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"We started our families at the same time, and they're certainly not radical people." But Abdelkader has seen a shift recently. Molenbeek is trying to maintain its unity, she says, but the space is growing between different communities in Brussels. "In the '80s, Molenbeek was like Marrakech. Now it's like Kabul. It's like a war here," she says. "People in other parts of the city don't see the reality of the situation -- but here we're living in it. "When I cross the road I am afraid. It's my country and I'm scared to go out. "We're also suffering from these attacks. One woman in our neighborhood went to work and never came back." The regular Thursday market in Molenbeek's Place Communale. Kamal, 35,cheap jordan shoes, owns a butcher shop not far from the market. His 7-year-old son Bilal is too young to understand most of what's transpired here in the past four months, and Kamal seems grateful for that. "I don't speak to him about the situation here,, and I don't let him watch the news on TV. He's too young. He has other occupations." As the years go by,cheap real jordans, Kamal says,cheap jordans online,cheap jordan shoes,cheap jordans online ?????????, he feels more and more like a stranger in his own country. "The situation here has gotten bad over the past four months. All Belgian people see Molenbeek as a problem. We are Belgian, but many see us as strangers