Inspired by Prophet Muhammed (SAW)

June 8th, 2010

check out:

http://www.inspiredbymuhammad.com

Also check out these shocking stats about how Muslims are perceived in the UK!

Knowledge of Islam

  • 60% say they don’t know very much about Islam
  • 17% say they know nothing at all
  • 33% would like to know more about Islam

Sources of Information on Islam

  • 57% obtain most of their information about Islam from the TV news
  • 41% obtain their information about Islam from newspapers
  • Just 3% get most of their information on Islam from Muslim organisations
  • 31% feel that information about Islam is not very accessible
  • 5% say that information is not accessible at all

Perceptions of Islam

  • 58% associate Islam with extremism
  • 50% associate Islam with terrorism
  • Just 13% associate Islam with peace
  • 6% associate Islam with justice
  • Only 16% think that Islam promotes fairness and equality
  • Only 6% believe that Islam promotes active measures to protect the environment
  • 41% disagree or strongly disagree that Muslims have a positive impact on British society
  • 69% believe that Islam encourages the repression of women

http://www.inspiredbymuhammad.com/yougov.php

Iraq foils 9/11-style plot against Imam Ali (AS) Shrine

May 5th, 2010

Iraqi securtiy forces disrupted an attempt to bomb the Imam Ali shrine in the holy city of Najaf, using an airplane in attacks planned to resemple the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the U.S., Al Arabiya reported on Wednesday.

According to Al Arabiya reporter Zeinab Bilal, members of al-Qaeda were planning to hijack an airplane after it took off from Najaf airport and fly it into the dome of the Shiite shrine in a scenario similar to the 9/11 attacks.

Security officials said they temporarily shut down at least two airports and have arrested two men — one of the intended pilots and an airport worker — suspected in the plot, which appeared aimed at undermining the country’s stability while U.S. troops prepare to go home.

The gold-domed Imam Ali shrine is one of the most revered Shiite religious mosques in the world

Najaf airport, 150 kilometres (90 miles) south of the Iraqi capital, was shut on April 7 on orders from the transport ministry citing security concerns.

The airport remains closed because of its proximity to the shrine, but Iraqi Defense Minister Abdul-Qader al-Obeidi told reporters in Najaf that it “will be reopened soon, after discussing the needed security measures.”

Around 800 people use the airport each day, most of them from Shiite-majority Iran and Bahrain, according to aviation officials

Iraqi Defense Minister Abdul-Qader al-Obeidi told reporters in Najaf that the airport “will be reopened soon, after discussing the needed security measures.” He said the intelligence about the attacks is unclear but “at the same time, we can’t neglect them.”

But numbers surge during major festivals such as Ashura, when pilgrims flock to the Imam Ali shrine.

Al-Qaeda in Iraq has been blamed for a recent violence in Baghdad, and security officials believe the terror network is trying to regroup during the political disarray left by the March 7 parliamentary elections, which failed to produce a clear winner.

The alleged plot also comes as American forces plan to send home all but 50,000 troops by Aug. 31, with the rest scheduled to follow by the end of 2011 as required by a U.S.-Iraqi security agreement.

http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2010/04/14/105854.html

Qaradawi stands up for women’s rights

May 5th, 2010

Disclaimer: Although I dislike Qaradawi, his stance in the article below promotes women’s rights.

Qatar-based Islamic scholar Sheikh Yousuf al-Qaradawi yesterday slammed the practice of denying women access to mosques by Muslims of South Africa as well as of the Indian subcontinent and said that he was surprised that women were not allowed to attend any of his lectures in Johannesburg during his recent visit there.

In his Friday sermon, Sheikh Qaradawi said that during his visit to South Africa, he was surprised by the “unreasonable practice” of not allowing women from entering mosques as well as by the ban to videotape his lectures in Johannesburg.

“It was my first visit to South Africa and I was impressed with its Muslim community’s commitment to Islamic rules as well as its unity, but it was the ban on women’s entry into mosques which drew my attention. I told the (community members) that this was un-Islamic and they should stop it,” he told a congregation in a mosque at Khalifa South.

“I know they did that because they follow the Abu Hanifa school of thought but they should know that time has changed. If Abu Hanifa himself were with us today, he would have changed his mind. It is unreasonable that women could now go to universities, markets and travel, but are not allowed to enter a mosque in some countries.”

http://www.islamophobia-watch.com/islamophobia-watch/2010/4/24/qaradawi-stands-up-for-womens-rights.html

Swiss Army Patronizes Muslim Soldiers with “special” arrangements

May 5th, 2010

The Swiss army recently approved an arrangement for non-Christian soldiers.

The regulations cover both dietary customs and hours of prayer.  Muslim soldiers can turn to Mecca, for example, only once a day. [Muslims are obliged to pray 5 times a day]

This document corresponds to a tradition in the Swiss army.  The army has always made exceptions, Martin Bühler, spokesperson for the federal ministry of defense told ATS.  He confirmed the information on NZZ am Sonntag.

There are already regulation for Jewish soldiers and recruits.  In another field, farmers are also entitled to exceptions, when they lack manpower, explains Bühler.

Muslim recruits can now report to their commanding officer before starting training that they do not eat pork. [There are quite a few more dietary considerations than just”no pork”] In certain recruit academies, Muslims make up practically 10% of the manpower.  They will now be offered an alternative menu.  They can also arrange for their own food.

In addition to the dietary requirements, the new document also regulates the issue of leave during religious festivals and prayer times.  As a Muslim in the armed forces can hardly pray five times a day, he must compact it into a single prayer after the end of his duty shift. [This is very wrong, Muslims should pray 5 times during allotted times in the day, with some given leniency] According to the army, the regulation was developed in collaboration with two Muslims who agreed to this solution. [Oh, I see, ask 2 idiots and pass regulations. How very intelligent]

Facilities are available to believers of all religions.  In some places the army arranges for a lace of meditation. [A What?] Otherwise, it’s possible to use a classroom.

http://islamineurope.blogspot.com/2010/04/switzerland-new-arrangements-for-muslim.html

I know if I were Swiss or even a Swiss Muslim, I wouldn’t be joining the Army any time soon.

Iran will never seek atomic bomb

April 4th, 2010

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei said Friday that the country neither believes in atomic bombs nor is it seeking to develop such weapons.

The Leader said the continuation of allegations by the West that the country is pursuing military objectives in its civilian nuclear program signals that the propaganda campaign against Iran has failed.

Iran has announced many times, he said, that its fundamentals and religious principles consider weapons of mass destruction as “illegal and haraam” — meaning forbidden and prohibited according to Islamic rules.

The West accuses Iran, a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), of seeking a nuclear weapon. Tehran, however, rejects the allegation and says its program is aimed at the civilian applications of the technology.

Iran in no way believes in an atomic bomb, and it does not seek one, Ayatollah Khamenei said.

The Leader made the remarks during the inauguration ceremony of Iran’s first domestically-built destroyer.

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=118988&sectionid=351020101

Halal Meat - No More Faith in the UK market

March 29th, 2010

‘Halal’ KFC is NOT really halal - KFC admits that its poultry is pre-stunned, but says this is approved by the Halal Food Authority (HFA), which has certified all the stores in the current trial. Many (most) Muslims, however, say the HFA’s standards are not strict enough. http://islamineurope.blogspot.com/2010/03/uk-christians-muslims-upset-at-kfc.html

Up to 75% of UK halal poultry falsely labelled - The majority of halal-labelled poultry and a small amount of beef and lamb were slaughtered by machine rather than an individual, Naved Syed, of the English Beef and Lamb Executive Halal Steering Group, told The Grocer magazine. http://islamineurope.blogspot.com/2010/03/uk-up-to-75-of-halal-poultry-falsely.html

Brussels: First European halal certificate (!) - The Brussels Chamber of Commerce (BECI) issued the first European halal certificate Thursday, meant to facilitate exports. The product is a festive drink without alcohol, ‘Night Orient’. http://islamineurope.blogspot.com/2010/03/brussels-first-european-halal.html

Perspective: Martin Amis: ‘I wish my sister had converted to Islam’

March 29th, 2010

Martin Amis might have expressed negative views about Islam in the past, but the author told an Abu Dhabi newspaper this week that he believed that if his sister, Sally, an alcoholic who died in 2000, had converted to the religion she might still be alive.

Interviewed by Abu Dhabi English-language newspaper The National, Amis said he wished his sister had converted to Islam. “To this day I have this wish – she was always religious and she converted to Catholicism. I wish she had converted to Islam. She might still be alive because of the continence of Islam, the austerity, the demands it makes on you. I just sort of helplessly think it every now and then. She would only be 56 now and she’d still be here,” said Amis, who is in Dubai to take part in the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature.

Sally Amis, whom the author has described as “pathologically promiscuous”, died aged 46 after periods of depression and alcoholism. Her brother believes that the structure of Islam might have saved her life. “She was such an uncontrollable girl that there was even talk of her joining the army when she was 17 or 18 because we all sensed that she needed a really tight structure, an ésprit de corps of shared belief,” he told The National. “Islam in its way gives you that, a collectivity that she could have been a part of, which incidentally forbade alcohol and premarital sex. She might have had a chance. She would have had to embrace it earlier than she embraced Catholicism.”

Amis courted controversy in 2006 with his comment to a newspaper that “there’s a definite urge – don’t you have it? – to say the Muslim community will have to suffer until it gets its house in order”. The National reported that the author “seemed somewhat penitent” over the remarks during an event at the literary festival, where he was interviewed by author and broadcaster Paul Blezzard.

“It was a rash remark made at a terrible time. Ten years on from September 2001, we have still not got a usable word for what we mean. People think you are talking about Islam but you are not. ‘Islamism’ is hopeless because it has got too many letters in common with Islam. I suggest we call it al-Qaida,” said Amis. “What I said was that there was an urge. No one can tell me that there was not. By the next day, I had changed my mind because that is collective punishment, but people were saying that. More than 95% of Muslims are horrified by this ridiculous, nihilistic wing and should not be connected verbally or otherwise with these extremists.”

After Blezzard joked that there had been a sweepstake over how long it would take Amis to get through immigration when he arrived in Dubai, the author said he had “met with nothing but extreme courtesy in this country”.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/mar/16/martin-amis-sister-islam

Rumblings Going on at IslamOnline.net - the Salafis are taking over

March 29th, 2010

Islamic advice websites aren’t the first thing that spring to mind when talking of strikes, sit-ins and workers’ occupations, but if there’s any proof needed that Egypt’s extraordinary wave of industrial action is reaching every corner of the nation, then today’s drama at IslamOnline.net fits the bill.

With more than 120,000 hits a day and a global reach that extends through several languages, IslamOnline is one of the biggest and most influential Muslim websites in the world. From Baghdad to Basildon, Muslims use it as a key source of scholarly advice on everything from impotency to the insurgency in Iraq.

So the question of who owns and controls the site is a vitally important one. And that’s the question being wrestled over today, after hundreds of staff walked out in protest over what they say is an attempt by conservatives in the Gulf to hijack the site and force it to pursue a more traditional and hardline agenda.

Tension had been simmering for months between the website’s Cairo-based editorial offices and the managers in Doha, whose plan this week to fire many of the 350 employees in Egypt led to an all-night occupation of the company’s offices, which was still continuing at the time of writing.

“We’re all resigning,” Fathi Abu Hatab, a former IslamOnline journalist and one of the strike leaders, told me over the phone from inside the building. “If we lose this battle then IslamOnline as we know it will be dead. We were an exception – in our professionalism, in our moderation, in our refusal to be bound by hidden agendas. And like all exceptions in the Arab World, we’ve come to the end of the line.”

So what is the battle, exactly? There’s not a lot of agreement on this point, with a host of competing explanations trickling out of the IslamOnline offices on to Twitter, Facebook and even a live online video stream that the workers set-up to show their grievances to the world. Some of the staff believe this is primarily a business dispute over pay, conditions and company management but others are reading more into it, placing the tussle over editorial control at IslamOnline into a wider political rivalry between Egypt and Qatar, and an even broader context of cultural warfare between Egypt and the Gulf.

As detailed in the news reports, there’s certainly a lot of evidence to suggest that a new board of directors in Doha has been throwing its weight around in debates over the site’s content. Analysts have argued that the site’s relatively open and inclusive nature (where discussions over homosexuality sit side by side with the latest fatwas on vegetarianism, martyrdom and T-shirts) has unnerved some of IslamOnline’s more conservative financial backers in the Gulf. At this stage it’s hard to verify that one way or another, but if true it would only be the latest salvo in a long-running campaign by the Gulf to wrest cultural ascendancy in the Arab World away from Egypt.

In the often febrile Middle Eastern media market, domination of the cultural landscape has tended to go hand in hand with political ascendancy. Historically the biggest centres of cultural production were Beirut and Cairo; the latter’s singers, film-makers, actors and writers were untouchable in the 1950s and 1960s.

Egypt’s status as the capital of Arab culture mirrored its political fortunes under Gamal Abdel Nasser; Umm Kolthoum sang, Youssef Chahine directed, and Nasser was the all-singing, all-dancing leader of the “Arab street” who faced down western colonialism at Suez in 1956 and swaggered across the world stage.

Then came the oil explosion of the 1970s, and the Gulf states suddenly found themselves with a load of petro-dollars at their disposal. Over the next couple of decades, with Lebanon mired in civil war and Egypt rocked by the assassination of Sadat and the beginning of the moribund, bureaucratic rule of Mubarak, Saudi Arabia (and to a lesser extent the UAE) embarked on an ambitious and eye-wateringly expensive programme to force control of the region’s culture away from their rivals.

The Arab culture wars are open on a number of different fronts, but all involve Egypt losing its grip on the Middle East’s cultural tiller. On television, for example, Egyptian soaps and serials have long dominated prime-time schedules, but now the UAE is fighting back with multimillion dollar productions like Million’s Poet, an insanely popular reality TV show that commands 70m viewers from across the Arab World, yet is based around an obscure form of Gulf Arabian poetry. The result has been a hitherto unknown appreciation for the Gulf dialect across the Middle East.

The whole show is funded by the Abu Dhabi Authority of Culture and Heritage, and forms part of a much wider push to make Abu Dhabi the capital of culture in the Middle East, with local versions of the Louvre and Guggenheim under construction.

It’s not just a matter of the Gulf producing new cultural products to rival Egypt’s; investors are actively taking over Egyptian cultural institutions and reshaping them to reflect more conservative Gulf values. Egypt’s film studios were managing to produce only about five or six films a year in the early 1990s; now, almost solely because of Saudi investment, they’re churning out around 40, some of which now have to conform to the “35 rules” of piety laid down by the Saudi backers – a huge shift away from Egypt’s traditionally more pluralistic Islamic values to the much more austere form of Wahhabi Islam prevalent in the Gulf.

This “Saudisation” has left some Egyptians, such as the billionaire communications tycoon Naguib Sawiris, feeling like a foreigner in their own land. “As far as I’m concerned, this is the biggest problem in the Middle East right now,” he says. “Egypt was always very liberal, very secular and very modern. Now … I’m looking at my country, and it’s not my country any longer. I feel like an alien here.”

As the IslamOnline workers prepare themselves for a second night of occupation in an attempt to assert their editorial independence over those that bankroll them, a broader upheaval is under way in every corner of the Arab media world, one that could prove dangerous for cultural pluralism.

“There is an Egyptian taste to IslamOnline at the moment which is very discernible; if the site packs up and moves to Qatar the spirit and attitude of the site will change,” says Khalil al-Anani, an expert on political Islam at Durham University.

“That would be a big loss to the Muslim community globally, because we are facing a wave of Salafist media at the moment – on the internet, on satellite TV, and elsewhere – and IslamOnline was one of the key outlets resisting that trend.”

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2010/mar/16/islamonline-egypt-qatar

Microsoft censoring Mideast online sex searches

March 29th, 2010

The Open Net Initiative (ONI) on Friday said Microsoft’s search engine Bing is more prudish than government censors when it comes to sex-related online queries.

A January test of a Bing version tailored for users in Arab countries showed that it filtered Arabic and English words for sexually explicit content along with queries related to gay, lesbian, bi-sexual or transgender material.

Attempts to use filtered keywords prompted a message reading “Your country or region requires a strict Bing SafeSearch setting, which filters out results that might return adult content,” according to ONI.

The message seemed at odds with the fact that while political censorship is widespread in the Middle East, not all countries there mandate filtering of sex, nudity, homosexuality and other such “social content,” ONI reported.

“A more targeted approach, either country-based or preferably, defined by the user, is more generally consistent with minimizing the impact on freedom of speech,” ONI study authors concluded.

“Microsoft has signaled its willingness to be at the forefront in protecting freedom of expression around the world. It is difficult to reconcile this position with Bing’s current filtering standards.”

The report noted that Bing didn’t impose search settings based on IP addresses indicating where computers are located, so users can get around filters by choosing versions of the engine crafted for other countries.

Microsoft did not return an AFP request for comment.

http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2010/03/06/102314.html

Al-Azhar Updates

March 29th, 2010

Egypt’s top Muslim cleric dies of heart attack (RIP) - Egyptian religious leader Sheikh Mohammed Sayyed Tantawi, the grand sheikh of al-Azhar, has died of a heart attack during a visit to Saudi Arabia. http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2010/03/10/102645.html

Egypt’s Mubarak names successor to top cleric - Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on Friday appointed a new head of al-Azhar, Sunni Islam’s most prestigious institution, after the death of its top cleric last week. He’s called Ahmed al-Tayeb. http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2010/03/19/103484.html