The Dean of Saint Paul’s Cathedral, Reverend Walter Matthews, called it the “Miracle of Dunkirk,” in his address, June 2, 1940:
Then, five days into the evacuation, the sky cleared for a day, June 1, allowing Nazi artillery and planes to attack, sinking 243 boats.
Winston Churchill insisted citizens sail their vessels back one more day, June 4, 1940, to rescue as many as possible of the trapped French, Dutch, Belgian, and Polish troops.
Churchill repeated this warning of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, in Fulton, Missouri, March 5, 1946:
This became a symbol for all Western European resistance during World War Two, with V’s painted on walls and over Nazi posters.
“Nazi” was an abbreviation of the “National Socialist Workers Party,” which was motivated by the racist, anti-Semitic, supremacist ideology expressed in Adolf Hitler’s work Mein Kampf, 1925.
Churchill’s equating of Mein Kampf with the Koran finds its roots earlier in Churchill’s career, 1897-1898, when he fought in northwest India, Egypt and Sudan, serving under the command of General Herbert Kitchener.
This view is similar to the Scottish philosopher David Hume, who described the Prophet of Islam in Of the Standard of Taste, 1760:
The annotated John Quincy Adams-A Bibliography, compiled by Lynn H. Parsons (Westport, CT, 1993, p. 41, entry#194), contained “Unsigned essays dealing with the Russo-Turkish War and on Greece” (The American Annual Register for 1827-28-29, NY: 1830):
Justice Robert Jackson, nominated to the Supreme Court by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, wrote in the foreword of the book Law in the Middle East (1955):
Ataturk, the first President of the Republic of Turkey, 1924 to 1938. He allowed women to vote in 1930, stating:
An incident of “Mohammedanism” was in the early conflict with the Quraishite tribe, circa 624 A.D.
This post originally appeared at https://americanminute.com/blogs/todays-american-minute/miracle-of-dunkirk-sir-winston-churchills-views-on-preserving-christian-civilization-and-fighting-socialism-sharia-american-minute-with-bill-federer