The song “Allahu Akbar” has trolled its way to the top of United Kingdom charts, in what’s believed to be a satirical jab at jihadists.

The dance track, by an anonymous artist known as “DJ Inappropriate,” was No. 1 on Spotify’s Viral Chart and No. 5 worldwide on Thursday.

The ratings show how much the tune is being played and shared online, and is often previews songs that’ll be worldwide, mainstream hits.

“The song is apparently meant to be satirical. It is not intended to be inflammatory or to incite hatred,” a music industry analyst told The Sun newspaper of London.

“It has been doing the rounds for ages and seems to be shared by a lot of gamers. But it has grown in popularity over the past month.”

“Allahu Akbar” directly translates as “God is great” and has been an oft-used prayer uttered by Muslims for centuries. But in recent years, the phrase has taken a sinister connotation because Islamic terrorist have been known to shout it while committing their atrocities.

Paris attackers shouted those words earlier this month during their assault on the City of Light.

Not far behind “Allahu Akbar,” at No. 8 on Spotify’s global Viral Chart is “Save a Prayer,” by Eagles of Death Metal – the group on stage at the Bataclan theater which was shot up by terrorists in Paris.