By Joe Kaufman
Oprah Winfrey, the popular television talk show hostess, probably doesn't realize it, but she is being used by a radical Muslim organization. Last month, she aired a tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr., where she featured the daughter of a well known Islamist leader. Now, the leader and his operation are spreading the word that Oprah has helped their group to hit the big time.
On January 21st, the Oprah Winfrey Show aired its 'The Dream Lives: A Martin Luther King Day Special.' It was a very personal event for Winfrey, because she credits much of her success to Dr. King. She stated, "I wouldn't have the life - no part of the life that I have - had there been no Martin Luther King, Jr. and all the other people who stood with him to create a civil rights movement. Nothing that has happening in my life, since I was 16 years old would have been possible."
Dr. King's dream was that there would be a day when all children from all different backgrounds could interact with one another, without being hindered by unnecessary obstacles, such as the color of one's skin. To make this dream a reality, for at least one show segment, Winfrey gathered children from various ethnicities, races and religions to shoot a video honoring King's famous speech, 'I Have a Dream.' Read more ...
Oprah Winfrey, the popular television talk show hostess, probably doesn't realize it, but she is being used by a radical Muslim organization. Last month, she aired a tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr., where she featured the daughter of a well known Islamist leader. Now, the leader and his operation are spreading the word that Oprah has helped their group to hit the big time.
On January 21st, the Oprah Winfrey Show aired its 'The Dream Lives: A Martin Luther King Day Special.' It was a very personal event for Winfrey, because she credits much of her success to Dr. King. She stated, "I wouldn't have the life - no part of the life that I have - had there been no Martin Luther King, Jr. and all the other people who stood with him to create a civil rights movement. Nothing that has happening in my life, since I was 16 years old would have been possible."
Dr. King's dream was that there would be a day when all children from all different backgrounds could interact with one another, without being hindered by unnecessary obstacles, such as the color of one's skin. To make this dream a reality, for at least one show segment, Winfrey gathered children from various ethnicities, races and religions to shoot a video honoring King's famous speech, 'I Have a Dream.' Read more ...
Source: FrontPage Magazine