Saturday, April 25, 2026

If you read this post, please take time to study and absorb the information paragraph by paragraph. Because it has transformed Islamic Europe and has a foothold in the USA.

 

The Reconquista Reversed

Demographic destiny and the shattered myth of Andalusian harmony.

Lars Møller | April 25, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

 From Wikimedia Commons: Batalla de las Navas de Tolosa (Francisco de Paula Van Halen, 1864)

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, whose wife has recently been charged with corruption, is having his way with the destiny of his homeland. A socialist and social engineer at heart, he reserves the right to legalize a civilian invasion by Muslims. 

So far, the Muslim population has swollen to an estimated 2.4 to 2.5 million souls—roughly 5% of the nation’s total—fueled overwhelmingly by immigration from North Africa, above all Morocco, which accounts for 65% of the Muslim immigrant cohort. These communities cluster with ominous symbolic precision in the ancient strongholds of al-Andalus: Andalusia and Granada alone shelter some 400,000 Muslims, while Madrid, that later-born capital, now harbors 100,000. Fertility differentials compound the shift; children born to at least one Muslim parent represented 11% of all Spanish births in 2024, a rate that mocks the anemic native birth figures.

From a historical perspective, this is no neutral migration. It is a slow-motion reversal of the Reconquista, a reconquest not by scimitar but by womb and ballot box. And yet polite discourse still clings to the saccharine fable of al-Andalus as a lost paradise of harmonious convivencia between Muslims, Christians, and Jews. That fable is a lie—a dangerous, ahistorical lie—and the gathering tensions in present-day Spain expose it as such. The impending conflict between post-Christian, secular Europeans and the resurgent Muslim Arab (and Arabized Berber) populations is not a fever dream of the far right; it is the inexorable consequence of incompatible civilizations colliding once more on the same soil.

The myth of al-Andalus must be dragged into the light and eviscerated. For centuries, European romantics and modern multiculturalists have peddled the image of a tolerant Islamic Iberia where Jews and Christians flourished under benevolent Moorish rule. This is historical malpractice of the highest order. From the Umayyad conquest in 711 until the final fall of Granada in 1492, non-Muslims existed as dhimmis—protected but explicitly subordinate subjects under the Pact of Umar and its variants. They paid the jizya, a humiliating poll tax that bought mere survival. Public display of their faith was curtailed; new churches and synagogues were forbidden; distinctive clothing—often yellow badges for Jews, dark robes for Christians—was mandatory. Testimony in court weighed less than that of a Muslim; a dhimmi who struck a Muslim faced execution. 

Far from idyllic coexistence, the record is littered with pogroms: the 1066 Granada massacre that slaughtered thousands of Jews, the 1013 Cordoba fitna that saw Christians and Jews butchered amid civil war, and the Almohad invasions of the twelfth century that forced mass conversions or exile under pain of death. Maimonides himself fled Andalusia to escape such persecution.

 The very term “dhimmi” denotes not equality but contractual inferiority—a permanent reminder that the House of Islam tolerates the People of the Book only on condition of acknowledged subservience. The Reconquista was not unprovoked aggression; it was the eight-century-long answer of a conquered people refusing to remain second-class forever. To romanticize al-Andalus is to spit on the graves of those who bled to reclaim their homeland. It is, moreover, a grotesque inversion: the same Islamic legal framework that governed medieval Spain now travels, via mass migration, into twenty-first-century Europe.

That framework is not ancient history. It is alive in the demographic surge now reshaping Spain. The concentration of Moroccan Muslims in Granada and Andalusia is not accidental; it is freighted with historical memory. These are the very cities where the last Moorish kingdom fell, where the Catholic Monarchs planted the cross in 1492.

Nowadays, Moroccan flags flutter from balconies, minarets rise beside cathedrals, and calls to prayer echo across plazas once cleansed by the Reconquista. The Spanish government’s January 2026 announcement of a mass regularization of 500,000 undocumented migrants—many from the same North African shores—has only accelerated the process. Critics rightly warn of a “pull effect”: an open invitation that will overload hospitals, schools, and welfare systems already groaning under the weight of native demographic collapse. Yet the left dismisses such objections as “maurophobia,” a convenient neologism that conflates legitimate historical wariness with racism.

The data tell a different story. A 2025 study found that 47.5% of Muslims surveyed reported experiencing racist attacks—an unsurprising backlash when integration fails so spectacularly. Muslim women face workplace and housing discrimination over the hijab; neighborhoods self-segregate; parallel societies form where Spanish law yields to informal sharia patrols. These are not anomalies. They are the predictable fruits of a creed that has never accepted the secular separation of mosque and state.

The passions now stirring among Spaniards are not irrational prejudice but the immune response of a civilization sensing existential threat. Right-wing parties such as Vox have surged precisely because they articulate what the bien-pensant class refuses to name: the incompatibility between a post-Christian Europe that prizes individual liberty, gender equality, and secular governance, and an Islamic worldview that subordinates all to divine law.

Fertility rates tell the tale: native Spanish women average below 1.3 children; Muslim households in Europe routinely exceed 2.5. At current trajectories, Muslims could comprise 10% of Spain’s population by 2040 and far more in the southern heartlands. Rather than benign “diversity,” this is population replacement in process. And it carries cultural corollaries. Honor-based violence, female genital mutilation (though officially banned, still reported in clandestine networks), and demands for halal-only school meals are not fringe excesses; they are assertions of supremacy.

When Muslim associations in Granada petition for greater public recognition while simultaneously decrying “Islamophobia,” they reveal the double standard at the heart of the dhimmi contract: tolerance is expected from the host, but criticism of Islam is branded blasphemy. Secular Europeans, heirs to Voltaire and the Enlightenment, find themselves cast once more in the role of second-class citizens in their own lands—pressured to accommodate a faith whose canonical texts still speak of jihad and the subjugation of unbelievers.

Nor is Spain an outlier. The same dynamics convulse France, where banlieues have become no-go zones; Sweden, where sexual assaults spiked with the arrival of young male migrants from Muslim-majority countries; and Germany, where parallel legal systems operate in migrant enclaves. The post-Christian West, having shed its own religious certainties, confronts an adversary that has not. Islam does not negotiate with modernity; it seeks to Islamize it. The polite fiction of “moderate Islam” collapses under scrutiny: poll after poll across Europe shows majorities of young Muslims prioritizing sharia over national law. Integration, we are endlessly told, is the solution. Yet integration presupposes a willingness on the part of the newcomer to adopt the host culture. When that culture is itself derided as “colonial” or “Islamophobic,” and when mosques funded by foreign powers preach separatism, integration becomes surrender.

The political response in Spain is therefore beyond electoral; it is existential. Vox and allied regional parties channel the fury of a people watching their cathedrals turned into tourist backdrops while new mosques proclaim the ummah’s advance. The regularization plan is a betrayal: it rewards illegal entry, erodes social trust, and accelerates the very transformation that erodes Spanish identity. Critics who warn of overloaded services are not fearmongers; they are realists. Public housing queues lengthen, hospital waiting lists swell, and native families flee neighborhoods where Arabic dominates the streets. This is not harmonious multiculturalism. It is the slow conquest by demographics that Islamic doctrine has always understood as divine will.

Europe’s secular elites, drunk on guilt over colonialism and the Holocaust, have disarmed themselves ideologically. They preach tolerance while ignoring the intolerance imported in the name of diversity. Christians and Jews, once dhimmis in al-Andalus, now risk becoming dhimmis again—this time in the lands that their ancestors reclaimed at such cost. The conflict is not “impending”; it has already begun in the quiet calculus of birth rates, the no-go zones, the political polarization. Spain, cradle of the Reconquista, may yet become its final battlefield.

Spaniards—and Europeans more broadly—must abandon the narcotic myth of Andalusian harmony and confront the demographic and cultural realities before them. To pretend that a faith founded on submission can coexist indefinitely with a civilization founded on liberty is to court civilizational suicide. The choice is stark: reclaim the inheritance of 1492 or prepare for a new dhimmitude. History does not forgive those who forget its lessons. The Reconquista was won once by steel and faith; its reversal will be resisted, or it will be endured. There is no third path.

Related Topics: Spain, Muslim Immigrants, History

 

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