Muslim man for slapping Tommy Robinson in the face and derided Tommy, who is leading massive marches opposed to Sharia law being imposed on the UK.

Hijab towers over his opponents in debate. He’s a 6’7” behemoth who alternatively grins and glares to great effect on social media. When he was losing a debate at Speaker’s Corner to Dr. Jay Smith, he made mocking gestures and flexed his muscles to exude prowess and distract from being out-classed on the intellectual front.

Hijab believes the entire world will eventually be ruled by Islam, whether by the force of reason or the force of violence.

Without reservation, he and Ali Dawah threaten apostates with the Koran’s sentence of death. Without shame, he urges Muslim men to have a second wife (or more) – and to do so in secret without telling their first wives.

Christian debaters have coined his brand of religion “Thug Islam.” And they have plenty of justification for using the term, after getting slapped, beaten, knifed, spat upon, threatened, stolen from regularly by Muslims – who are offended that anyone would dare to question the integrity of the Koran or of Mohammad.

Many Muslims love Hijab’s bravado and bluster, his deep growl, the undercurrent of violence; he has 1.24 million subscribers on the YouTube channel. To them, Hijab is the archetypal underdog who stands up unflinchingly to the Godzilla of oppressive Western Civilization.

Others are put off by him. “Honestly, I had been a believer of Islam for many years. After watching you debate Christians, I have decided to leave this enslaving doctrine,” one man writes in his comment section. “The way you conducted yourself gave me flashbacks of being a young child and being bullied into something that I wasn’t even allowed to ask questions about. I want to thank you for showing me how ridiculous this religion is at its core.”

Mikhaila Peterson invited Hijab to debate ex Muslim Ayaan Hirsi Ali on her channel and was frustrated by the patronizing, insulting manner of Hijab. “I left these opposing views kind of freaked out and kind of aggravated by this somewhat stressful podcast,” Mikhaila says.

Before he said pretty much anything, Hijab launched a personal attack against Ayaan: “I don’t like the ultracrepidarian, academic charlatan co-guest, the obsequious, apple-polisher for the far right.” (An ultracrepidarian is a person who’s not an expert but acts like one.)

When boxer Ryan Garcia called Muslims “cool…” on social media, Hijab responded the same day, “Join us, brother,” as reported in a Jai & DoC video.

But Hijab had just posted a discussion with Sneako, a YouTuber who followed Andrew Tate into Islam, in which he validated pedophilia. “We don’t have any problem with it at all,” Hijab said. “We have a different idea of what it means to be a child.” Mohammad the prophet married a six year old, Ayeesha.

Garcia has alleged publicly that he was sexually abused as a child, so he lashed out against the invitation to join Islam: “Wtf, nah lock him up. He just justified f—ing a 13-year-old cause it won’t hurt her medically. B—-h, mentally that little girl will not be okay. F— you whatever your name is pedo.”

For every Christian, or liberal, or feminist he angers, there are many more Muslims who are excited and enthralled with his gamesmanship.

Muslims criticize the Apostle Paul, alleging he derailed the pristine message of the Prophet Jesus and introduced corruptions. But there’s another aspect of Paul’s life that they don’t consider much: Originally Paul practiced violence against Christians, but Jesus himself intervened and got Paul saved.

Let’s follow the Bible: No one should seek to do violence against Hijab. Instead, let’s pray that Jesus would give him a Paul-like vision and conversion.

To learn more about a personal relationship with Jesus, click here.

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About this writer: Michael Ashcraft pastors a church in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles.

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