Monday, January 24, 2011

Why Islam Is Based On Justice?

Why Islam Is Based On Justice?

During the Tartar invasion, when Muslims were being attacked and butchered by the Mongols, one of the Muslim leaders at that time, Qutuz, had to raise enough money to be able to resource the battle against the Tartars

Why Islam Is Based On Justice?(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - During the Tartar invasion, when Muslims were being attacked and butchered by the Mongols, one of the Muslim leaders at that time, Qutuz, had to raise enough money to be able to resource the battle against the Tartars.

He met with scholars and leaders and told them of his intention to impose taxes, to supply the military and secure enough resources to fight the Tartars.

However, a great scholar at that time, Imam al-Izz ibn Abdis-Salaam, opposed these measures. He issued a famous fatwa, that imposing taxes will not be allowed, except after two conditions had been met:

1) To prepare the army from the treasury department until there is no more money.
2)To sell the properties of ministers and leaders and let them have only their swords and horses.

Once they did this and if money was still needed, only then could they impose taxes on the Muslim public. Imam al-Izz ibn Abdis-Salaam's sense of justice, was such that he could not allow taxes to be imposed on the Muslim public; while military leaders and ministers had fancy rides and huge properties, leaving the public with nothing.

Qutuz, being a just leader himself and enriched in Islamic principles, agreed to implement this fatwa. He began with his own resources. Soon there was more than enough money to fund the military and there was no need to impose any taxes.

Today we are in difficult economical climate. Our leaders are living lavishly, while the tax payer has to work harder than ever to replace the money that was squandered. Student fees have been increased and EMA finished, deeply affecting our next generation. Redundancy is sky high and many people are struggling to pay for basic necessities. The future doesn't look set to improve significantly.

Despite all this, it does not seem as if anything has changed significantly, when it comes to our leaders' financial circumstances. Infact, there is even talk of a 1% pay rise. They even got a pay rise last year - let's just turn a blind eye to the expenses scandal and the economy.

Islam has a lot to offer the world, despite Islamophobes trying to malign its name. But for the well educated and open minded, they can see past the demonisation to the pure, just religion beneath. It is about time the non-Muslim masses decided to find out about Islam for themselves, instead of reading the rubbish in the Murdoch owned press.

Who better to teach them than our Mosques - who need to wake up and open the gates of the Mosques to all. It is about time they started to counter the negative tide of Islamophobia out there. When will our Mosque leaders start becoming more like Imam al-Izz ibn Abdis-Salaam?

URL of this Page: http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=222451



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Asadullah Syed

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Pakistan’s jihad against reason

Pakistan's jihad against reason

Pakistan's jihad against reason thumbnail

'Covered in the righteous cloak of religion… even a puny dwarf imagines himself a monster. Important to face. And call their bluff.'

The man who tweeted the above sentence was shot in the head from behind by his own body guard.

Two other armed guards, who knew of the impending murder, violated standard operating procedure and stayed quiet, their guns hanging limply by their sides while the assassin shot 27 times at the now lifeless, punctured body of Salman Taseer, the governor of the Punjab province of Pakistan.

The governor was given a state funeral, but the reactions from sections of the Pakistani society were more than jubilant.

An uneasy disquiet hung over the country's democratic credentials as hundreds of lawyers showered the unrepentant body-guard with rose petals as he was being taken to court. The Rawalpindi District Bar Association, a body ostensibly designated to uphold the rule of law, has even pledged to fight his case for free.

A statement by 500 clerics of the Jamaat-e-Ahl-e-Sunnat religious group commended the bodyguard for what they proclaimed was a righteous killing.

"We pay rich tributes and salute the bravery, valour and faith of Mumtaz Qadri," they said of the assassin, who shot the unarmed 66 year-old governor from behind.

The incident has brought into sharp focus the tenuous democratic freedoms and fragile rule of law in Pakistan – a country that ranks 10th in the Foreign Policy magazine index of failed states.

Mr Taseer, an outspoken liberal and fifth-most senior member of the ruling PPP, had been the most vocal proponent for repealing Pakistan's stringent blasphemy law, which was in the news recently following the death sentence awarded to Aasiya Bibi, a Christian woman, for 'insulting the Prophet' – an allegation she strongly denies.

The blasphemy law was introduced by former Pakistani dictator General Zia-Ul-Haq, whose military regime oversaw Pakistan's decided swing towards a more hardline wahhabi religious state.

The law has been criticised by Human Rights groups in Pakistan for allegedly being abused to settle scores against minorities.

In December 2010, an Ismaili Muslim doctor, Naushad Valiyani, was charged with blasphemy after he threw away a business card belonging to a man whose first name was Mohammed – an exceedingly common first name for many Pakistanis.

In the past, accused blasphemers have been lynched inside court premises; at least one Judge has been killed after acquitting an alleged blasphemer.

Pakistan appears to be caught in a vicious battle between the pro-democratic voice of liberal Muslims, who espouse an Islam of reason and tolerance – and religious hardliners who promote an Islam of fear and supremacy, which rejects the rule of law and democracy. After Salman Taseer's assassination, the scales have decidedly tipped in favour of the latter.

Mumtaz Qadri revealed that he was inspired by a sermon from Sunni cleric, Mufti Hanif Qureshi, who preached that anyone who killed Salman Taseer would be granted Heaven, and become a hero of Islam.

"After the motivation I decided to kill the governor," Qadri told investigators.

Section 503 of the Pakistan Penal Code makes it an offense to threaten any person with injury. Nevertheless the law appears to not be enforced when it comes to public remarks by religious conservatives.

There have been attempts in the past to curb the trend of religious right-wing parties using mosques to incite violence, especially against minorities.

In 2007, MP Minocher Bhandara presented a bill to Pakistani parliament to include Mohamed Ali Jinnah's famous August 11, 1947 speech to the Constituent Assembly, as part of the Constitution.

In his speech, the founder of Pakistan had famously proclaimed that 'in course of time, Hindus would cease to be Hindus and Muslims would cease to be Muslims, not in the religious sense… but in the political sense as citizens of the State."

According to Bhandara, "The speech has been consistently downplayed by the government of Pakistan since 1949. Parts of the speech have been materially altered, or omitted altogether, in the past… On the one hand tremendous respect is shown for the memory of the Quaid-e-Azam, but on the other hand his political thoughts are desecrated to appease religious groups."

In an almost parallel narrative, the ideals envisioned by founder Mujibur Rahman proved to be short-lived in the overwhelmingly Muslim-populated Bangladesh.

Right wing fundamentalist General Ziaur Rahman rewrote the constitution and declared Bangladesh an 'Islamic' state, following the overthrow of a democratic government in 1975.

His widow, Khaleda Zia, who took over the reins of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), flirted dangerously with Islamist parties in the years following Zia's assassination.

Over 8000 madrassas sprouted in Bangladesh – many of them Saudi-funded and promoting the rigid, literalistic Wahhabi school of thought, while terrorist groups like Harkat-ul-Jehad-al-Islami (HuJI) and Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen mushroomed under her government's rule.

As with Pakistan, the experiment in home-brewed radicalism blew up in the government's face when, in the span of half an hour on the morning of August 17, 2005, nearly 530 bombs exploded across the country.

There have been stirrings in Bangladesh in the past year. Following a series of assassinations that took out many of its top leaders, the secularist Awami League stormed into Parliament in late 2008, winning 263 out of 300 parliamentary seats.

In October 2010, the country's Judiciary struck down the fifth amendment of the constitution and invalidated the military regimes of the 1970s, thereby re-declaring Bangladesh a secular state and realising Mujibur Rahman's long lost dream.

Indeed, the battle between democratic ideals and religious dogmatism has followed a familiar script in the Maldives, following the rapid rise of wahhabism in the last decade.

Censorship and religious intimidation appears to be taking root in the country. Soon after the first multi-party elections, the newly instituted Ministry of Islamic Affairs controlled by the Adhaalath Party banned DJs, blogs and websites critical of them.

In an article on their website, a local Islamic NGO openly denounced democracy as a decadent, evil, western system incompatible with their version of Islam.

Islamist preachers have made anti-Semitic speeches in public, justifying their positions with highly literalistic interpretations of the scriptures. In an unprecedented move, religious conservatives recently took to the streets of Male', yelling anti-Semitic slogans.

Among the many frictions between Islamism and democratic ideals, liberals would contend that the Religious Unity Regulations drafted by the Ministry of Islamic Affairs, if imposed, would be an unheralded victory for Islamists: the Maldives would then have its own blasphemy law.

Notably, the liberal voice that lies buried in Pakistan is deafeningly silent in the Maldives.

In a chilling replay of Pakistan and Bangladesh, mainstream politicians and the public appear to have chosen to ignore the tide of Islamism – despite the Sultan Park bombing and a very visibly-changing Maldivian identity.

Liberals continue to await a Maldivian counterpart to Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, the young chairperson of PPP, who has vowed to take up 'jihad' against Islamist forces.

Referring to violent Islamists in a speech mourning Taseer's death, he said: 'Allah has promised them hell, and we shall send them there.'

URL of this Page: http://www.shreveporttimes.com/article/20110114/OPINION0106/101140309/Terry-Plamondon-Islamist-threat-is-most-insidious-of-all


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Asadullah Syed

N.Y. Muslim cleric says Islam shouldn't be 'wedge issue' in U.S. politics

N.Y. Muslim cleric says Islam shouldn't be 'wedge issue' in U.S. politics

Oralandar Brand-Williams / The Detroit News

Detroit — A New York Muslim cleric who wants to build an Islamic center near Ground Zero said Saturday night he does not want to see Islam become a "wedge" issue in American politics.

"Our role right now is to depoliticize our faith not make it a wedge issue," Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf told a crowd of 400 people gathered for a Muslim diversity conference at the Detroit DoubleTree Hotel on Southfield Freeway service drive near Ford Road.

"We do not want our faith to be a wedge issue between Republicans and Democrats in this country. It must be a unifying aspect," said Rauf during the first stop of his national speaking tour.

The eventwas sponsored by the Islamic Society of North America and the Council of Islamic Organizations of Michigan.

Rauf said "what we need now is a discourse about Islam and Muslims in America."

He said Muslims in America need to "shift the discourse" and need to work on becoming a "recipe for healing."

"How do we create this unity umbrella," said Rauf. "This is the challenge we have today."

He also urged Muslims to embrace the "oneness" of their faith even as they acknowledge their own racial, ethnic and faith differences.

Rauf's proposal for the new Islamic center in Manhattan has stirred controversy across the country. Opponents to the plan say Ground Zero is sacred and the mosque should not be built there.

Park51, the nonprofit group controlled by the developer of the Islamic center, announced Friday that Shaykh Abdallah Adhami would serve as a new senior adviser to lead religious programming in Rauf's absence.

Hours before his speech, some critics of Rauf held a screening of a film featuring interviews with survivors and relatives of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

The Christian Action Network screened the "Sacrificed Survivors: The Untold Story of the Ground Zero Mega Mosque" at the Ford Community & Performing Arts Center in Dearborn.

About 80 people packed a small room at the center to see the 45-minute film and hear some of the victims' relatives and survivors of the attacks speak after the movie's screening.

Michael Burke, the brother New York Fire Department Capt. William F. Burke Jr. who was killed when he went to the 27th floor of the North tower of the Wall Trade Center twin towers to rescue trapped people, attended the screening.

Burke said he does not want to see the Islamic center built near Ground Zero.

"It just seems inappropriate …insensitive," an emotional Burke said in aninterview. "It's almost seems intentionally insensitive."

"(The proposed center) imposes upon the sanctity of the site," said Burke.

Rauf's tour itinerary also includes stops in Chicago, Washington and San Antonio, and Rauf plans to speak at Harvard, Georgetown, Yale and the University of North Carolina. He said the tour will likely end in April.

URL of this Page: http://www.detnews.com/article/20110116/METRO/101160314/1022/local/N.Y.-Muslim-cleric-says-Islam-shouldn%E2%80%99t-be-%E2%80%98wedge-issue%E2%80%99-in-U.S.-politics


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Asadullah Syed

The Lady in the Hat" or "How I came to Islam

The Lady in the Hat" or "How I came to Islam

I am in my late fifties in age. I was born into a Catholic Family on my mother's side, and into a Baptist family on my father's side.





The Lady in the Hat" or "How I came to Islam

I am in my late fifties in age. I was born into a Catholic Family on my mother's side, and into a Baptist family on my father's side. My father had to convert to Catholicism in order to marry my mother (before I was born). I was circumcised when I was still a young boy. I do not remember it. Strangely enough I have a memory of being baptized in a Catholic Church. I do not know why that is. I was too young to even talk. I remember being in New Jersey (My maternal Grandmother's house) many times after that, while my father was at war. He was a U.S. Marine and always seemed to be going to war. The thing that I remember the most about New Jersey was, that the windows in My grandmother's house had black roll down curtains, "left over" from the Second world war. These were supposed to keep the German U-boats and bomber planes from seeing the city's lights at night. (New Jersey is on the eastern coast of the U.S. and also borders the ocean acessable Hudson River)

I was commanded to go to Catholic training school called Catechism (1). I hated it. Much later in my life I was doing a kind of "Deep Tissue" muscle therapy, and while the therapist was working on my feet, she touched two very painful spots. The pain felt like hooks that went between my Achilles tendons and my heels. During the painful correction of those misaligned muscles, I started having "flashbacks" of a ritual (2) performed by the Catholic Bishop priest who "confirmed" me as a Catholic. After reviewing that incident a few times, the pain around my Achilles tendons became more and more painful. I mentally and spiritually pulled the "hooks" out. (While my "deep tissue" therapist was working on the physical end, I was working on the mental/spiritual end). The muscles and tendons "released", after that, and the pain went away. It seemed to me that these spiritual "hooks" were installed as part of the ceremony, by the priest. during my "one on one" interview with him. I used to get a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach whenever I went near anything Catholic. I do not feel that now.
(1....catechism

noun
a summary of the principles of Christian religion in the form of questions and answers, used for the instruction of Christians.
• a series of fixed questions, answers, or precepts used for instruction in other situations.)
( 2...ritual
noun
a religious or solemn ceremony consisting of a series of actions performed according to a prescribed order : the ancient rituals of Christian worship | the role of ritual in religion.
• a prescribed order of performing such a ceremony, esp. one characteristic of a particular religion or church.)

At the age of 15, my mother passed away, and thus the family compulsion for us to be Catholic, went away also. My father soon remarried another Catholic woman who had 3 children from a previous marriage. She was a widow. She had all of her children and my younger sister attending Catholic school. I remember someone "half heartedly" asking me to attend Catholic school also, but my father knew better than to push me on it. I could be VERY stubborn. Besides, I can say now that I he probably though it was a waste of money, and would ultimately cause a lot of friction with his "new" family.
At the age of 17, I read the first spiritual book that I actually liked. It was by Kahlil Gilbran. During the next ten years, I read Sidartha, by Herman Hesse, Jonathan Livingston Seagull, Buddhist writings, Hindu stuff, and basically anything spiritual, except Christianity and Islam. (we were not exposed to Islam except mostly in cartoons and Jewish owned Hollywood movies.) I studied Martial Arts and the Zen and Taoist philosophies behind them. I even joined a worship group of Tibetan Buddhists. (3) Most of these endeavors kept my mentally and spiritually busy, but there was something missing. I felt like I needed to get close to the creator. Even though I hated Christianity as I had come to know it, I went to a Pentecostal church to see what it was like. I saw the electric guitars and the drums that the "worship team" played. This was NOT like the Catholic church that I remembered.
(3......When I went to join the U.S. army and go fight in the Viet Nam war, I even told the personnel clerk who filled out my personnel files that I was a Buddhist. It wasn't until I read about the Viet Nam war on the internet, and how it was controlled by an Arch Bishop in New Jersey, that I realized that the war was basically a Genocide. They were killing everyone who wasn't a catholic, agnostic or atheist. It said my religion was Buddhist on my dog tags. They sent me to South Korea to do my overseas tour of duty, instead of Viet Nam. I guess the government didn't want a Buddhist to recognize what they were doing and then to tell the rest of the world. I am in a similar situation now. I am an American who became Muslim in America, and went to a so called "Muslim" country.)
I was mostly drawn in to that new church scene by the Music. I was a pretty fair singer/songwriter, and had always wanted to have a venue for my talents. I went to a lot of bible studies. I learned a lot about christianity, from the "Christian" perspective. I was right there looking for approval from men, while at the same time trying to figure out my relationship with the Creator. Many times we would be told to hold up our bibles and say "This is my sword. It is the unerrant word of God". If someone wanted to debate us on the bible, we were told they could only debate us about our faith from within the parameters of what was written in the Bible. "It" was the "only" truth. I was totally swept up into that cult. It was pretty cool to go to a place of worship where women wore sexy clothes and held there hands up and swooned when the band "played in the spirit". Especially when "I" was part of the band.
I had been in another cult before that. It was called Scientology. The Scientology and Dianetics Dictionary describes Scientology as an extension of the works of Gutama Siddartha Buddha. But it was very high tech, and used a kind of "lie detector" along with a mentally guiding "voice dialogue" to spiritually elevate it's members. It also charged an extraordinary amount of money for that. After about 9 months I had seen through that money making facade and left. It took me much longer to finally leave the "cult" of Christianity. I finally left it, and Came to Islam, Nine years later.
One day I was in an auto repair shop and was talking with the cashier. I noticed a lady sitting in the corner of the same waiting room. She was wearing a hat that covered her hair. She looked like a foreigner. Something told me to try to get her involved in the conversation. I said something about women drivers. I said you know ho those women are? I turned to her and saw her chomping at the bit to talk with us. I said "What do YOU think?"
She turned out to be a very interesting woman. She was an Algerian. I invited her to come play some board games with me and a friend. We all had a great time. Later I learned about her dilemma. About what my country had done to her. (4) I went to court with her and began to try to straighten things out. The more I got into her case, the more I lost faith in my country and finally came to the realization that my country's government had been hijacked. I became very upset about all this, and did a lot of research. When I asked my "Christian" friends and churches to help, most did no more than try to convert her to Christianity. More than one Christian told me to tell her that if she converted, that God would give her back her child. Those interactions brought me to doubt my faith and what I was finding out were the "government controlled" churches, and to investigate "Christianity" from it's inception.
(4...http://legalizedpedophillia.blogspot.com/)
During my research I read what is generally considered to be an unaltered document written by one of the Diciples of Isa. It was called the Gospel of Thomas. It had apparently survived the purging and burning of all documents that were unauthorized by the Roman Emperor Constantine's second council of Nicaea (during which, the Bible was compiled). The more I read it, the more I realized how much the writings in the book called the Bible had been altered and rewritten. There was a particular prophetic line in it that shook me to the core. It gave me a new insight. I looked at the religious world through these new perceptions for weeks. I became very unsettled. I then read the english translation of the Quran.

Surah 5–al-Maidah
82. You will surely find the most intense of the people in animosity
toward the believers [to be] the Jews and those who associate
others with Allah; and you will find the nearest of them in
affection to the believers those who say, "We are Christians."
That is because among them are priests and monks and because
they are not arrogant.
83. And when they hear what has been revealed to the Messenger,
you see their eyes overflowing with tears because of what they
have recognized of the truth. They say, "Our Lord, we have
believed, so register us among the witnesses.
84. And why should we not believe in Allah and what has come
to us of the truth? And we aspire that our Lord will admit us
[to Paradise] with the righteous people."

.

URL of this Page: http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=221401
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Asadullah Syed

Psychology approach to Hijab philosophy

Psychology approach to Hijab philosophy

The book "philosophy of Hijab" from Quran point of view by emphasizing to woman and man psychology was published by Specialized Media publication. The book is written by Abbas Fathi, expert of religious fields.

Psychology approach to Hijab philosophy

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - The book "philosophy of Hijab" from Quran point of view by emphasizing to woman and man psychology was published by Specialized Media publication. The book is written by Abbas Fathi, expert of religious fields.

Abbas Fathi told :"This work is the result of 15 years teaching in different universities of the country about culture circuit and Hijab topic."

He said :"main subjects of the book emphasized on Quran lessons about Hijab and its various issues. It can be said the book has been written in continuous of two valuable works of Motahari Martyrdom; "Hijab issue" and "system of woman's rights in Islam"."

Fathi explained :"at the beginning parts of the book and according to Hijab rules in Quran, psychology and social security aspects of it are cited."

He declared :"the book has been written based on psychology of woman and man but since psychology resources about the subject are limited, Quran has more effect and role."

Fathi added :"content of the book in fact is interpretation of two verses of Quran, for example in Ahzab Surah of Quran God says :"this (Hijab) is the best way to be recognized as goodness." Or in Nur Surah of Quran God says to men :"this (Hijab) causes their souls and body remain pure and honest and God is aware of what he creates."

The writer emphasized :"it is supposed that Hijab is necessary only for women, but according to Quran Hijab is also necessary for men. This book tries to answer the question that why Hijab has been enacted in Islam. The book also talks about the necessities of modern society to Hijab."

According to Fathi, in the book wearing Chador has been introduced as the superior Hijab since in some verses of Quran Chador have been considered as complete Hijab."

URL of this Page: http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=221410
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Asadullah Syed

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Terror does not know any faith: Grand Mufti

Terror does not know any faith: Grand Mufti

Alia Allana Posted online: Thu Jan 13 2011, 01:34 hrs

New Delhi : Egypt's Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa on Wednesday said "terror does not know any faith" and Muslims involved in terror attacks are "an unstable minority" that "does not represent the face of Islam".

Speaking to The Indian Express via a translator, the Grand Mufti of Dar Al-Ifta, on his first visit to India, said: "Terror can never be identified with a particular faith. Terror does not know any faith. Though some terror attacks have been undertaken by Muslims, this is a nominal group. This is an unstable minority and does not represent the face of Islam."

"Why criminalise an entire faith because of the reckless actions of a small minority? Terror is our common enemy. We have to join hands to eradicate this disease because when terror comes it does not differentiate between Muslim and non-Muslim," he said.

The Dar-al-Ifta al Misriyyah was established in 1895 with the purpose of being the supreme arbitrator of Islamic legal opinion.

The Grand Mufti asked counterparts in religious universities to visit Cairo for deepening of relations.

"Islam is no stranger to Indian soil even though Muslims are a minority. This minority is still double the population of Egypt. Muslims have integrated positively in India. We see them in the highest political offices. In Egypt, we regard the Indian Muslim community as a role model... It is important to revitalise cooperation between Indian and Egyptian Muslims."

URL of this Page: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/Terror-does-not-know-any-faith--Grand-Mufti/736763

 

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Asadullah Syed

Biden tells Pakistan: 'We are not the enemy of Islam'

Biden tells Pakistan: 'We are not the enemy of Islam'

ISLAMABAD — US Vice President Joe Biden delivered a bold message of support for key anti-terror ally Pakistan during a trip to Islamabad Wednesday, telling the country that America is "not the enemy of Islam".

In a joint news conference with Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, Biden said their discussions had been "extremely useful" before he turned to address anti-American sentiment, fanned by the ongoing war in Afghanistan and a covert US drone campaign.

"There are... some sections in Pakistani society and elsewhere that suggest America disrespects Islam and its followers," Biden told reporters at the prime minister's residence.

"We are not the enemies of Islam and we embrace those who practise that great religion in all our country," he added.

As Biden wrapped up his visit, a suicide blast in the northwest town of Bannu killed 18 people, most of them security officers, and wounded 15 in an attack claimed by the Taliban as revenge for US missile strikes in the area.

Biden said militancy in Pakistan was a threat to both countries, and he referred to the killing last week of Punjab governor Salman Taseer, who was shot dead by his bodyguard over his outspoken opposition to strict blasphemy laws.

The confessed killer has been hailed a hero by religious conservatives and rallies have been held across the country in his honour.

"Societies that applaud such actions end up being consumed by those actions," Biden said.

Biden delivered his message before leaving for a key meeting with army chief General Ashfaq Kayani.

"A close partnership between Pakistan and its people is in the vital self-interest of the United States of America and, I would argue... in the vital self-interest of Pakistan as well," Biden said.

"My hope is, God willing, if I'm able to stand here next year with you, that we're able to point to greater progress and greater resolve and greater prosperity for your people and mine," Biden said, concluding his speech.

Gilani applauded "very fruitful discussions" with the US vice president.

US officials have sought to smooth an often rocky relationship with Islamabad with promises of huge non-military aid donations on top of its military assistance, to help the nuclear nation develop its fragile economy.

US officials have announced they will fast-track part of a 7.5-billion-dollar five-year aid package to help the country recover from devastating floods last year.

The government in part blames the diversion of national resources to fight militancy for its raft of economic woes, which include a huge fiscal deficit and crippling fuel and energy shortages.

Biden also met with President Asif Ali Zardari who is due to visit the United States this week, in the wake of a major domestic political crisis that has further weakened his fragile coalition government.

Zardari's spokesman Farhatullah Babar said the president reiterated calls for "transfer of done technology to Pakistan for use by its own security forces against the militants."

Pakistan won US praise after it mounted an offensive against homegrown Taliban extremists in the South Waziristan region in late 2009.

But a White House report to Congress in October stated bluntly that Pakistan had not confronted Afghanistan's Taliban, in what experts see as a bid by Islamabad to preserve influence over its neighbour.

Biden arrived in Pakistan from Kabul, where he met President Hamid Karzai for talks that included discussing the presence of US troops serving in Afghanistan as part of an international force of some 140,000.

 



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Asadullah Syed

Despite controversy, EDL rally against ‘political Islam’ goes on

Despite controversy, EDL rally against 'political Islam' goes on

 

Written by Atara Beck   

Wednesday, 12 January 2011

TORONTO – As of this newspaper's publication deadline on Monday afternoon, a "support rally" for the English Defence League (EDL) – with EDL leader Stephen Lennon, aka Tommy Robinson, addressing the rally via online hook-up – was scheduled for Tuesday evening.

Organized by the Jewish Defence League (JDL), the group's literature encouraged the public to attend and "take a stand against the forces of political Islam."

Much controversy has arisen over the nature of the EDL, which claims that it is not a racist group but is dedicated to fighting Islamist fascism in the UK.

Both JDL and EDL are generally described as "far right" groups, not only by anti-Western groups like Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid, but also by mainstream media.
According to prominent British author and journalist Melanie Phillips, who has been most outspoken in her warnings against what she has termed the 'Islamization' of Britain: "The label of the 'far right' toxifies everything it touches. There is now a real danger that anyone who opposes Islamic supremacism will find themselves vilified not only as 'Islamophobes,' but also as fascists."

In an article titled The clash of uncivilizations, Phillips nevertheless linked the EDL to fascist groups, stating: "Sometimes, my enemy's enemy is also my enemy." Also, "most tellingly of all, EDL leaders have admitted that it is opposed not only to Islamist extremism, but to all devout Muslims."

However, British columnist A. Millar recently wrote, in an article published by the Hudson Institute: "The fiercest opposition to the EDL comes from the controversial Unite Against Fascism [UAF], a militant left-wing organization that has been accused of siding with the homophobic by gay rights activist Peter Tatchell, and of overlooking antisemitism by David Toube in The Guardian."

The JDL event was expected to be held at the Toronto Zionist building in north Toronto, which is owned by the Toronto Zionist Council (TZC).

"We have struggled with this issue because the reports regarding the EDL are conflicting," explained Paul Rotenberg, a TZC spokesperson. "As indicated by some reports, violence appears to have been used by the EDL, but it does appear to have been in self-defence against Islamist groups that instigated the violence.

"There are videos of these Islamists attacking the British police and the police turned and ran. The EDL stood and fought back. We found ourselves struggling with the line between defence and violence and how the perspective of the reporting can influence the perception. After all, our parents and grandparents fought in some very violent wars but we would not accuse them of being violent extremists. We see those [wars] as having been valid, even necessary, defence.

"The threat of Islamofascism is a major issue today, and this is an issue the EDL has chosen to take up," Rotenberg added. "We have read a lot of articles about the EDL, most of which seem to be more opinion than fact, on an issue where opinion often takes the place of fact. As such, understanding that we do not have reliable information on the other aspect of this, allegations that the EDL has racist or antisemitic roots, we have advised the JDL that they may hold the program on the premises but must be vigilant in ensuring that the program focus remains as they intend, the issue of defending our democracies and our freedoms.

"We see this as being entirely consistent with our policy of not tolerating incitement to racism of any kind on our premises and consistent with Canadian values and the legacy of freedom and democracy we all need to defend."

 

URL of this page: http://www.jewishtribune.ca/TribuneV2/index.php/201101123882/Despite-controversy-EDL-rally-against-political-Islam-goes-on.html

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Asadullah Syed

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Malaysian Financial Exchange remain top market for listing of Islamic bounds

Malaysian Financial Exchange remain top market for listing of Islamic bounds
With the recovery in global economy, Malaysian financial exchange Bursa Malaysia has retained its position as the top sukuk (Islamic bonds) listing destination.

Malaysian Financial Exchange remain top market for listing of Islamic boundsKUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - With the recovery in global economy, Malaysian financial exchange Bursa Malaysia has retained its position as the top sukuk (Islamic bonds) listing destination.

In a statement here Monday, the exhange said 2010 had been a good year with total global issuance of sukuk reaching 30 billion USD, representing an increase of 20 per cent on the previous year, and a two-fold increase from 15 billion USD in 2008.

"Of that amount, some US$8.6 billion sukuk programme was listed on Bursa Malaysia, accounting for almost one-third of the total global issue," it noted.

"As Malaysia has a well established legal and regulatory framework to support sukuk issues, we are hopeful that 2011 holds greater promise in this space for us," the exchange's Global Head of Islamic markets, Raja Teh Maimunah, said.

She added that the general consensus among industry players was that global sukuk issuances for 2011 would surpass the record high of US$34.5 billion in 2007. Among the notable listings last year were a RM4.5 billion Musyarakah sukuk from Malaysian conglomerate Sime darby Berhad, the Government of Malaysia's US$1.25 billion Global Sukuk Al-Ijarah and the Islamic Development Bank's US$3.5 billion sukuk.

As at Dec 31, 2010, the total value of sukuk programmes listed on Bursa Malaysia stood at US$27.7 billion, retaining its position as the leading sukuk listing destination.

"We are seeing issuers more willing to list their issues and be subjected to reporting and disclosure and requirements in order to attract investors as the credit crisis have caused investors to be more aware of the importance of transparency and are thus demanding greater governance," Raja Teh Maimunah said.

URL of this Page: http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=220698
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Asadullah Syed

Science meetings will strengthen Islamic world

 Science meetings will strengthen Islamic world
The Omani participation in the 14th General Assembly of the Standing Committee on Scientific and Technological Cooperation (COMSTECH) in Islamabad, Pakistan, reflects His Majesty Sultan Qaboos bin Said's interest in the Sultanate's presence at the heart of all discussions and deliberations pertaining to scientific and technological collaboration among Islamic countries.....

Science meetings will strengthen Islamic world

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - The Omani participation in the 14th General Assembly of the Standing Committee on Scientific and Technological Cooperation (COMSTECH) in Islamabad, Pakistan, reflects His Majesty Sultan Qaboos bin Said's interest in the Sultanate's presence at the heart of all discussions and deliberations pertaining to scientific and technological collaboration among Islamic countries, said Dr Rawiyah bint Saud bin Ahmed Al Busaidiyah, minister of Higher Education, while attending the meeting in Pakistan, yesterday.

"His Majesty believes that developing and updating such collaboration would reinforce the Islamic world's unity and would contribute to its development," she added.

Rawiyah is leading a high-level delegation from Oman in COMSTECH. The meeting will be held till January 13.

The COMSTECH was established in 1981 to consolidate the collective efforts of the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) as a whole in the fields of science and technology by means of promoting mutual cooperation, collaboration, and networking of resources to foster rapid industrialisation and socio-economic development.

All OIC member states are automatically members of COMSTECH as well.

URL of thia Page: http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=220713
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Asadullah Syed

Islamic Financial Markets Textbook to Be Published in Malaysia

Islamic Financial Markets Textbook to Be Published in Malaysia

National mortgage corporation, Cagamas Bhd, has signed an agreement with the International Syariah Research Academy (ISRA) to sponsor an Islamic financial market textbook.
 
Islamic Financial Markets Textbook to Be Published in Malaysia(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - National mortgage corporation, Cagamas Bhd, has signed an agreement with the International Syariah Research Academy (ISRA) to sponsor an Islamic financial market textbook.

In a statement Monday, Cagamas said the textbook, which was scheduled to be published later in the year, was part of its corporate social responsibility program.

"Cagamas will also undertake reviews of selected chapters and provide references to its role in the development of Islamic capital market in Malaysia," it said.

Its chairman, Datuk Ooi Sang Kuang, said in view of the growing importance of Islamic finance in the global financial market, the textbook was expected to play a pivotal role in addressing the issue of the scarcity of literature in Islamic finance.

ISRA executive director, Associate Prof Mohamad Akram Laldin, said the textbook would encompass an overview and the development of the Islamic financial and capital markets, syariah principles, regulations as well as issues and challenges of the Islamic financial and capital markets.

 

URL of this Page: http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=220738

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Asadullah Syed
 

Egypt’s Pope Urges Muslim-Coptic Unity to be Reflected

Egypt's Pope Urges Muslim-Coptic Unity to be Reflected
Pope Shenouda urged legislators to enact laws that accommodate all sectors of society without discrimination and indicated that national unity can be best achieved through unity in action, thought, and sentiment. He added that Muslim-Coptic unity must be reflected on the level of political parties

Egypt's Pope Urges Muslim-Coptic Unity to be Reflected(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - Pope Shenouda urged legislators to enact laws that accommodate all sectors of society without discrimination and indicated that national unity can be best achieved through unity in action, thought, and sentiment. He added that Muslim-Coptic unity must be reflected on the level of political parties.

Shenouda said although the state also has a duty to try to resolve the problems of Copts, problems are best solved with calm and communication, not with anger and emotions. Shenouda accused "elements and political bodies with certain orientations" of infiltrating Coptic protests to pursue their own interests.

In an interview with Egyptian Television on January 3, Shenouda said not all members of the recent Coptic protests were Copts and that several people have joined in the name of sympathy. "They have nothing to do with the problem, though," he said.

Some of the slogans chanted were not proper and could not possibly be uttered by a well-mannered Christian or Muslim, Shenouda said.

"We cannot prevent people from expressing their sorrow, yet I ask them to express their feelings without violence. I am glad that many Muslims joined in the protests, which shows that all are against terrorism and sectarian violence."

He said the attack has brought Egyptians together, and Egyptians must unite against the enemy that aims to weaken the Egyptians' bonds.

URL of this page: http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=220741
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Asadullah Syed

Differentiating between Islamic teachings, culture vital - scholar

 Differentiating between Islamic teachings, culture vital - scholar
Muslims living in the West should draw a line between their cultural heritage and teachings of Islam, a renowned Islamic preacher residing in England said Wednesday.

Differentiating between Islamic teachings, culture vital - scholar

BRUSSELS (Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - Muslims living in the West should draw a line between their cultural heritage and teachings of Islam, a renowned Islamic preacher residing in England said Wednesday.

The difference should be acknowledged by Muslims all around the world in order for the religion to survive in the West, Islamic Preacher Abdulraheem Green, who delivered a lecture to Muslims in the Dutch city of the Hague on Saturday.

Unlike cultural heritage, Islamic teachings are applicable worldwide, he said, noting that Islamic media was also suffering from the Islamic teachings versus ethnic confusion.

Meanwhile, Muslims in the UK were beginning to understand the difference between culture and faith, he said.

This is a significant change as Muslims are taking parts in society as doctors, engineers, IT consultants while practicing their religion and its teachings, he said.

Until recently, Muslims in England were marginalized as those who had come from the Asian subcontinent found the English culture threatening; therefore, isolated themselves in their own ethnic and cultural backgrounds, he said.

"There is a change now," as younger generations see themselves as Englishmen and Muslims at the same time, he said.

URL of this page: http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=220743
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Asadullah Syed

Friday, January 7, 2011

Most of French, Germans consider Islam 'a threat' to national identity: Poll

Most of French, Germans consider Islam 'a threat' to national identity: Poll

Fri Jan 07 2011

Almost half of the French and German populations considers Islam ''a threat'' to national identity, according to new Media poll.

The Mail Online quoted the poll conducted by France's Le Monde newspaper as saying that 42 percent of French and 40 percent of Germans consider the presence of Islamic communities ''a threat'' to their national identities, adding that a majority in both countries believe Muslims have 'not integrated properly'.

According to the poll, carried out with marketing firm IFOP, 68 percent of French and 75 percent of Germans believe Muslims are 'not well integrated into society'.

The poll, which questioned 1,600 people in France and Germany last month, also found that 55 percent in France and 49 percent in Germany believe that the 'influence and visibility of Islam' is 'too large', while 60 percent in both countries say the reason for the problem is Muslims' own 'refusal' to integrate.

The Le Monde editorial said that as Islam becomes a permanent and increasingly conspicuous fixture of European societies, "public opinion is clearly tensing up, though disparities do appear between young and old and between Left and Right wing."

Jerome Fourquet, of IFOP, said the results "go beyond linking immigration with security or immigration with unemployment, to linking Islam with a threat to identity."

Meanwhile, German Chancellor Merkel has said that her country's cultural integration had failed.

In France, Nicolas Sarkozy's Government has displayed an intolerance towards religious extremism by recently banning Islamic veils.

However, French Foreign Minister Michele Alliot Marie said it was important not to confuse moderate Muslims with radical or fundamentalist parties.

"The trap set by Al Qaeda was to push us towards a general confrontation, towards a war between the Muslim and Western worlds. We must watch out for anything that goes in that direction. We must not confuse Islam and terrorism," she added.

URL OF THIS PAGE: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/most-of-french-germans-consider-islam-a-threat-to-national-identity-poll/734589/0



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Asadullah Syed

Council on American-Islamic Relations sues lawyer over use of name

Council on American-Islamic Relations sues lawyer over use of name

By DAVID ASHENFELTER

Free Press Staff Writer

The Council on American-Islamic Relations has sued controversial Southfield lawyer Debbie Schlussel for trademark infringement, saying Schlussel is using its name to confuse its donors.

The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Detroit, urges Judge Avern Cohn to order Schlussel to stop using or raising money in CAIR's name. A hearing is set for 9 a.m. today.

"She's trying to use the name of the most visible Muslim organization in America to cause confusion and raise funds," Dawud Walid, the group's executive director, said Thursday. "We want the federal court to put a stop to this."

Schlussel countered that CAIR gave up its right to the name by failing to file legally required reports with the State of Michigan starting in 2001.

She said she decided to file paperwork to get the name last year at the behest of a client she wouldn't identify.

"They abandoned the name, they're a fake organization," Schlussel said of CAIR and its name. "A big part of owning trademark is you have to protect it, and they didn't."

CAIR's lawyer, Gadeir Abbas, said CAIR owns the federal trademark on which Schlussel is infringing. Failing to file state paperwork is irrelevant, he said.

The suit accuses Schlussel of achieving "nationwide infamy for stoking Islamophobia in an attempt to marginalize the American-Muslim community" through her Web site, www.debbieschlussel.com.

Schlussel says she exposes the intolerance of Islam and how it infringes on free speech and the American way of life.

Last April, the suit said, Schlussel filed articles of incorporation for "CAIR Michigan, Inc.," and certificates for 17 assumed names, including "Council on American-Islamic Relations." She also registered five Internet domain names, all variations of CAIR.

It said she told a follower on her Web site that she registered the name with the state and appointed herself executive director of the group "to drive the Muslims crazy."

The suit also said she contacted the Michigan Attorney General's Office last September to try to interfere in a federal lawsuit CAIR had filed on behalf of a Muslim woman whom a Wayne County judge ordered to remove her religious head scarf during court proceedings. Schlussel told the state that CAIR was masquerading as her group, which opposed the suit.

Contact David Ashenfelter: dashenfelter@freepress.com

URL OF THIS PAGE: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/most-of-french-germans-consider-islam-a-threat-to-national-identity-poll/734589/0

 



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Asadullah Syed

SAY IT ALOUD Cultural collisions: Is Islam against the West?

SAY IT ALOUD Cultural collisions: Is Islam against the West?

By Joseph Mihangwa

 

Whenever they kindle a fire for war, Allah extinguishes it. 

And they strive to create disorder in the earth,

and Allah loves not those who create disorder" – The Quran.

 

THE West and the world of Islam sometimes resemble two different centuries banging through the night on parallel courses. In full raucous cultural panoply, they keep each other awake.  They make each other nervous.  At times, as now, they veer together and collide: up and down the processions, threats are ex-changed, pack animals and zealots bray, bales of ideological baggage spill into the road. Embassies get burned or bombed, hostages taken.  Songs of revenge rise in the throat.

Are these collisions inevitable?  The mutual misunderstandings of the West and the Islamic world have a rich patina of history.  Jews, Christians and Muslims, all "People of the Book", draw much of their faith from the same sources.  Yet from the time of the Muslim conquests and the Crusades, West and Islam have confronted each other by turns and attitudes of incomprehension, greed, fanaticism, prurient interests, fear and loathing.

The world of Islam, more than often, has accused the United States (US) of leading the onslaught against the "harbours" of Islamic culture.  However, the Americans have responded by asking with truculent innocence:  "What did we ever do them?"  If the question is disingenuous, the answers are complex.

The US never colonized Islamic countries, as, for example, Britain and France did.  The US has no large Islamic minority and thus, unlike the Soviet Union, has no record of bitter internal relations with Muslims.  Besides (as some Muslim leaders know), Communism was far more inimical to Islam than capitalism.

But in the past 50 years, the US has been a chief participant in a cultural encounter that is in some ways even more traumatic to the World of Islam than colonialism:  the full onslaught of secular, materialist modernization of 21st century civilization sweeping into the timeless Muslim villages.  The apparatus of Western progress, a machine overwhelmingly vigorous, profoundly tempting and yet decadent by all the disciples of the Prophet, has threatened Muslim identity.

Western science and technology have wounded the deep pride of Islam.  The success of unvirtuous, the infidel unfavoured of Allah, is psychologically confusing.  Seen through Muslim eyes, the emergency of the West as the temporary master of the world remains an anomaly in the natural unfolding of the course of history.

Muslims have recoiled from modernization in exact proportion to the force of its temptation for them.  They have been attracted by secular materialism, have tried it in the guise of capitalism and Marxism, but they have often been disappointed by it and have associated it with colonial masters who introduced them to it.  They found it dangerously, almost radioactively, corrupt.

Some Muslims, of course, insist that Islam and modernization are perfectly compatible.  Many Islamic countries supply the oil that is, for now, the indispensable ingredient of modernization, and they have tried to use the staggering and sudden wealth to buy the machines of progress without the devils that often inhibit them. Some of the conservative Islamic leaders, like Saudi Arabians for example, pursue a selective strategy regarding the technological riches of the West:  they want to modernize without the garish libertine free – for – all that Western secular individualism has promoted.

But for Muslims, the dilemma remains; if they are to develop economically, they must send their young to be educated in the West.  And that inevitably means diluting their culture.

Progress means better medicine and other mitigations of life's harshness, of course, but it also means that the young women returning from Paris or Paulo Alto in short skirts instead of chadors; it means 30 percent inflation, pollution, and open door to all the depressing lot of the junk culture; it means the young leaving the villages and becoming infested with all kinds of Hefnerian tastes and forbidden way of Islamic life.

It is sometimes difficult for a Westerner to understand that to a Muslim, the cultural dismantling of Islam, the governing apparatus of life and civilization, is a tragedy that amounts to a form of annihilation.

The sort of Muslim fundamentalism evident in some of the Islamic countries may confirm a remark by Franz Fanon, the philosopher of Third World uprisings, in his book 'The Wretched of the Earth' when he writes: "the native response to imperial dominations is to fall back on what is authentic, what is resistant to modernization.  The mosque becomes a symbolic safe haven".

Generally, Islam is not inherently or inevitably anti-Western, despite the often bloody encounters.  Muslims have historically occupied geographically vulnerable positions, which may account for their militant touchiness.  But the religion has become the vehicle for certain anti-Western resentments and antipathies.

All too often the fault has been dumped on the doors of colonialism; that the colonists disrupted Muslim society, ousted the Shariah, replaced it with Common Law, and turned the conquered people technically into Kuffars (unbelievers).  This could be one of the gists behind Muslims claiming for Kadhi's Court in Tanzania today.

It is under this pretext that two issues have been central to religious speculation today, namely, Islamic expansion and Islamic revivalism.

Expansion is about the spread of religion and its scale of new conversions.  Revivalism is about the rebirth of faith to those who are already converted.  Expansion is a matter of geography and populations – in search of new world to conquer.

Revivalism is a matter of history and nostalgia – in search of ancient worlds to re-enact.  The revival of Islam is often an angry process of rediscovered fundamentalism.  It is this type of fundamentalism which culminated into attacks of pork butcheries in Dar es Salaam in 1993, and the like.

Of the three principal religious legacies - indigenous, Islamic and Christian, the most tolerant is the indigenous tradition.  It is true that in Africa, for example, the continent did not have religious wars before Christianity and Islam came.  Precisely, because these two latter faiths were universalistic and aspirations – that is seeking to convert the whole of humankind, they are therefore inherently competitive.

It is due to this that Christianity (Western culture) and Islam (Arabic culture) have often been in competition for the soul of the world.  Rivalry has resulted in conflict.

More often, this competition has been under the banner of a liberating force against the clutches and culture of the West (Christianity).  And in doing so, the Quran has been a great force often quoted, thus:  "And why should you not fight in the cause of Allah and of those who, being weak are ill-treated, (and oppressed), "men, women and children; Our Lord Rescue us from this town, whose people are oppressors, and raise for us from Thee one who will protect and raise for us from Thee one who will help" [Quran 4.75]. 

Hence "O ye who believe, Endure, outdo all other in endurance, be ready, and observe your duty to Allah, in order that  you may succeed" [Quran 3.20].

It is true that the post-colonial prosperity of oil-rich Arab countries has given Islam sources for missionary work in the world which are unprecedented in modern Islamic history.  With all these, can Islam be culturally and economically competitive with the West in the rivalry for the soul of the World?  I don't think so.  Why?  Because Muslims have greedily and aggressively sought the material wonders of the West, yet are ambivalent in their souls.  However, one can yet easily locate the dilemma:  That, if Islam is ever to become an economic and political competitor of the West, it must embrace a progress that may for ever weaken its ethical and spiritual structures, just as other religions have been drained by the secularization of the Western World.

In this respect, Islam, whether it likes or not, has to agree to be integrated and grapple with the dictates of secularism, the European culture and civilization, for it cannot survive on inspirations of the past, otherwise it will naturally die.  Nor are the desired old Islamic social moral values have any chance to regain their 14th century supremacy any more.

URL of this Page: http://www.thisday.co.tz/?l=10996

 



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Asadullah Syed