Desi Thoughts

Amrika, Pakistan, Islam and everything in between

Page 16 of 18

And i Got kicked

It was a very interesting argument going on with some ahmedis on their community on Orkut but i dared to call their false prophet Mirza Sahib. So They deleted my postings and kicked me out.
Well their loss. I was enjoying every bit of it.

Mirza whatever came in the late 1800s on the request of the british to counter and split the muslims in the south asia. They are declared non-Muslims in the Constitution of Pakistan. They are declred non muslims by Muslim scholars and are not allowed to enter the holy places in Saudi Arabia.

More information on these people can be found at this link
http://www.irshad.org/qadianism.php

Censorship

Got this in email today

THE PEACE AND JUSTICE FOUNDATION
11006 Veirs Mill Rd, STE L-15, PMB 298
Silver Spring, MD. 20902

IMPORTANT ALERT!!!

Assalaamu Alaikum
(Greetings of Peace):

The struggle to control and manipulate images is one of the most critical components of an efficient propaganda war. The Zionists (and their complicit slaves) have repeatedly shown themselves to be ruthless masters at it!

A couple of weeks ago a friend and brother-in-Islam (Dr Imad ad-Dean Ahmad) and I thought that we were going to the ONLY theater in metropolitan Washington to see the award winning film “Paradise Now.” Unfortunately, as we were preparing for our drive to Virginia, we learned that it had just closed – with the next closest venue being ONE theater in New York.

“Paradise Now” is an award-winning Palestinian film that has made a serious break-through in the international film industry, and is currently nominated for an Academy Award under the “Best Foreign Films” category. It is now my understanding that there is a chance it will be removed from the OSCAR bid because of anti-Palestinian lobbies.

A petition drive is under way to address this matter: http://www.petitiononline.com/para222/petition.html
Now I’ve learned that a play celebrating the life and legacy of a courageous (now deceased) young woman named Rachel Corrie, titled “My Name Is Rachel Corrie,” may not see the light of day any time soon in the U.S. – once again because of Zionist pressures!

We have first hand experience on the power of eye-opening, truth based, propaganda! The same year that Rachel was murdered by a hate-filled Israeli soldier operating an American made bulldozer, we published a small book on the ongoing Palestinian crisis titled “The Message of Rachel Corrie.” On the back cover of the second printing is a revealing quote, from a non-Muslim woman who read a copy of the first:

“Words alone cannot express the gratitude I feel for you having written the book on Rachel Corrie. It literally moved me to tears. As a woman who is half Jewish I am outraged by what occurred, shamed and saddened. All the while reading it I couldn’t shake the feeling that this could have been my daughter. I must also confess to feeling almost a sense of embarrassment for having allowed myself to view the Arab-Israeli conflict through a distorted lens for so many years. I will never be the same, and I have you and the incredible sacrifice made by this courageous young woman to thank for opening my eyes.
“God bless you and your organization sir, and may your book enjoy all the success that it so richly deserves.”

With these words in mind, it’s clear why the “freedom” touting powers-that-be are poised to prevent a PLAY on Rachel Corrie from seeing the light of day in the “Big Apple” (New York City). I pray that committed activists and well meaning citizens will take up the challenge and push back such HYPOCRITICAL CENSORSHIP!

El-Hajj Mauri’ Saalakhan

_____________________________

Surely Americans will not put up with this censorship

By Katharine Viner

The Guardian
1 March 2006

http://arts.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1720592,00.html

The flights for cast and crew had been booked; the production schedule delivered; the press announcement drafted and approved; tickets advertised on the internet. The Royal Court production of “My Name Is Rachel Corrie,” the play I co-edited with Alan Rickman, was transferring next month to the New York Theatre Workshop, home of the groundbreaking musical Rent, following two sellout runs in London and several awards.

We always thought that it was a piece of work that needed to be seen in the US. Created from the journals and emails of American activist Rachel Corrie, telling of her journey
from her adolescent life in Seattle, Washington, to her death under a bulldozer in Gaza at the age of 23, we considered it, in a sense, to be an American story, which would have a particular relevance for audiences in Rachel’s home country. After all, she had made her journey to the Middle East in order “to meet the people who are on the receiving end of our [American] tax dollars”, and she was a killed by a US-made bulldozer.

But last week the New York Theatre Workshop canceled the production – or, in their words, “postponed it indefinitely”. The political climate, we were told, had changed dramatically since the play was booked. As James Nicola, the theatre’s artistic director, said yesterday:
“In our pre-production planning and our talking around and listening in our communities in New York, what we heard was that after Ariel Sharon’s illness and the election of Hamas in the recent Palestinian elections, we had a very edgy situation.” Rachel was to be censored for political reasons.

It makes you wonder. If a young, middle-class, scrupulously fair-minded, and dead, American woman, whose superb writing about her job as a mental health worker, ex-boyfriends, troublesome parents, struggle to find out who she wanted to be, and how she found that by traveling to Gaza and discovering the shocking conditions under which the Palestinians live – if a voice like this cannot be heard on a New York stage, what hope is there for anyone else? The non-American, the non-white, the non-dead, the oppressed?

Anyone who sees the play, or reads it, realises that this is no piece of alienating agitprop. One night in London, a group of American students came to a performance and mobbed us afterwards, thrilled that they had seen themselves on stage, and who they might, in a different life, have become. Another night, an Israeli couple, members of the rightwing Likud party, on holiday in Britain, were similarly impressed. “The play wasn’t against Israel, it was against violence,” they told Cindy Corrie, Rachel’s mother.

I was particularly touched by a young Jewish New Yorker, from an Orthodox family, who said that he had been nervous about coming to see My Name Is Rachel Corrie, because he had been told that both she and it were viciously anti-Israel. But he had been powerfully moved by Rachel’s words and realized that he had, to his alarm, been dangerously misled.

But the director of the New York theatre told the New York Times yesterday that it wasn’t the people who actually saw the play he was concerned about. “I don’t think we were worried about the audience,” he said. “I think we were more worried that those who had never encountered her writing, never encountered the piece, would be using this as an opportunity to position their arguments.”

Since when did theatre come to be about those who don’t go to see it? If the play itself, as Mr Nicola clearly concedes, is not the problem, then isn’t the answer to get people in to
watch it, rather than exercising prior censorship? With freedom of speech now at the top of the international agenda, and George Clooney’s outstanding Good Night, and Good Luck reminding us of the dangers of not standing up to witch-hunts, Americans should not be denied the right to hear Rachel Corrie’s words – words that only two weeks ago were deemed acceptable.

I’d heard from American friends that life for dissenters had been getting worse – wiretapping scandals, arrests for wearing anti-war T-shirts, Muslim professors denied visas. But it’s hard to tell from afar how bad things really are. Here was personal proof that the political climate is
continuing to shift disturbingly, narrowing the scope of free debate and artistic expression. What was acceptable a matter of weeks ago is not acceptable now. The New York theatre’s claim that the arrangement was tentative is absurd: the truth is that its management has caved in to political pressure, an
d the reputation of the arts in New York is the poorer for it.

It is surely underestimating the curiosity and robustness of the American public, many of whom would no doubt be interested in an insight into the reality of occupation that led to the Hamas victory. Artistic communities need to resist the censorship of voices that go against the grain of George Bush’s America, rather than following the Fox News agenda and gagging them before they have even been heard.

_________________________

El-Hajj Mauri’ Saalakhan
Director of Operations
The Peace And Justice Foundation

will serve as guest khatib for Jumah this Friday (March 3rd)

MOSQUE OF THE ISLAMIC BROTHERHOOD (MIB)
in the Village of Harlem, NY

Well look who spoke up

The only people to stand up to islamic threat is the group of people already run from the muslims.
This is what they had to say!!

“After having overcome fascism, Nazism, and Stalinism, the world now faces a new global threat: Islamism,” the manifesto says.

“We, writers, journalists, intellectuals, call for resistance to religious totalitarianism and for the promotion of freedom, equal opportunity and secular values for all.”

Well what can I say about these people. Rushdie still has a fatwa against him, Ayaan Hirsi Ali also lives a life protected on every step by the gvot securtity forces, Taslima Nasreen was kicked out of a muslim country, Irshad just got a good lecturing fromthe Angry Arab that day and soo on.

Well why dont these people study islam first and then try to question it. They are not intellectuals or writers, they are just attention seekers. They thought hey the iron is hot and it is time for them to make their mark and get their 20mins of fame again. so here they are with their suggestions.

Sorry guys your opinion is not needed.

STATEMENT SIGNATORIES
Salman Rushdie – Indian-born British writer with fatwa issued ordering his execution for The Satanic Verses
Ayaan Hirsi Ali – Somali-born Dutch MP
Taslima Nasreen – exiled Bangladeshi writer, with fatwa issued ordering her execution
Bernard-Henri Levy – French philosopher
Chahla Chafiq – Iranian writer exiled in France
Caroline Fourest – French writer
Irshad Manji – Ugandan refugee and writer living in Canada
Mehdi Mozaffari – Iranian academic exiled in Denmark
Maryam Namazie – Iranian writer living in Britain
Antoine Sfeir – director of French review examining Middle East
Ibn Warraq – US academic of Indian/Pakistani origin
Philippe Val – director of Charlie Hebdo

Link to the Article is here

University of California Irvine and Muslims

I guess no one is working hard enough to make things better for muslims but infact it is becoming much more harder for muslims. I dont understand why they would want to have a discussion with a group like Brotherhood Organization of a New Destiny which is endorsed by Hannity of Fox News and is very conservative. Couldnt they see it coming.
Then CAIR decided not to attend the session so muslims had no represenation. Also from the article it very clear the crowd was biased and it was just a muslim bashing session.

http://www.forbes.com/home/feeds/ap/2006/03/01/ap2560953.html

Hate for Islam

I am very much convinced that this issue with Prophet’s Cartoon has opened up a new window into the west. Muslims always believed the view put out by the west that the west was very tolerant and calm, they have proven this wrong sometime back.
My constant search on Technorati.com for blogs relating to islam resulted in blogs which are pure Hate against Islam or prophet. They will speak about free speech and crap but they dont realise that it is not free speech. Free speech is only when it has something to do with Modern Western Values, this can include thinking other countries and cultures to be degrading and insulting them.
What is not free speech includes “questioning free socities immoral values, their governments, Illegal wars initiated by them and many more”.

Needless to say it is very clear that Muslims and Islam is hated very much all across the board by non-muslims. It was just one incident that removed this veil from the true actions of the these people.

To top this off the whole deal with the UAE company came forward and now it is an Arab country and people dont want anything from an arab country in their ports. But they dont have a problem with their #rd Naval Fleet based there or Military bases there. Isnt it just hate..

I am sure you are thinking what crap am i talking about but here are some simple search on islam. look at this Search.
See this link and see how much of Islam hate is out there.

Arshad Manji gets it good :)

I got this from http://gaymuslims.wordpress.com/2006/02/19/manji-gets-a-pasting/


OK, it’s nothing to do with gay Muslims, but I couldn’t resist sharing this Democracy Now head to head between lesbian refusenik Irshad Manji and “Angry Arab” As’ad AbuKhalil, professor of political science at California State University.

You can watch the show: [128k] [256k] – the relevant part is after 5:10. Also here’s a transcript:

Freedom of Speech or Incitement to Violence? A Debate Over the Publication of Cartoons of Prophet Muhammed and the Global Muslim Protests

AbuKhalil gives it to her good, and though it might have been better if they had got a Muslim guest on to do the job, his honesty in identifying himself as an atheist puts him in a suitable position to lambast Manji for her sick hypocrisy.

Here’s a blog post of his about her.

Progressive Islaam

Hmmmmm…

Muslims Wake Up, which was the blog name I saw on some site, which had a lot of interesting blogs and forum links. Well the title is not accurate; it should be Progressive Muslims Wake Up.
I realize that there is a lot of stuff that happens in the Muslim world which has nothing to do with Islam. Honor Killings are not Islamic, women are honored in Islam. Honor killing is a cultural aspect, not an Islamic tradition. Polygamy is a fact in Islam but if and only if you can do justice with your spouses and not violate their rights. Shariah and Hadood are a fact and should be prescribed in a Muslim country. Homosexuality is forbidden in the Quran and it is an act not welcome in any religion. There are so many things I can write here but I will put a stop to it.

I just imagine if the prophet was here during this time, what his opinion would be. Well he will not be happy with overall Muslims. They are not united or strong. They are fighting among themselves in so many sects. Muslims prefer non Muslims each other. Muslim’s love for the world is greater than for their own salvation. So many problems that exist in the Muslim societies but I just want to talk about one. i.e. Progressive Muslims

I am not a religious authority or not even enough learned about Islam but I can see a problem if there is one. Progressive Muslims have gotten a lot of attention in the recent years, due to their defiance of the Men’s dominance of Islam. A lot of women are spearheading this effort but men are also equally involved. Islam has never discouraged women’s role but the societies have done that very much. Islam came to give women rights in a society that never gave any to women.

Women leading the jumah and a lot of Muslims (men or women) praying behind them together.
Accepting Homosexuality in Islam.
No respect for Hijab.

I don’t know I was never brought up in a society that was conservative. My family was very liberal and I think I am still very liberal. But what is wrong is wrong. If I say the earth is flat, it doesn’t become flat or if I believe that it doesn’t become flat. Facts are facts, Islam has a lot of history and that history has been preserved maybe for days like this when people try to change Islam for their convenience.

If having illegitimate relations and having a child out of wedlock is acceptable in the society then I feel that we have reached that threshold which was told in the ahadith about days before the Day of Judgment.
Islam teaches us good things and noble aspects of human personality. If you believe in God you should obey the word of Allah. Let’s not try to find ways out of his laws. As the children of Israel did to fish on Fridays but not on the Sabbath and what happened to them is in the Quran. I guess we should learn from those lessons and ask Allah for forgiveness.

State of our education

While browsing the Website for the higher education department at the ministry of education. i came to know we only have 47 universities in Pakistan accredited by HEC. Amazing isn’t it. We are the people were able to develop nukes and have one of the biggest armies but we don’t have enough institutions for higher education.

I was reading that India has more universities than all the universities combined. Why is that? Why we are so behind countries like India and China. We have a smaller country than these two and to have an infrastructure like them should be easier.

Is it because that we have a high military budget.(if we have a huge budget in billions for the military then why we didn’t have enough helicopters for the rescue ops during earth quake relief)

Is it due to the feudals still sucking the blood out of our country and they don’t want to have educated people in their lands.

Is it because our Political Leaders have become accustomed to raping our resources and economy.

Is it because we are not run by our people but by outside forces.

Just some food for the thought.

The whole issue of cartoon and Insult to Prophet Muhammad

After this whole issue started, I started doing some research online about the issue. I came across quite a few sites which were more offensive than the cartoon originally done by the Danish newspaper. It seems that people hate Muslims quite a lot in certain parts of the world.
I wouldn’t include the links to the following stupid sites as we are not like them. We should tolerate such actions and it is ignorance on the part of such people who have such sites just to offend Muslims.
The blog called The Study of Revenge on blogspot was very offensive and includes a non acceptable image of the prophet.
Then there is a site called Muhammad Believe it or Else is very offensive.
Muhammad’s Image Archive on zombie online had quite a lot of images and most of them are offensive but interestingly quite a few are from Persian cultures. (I don’t know what the Persians wanted by drawing the Prophet’s Images)
Aarons Blog or funny images whatever you want to call it is useless and a clear hate site. Although it seems he is a Jew so I guess he takes it as his God given right to do blasphemy. (Sore Loser)

There are too many sites out there and this has been going on for quite a while. Sadly there are worse cartoons done in the past than the ones in the Danish paper. I would just hope and pray that Muslims understand their position in this world and give attention to stuff that is more serious. I don’t imply that the cartoon are not a serious issue, they are very serious but the scholars of Islam are there to judge the position and I have not heard of a single fatwa about this issue. Until then we can protest but killings and torching tells the world that we are savages. As for these cartoon makers Inshallah Allah will deal with them in the after life and on the Day of Judgment.

Orkut

I finally got someone to send me an invitation to orkut and man i love it. I have been able to find soo many people on it whom i thought would never see online. it is an amazing online place.

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