Carl wrote:^^ I don't fully understand the reasons KSA propagates this brand of Islam. Is it just their ideological conviction? The Saudi regime themselves are targets of extreme jihadi networks.
World domination onlee

Carl wrote:^^ I don't fully understand the reasons KSA propagates this brand of Islam. Is it just their ideological conviction? The Saudi regime themselves are targets of extreme jihadi networks.
Carl wrote:^^ I don't fully understand the reasons KSA propagates this brand of Islam. Is it just their ideological conviction? The Saudi regime themselves are targets of extreme jihadi networks.
Of course. But how do we empower women in the bastion of Islam without tackling some tenets of Islam itself. Women empowerment can come from a separation of State and Mosque for instance. But is that going to happen in KSA for example without tackling those tenets?I think empowering the Saudi women is key step in changing KSA attitudes.
An attack on a Newcastle mosque, trapping seven worshippers inside, has been caught on security camera.The attack happened only minutes after a group of children had finished a scripture class and is the latest in a series of incidents that have left the city's Muslim community feeling "vulnerable and scared".In the security footage, which has been provided to police, two tattooed men are seen to approach the Wallsend mosque about 9.30pm on Monday. One man, with a large tattoo of a cross on his neck, kicks through the fence gate and hurls an object at the mosque's front door. Then he runs and smashes a flying kick into the door. More objects are thrown at the building and one of the men is seen to shout what appears to be abuse.Newcastle Muslim Association vice-president Diana Rah said seven worshippers were inside the mosque at the time and managed to lock the main entrance on the side of the building. The two men tried to kick through this entrance but were unsuccessful, she said. Ms Rah said a group of children left the mosque after an evening scripture class only minutes before the men arrived.
harbans wrote:Of course. But how do we empower women in the bastion of Islam without tackling some tenets of Islam itself. Women empowerment can come from a separation of State and Mosque for instance. But is that going to happen in KSA for example without tackling those tenets?I think empowering the Saudi women is key step in changing KSA attitudes.
Wealth and Power in Islam are also not religious blocks in Islam. Chapter 8 of the Koran is titled Booty and Spoils of war and the sharing of loot for instance.
That will rob Saudis of the whole purpose of Islam from their viewpoint, Asians must feel lesser to arabs, thats why in Haj/UMra only white and arab muslims can use the special trains. Asians and Africans have to take the bus.ramana wrote:harbans wrote:quote]I think empowering the Saudi women is key step in changing KSA attitudes./quote]
Of course. But how do we empower women in the bastion of Islam without tackling some tenets of Islam itself. Women empowerment can come from a separation of State and Mosque for instance. But is that going to happen in KSA for example without tackling those tenets?
Wealth and Power in Islam are also not religious blocks in Islam. Chapter 8 of the Koran is titled Booty and Spoils of war and the sharing of loot for instance.
The second Caliphate dynasty (Ummayads) onwards separted the State from the Mosque by shifting the capital to Damascus. The rise of Abbasid Caliphate is due to the State being far away from Mecca. One way in modern world is to accord Mecca and Madinah indepenent status. But that will lead to different set of issues.
Not to mention robbing the ruler of the clan of the title "defender of the faith"Aditya_V wrote:ramana wrote:{quote="harbans"}I think empowering the Saudi women is key step in changing KSA attitudes./quote]
Of course. But how do we empower women in the bastion of Islam without tackling some tenets of Islam itself. Women empowerment can come from a separation of State and Mosque for instance. But is that going to happen in KSA for example without tackling those tenets?
Wealth and Power in Islam are also not religious blocks in Islam. Chapter 8 of the Koran is titled Booty and Spoils of war and the sharing of loot for instance.
The second Caliphate dynasty (Ummayads) onwards separted the State from the Mosque by shifting the capital to Damascus. The rise of Abbasid Caliphate is due to the State being far away from Mecca. One way in modern world is to accord Mecca and Madinah indepenent status. But that will lead to different set of issues.
That will rob Saudis of the whole purpose of Islam from their viewpoint, Asians must feel lesser to arabs, thats why in Haj/UMra only white and arab muslims can use the special trains. Asians and Africans have to take the bus.
The blasts occurred in the run-up to Arbaeen, a Shiite holy day which sees Shiite pilgrims from across Iraq make their way to Karbala, south of Baghdad.
Um_haa can also justify collective punishement for genocidal history of Islam.ravi_g wrote:The logic would become counter productive only when the opponent is someone with a long memory and strong paachan sakti. Amerikans are not that.
And the listing will not include merely the past genocides. Once the people are told in some serious manner how the Ummah in India has been keeping away or being kept away from the common minimum program and how criminal it is, will the people realise the worthlessness of these ==.
But are you sure this is any Indian movie. Professor sahab thode thode Pataudi ki aulad lag rahen hain. Also you bet this video is going to remain on that site for ever.
prahaar wrote:Is that a clip from a Hindi movie?Please tell me the name. I should start watching movies more frequently.
Aditya_V wrote:Cancel Salman Rushdie's visa: Deoband
I guess at this rate soon we will have Sharia law and jaziya directly (now inderctly) being implemented.
Some details I got from Steve Coll's "Bin Ladens" in how Ibn Saud founded KSA from obscurity. He was helped by Ikhwanis - an Islamist extremist group who now believe that they were cheated of an Islamic kingdom (apparently KSA is not islamic enough for these nutsCarl wrote:^^ I don't fully understand the reasons KSA propagates this brand of Islam. Is it just their ideological conviction? The Saudi regime themselves are targets of extreme jihadi networks.
Download publication (pdf)by ABDAL HAKIM MURAD
With a Foreword by DR UMAR FARUQ ABD-ALLAH
This short essay by Abdal Hakim Murad, one of leading Muslim intellectuals in the West, is a concise and rich theological statement exploring the dynamic possibilities of an authentically Islamic universality for our age. Whereas modern globalism tends to annihilate cultural diversity, authentic Islamic pluralism, as exemplified in the theological implications of dhimma, offers to each community the opportunity to develop its own sacred space and express its own uniqueness.
June 2010
Indian media is being taken over by foriegn interest. Indian interest media is not coming up at allShankaraa wrote:
In media, people like Barkha Dutt would interview Kashmiri Muslims as if they are the only ones who are suffering but she would not interview any Hindu who has lost a relative in a terrorist attack. For example, when more than 250 Hindus were killed in a bomb blast by terrorists in a Mumbai train attack, Barkha did not interview a single Hindu family affected by this. Similarly, she did not interview the relatives of those Hindus who were killed by terrorists at CST, Mumbai. She did not confront Mussaraff when he openly said in his interview with her that he instigated the Kargil war. I watched a NDTV programme on 1971 Bangladesh war recently. Again, Barkha was ‘offering’ her opinion to viewers that ‘we should not see this war as triumphalism’! How dare she talk like that when we have lost more than 3,500 brave soldiers in this war. Who needs enemies when we have biased media people like Barkha in India?
I can go on and on but I have to stop now!
Its joke to call fuddu an intellectual.Carl wrote:QUR’ANIC TRUTH AND THE MEANING OF ‘DHIMMA’[/url]by ABDAL HAKIM MURAD
With a Foreword by DR UMAR FARUQ ABD-ALLAH
This short essay by Abdal Hakim Murad, one of leading Muslim intellectuals in the West, is a concise and rich theological statement exploring the dynamic possibilities of an authentically Islamic universality for our age. Whereas modern globalism tends to annihilate cultural diversity, authentic Islamic pluralism, as exemplified in the theological implications of dhimma, offers to each community the opportunity to develop its own sacred space and express its own uniqueness.une 2010
A Somali convert from Islam was paraded before a cheering crowd last month and publicly flogged as a punishment for embracing a “foreign religion,” sources said.
Sofia Osman, a 28-year-old Christian from Janale city in Somali’as Lower Shabelle region, had been taken into custody by Islamic extremist al Shabaab militants in November; the public whipping was meant to mark her release. She received 40 lashes on Dec. 22 while jeered by spectators.
“Osman was whipped 40 lashes at 3 p.m., but she didn’t tell what other humiliations she had suffered while in the hands of the militants,” an eyewitness, told Compass, adding that whipping left her bleeding. “I saw her faint. I thought she had died, but soon she regained consciousness and her family took her away.”
The whipping was administered in front of hundreds of spectators after Osman was released from her month-long custody in al Shabaab camps. Nursing her injuries at her family’s home, in the days after the punishment she would not talk to anyone and looked dazed, a source close in touch with the family said. She has since been relocated.
“Please pray for her quick recovery,” the source said.
Janale, one Somalia’s major cities, is about 200 kilometers (124 miles) from Mogadishu.
Osman became a Christian four years ago and was a member of the underground church in the war-torn Horn of Africa country largely controlled by the al Qaeda-linked militants from al Shabaab.
The al Shabaab militia is being hunted down by Kenya Defense Forces in southern Somalia following the extremists’ incursions into Kenya. They had killed and kidnapped tourists and aid workers inside Kenya, prompting military forces to formally enter into war to secure its borders.
In response, the al Shabaab militants have targeted churches in northern Kenyan towns such as Garissa in the hope of dividing Kenyans along religious lines. The Kenyan public, however, is largely backed the government decision to pursue the militants deep into Somalia.
Kurban? Saif and Kareenaprahaar wrote:Is that a clip from a Hindi movie?Please tell me the name. I should start watching movies more frequently.
Her name indicates an Iranian expat.Melbourne woman Zahara Rahimzadegan, 46, has been missing since December 16 when she was last seen at her Ashwood home in the eastern suburbs.
Attention has focused on Zahara's Facebook account, which has had four new posts since her disappearance, most recently on New Year's Day.
[...]
Evangelical pastor Daniel Nalliah says Zahara may have been abducted by Islamic extremists angered by her religious conversion five years ago.