I don't create hate.

There is no equality between our culture and the retarded Islamic culture. Look at their views on homosexuality or women.

My intention is to show the real face of Islam. I see it as a threat.

I don't hate people.

It is my right and my duty as a politician to speak about the problems in our country.

It is a travesty that I have to stand trial because I spoke about fewer Moroccans.

I'm very strong willed and I'm very impatient as well.

Mr. Trump is Mr. Trump. I'm Mr. Wilders. I'm not anybody's copy or whatsoever.

Europe is my home, Europe is my continent. Europe is where we live. The European Union is a political bureaucratic organization that took away our identity and our national sovereignty. So, I would get rid of the European Union and be a nation-state again.

I'm very thankful to live in a country where the government provides my protection - many police and armored cars and safe houses and things like that.

The message, 'stop Islam, defend freedom,' is a message that's not only important for the Netherlands but for the whole free Western world.

We must have the courage to restrict legal immigration instead of expanding it, even if we sometimes have to build a wall.

I experienced first-hand the degeneration of the poldermodel in full force.

Nexit is the best thing that can happen to us.

The Moroccan scum in Holland... once again not all are scum... but there is a lot of Moroccan scum in Holland who make the streets unsafe, mostly young people... and that should change.

People are equal, cultures are not.

European Parliament should not be involved in foreign politics.

We are not for cutting social welfare and are for more health care.

We don't want a European super state.

Immigrants have to adopt our values, not the other way around.

We don't hate Muslims, but they have to integrate.

My main message is that I have a problem with the Islamicisation of our societies.

We in the Netherlands have the right to demonstrate and the right to speak up if we don't agree with something.

It's not that we have two different kinds of Islam. I acknowledge the fact that we have two kinds of people. There are moderate Muslims and non-moderate Muslims. But there is really only one Islam, and this is the Islam of the life of Muhammad, of the Quran, of the Hadiths, of the Sunnah.

I am not ashamed to say that our culture is far better than the Islamic culture, which is a culture of barbarism.

It's about hard work and not gender.

Film as a medium has a power that sports like wrestling lack.

Our akhara was very basic. It was just a little opening next to where the animals were tied. We had to first dig the soil with our bare hands, make it loose, before we could begin our session. I used to hate it. It also used to be either too hot or too cold. There were no mats, no mattresses, nothing.

I come from a village where traditionally girls don't go out and play sport so I struggled a lot to come this far and to get to this position where I am at the Olympics.

There was no roof where we trained, so it used to get very hot during the day and the mud used to feel very cold during the evening.

I used to watch Babita and Vinesh win medals. I was happy for my sisters but at the same time I felt bad for not being a part of the contingent.

There is so much discrimination towards women in Haryana.

We did not had enough facilities in the village. My family was also not well off. There was no mat, no gym; we used to wrestle in the mud. It was very different from the national camps where I trained before the Commonwealth Games.

Wrestlers from Japan and Canada are very tough.

Till the time my body supports me and till the time I have that desire inside me to succeed, till then I will keep wrestling.

Inner strength is very important.

It is extremely difficult to get a medal at the World Championships, even more than the Olympics. And when one is not 100 per cent prepared, it is next to impossible to win a medal there.

I believe that if I can qualify for the Olympics, I have the skills to compete at the highest level and do good for my country.

We used to wear a track suit and T-shirt while training. But that did not go down well with the villagers, because women are usually supposed to wear salwar kameez.

In my village, girls have limited opportunities. If they get admission in a college, only a few households would allow them to go for further studies.

Our parents faced more hardship than us. They didn't stop us from training despite hearing the taunts from the people in the village. We were fortunate to have parents like them.

My only aim is to win an Olympic medal.

My father gave us inner confidence. He taught us, as young girls, never to be scared.

I've seen the success of Mary Kom at the Olympics... We stayed in the same flat. If she can win a medal after being the mother of two, why can't I?

If you are not strong from inside you can never look beautiful from outside.

Things are not going to change until Indian women, and their parents, stop being afraid of what society will say. This is the single biggest obstacle. The fear of what people will say and how this will shame their parents means that women are paralysed.

My father, once he has decided on something, doesn't care about what anyone else thinks. All the men in our family swore at him for training us. His parents said he was mad. But he didn't listen.

I feel that Indian women are too frightened. They all say, 'I can't do this, I can't do that.' Worse, their families don't support them.

Colorado Springs is a very good place to train ahead of the Olympics. We get to compete with different partners, learn different movements, we also get to improve upon our speed, which is very essential.

We had a very hard training during our childhood and I don't want to live it again.