On Portugal’s national day—a day meant to celebrate the country’s proud heritage and enduring identity—hundreds of brave citizens in Samora Correia, a peaceful town near Lisbon in the Santarém district, took to the streets not with fanfare, but with a clear and defiant message:
No to the mosque. Yes to Portugal.
This from rairfoundation.com.
The people of Samora Corrêa took to the streets to reject the construction of an Islamic mosque, warning that Islam brings war, persecution, and the destruction of nations wherever it takes root. They cried out:
If I can’t build a church in their country,
why do they have the right to everything here?
The protest was not organized by political parties or outsiders; it originated from the grassroots level. Mothers, fathers, workers, patriots. They gathered on the very street where an Islamic association now plans to erect a mosque. Their rallying cry was simple, yet powerful: “Mosques, no! Samora, yes!”
At the heart of their resistance lies a truth that Europe’s elites refuse to acknowledge:
[T]his is not about religion, it’s about survival.
It’s about safeguarding their culture,
their safety, their daughters,
and their right to remain who they are in their own land.
One protester, capturing the mood of the crowd, said:
We’re here out of patriotism and duty to our people.
Further:
We have great pride in our traditions, great pride in our history, and in Portugal, the Portuguese must rule.
And:
Not the cultures of the Third World.
This protest was born from the bitter experience of watching Europe burn under the weight of mass Islamic immigration. From the no-go zones of Paris, to the grooming gangs of England, to the Sharia courts in Germany, citizens of Samora Correia have seen the writing on the wall. They do not want to become the next casualty in a continent that is losing itself.
One woman warned:
All over the world, we see Muslims creating war, persecuting Christians, and committing attacks.
Further:
We don’t want that here. Samora Correia is a peaceful land.
And she is right. While the media spins tales of “tolerance,” these protesters spoke truths that are ignored at Europe’s peril. Many of the mosque’s supporters reportedly hail from Pakistan and India, regions plagued by deeply ingrained misogyny, religious intolerance, and violent sectarianism. In their home countries, women are beaten, forbidden from leaving the house, or denied basic human rights. Churches are banned. Christians live in fear. And now these same ideological frameworks are being imported into Portugal.
One woman asked:
If I can’t build a church in their country, why do they get to build mosques here?
It is a question no politician seems willing to answer.
This is not merely a protest, it is a line in the sand.
The people of Samora Correia are standing for every town in Europe that has been betrayed by open-border policies and silenced by accusations of “bigotry” when they dared to speak out. They are saying what millions of Europeans feel but are too afraid to declare publicly:
We want our own identity.
We want our traditions.
We want freedom for the Portuguese
and above all, for our women.
If Portugal wants to remain Portuguese, this grassroots resistance must be honored, not condemned. Because once the mosques go up, once Sharia embeds itself into law and life, it is not just buildings that change, it is entire nations that change.
Samora Correia has spoken. Will Portugal listen?
And will America read the handwriting emboldened with blood on the wall?