Tag Archives: Islam

When “religion” preaches anti-love sentiments, …

For 2.9.2014.2For 2.9.2014

[Image Credit:  James Wolf and Gyöngyi Keller of facebook]

 

Yes, I am intentionally personalizing any and all religious institutions.  And yes, I am intentionally using a mere clause – and a dependent one, at that; instead of a complete sentence statement.  Because I am hoping you will help me with potential independent clauses that may enable us to conceptualize anew the practice of “religion” in the terms with which I open a discussion floor to us: When the application of any world religion’s teachings disregards or discards love for another human being, …

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May you have a spectacular Sunday and a fabulous week.  As always, I very much look forward to your visit.

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It still may not be too late for Amira Osman Hamed

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Amira Osman Hamed: Not a mere name but as real of an individual as you and I.

 

As I am writing this post on Saturday, the 28th of September, “a day” old news according to a Bustle article by  Nathalie O’Neill claims the trial for Amira Osman Hamed, the Sudanese woman who refuses to cover her hair has been postponed from September 19 to November 4.  This time frame is critical, as her case – while “hot” early September now faces the risk of being put on the back burner by her supporters.  Ordinary life will take over.  We know it too well. It always does.  I am, therefore, repeating the plea initiated by poet4justice on a September 19, 2013 post titled Refusing to cover her hair in public.  You may remember my reblogging of that post. Today, I am revisiting Hamed’s predicament in the hope that you may take the time to support her rights as a human being.  Please note the following specifics for your convenience, if you were to decide to sign the petition to get some lawmakers to listen to the worlds of sane voices:

Amnesty Organization Australia petition site . To sign up from the United States, on the standard form, you will be asked the USA phone code for the world.  It is 001 (no individual state codes will do).  Also, the USA zip code for the world is 1511 (no individual zip codes will do).

Should you want to share the Amnesty International Australia plea to petition on behalf of Amira Osman Hamed, the following are provided for you by the site itself (no credit to me):

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A Girl’s Message to all Christians (with my apology to The Persecution of Mildred Dunlap for my initial reblogging error)

[My apology to you, dear Paulette, for my initial error in the reblogging process.]

With my heartfelt appreciation to The Persecution of Mildred Dunlap and in the hope to mediate her reblogged post A Girl’s Message to all Christians from Elana – The Voice of the Future to Muslims as well, the followers of the religion of Islam and its mind-boggling distortions I believe to know well. Signed: An atheist, or, an agnostic at best.

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Reblogged from The Persecution of Mildred Dunlap

With my heartfelt appreciation to The Persecution of Mildred Dunlap and in the hope to mediate her reblogged post A Girls’ Message to all Christians from Elana – The Voice of the Future to Muslims as well, the followers of the religion of Islam and its mind-boggling distortions I believe to know well.

Signed: An atheist, or, an agnostic at best.

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Unrest in Turkey and the Prime Minister’s Appeal to Allah to End it

“It all started with a tree”

 

 

What can penguins, pots and pans, jazz, folk music, police, Allah, a woman in red, gas grenades, nail polish, Noam Chomsky, children, alcohol consumption, family values, Turkish Airlines, red lipstick, possibly have in common?

If you are as puzzled now as I had been on May 30, 2013, then we are in good company for each other, when it comes to my attempt today to help us all understand and make sense of what has been happening in Turkey since.

It all began in Gezi Parkı, in Taksim, İstanbul with a hard core female terrorist.  Please, heed particular attention to her white bag over her right shoulder and her left hand.  You, too, will be convinced as to what type of destructive acts a ‘Woman in red’ is capable of:

 

 

The country’s unarmed, unprepared police force has, thus, suffered first in this heavily armed woman’s hands, as we all saw in the news coverage above; then, they were attacked by other terrorists:

 

 

Turkey’s current prime minister knew of the peaceful march initiated by his unarmed citizens to raise awareness for their rights to Gezi Parkı in Istanbul’s Taksim quarters, their public space since the founding of the Republic of Turkey in 1923.  Standing by his public alone, he did all in his power to help raise awareness and nation-and worldwide support for their actions.  The significance of the park – other than its ancient old trees, benches, strolling paths offering the only natural haven in the middle of one of the world’s largest cities, was, after all, apparent to everyone who had basic knowledge about modern Turkey’s historical and cultural past.  He, too, didn’t want any drastic steps erasing the city’s post-Ottoman Empire landscape.  He, too, knew bulldozing this park would be unforgiveable.  Therefore, the night of the first day of the protests by thousands of his people across the country, he ordered CNN-Turk – the nation’s primary source of information, to contribute to the spreading of the word with a penguin documentary .  At the risk of becoming a source for mockery inland and abroad.

The protesting citizens just didn’t and wouldn’t appreciate his good intentions, or what he meant by his reference to them as çapulcu and “terrorist”, and their actions, “tencere tava, hep aynı hava” (“pots and pans, the same tune as always”).  First, a few among them but then in growing numbers, were so unthankful that they composed folk music using pots, pans and other everyday items, now known as Tencere Tava Havası:

 

Then, students from Bosphorus University, one of the oldest and most prominent higher education institutions in Turkey, had the nerve to form a jazz ensemble, following in the footsteps of their pots-and-pans-musical counterparts:

 

Why did at least the half of his public end up with unrest that has been going on as I am writing?  Despite the killings, being subjected to indiscriminate, horrific injuries, the debilitating blows to the face to take the eyes out, and other horrendous crimes against their rights to live as a human?  After all, it is not that the Turkish prime minister has been tyrannizing the thinking, analyzing, alert population among his public with his multiplying, human rights-disregarding decrees of random conception, like his  call for three children.

Why not abide by his iron fist that falls onto everyone’s bedroom scene and bring into his world for his sake a minimum of three children?

And what about this obsession of the same population with alcohol consumption?  After all, drinking even a mere cup of wine –however occasional or frequent that may be, equates alcoholism.

Oh, then there is red lipstick!  And, nail polish! Every woman not only in Turkey but in the rest of the world would be much better of living without the red and the polish.

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Let me, at this point, lend these events the somber tone they deserve in any re-narration.  And mine won’t be an exception.  (Not that I can think even for a minute you having taken me seriously throughout my preceding notes of dark humor.)

Amnesty International calls for prompt action against the use of “brutal police repression” and for ‘investigation’ of “abuses” in the “İstanbul protest”.  A Reuters article, then, sums up how Turkey’s prime minister invokes Allah, demands protests end immediately.  While routinely ordering his police to conduct their violent attacks on his own unarmed and peaceful public, in full knowledge of the ensuing consequences of senseless human suffering, he “invokes Allah”.

What has Allah to do with brutality against fellow human beings?  Defenseless, at that?  In a May 29, 2013 interview about the murder of a British soldier, Imam Ajmal Masroor (an imam is the head of a Muslim community) answers the question as clearly as can be: Nothing.

Though unrelated to the violence-inclined Allah invoking Turkish leader – Imam Masroor asserts in angry disbelief repeatedly how killings don’t belong in the Kuranic teachings (Kuran as the Holy Book of Muslims):

 

 

For the time being, it is the people of Turkey who need our fact-based knowledge about what is taking place in their part of the world.  Tomorrow, it will most certainly be in a different segment of our planet.  For greed, lust in and abuse of power, violation of human rights, brutality, the killing of the innocent does not solely a Turkish agenda make.  In heart-felt empathy for but unfortunately geographically distant collaboration with those who presently suffer or may be subjected to suffering within their own country’s borders at another point in time, I end my words with a call to the world by Noam Chomsky in support of the Gezi Parkı Resistance:

 

 

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What has violence gotten anything to do with celebration?

Two days ago, some countries acknowledged, some others rejected once more the United Nations International Women’s Day (IWD).  Cultural entities around the world coincided their fertile grounds for violence against women with the supposed celebration of their female populations. South Africa and India became two of the most adored objects of the media, Celebrating International Women’s Day due to “recent cases of violence against women” on their soil.

In the honor of IWD, seven injustices women around the world meet became newsworthy yet once again.  Among them, China, India and Afghanistan attained considerable attention.  Sex-selective abortion and infanticide brought China and India to the news, while Afghanistan, this time, competed in the list due to its lack of education rights for its females.  Lesser crimes against women in relatively wide-spread coverage included no rights to drive in Saudi Arabia, far fewer rights in divorce in Egypt, restricted land ownership in Lesotho, media coverage discrepancies in Latin America and gender pay gap in the United States.

With a substantial leap from concerns over equal pay for both sexes, selected world media leaders took us to a brief tour in one of the exclusive districts of Istanbul, in quest of a public gallery constructed in commemoration of IWD following the increase in “honor killings” of women in Turkey.  The displays consist of newspaper clips of stories of women murdered by the men of their families, i.e. husbands, divorced husbands, fathers, father-in-laws, brothers, brother-in-laws, uncles, etc. A large banner reading “There is no excuse for violence against a woman” functions as the onset of the news program, Beyoğlu’nda ‘Kadına şiddetin bahanesi yoktur’ sergisi.

At the risk of being ridiculed – in view of the above-mentioned violence’s scope, I claim that even one hand constitutes a brutal act when used to slap someone regardless of that strike’s force. So is using pepper spray on unarmed, non-violent, nonthreatening, defenseless people, as the following video, Kadınlar gününde kadına biber gazı documents.  The clip makes history on Turkish lands since the founding of the Republic of Turkey in 1923 by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk – on International Women’s Day, nonetheless.  For, the Islamist Erdoğan administration uses police to stop women in Hatay, Turkey with pepper spray from voicing their demands for anti-violence against women in a peaceful walk.

An image from a critically-claimed cinematic production, “Osama” enters the memory:

Wasn’t it mere water, after all, that the Talibani had used on women to dissolve their quest for work to survive in their man-less households? Before ordering their murders without trial on the slightest suspense of their “misbehavior”?  On behalf of Islam?

Let us have a quick fact-check against the backlash of at least a few of the relevant teachings of the Kur’an regarding some of the hereby summarized crimes against women: Driving?  There is – as to be expected – no mention of it.  It, thus, has no connection to Islam when Saudi Arabia or elsewhere is concerned. Rights in divorce? Equal for both genders, with a clause to more heavily support the woman; especially, if she is expecting or already a parent. Right for education? Equal for both genders.

Celebrating women? What an impossible feat as long as distortions, misinterpretations, misconstructions, de-constructions, or reconstructions of religious texts reign over humanity when at least the three “main” world faiths are concerned!

 

Related Articles and Images:

Joyce Stevens. “A History of International Women’s Day”

Women Watch. “History of International Women’s Day”

Women Watch. “A Promise is a Promise. Time for action to end violence against women. UN System Observances for International Women’s Day 2013”

Women’s Day. Picture images from around the world

“7 Injustices Faced by Women Around the World”

“Turkey celebrates int’l Women’s Day”

“Pain, not joy on Women’s Day, says Turkish pop icon”

“Turkish Women Underrepresented In Politics”

The Kur’an

International Men’s Day Global Website

About International Men’s Day

Definition of “violence” in English

Definition of “violence” in Turkish

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