Manitoba Waterpark owner caves to Muslim demands despite the negative health consequences

A Winnipeg Muslim family was initially told they couldn’t enter the pool because of the unsanitary, bacteria-ridden, full body-covering Islamic burqini the women were wearing.

CTV“About 10-15 minutes, the owner approached us and said that due to the burkini me and my daughter were wearing we aren’t allowed on the waterslide,” said the mother Halima Jelloul

Lilac Resort’s owner, Dan Manaigre, said he approached the family because he didn’t know what a burkini was and thought it was streetwear (It is!)– a major public health violation if worn in a pool.

“I want to apologize to the family because I just didn’t know,” said Manaigre. Manaigre has sent a memo out to all of his staff explaining what a burkini is and that they are allowed.
“Moving forward, they’ve all been told that burkini will be acceptable wear. However, they will continue enforcing no streetwear in the pool,” he said. In other words, Muslims can wear streetwear, but Christians and Jews can’t.

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FATAH: The Swiss have banned the burka — when will Canada follow?

Why are Canadians scared to speak out against what is a symbol of anti-West hatred and the flaunting of the Muslim Brotherhood agenda right in our midst and in our face? It’s the label of ‘racist’ that hangs like the sword of Damocles over our heads.

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Muslim Migrant Threatens to Kill Daughters Who Do Not Wear Islamic Veil

A Muslim migrant from Algeria living in the French-speaking Canadian province of Quebec is said to have repeatedly threatened to kill his daughters if they refused to wear the Islamic veil.

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European bans on Islamic full-face veils

Switzerland is the latest European country to ban the niqab, the Islamic full-face veil that shows only the eyes.

Swiss voters on Sunday narrowly backed a ban on full face coverings in public places — a decision hailed by supporters as a bulwark against radical Islam but branded as discriminatory by opponents.

Policies attempting to regulate or ban the niqab — and the more extensive burqa covering — have popped up in a handful of countries across Europe, with France enacting the first public ban in 2010.

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