View all Articles
Commentary By Judith Miller

Daughter of the Nile

Culture Society

Photo by Sameer Al-DOUMY / AFP via Getty Images

Dismissed by academics but revered on the right, the author of ‛Eurabia’ sees Muslim migration as the result of a grand conspiracy

In late January, I had lunch at Le Rive, a tony, wood-beamed restaurant whose tall windows offered a stunning view of Lake Geneva and its snow-capped mountains. The room buzzed with the sound of diners speaking softly in French and German and the clinking of crystal glassware. The tables were covered with heavy, white linen cloths, perfectly pressed. The lake’s soft, silvery light filled the immaculate room.

The room buzzed with the sound of diners speaking softly in French and German and the clinking of crystal glassware. The tables were covered with heavy, white linen cloths, perfectly pressed. The lake’s soft, silvery light filled the immaculate room.

My companion was a 92-year-old woman who has lived for the past decades in a nearby town in the peaceful Swiss countryside under her pen name, which refers to a country that she left for the last time

Continue reading the entire piece here at Tablet

______________________

Judith Miller is a contributing editor of City Journal and adjunct fellow at the Manhattan Institute. Follow her on Twitter here.