Thursday 31 March 2016

Snapchat Imams

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qz.com, This imam delivers eight-second Snapchat sermons "For the past few months, Webb, a Muslim scholar based in Washington, D.C., has been answering young Muslims� questions via eight-second videos. His Snapchat story topics cover everything from dating and drugs, to the exact specifications for prayer and fasting."

Monday 28 March 2016

American Muslims condemn the attacks targeting Christians by the Taliban�s on the auspicious day of Easter in Lahore, Pakistan.

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PRESS RELEASE

American Muslim Institution
Contact:  Mike Ghouse (214) 325-1916
Mike@AmericanMuslimInstitution.org
www.AmericanMuslimInstitution.org

American Muslims condemn attack targeting Christians by the Taliban on the auspicious day of Easter in Lahore, Pakistan.  

Washington, DC, March 28, 2016 � Reuters News reports that at least 65 people were killed and 300 were wounded in a suicide bombing attack that targeted Christians on the auspicious day of Easter in the City of Lahore, Pakistan.  Taliban groups that once had ties with Daesh claimed responsibility.  

While we applaud the efforts of the Government of Pakistan to hunt down terrorists, we appeal to the Pakistanis religious leaders to reach out and counsel misguided individuals and groups.  We have an obligation to restore peace on earth in the name of the prophet, who is a mercy to fellow humans.  

We condemn all acts of terrorism unconditionally, and our hearts go out to the families of the victims and their loved ones.  We pray with our hearts, souls and minds, asking God to guide us all to restore peace and a sense of security, especially to minorities among us.

We people of different faiths, races, and ethnicities must come together and remain united against terrorists who seek to tear us apart.

American Muslim Institution is the proactive voice for Muslims in America and we are committed to contributing towards building pluralistic societies. 

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Sunday 27 March 2016

Video: Caliphate's destruction: How Muslims reacted globally

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Talk 1 - The Caliphate's destruction: How Muslims reacted globally | Abu 'Isa Nomani

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The 3rd of March marks the date of the abolition of the Caliphate. 92 years since its passing, we look back at both the history leading up to its fall, and the reaction of Muslims around the world to this fateful political event.

Talk 1 | The Historical Lead-up: Political Events Leading to Destruction

Talk 2 | The Global Response of Muslims: How the Muslim World Reacted

For more:

www.hizb-australia.org
www.facebook.com/hizbaust

Q&A: What is the Difference between Khair and Shar, and Husn and Qubh?

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Question:                                                               
As-Salaam Alaikum Sheikh, may Allah grant you a long life to witness the victory, InshaAllah.
I have a question about the difference between Khair (good) and Shar (evil), and Husn (pretty) and Qubh (ugly)? Because when the topic is raised among the brothers, varying answers are given on the subject, please explain to us the difference between the two subjects, May Allah bless you.
From Abu Qusay


Answer:
Wa Alaikum As-Salaam Wa Rahmatullah Wa Barakatuhu
A. Husn (pretty) and Qubh (ugly), and Khair (good) and Shar (evil) are terminologies used by the scholars of jurisprudence and the understanding of their meanings would be according to how they defined and used them, and not as in their stated meaning in the language. I.e. for you to know the meaning and the difference between them, you must refer to the scholars of Jurisprudence not the scholars of the language, do not open the dictionary and look for the meaning of Husn and Qubh, and Khair and Shar and then say that you obtained the answer, you must look at what the jurisprudence defined and follow that meaning.
B. The scholars of jurisprudence discussed the (legislator) i.e. who has the authority to issue the classification of the actions, whether they are an obligation (fardh), recommended (mandoub), permissible (mubah), detested (makrooh), or forbidden (haram), and on the things being halal or haram? This means that it is in terms of the commands and prohibitions on them, i.e. in terms of being praised and condemned and the consequent reward or punishment.
Hassan and Qubh are defined from this angle. What is in accordance with the orders of the Shariah is praised and obliged, it is Hassan and it�s rewarded, and what is contrary to the rules of Shariah is condemned and forbidden, it is Qubh and it is punishable. Therefore Hassan and Qubh are relevant when defining actions and things in terms of what is their Hukm Shar�i (Islamic ruling), and in terms of what are the consequent praise or condemnation i.e. in terms of the reward and punishment.
Therefore, in the case of theft, for example, in terms of issuing its ruling, it is forbidden, and in terms of praise and condemnation and the consequences (reward and punishment), that the cutting off the hand is applicable or the Hellfire in the Hereafter, here we say that theft is Qabih (ugly).
C. The scholars of jurisprudence also discussed the criteria, which the person refers to when measuring the effect of harm or benefit on him, and if the person should undertake the action or not as a result, so they refer a certain action to the criteria of Islam, which they accepted, and if the result of the measurement is (benefit) according to Islam, then they love this action and carry it out and they call it Khair (good), and if the measurement is (harm) then this action is hated and they decline from undertaking the action and they call it Shar (evil).
So in the case of theft, for example, in terms of the Islamic criteria, which is used to measure its benefit or harm to the person, and which results in the person taking the action or refraining from it, this is good and evil.
So you will say that theft is evil because it is harmful according to the criteria of Islam and therefore you will refrain from stealing.
D. So you will call theft (Qabih) ugly if the discussion is about issuing the ruling on it i.e. it is forbidden, and in terms of reward and punishment i.e. the cutting off the hand in this life or going to Hellfire in the Afterlife.
And theft is called Shar (evil) if the subject of your discussion is the criteria that you use to measure benefit and harm, so you measure according to the criteria of Islam, not by your benefit or whim, accordingly you find it harmful and you will hate it and refrain from doing it, and you will call it Shar (evil).
E. Conclusion:
If the discussion is in the context of issuing the ruling on the actions and things and what follows in terms of reward or punishment, it will be described as Husn and Qubh.
If the discussion is over the criteria that you use to measure the benefit or harm and therefore love the action and carry it out or hate the action and refrain from it, then this will be described as good and evil.

Your brother,
Ata Bin Khalil Abu Al-Rashtah
29 Jumada I 1437 AH
9/3/2016 2013 CE

The link to the answer from the Ameer�s Facebook page:
The link to the answer from the Ameer�s Google Plus page:
The link to the answer from the Ameer�s Twitter page:

It�s Time to See Who is Behind the Chaos and Terror

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Our soils have turned to a showdown arena for the colonial interests of the US and Western states whom Turkey regards as its allies. Behind any chaos, slaughter and terror on whatever soil on this earth, there are these blood-sucking capitalist countries. These countries wage their colonial wars between each other through the hands of the subcontractor groups they support in order to maintain their economic and political interests in the Muslim lands. And those who die are always the Muslims and innocent civilians. In spite of all these facts, Turkey still continues its cooperation and friendship with the colonial powers.
We as Hizb ut Tahrir / Wilayah Turkey have shared this fact with the public after every conducted atrocious act, and warned politicians and leaders. After the bomb attack in Suru� on July 20, 2105, �we said that �The True Perpetrators of the Blast in Suru� are the Colonialist Western Powers Who Drown the World in Oppression, Blood and Tears�, and we expressed that this attack is the outcome of American-English feud of interests upon Turkey. In our written press release on 11th of August 2015, titled �It is Colonialist America and England Who Target the Lives of Muslim Turkish and Muslim Kurdish People�, we highlighted the Western powers� terror plans of antagonizing the Muslim Turkish and Muslim Kurdish people towards each other in the following way: �none of the steps towards ending this bloodshed which is going on for 30 years for the sake of the colonial Kuffar is sincere. Because those who take these steps act upon leaning their backs either on America or England. As soon the Kuffar�s dominance upon our soils is lifted, as soon they are not granted any voice over these soils, and as soon these kuffar disappear from our soils, then only then this war and brother fight will come to an end.� After the terror bombing in Hakkari on September 6, 2015, and the same attack in Igdir on September 8, 2015, we once again raised our voices against the rulers who took no lessons from the experiences, we pointed at the true perpetrators and the countries who support this terror, we warned them and said: �This Fire That Burns Where It Falls Will Not Extinguish Unless You Don�t Change Your Friends�
This time the colonialist countries chose Ankara on October 10, 2015, in order to reach their aims. More than 100 people died and hundreds were injured at this blast. We indicated the true murderers to the rulers who expected condemnation from Western countries by saying, �No Matter Who the Subcontractor of the Ankara Attack is, the Colonialists are the Real Perpetrators�. This never-ending terror chaos continued in Istanbul�s Sultanahmet Square on 12th of January 2016, and in Diyarbakir�s �inar district on January 13, 2016. On 17th February 2016, a bloody bomb attack was carried out in Ankara. We as Hizb ut Tahrir Wilayah Turkey published an explanation saying �More Pains are to Come As Long the Colonialist are Your Friends and Allies!� However, in spite of our warnings; the Government, the opposition, the rightists and leftists, all together run after dirty revenges in Turkey�s domestic politics and ignored the real killers. The leaders held hot speeches of payoff for the PKK and ISIL who live on terror and chaos and strengthen on slaughter and crime. We said: �A great state is not a state who is America�s satellite. A great state is not the one who calls the hitmen and subcontractors to account, but the instigators in propria persona. A state who is friend with the enemies of Islam and the Muslims cannot be this great state! A great state is only the Second Khilafah Rashidah able to call the colonialists to account.�
On March 13, 2016 a terrorist attack targeting at innocent civilians took place in Ankara. Once again we declared what is evident: �We Condemn the Attack in Ankara and Declare once more that the Perpetrators are the Imperialists� And lastly, another terror attack took place in Taksim in Istanbul on Saturday, March 19, 2016. Once again we condemn terror and remind that the perpetrators are the colonialists.
O Muslims! It is time to see who is behind these explosions and fights who claim the lives of innocent people in our cities. The colonialists do not give up shedding blood on our soils, and unfortunately the rulers of Turkey do not give up cooperation with them. See the truth, even though the rulers turn blind and deaf. Say bravely that the killers are the colonialists. Until, the rulers end cooperating with them. Until, the colonialists disappear from our soils.
Media Office of Hizb ut Tahrir in Wilayah Turkey
Monday, 12th Jumada II 1437 AH
21/03/2016 CE
No: TR�BA�2016�MB�TR�011

Thursday 24 March 2016

Anti-Hindu sign by a Muslim Dairy Queen Owner condemned

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Dairy Queen Owner's action to be condemned | www.WorldMuslimCongress.com 


As a Muslim, I condemn the actions of a Muslim Dairy Queen Owner for his anti-Hindu marquis at his business in Kemah, Texas. However, it is obligatory on all of us to verify, if this Report is accurate. Even if the sign did not mean anti-Hindu, it is perceived as such by some of the Hindus of Houston area. Therefore, it becomes necessary to take the sign down to prevent pitting one American against the other.  

If Mohammad Dar has mocked Hinduism on this Marquis at his store, it is is not acceptable and as Muslims we condemn his action.  

As a Muslim and an interfaith speaker, I want to assure my fellow Americans who are Hindu in this instance, that this man Mohammad Dar is a nut case like so many others.

No religion ever teaches one to be ugly towards fellow beings, and each one of the religions teaches one to respect the otherness of others, and accept the God given uniqueness of each one of his creation. What happens then? Conflicts fade and solutions emerge.  99.9% of the people in each faith get that message right, a few don�t and Dar is one of them.

Take a look at few of the many verses from Quran (Muhammad Asad translation), thanks to Imam Zia and Imam Yahya, my partners in getting the right message of Islam out, for responding to my request quickly.
In this article, I have also thrown a challenge to fellow members of family of faiths including Hindus.

God has created this universe in balance, and whenever that balance is lost, it is our duty to restore it, and that is all religion is about.
Quran, 49:13 -- O men! Behold, We have created you all out of a male and a female, and have made you into nations and tribes, so that you might come to know one another. Verily, the noblest of you in the sight of God is the one who is most deeply conscious of Him. Behold, God is all-knowing, all-aware. ( We are all one large family - in Hinduism it is the concept of Vasudhaiva Kutumbukum, and in Abrahimic faiths, we all are children of Adam and Eve)
Quran, 49-10 -- All believers are but brethren. Hence, [when�ever they are at odds,] make peace between your two brethren, and remain conscious of God, so that you might be graced with His mercy. - 49:10 
Quran,  6:108 -- But do not revile those [beings] whom they invoke instead of God, (This prohibition of reviling anything that other people hold sacred - even in contravention of the principle of God's oneness - is expressed in the plural and is, therefore, addressed to all believers. Thus, while Muslims are expected to argue against the false beliefs of others, they are not allowed to abuse the objects of those beliefs and to hurt thereby the feelings of their erring fellow-men.(Quran Ref: 6:108 )) lest they revile God out of spite, and in ignorance: for, goodly indeed have We made their own doings appear unto every community (Lit., "thus goodly have We made...", etc., implying that it is in the nature of man to regard the beliefs which have been implanted in him from childhood, and which he now shares with his social environment, as the only true and possible ones - with the result that a polemic against those beliefs often tends to provoke a hostile psychological reaction. (In time, [however,] unto their Sustainer they must return: and then He will make them [truly] understand all that they were doing. - 6:108
Hinduism and Islam teach non-violence, so do other religions, and I ask my friends of faiths, from all faiths to heed this verse.
Quran, 41.34  -- "To overcome evil with good is good, and to resist evil by evil is evil." It is also strongly enjoined in the Qur�an in the same verse 41:34, �Good and evil deeds are not equal. Repel evil with what is better; then you will see that one who was once your enemy has become your dearest friend.�

References:




Thank you

Mike Ghouse
(214) 325-1916 talk/text

Dr. Mike Ghouse is a community consultant, social scientist, thinker, writer, news maker, Interfaith Wedding officiant, and a speaker on Pluralism, Interfaith, Islam, politics, terrorism, human rights, India, Israel-Palestine, motivation, and foreign policy. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions on issues of the day. Visit him (63 links) at www.MikeGhouse.net and www.TheGhousediary.comfor his exclusive writings.

Wednesday 23 March 2016

American Muslims condemn terrorists attacks, and mourn the loss of life in Brussels and other places.

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PRESS RELEASE 

American Muslim Institution
Contact:  Mike Ghouse (214) 325-1916
Mike@AmericanMuslimInstitution.org www.AmericanMuslimInstitution.org

American Muslims condemn terrorists attacks, and mourn the loss of life in Brussels and other places.

Washington, DC, March 22, 2016 � The Daesh terrorists have recklessly killed over 232 innocent people and wounded 712 in the last six months. The latest is in Brussels, where 30 people were killed and 200 innocent men, women and children were injured.

We condemn all terrorism unconditionally, and our hearts go out to the families of the victims and their loved ones.  We pray with our hearts, souls and minds, asking God to guide us all to restore peace and sanity.

We the people, of different faiths, races, and ethnicities must come together and remain united against terrorist who want to tear us apart.

American Muslims condemn these violent crimes and urge the law enforcement agencies to track down all possible links to these terrorists and not stop until we find each one of them.

American Muslim Institution is the proactive voice for Muslims in America and we are committed to contribute towards building pluralistic societies. 


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NOTES
Muslims have been in the forefront in reporting any suspicious characters to the intelligence agencies and they will continue to monitor and work on preventing the loss of another life.
March 13 � Ankara, Turkey, 36 people killed -100 people injured
March 14 - Grand Bassam, Ivory coast, gunned down 22
March 22 � Brussels, Belgium, 30 dead and over 200 wounded.
Dec 14, 2015 � San Bernardino, 14 people and 22 wounded
Nov 13, 2015 � Paris, France, 130 people killed and 368 injured
In the United States we had 355 mass murders in 2015, and one of them was a Muslim and the Muslim community appeals to fellow Americans to discard their identity, as we have done with the 354 other terrorists.
We hope the world understands that, the Muslims are the most terrorized people on the earth, the terrorists get them and the others point fingers at them as if they have done the wrong.
American Muslims condemn these violent crimes and urge the law enforcement agencies to track down all possible links to these terrorists and not stop until we find each one of them.
Mike Ghouse

Tuesday 22 March 2016

#Brussels attacks

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Round-up of coverage associated with #Brussels attacks

Guardian, Why did the bombers target Belgium?

BBC News, Islamic State group claims responsibility for Brussels attacks in statement issued via its Amaq news agency

Daily Mail Online, 79 minutes of terror in #Brussels | How airport and metro explosions left 34 dead

Rula Jebreal, Already, there have been shameless attempts to

Monday 21 March 2016

German Muslim Woman does not want to wear Hijab

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Indeed, she makes a lot of sense. Its the essence she understands over ritual. Please look for some 15 articles on Hijab in this site - through the Search box.  We should be pro-choice, let the woman decide and not the men.

Mike Ghouse

Why I as a Muslim Woman Don't Wear a Headscarf

Lamya Kaddor
Courtesy - Qantara

 
The German Islam Scholar Lamya Kaddor
Does the Koran really demand that women wear headscarves? Or is it mainly older men who claim they can decide how women should dress � with no theological foundation whatsoever? For the Islam scholar Lamya Kaddor, there is no question about it: the headscarf is obsolete
?If I as a Muslim woman living in Germany ask myself whether I should wear a headscarf or not, that gives rise to the question of whether the additional head-covering called for in the Koran (33:59) still fulfils its original purpose of protecting women from male desire. My answer is: no. In contemporary Germany such covering-up no longer serves that purpose. It is even more likely to bring about the opposite of what God intended by exposing wearers of headscarves to discrimination.
Today the intended protection against 'annoyances' is provided by a well-functioning legal system rather than by adherence to social rules from the past. A free state based on the rule of law protects a woman, for example by punishing attacks on her person. This protection may be primarily concerned with bodily integrity, but people in a modern state are more than ever responsible for themselves with regard to the freedoms accorded � including in the realm of moral integrity. Covering my head cannot relieve me of that responsibility. I cannot hide myself behind a little piece of cloth. A free and democratic state grants rights and also imposes responsibilities. In such circumstances I can behave honourably with and without a veil or head-scarf � or not, as the case may be.
A 'fashion accessory' from Koranic times?
If this argument is accepted, one can also abandon the Koranic demand for additional covering, directed towards women in Early Arabic tribal society. What would still initially remain is the khim�r, the head covering that was part of women's clothing at that time. The Koran neither speaks against nor in any way emphasises that form of covering. God uses the word only once in the Koran (24:31). That occurs in passing in connection with a call for moral behaviour. So there is no Koranic emphasis on such head covering. However, if God had required a special head covering, would He not have said so explicitly? The khim�r thus merely constitutes a 'fashion accessory' according to the spirit of that age. Viewed rationally, functions consciously or unconsciously associated with head coverings across the course of history � such as protection against sand or evil influences � are all superannuated today and have lost their validity. People's powers of imagination have changed.
Female students with and without headscarf (photo: picture-alliance/dpa)
"Sura 24:30-31 calls on both men and women to behave chastely, but exegesis of the Koran up to the present day only puts the emphasis on chaste behaviour for women," Kaddor writes
??
In the Germany of the twenty-first century � at the very latest � women's hairstyles are no longer per se an erotic stimulus. The sight of head-hair no longer provokes sexual fantasies and thus immoral behaviour � except perhaps among fetishists. When you walk along a city's pedestrian precincts no one turns to look at you because of your hair. Only if you dress provocatively or in a particularly original way, and behave accordingly, do you attract some attention. In addition, this isn't a male world that still thinks as it did a thousand or more years ago. Thanks to the achievements of a free and democratic state, and thanks to the prevalent understanding of relations between the sexes, you no longer necessarily need a head covering in order to live morally. The headscarf has become obsolete.
Misogyny by Islamic scholars
Today's orthodox comprehension of the obligation to wear a head covering is primarily based on the interpretations of scholars who lived several generations after the Prophet Mohammed. One can follow their judgements but they are not sacrosanct. As human beings all scholars are fallible. Conservative and fundamentalist circles constantly emphasise that our behaviour should follow the Koran and the Prophet. Their spokesmen maintain that this directly accords with what was laid down during the Prophet's lifetime and the initial period of Islam.
Koran (photo: fotolia/lapas 77)
The depiction of the headscarf as a unifying element within the Muslim community is not well founded, Kaddor argues
??
However in reality this view is mainly based on the ideas of scholars who lived some 600 (!) years later � such people as Ibn Qud�ma (d. 1223), Ibn Taym�ya (d. 1328), or the latter's pupil Ibn Qayyim al-Jawz�ya (d. 1350). Bearing in mind the patriarchal social structures of that time, it is unsurprising that interpretations of sources concerning relations between the sexes were usually unfavourable for women � even though that contradicts a striving (to be found throughout the Koran) towards improving women's situation. That tendency is even less surprising if one recalls the misogyny demonstrated by many scholars throughout the history of Islam. Linking shame and a head covering is by no means as self-evident as it seems. Sura 24:30-31 calls on both men and women to behave chastely, but exegesis of the Koran up to the present day only puts the emphasis on chaste behaviour for women.
No political symbol
Nevertheless, the Koranic injunction to dress in a way that is generally demure remains a religious demand, to be fulfilled by wearing 'appropriate' clothing. A woman believer sees this as signifying that all those parts of the female body which nowadays excite the idea of possible sexual contact should continue to be 'properly' concealed beneath the kind of clothing usual today. What is entailed in 'proper', 'appropriate', or 'decent' is left to the reasonableness of every mature woman citizen, since at present there are no specific directives based on Islamic sources. In prevalent practice, it is mostly older men � learned or unlearned � who assume the right to determine how a woman should appear, but there is no theological or sociological foundation for this.
A similar situation prevails regarding evaluation of the headscarf as a token of Islamic faith. Such a function cannot be demonstrated in the history of Islam. The depiction of the headscarf as a unifying element within the Muslim community is not well founded either. In addition, its function as a political symbol, so frequently evoked in public discussions today, also constitutes a historically unfounded inflation of the significance of this item of clothing. This has occurred only in recent decades, as an element in the opposition to Western influences within the Islamic world.
Lamya Kaddor � Goethe-Institut 2011
Lamya Kaddor was born in 1978 in Ahlen, Westphalia, as the daughter of Syrian immigrants. As a student she specialised in Islamic Studies, and went on to train Islamic teachers of religion at M�nster University. Since the 2003-04 school year she has been involved as a teacher in the 'Islamic Studies in the German Language' project. Her most recent book is "Muslimisch � weiblich � deutsch! Mein Leben f�r einen zeitgem��en Islam" (Muslim � Female � German! My Life for an Islam in Keeping with the Times), C.H. Beck Verlag, Munich 2010. This text is an abbreviated version of a study published in Thorsten Gerald Schneider's Islamverherrlichung [Glorification of Islam], VS Verlag, Wiesbaden 2010, pp. 131�158.
Editor: Lewis Gropp/Qantara.de

Sunday 20 March 2016

New books published by MaktabaIslamia

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The Book Takattul Hizbi (Structuring of a Party by Shekh Taqiuddin) is no doubt the most honest and unbiased research into the Islamic movements in the past 2 Centuries and their aims, objectives, organisation, activities and the reason and causes for their failure and the lessons to be learnt from their failure. 

Alhamdulillah the Sharh (Explanation & Commentary) of this book by Shekh Hafez Saleh (one of the early pioneers of the Da'wa) is now available in print in English. You can check the book out on the follow link

Another book that Sheikh Taqiuddin Nabhani coauthored with Shekh Ali Raghib in 1958 was Ahkam As-Salah (the Rules of Prayer). Thanks to the efforts of the team behind RevivalPublications, we have been able to bring this amazing book in print. The book is available on the following link

Alwaie magazine is also available in print on MaktabaIslamia. Edition 353 is the latest edition and is available in store. You can check it on the following link

Saturday 19 March 2016

The Battle of Ideas in the Middle East

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BBC World Service, The Battle of Ideas in the Middle East - Part One "Kevin Connolly travels through the Middle East to look at different ways in which the Arab states in the region are confronting the ideas of the so-called Islamic State and how well-equipped they are to fight them" Worth listening to, as it relates to several themes associated with this blog, including online issues. Also see

Prayers, Pilgrims and Power

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BBC World Service, Prayers, Pilgrims and Power "The Imam Reza shrine in the Iranian city of Mashhad is a spectacular complex visited by millions of pilgrims every year. It's also spectacularly wealthy, and part of a huge business empire worth an estimated $20 billion. So the person who runs it has considerable power. Earlier this month that person changed. BBC Persian's Najieh Ghulami, who's from

Wednesday 16 March 2016

ISIS lures with video game themes

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RNS, ISIS lures with video game themes "Javier Lesaca, a scholar who has spent hundreds of hours studying ISIS videos, says the terrorist organization has masterfully mimicked not only the look and feel of popular, violent games such as �Grand Theft Auto� and �Call of Duty,� but television shows � �Homeland,� �Saw,� and �Person of Interest,� to name a few � which, like the video games, feature

Monday 14 March 2016

Babar Ahmad

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BBC News, Babar Ahmad: My support for Taliban was 'naive', 13 Mar 2016 "A British man jailed over a website considered a key moment in the birth of online jihadist propaganda said he had been "naive" to support the Taliban." I presented some images from this website during my Leiden presentation last week (see earlier posts). Ahmad is interviewed for the Victoria Derbyshire programme.

Reading List: new ISIS book

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David Kilcullen, Guardian, The deadly efficiency of Isis and how it grew on the global stage "In this exclusive extract from his hotly anticipated book Blood Year, counterinsurgency expert David Killcullen maps out the leaderless resistance, remote radicalisation, and guerrilla-style terrorism that characterise the �Isis Internationale�."

Jihad: Between Theory and Practice.

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I gave a paper at Leiden University last Friday, as part of their conference Jihad: Between Theory and Practice.

It was an interesting event and well-organised event (convened by Dr Jelle Bruning), with other presentations by Asma Afsaruddin (Indiana University) on 'Qur'anic Jihad and Its Interpretations', and Yumna Masarwa Institute for American Universities, Aix-en-Provence) on 'Ribat, Jihad,

Sunday 13 March 2016

Our national dress is the shalwar kameez, not the niqab

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No dress can be called a national dress, as most of them evolved over a period of time, indeed dress is a cultural expression of a given society. Dress is cultural, and each culture tends to be different every 250 miles apart.   Pakistan is an exception in this regard, where a dress was labeled as a national dress and almost every Pakistani has at least one pair of such clothing.

When it comes to clothing, particularly Hijab, we need to be pro-choice, that is  a woman should have the freedom to wear what is comfortable to her, as a majority of women tend to be modest no matter what faith or culture they come from. No Taliban brute should force her to cover up completely or French brute to force them to wear fewer clothes. Neither of them respects woman's choices.

The full covering has been around for centuries in different formats, but only a small percent of Muslims women wore that,  the French statistics were quoted at 3% of Muslim women wearing burqa, and I believe it was less than 10% in early 20th century in the subcontinent.


I hope some one can take the time to put the dates on the critical changes, that is, when did a mass movement to wear Hijab (the fashionable head covering) began. Tentatively, I place the date to be 2000 AD, so we can discuss and arrive at a more precise date.  

I recall my late wife who had never worn any sort of Hijab, made an announcement one morning at the breakfast table,  that she will start wearing the Hijab/Burqa,  that threw me completely off for a moment, indeed, it startled me. I thank God for giving me the wisdom not to blurt out, "not with me" instead, I responded, "its your choice".  But deep down, I did not want her to wear Hijab, but did not want to sound like a brutish man either.  Of course she did not wear it and I have no idea if she was testing my "open mindedness" and pluralistic attitudes, regardless, I felt good for keeping my attitude of live and let live. 


It is from around 2000, perhaps after 9/11, Hijab wearing began as an assertion of identity, we started seeing a mass movement when girls started wearing Hijab. What was ironic was their mothers and family members did not, the girls chose it on their own and then the mothers started copying them, mind you many of these women had never worn  Hijab before. I had never seen Muslim Female Doctor wearing the Hijab before but the movement started then. The same trends are observed around the world. ( not sure about Saudi Arabia and Iran, not because they are Islamic but because of their culture of wearing Burqa may be long).

Hijab is a fashion statement along with an expression of a new identity. It is certainly not Islamic, the Islamic requirement is nothing different than calling men to be modest and not stare at women,  and women to be modest and cover their bosoms, which all religions, cultures and societies call for. No urban society in general is comfortable wearing clothes that sexually incites others.


Mike Ghouse
www.MuslimSpeaker.com
www.Interfaithspeaker.com 


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http://blogs.tribune.com.pk/story/31903/our-national-dress-is-the-shalwar-kameez-not-the-niqab/



Our national dress is the shalwar kameez, not the niqab

By Noman Ansari Published: January 27, 2016
Recently, I came across a meme that compared the full niqab with local cultural dresses, and it reminded me of our unfortunate transformation.

Through fear of the sword or through promise of eternal torment they spread their regressive ways. Over time we found another reason to abhor each other, to feel divided, to openly judge our own. The foreign culture we adopted didn�t play well with our own, for it insisted in its dark perfection while clashing with our own light.

Whenever I travel from Pakistan I feel a melancholy that slowly hums in my heart overseas until it reaches full tempo when I return home. Other countries hold dear their customs and honour the old roots from which they rose with tolerance and diversity. Pakistan, on the other hand, has turned into a claustrophobic cultural mute.

If culture is food for the soul then we are going mad with starvation. Tragically, we are unable to realise this in our fractured state of mind. For so long we have boiled our meat without salt, pepper, or spice, that we now believe this is the way it is meant to be.

Imagine a Pakistan where you regularly socialise with Christian, Hindu, and Sikh Pakistanis, absorbing the aspects of their traditions that make them unique from you.

Imagine a Pakistan where you are able to attend an event of a culture different from your own, but completely Pakistani nonetheless.


Imagine a Pakistan where heritage sites are preserved with reverence rather than treated as offensive by the intolerant. Imagine a Pakistan where our language, clothing, and music remain unmolested by the Wahhabi sense of conformity.

As a child when I visited Karachi I recall the streets and taxis were full of melody; the latest Pakistani pop songs would blare at every corner. Today, the only tones that feature on the same roads are the sounds of vehicles and angry pedestrians. Full niqabs have replaced beautiful Pakistani dresses, long beards have taken the place of fashionably diverse faces, naats (praise of the Prophet (pbuh)) have taken over from musical numbers. Tellingly, a musician who once enriched our lives has transformed into a hard-line preacher in perhaps the biggest indication of our metamorphosis.

Recently, I came across a meme that compared the full niqab with local cultural dresses, and it reminded me of our unfortunate transformation. Inspired by this meme, I�d like to take you through a pictorial guide across the world.

1. This is a traditional Pakistani dress:
Photo: Pinterest
Not this:
Photo: Reuters
2. These are Bangladeshi dresses:
Photo: Pinterest
Not these:
Photo: Pinterest
3. These are Afghani dresses:
Photo: Pinterest
Not these:
Photo: Pinterest
5. This is an Indian dress:
Photo: Pinterest
Not this:
Photo: Pinterest
6. These are Iranian dresses:
Photo: Pinterest
Not these:
Photo: Pinterest
7. This is a Malaysian dress:
Photo: Pinterest
Not this:
Photo: Reuters
8. This is an Indonesian dress:
Photo: Pinterest
Not this:
Photo: Pinterest
9. This is an Iraqi dress:
Photo: Pinterest
Not this:
Photo: Pinterest
10. This is a Syrian dress:
Photo: Pinterest
Not this:
Photo: Pinterest
11. This is a Moroccan dress:
Photo: Pinterest
Not this:
Photo: Reuters
12. This is a Tunisian dress:
Photo: Pinterest
Not this:
 
Photo: AP
On one end we have colourful examples of cultural diversity, and on the other we have a misogynistic garb that seeks to paint women of the entire planet in a single colour. What does the world need more?


Noman Ansari

Noman Ansari

A freelance writer and regular contributor to The Express Tribune magazine and newspaper, Noman tweets as @Pugnate (twitter.com/Pugnate)

Saturday 12 March 2016

Q&A: Can Private Property become Public Property?

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Question:
Assalaamu Alaikum our honourable Sheikh, I would like to ask you a question regarding public ownership.  Can a private ownership transfer to a public ownership in accordance to the Shariah rules, like transferring water springs from a private ownership into public property if that is needed for the public good? And if the public no longer needs it, does it revert as private property? Similar to oil wells when they are depleted, can they become a private property?
Thank you, and May Allah help you and make your foothold strong, Wa Assalaamu Alaikum Wa Rahmatullah Wa Barakatuhu
From Nadir Az-Za�tari


Answer:
Wa Alaikum us Salaam Wa Rahmatullah Wa Barakaatuhu,
If any type of public ownership was as a result of a divine reason (�illah), then the rule will follow this divine reason, whether it exists or in its absence. If the �illah is present then that public ownership will remain, but if it was absent, then it will be permitted to privately own that type of property, however on the condition that the �illah is Shar�i found in a Shar�i text.
For example, public utilities are considered as public property, which have been explained by the Prophet ? in the Hadeeth in terms of its description, and not its quantity: On the authority of Ibn Abbas that the Prophet ? said:
???????? ????? ?? ???? ?? ????? ?????? ??????
�People are partners in three: Water, Pasture, and fire.� Narrated by Abu Dawoud and narrated by Anas from the Hadeeth of Ibn Abbas and he added: �????? ????� �And its price is Haram�.
Ibn Majah narrated from Abu Huraira that the Prophet ? said:
�???? ?? ?????: ????? ?????? ??????�
�Three that must not be prevented: Water, Pasture, and Fire.�
This is the evidence that people are partners in water, pasture, and fire; and that they are not permitted for ownership by individuals.
However, the Prophet ? permitted individuals to own water in Ta�if and Khaibar, and they did so to irrigate their plants and fields.
Similarly, some Muslims privately owned wells in Medina; Bukhari narrated on the authority of Abdullah (ra) from the Prophet ? that he said:
???? ?????? ????? ??????? ?????????? ????? ????? ??????? ????????? ???? ????????? ???????? ?????? ??????? ?????? ???????? ?????????
�Whosoever gives oaths falsely to take the wealth of a Muslim illegitimately, he is a fajir (wicked), and will meet Allah while He ?????? ?????? is angry with him.�
And Allah ?????? ?????? revealed:
????? ????????? ??????????? ???????? ??????? ??????????????? ??????? ????????
�Indeed those who exchange the covenant of Allah and their [own] oaths for a small price.�
(Al-i-Imran: 77)
Al-Ash�ath came and said: An Ayah was revealed about what Abu Abdul Rahman spoke to you about me, I had a well in the land of my cousin, he asked:�?????????�  �Your witnesses�, I said I do not have witnesses, he said: �???????????� �his oath (is required)�, I said: O Messenger of Allah, then he must give an oath, then the Prophet ? mentioned this Hadeeth, and Allah ?????? ?????? revealed the Ayah to support His truth.� End quote
If partnership in water, in and of itself, and not because of the need for it, it would have not been permitted for individuals to own it. From the saying of the Prophet ?:
�???????? ????? ?? ???? ?? ?????�..
�People are partners in three: water��
And the permission given by the Prophet ? to individuals to own water, this extracts the �illah in the partnership in water, pasture and fire, and it is from the public utilities that people can not live without.
Hence the Hadeeth has mentioned three but they are based on �illah because they are public utilities. Therefore  this �illah follows what is reasoned in its existance and absence; so anything that is considered as public utility is considerd as public property, but if it is not considered as public utility even if it was mentioned in the Hadeeth like water, then it is not public property, but it is considered as property that can be privately owned. Public utilities are decided when all resources are not available for a group of people, whether it is a group living in house made of tents, or living in a village or city or a state, and have disputed to get it, is considered public utility, like water source, pastures or woods, grazing areas for cattle, and the like.
-e.g. Minerals are considered as public property if found in abundance, like in mines and the like, these minerals are public property, and it is not permitted to be owned by individuals, due to what Tirmithi narrated from Abyadh Bin Jamal:
??? ??? ??? ???? ???? r? ???????? ????? ???? ??? ???? ?? ????? ??? ??? ?? ??????: ????? ?? ???? ??? ???? ???? ?? ????? ?????????: ??????? ???
�He came to the Prophet ? and asked to assign him a salt (mine),  so He ? did, when he left, a man from his ? council said: Are you aware of what you assigned him? You assigned him a perennial (�id) spring of water, he  said: so he took it back from him.�
��Id� water is the continuous source of water, he drew the similarity between salt and water for its unlimited source. This Hadeeth is an evidence that the Prophet ? has given a portion of mountain salt for Abyadh Bin Jamal, but when he ? found out that the mineral is unlimited, he took it back from him and prevented its private ownership, i.e. it is public property.  Salt here is an example of a mineral, what is intended is the mineral not the salt. From this Hadeeth it is cear that the�illah of prevention of giving the portion of the mineral of salt is that it is �Id i.e. unlimited.
This ruling, that the unlimited mineral is a public property, which includes all minerals whether they are on the surface and easily accessed that people frequent and use, like salt, coal, emerald and the like, or it was found underground, that needs to be extracted with equipment, like gold, silver, iron, bronze, lead, and the like. And whether it is solid like crystals or liquid like oil, they are are minerals that come under the Hadeeth. Since unlimited minerals are public property for all citizens, the state is not permitted to give its ownership to individuals, companies, or allow individual or companies to extract them for their own use; instead the state must extract them itself on behalf of the Muslims, in looking after their affairs, and all that it extracts from them is public property for all the citizens.
Therefore, the property mentioned in the question will be considered as public ownership if they are public utilities, e.g. the water well in a village which is the only source of water, it is a public property and not allowed for individual ownership� But if the people in the village have another sufficient source of water, it will be permitted for an individual to dig a well in his land and own it, because it is not from the public utilities in this case, i.e. that the �illah of its public property is absent. But the well which was a public property does not become a private property but remains as a public property and it will be allowed to sell to individuals if there is sufficient water for the people and then it will be priced for the private ownership.
Hence, the water well is a public property if the people have no other source, but if there was an depletes or the people do not need it any more, i.e. the �illah is absent of it being a public utility, by the presence of a sufficient source of water, then it will be permitted to sell that well to individuals and it�s priced for private ownership. Oil wells for example are public utilities as long as it is unlimited, but if there were depletes, i.e. the �illah for being a public property is absent, then it is allowed to sell this well for people and its price is put for private ownership.

Your brother,
Ata Bin Khalil Abu Al-Rashtah
15 Jumada I 1437 AH
24/2/2016 CE

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