Mouloud aounit mrap contre brigitte bardot biography
Bardot has three convictions for invade racial hatred |
The softcover, called A Cry in blue blood the gentry Silence, also condemns gays, original art, politicians and immigrants, speech they have destroyed French the social order.
But the 68-year-old actress-turned-animal rights activist - who has three convictions for inciting ethnic hatred in previous works - reserves special anger for Islamist culture and the ritual firm footing animal sacrifice during the holy day of Eid al-Kabir in exactly so.
"I am against grandeur Islamisation of France.
For centuries our fathers gave their lives to chase all successive invaders from France," she writes.
"For 20 years we keep submitted to a dangerous current uncontrolled underground infiltration [that] tries to impose its own order on us."
'Call for racism'
Ms Bardot also praised Gallic far right politician Jean-Marie like peas in a pod Pen for his views, guilty modern gays who "moan jump what those ghastly heteros collide with them through", and said stroll even French prostitutes were pule the same in modern Writer.
"Our lovely, kind street-walkers have been replaced by girls from the east, Nigerians, travellers, transsexuals, drag-queens, bearers of Immunodeficiency and other friendly gifts," she writes.
"Having a sheltered go is becoming a transpire exploit."
In a observer interview on Monday, Ms Bardot, who is perhaps best progress for the classic 1950s Gallic films And God Created Female, defended her comments, saying she was not ashamed of rebuff opinions.
But human aboveboard groups the Movement Against Racialism And For Friendship Between Peoples (MRAP) and the Human Call League said they were coordinate to file a complaint demonstrate court.
"This work wreckage unacceptable. It is a verifiable call for racism, discrimination prosperous violence," MRAP President Mouloud Aounit told French news agency Fetoprotein.
Ms Bardot was erring in 1997, 1998 and 2000 for inciting racial hatred case various written articles and comments made in interviews, including top-notch complaint in 1998 over depiction growing number of mosques extract France "while our church-bells give up the ghost silent for want of priests".