Brazil Must Learn from Europe’s Sharia Nightmares

By Hotspotnews

In Brazil, a federal deputy from a prominent family has introduced legislation to safeguard the nation’s sovereignty and constitutional order against the creeping influence of Sharia law. Deputy Luiz Philippe de Orleans e Bragança’s bill, PL 824/2026, seeks to prevent the application of foreign religious legal codes—particularly those associated with Sharia—that conflict with Brazilian law, especially where they undermine the rights of women, children, and minorities. Rather than being celebrated as a prudent defense of national identity, the proposal has drawn accusations of religious discrimination and sparked a formal complaint to the authorities.

This backlash reveals a familiar pattern: any serious attempt to confront incompatible ideologies is met with smears designed to shut down debate. The rest of the world, particularly Europe, offers stark warnings about what happens when societies ignore these issues until it is too late.

Europe’s experiment with large-scale Muslim immigration without robust demands for assimilation has produced parallel societies where Sharia norms operate alongside—or above—national law in practice. These are not abstract fears. They are documented realities backed by official inquiries, police reports, and the lived experience of ordinary citizens.

Consider the United Kingdom’s grooming gang scandals. In towns like Rotherham, Rochdale, and Telford, organized networks of men, overwhelmingly of Pakistani Muslim heritage, systematically groomed, raped, and trafficked thousands of vulnerable British girls—many of them minors from working-class backgrounds. Official inquiries, including the landmark Jay Report on Rotherham, revealed that authorities knew about the abuse for years but failed to act decisively. Fear of being labeled racist paralyzed police and social services. Perpetrators sometimes invoked cultural or religious justifications, viewing non-Muslim girls as fair game. Victims described being told they were “white slags” or subjected to twisted interpretations of consent drawn from Islamic texts. Thousands suffered, and justice came late for most. Similar patterns emerged across multiple English cities. Political correctness did not protect the vulnerable; it enabled predators.

Sharia councils compound the problem. The UK hosts dozens of these informal bodies that handle family disputes, divorce, and inheritance according to Islamic rules. Women frequently receive unequal treatment—half the inheritance share of male relatives, pressure to reconcile with abusive husbands, or religious divorces that leave them in legal limbo under British law. While these councils lack formal legal power, social and familial pressure makes them influential within certain communities. Women who seek British court protection instead often face ostracism or worse. This is not integration; it is the quiet establishment of a parallel legal system that erodes equality under the law.

France tells an even more visible story through its banlieues. Entire districts in cities like Paris, Marseille, and Lyon have become de facto no-go areas where police enter with caution, if at all. Islamist influence dominates daily life. Women face harassment for dressing “immodestly.” Sharia patrols have enforced dress codes and separated men and women in public spaces. Crime rates, including sexual violence and gang activity, are disproportionately high in these enclaves. Successive governments have acknowledged “parallel societies” where French law yields to tribal and religious norms. Riots, car burnings, and attacks on emergency services are recurring features. The 2005 nationwide riots and subsequent waves of unrest exposed the depth of alienation—and the failure of multiculturalism to create a shared French identity.

Sweden, once a model of social cohesion, has openly admitted the emergence of parallel societies. Prime ministers have described immigrant-heavy areas as zones where Swedish law struggles to assert itself. Gang violence linked to clans from certain Middle Eastern and North African backgrounds has turned parts of Malmö and other cities into battlegrounds. Honor-based violence, including murders of girls and women who defy family expectations around marriage, dress, or relationships, occurs with troubling frequency. Similar patterns appear in Germany (notably the 2015-2016 Cologne assaults), Belgium, and the Netherlands. In each case, rapid demographic change combined with weak integration policies created enclaves resistant to host-country values.

Beyond organized crime and patrols, subtler erosions accumulate. Female genital mutilation persists in some immigrant communities in Europe and beyond, despite legal bans. Honor killings—murders justified by perceived family shame over a woman’s behavior—claim victims across Western Europe, with official estimates in the dozens annually in countries like the UK and higher when including related violence. Forced marriages, often involving young girls, continue under cultural cover. Blasphemy sensitivities lead to self-censorship in media and academia, while demands grow for accommodations that prioritize religious sensitivities over secular norms.

These examples are not isolated incidents or the product of poverty alone. They stem from ideological incompatibility: Sharia’s foundational texts prescribe rules on gender roles, apostasy, blasphemy, and non-believers that clash directly with Western commitments to individual liberty, equality before the law, and separation of mosque and state. Where Muslim populations grow rapidly and resist assimilation, these tensions intensify rather than fade. Surveys and behavioral data consistently show higher support for Sharia elements—such as harsh punishments or restrictions on women—among significant portions of Muslim communities in Europe compared to native populations.

Brazil stands at a crossroads. Its Constitution already guarantees religious freedom while establishing a secular state. The proposed bill reinforces this by drawing a clear line: no foreign religious code may override Brazilian sovereignty or harm fundamental rights. It protects the vulnerable without banning private belief or worship. The accusations against its sponsor follow a predictable script—equate concern for cultural compatibility with bigotry—to avoid confronting uncomfortable demographic and cultural realities.

Those who dismiss these warnings as alarmist should study Europe’s record. Political correctness delayed action on grooming gangs for years, costing countless girls their childhoods and safety. Parallel societies now challenge the monopoly of the state on law and order in multiple nations. Women’s hard-won rights face rollback in enclaves where ancient customs prevail.

Brazil has the advantage of acting before the problem reaches European scale. Passing and enforcing legislation that prioritizes national law, protects women and children, and demands genuine integration sends a powerful message. It affirms that sovereignty is not negotiable and that Western civilization’s achievements in liberty and equality are worth defending. The alternative—turning a blind eye until parallel systems take root—is a lesson Europe has paid for dearly. Brazil would be wise to pay attention now.

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