Sunday, December 16, 2007

Horror Under the Hijab

By Stephen Brown

Aqsa ParvezA Canadian Muslim teenager was murdered this week for trying to establish her own identity by moving out of her family home and for reportedly defying her father’s command to cover her head. Meanwhile, Canada’s largest daily newspaper, the Toronto Star, disgracefully hid its own head in the sand.

Pakistani-Canadian Aqsa Parvez, 16, was strangled by her father in an honor murder last Monday in the Toronto-area city of Mississauga. Refusing to wear the Islamic hijab, Parvez, who was herself born in Pakistan, wanted to live the normal lifestyle of a Canadian teenage girl, but ran into conflict with her strict, religious father. One friend and schoolmate said the Canadian teenager was afraid of her father and often came to school wearing bruises, the result of his violence.

“She was scared of her father; he was always controlling her,” the friend told the National Post, a Canadian national newspaper. “She wasn’t allowed to go out or do anything.”

Aqsa ParvezNevertheless, the Grade 11 student, according to friends, would leave home wearing the hijab but arrive at school in western-style clothes, having changed on the way. This was part of her courageous desire to live her own life and overcoming the fear in which she lived.

Despite the Canadian public’s disgust and outrage over this murder and in contrast to Parvez’s courage, the Toronto Star avoided tackling head on the issue of Muslim male intolerance and violence toward female family members who wish to establish their independence and lead their own lives. Instead, the Star published a story that, incredibly, accuses a supposedly racist Canadian society for being equally responsible for the cultural “tension” in Muslim families concerning the issue of head coverings. In the story, two young Muslim women say some Muslim families do not want their daughters to wear the hijab because it will make them “the targets of racism.” If only Aqsa Parvez could have lived in such a family! Not surprisingly, no Muslim women or girls were interviewed who are forced to wear the Islamic clothing.

But this unbelievable attempt to detract people’s attention from the real issue of Muslim intolerance, even hatred, towards females’ desire for freedom and to establish a moral equivalency between a tolerant Canadian society and an Islamic culture that has seen dozens of Muslim women perish in honor killings in Western Europe (48 in Germany alone between 1996 and 2006) should not come as a surprise to anyone who has ever read the left-leaning Star.

The politically correct Star, you see, is Canada ’s paper of multiculturalism. Hardly an issue ever comes out without the word "racism" appearing somewhere on its pages. (multicultural societies always have racism as their rallying cry). As a result of its support of, and belief in, the possibility of establishing a multicultural country, left-wing media organs like the Star and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation will never deeply investigate any negative aspects of cultures newly arrived in Canada. Such revelations, they fear, may damage their unrealizable multicultural dream.

By the way, in the Star’s and CBC’s world, racism does not exist in the newcomers’ cultures. And if it does, it is the fault of the host Canadian society. In fact, the same day the blame-racist Canadian society story appeared, a Toronto Star columnist wrote that English Canadians, one of the Canada’s two founding peoples who now make up only about fifteen per cent of Toronto’s population, do not welcome immigrants with enough love -- again the host country’s fault.

Leftist Canadian women’s groups are also passengers in the same see-no-evil-in-new-cultures, hear-no-evil-in-new-cultures boat as the Star, since they also support multiculturalism. Their hypocrisy does not even allow them to criticize and intervene to help oppressed Muslim females let alone oppose the polygamy some Muslims are practicing here in Canada. For this, western feminists are criticized by Muslim feminists both in Canada and in Western Europe. These Muslim feminists say they can’t get over the fact that western feminists pretend they care so much for the rights of women in some land thousands of miles away but ignore the oppression of Third World women right in their own societies. The silence of their western sisters, these Muslim feminists point out, facilitates this oppression.

But if left-wing Canadian media ever investigates the Parvez killing properly, they will most likely have to face some hard, cold and uncomfortable cultural facts. While the refusal to wear the hijab has been reported to be a significant contributing factor in her murder, the main reason for the brutal killing, they may discover, is that the terrified Muslim teenager had moved out of her home two weeks earlier and was living with a friend. In fact, one newspaper quoted another of Aqsa’s friends who said her father threatened to kill her if she left the family home. Moving out, western European social workers say, is a death sentence for these woman. In a strict, religious Muslim family, no woman is allowed to establish an identity of her own outside of her family, religion and culture.

Aqsa Parvez’s death, they will learn, may also have been a family decision. The high school student, one of eight children, lived, according to one newspaper report, in a house with eleven other people in an extended family. Like the Hatun Surucu murder in 2005 in Germany that awoke the people of that country to the suffering of Muslim women in their midst, police are investigating Parvez’s killing as a premeditated one that involved the concurrence of several family members, possibly even including female ones.

After all, one newspaper reported Aqsa’s older sister used to spy on her at school for the family and Aqsa only discarded the hijab after her sister had graduated. The dead teenager had even established her own Facebook site with her photo and uncovered hair on it accompanied by comments about popular culture. Tragically, this also may have led to her demise as her non-traditional, independent lifestyle was now visible to everyone.

Moreover, the unfortunate teenager was probably also, like Hatun Surucu, lured to her death by her brother, possibly her favorite one. The police are currently investigating this angle. The independent Surucu was lured to a bus stop to meet a brother who murdered her to restore the family’s honor because she was “living like a German.” Parvez was picked up by her brother at a bus stop, saying he would bring her home to get a change of clothes, where she was then killed, for living like a Canadian. At this point in time, the brother has been charged with obstruction of justice.

What will probably be the most sickening discovery is that none of the people involved in Aqsa’s killing will express any regret or remorse. On the contrary, they will be happy because they believe they have restored their family’s honor and will be respected for having done so by like-minded others in their community who, like them, practice an anti-civilizational legal and cultural apartheid in the country hosting them and their families. The Star will never investigate why such people come to Canada and other western countries but never really live here.

But unlike the Star, not everyone has their head in the sand. Tarek Fatah, founder of the Canadian Muslim Congress, calls Parvez’s murder a blight on Islam.“In my mind, this was an honor killing,” said Fatah, adding its going to get worse before it gets better.

And as if he was talking directly to the Toronto Star, the Muslim community leader also said there needs to be an honest debate about this murder and that “the media should not just talk to the ones wearing head scarves but the ones who do not want to.”

With or without the hijab on, Aqsa Parvez would only have nodded her agreement with that.

Source: FrontPage Magazine
H/T: The Intelligence Summit

Gaza Celebrates Hamas Anniversary
Israeli Dhimmis Continue to Supply Utilities to Terrorists

HamasTens of thousands of Islamists rallied in central Gaza City on Saturday to mark Hamas' 20th anniversary, in a show of force six months after the terrorist group seized control of the territory. Waving green flags and banners, throngs of Palestinians poured into Katiba Square ahead of the rally at which Hamas leader Ismail Haniya and other officials reaffirmed their commitment to armed struggle against Israel.

"Resistance and jihad (holy struggle) is the best path to the liberation of Palestine, not negotiations and meetings, sitting at round tables and exchanging smiles and chuckles with the Jews," Haniya told the crowd.

The rally was the largest show of strength since the Islamists seized control in Gaza in June, routing forces loyal to president Mahmud Abbas and futher deepening the economic and political isolation of the coastal strip. Read more ...

Source: AFP
H/T: TFO

Friday, December 14, 2007

Hizb ut-Tahrir: A Rising Force In Palestinian Territories

By Jonathan Spyer

Demonstrations across the West Bank in protest of the Annapolis conference showcased the entry into the public eye of a new force in Palestinian politics - the pan-Islamic Hizb ut-Tahrir (Party of Liberation.) The party held a demonstration numbering 2,500 in Hebron, and one of its members was killed in subsequent clashes with Palestinian Authority police. Similar gatherings took place in other West Bank cities. Hizb ut-Tahrir's slow emergence from eccentric obscurity has been a subject of note among observers of Palestinian affairs in recent years. The anti-Annapolis demonstrations are the latest stage in this process. These events may indicate deeper political currents - both in the West Bank and beyond.

Hizb ut-Tahrir was established in 1952, in then-Jordanian-controlled Jerusalem, by Sharia court judge Taqi al-Din al Nabhani, from the village of Ijzim, near Haifa. The party's goal is the reestablishment of an Islamic caliphate to govern the whole Muslim world under Islamic law - and eventually to bring the entire world under Islamic rule. The caliphate, a title that had been claimed by Ottoman sultans since the fall of the Abbasid Caliphate, was formally abolished by Turkey's founding father Kemal Ataturk in 1924. In its half-century of existence, Hizb ut-Tahrir has developed into an international Islamist organization known to be active in 45 countries. It has particularly active branches in Indonesia and Uzbekistan, and has made inroads into the Pakistani community in the United Kingdom. Read more ...

Source: Global Politician
H/T: The Intelligence Summit

Ex-convicts plead guilty to planning SoCal terror attacks

Two men accused of plotting behind prison walls to launch jihad-style attacks on military sites, synagogues and other targets in 2005 pleaded guilty Friday to conspiring to levy war against the United States.

Kevin James, 31, and Levar Haley Washington, 28, both pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy charges. Washington also pleaded guilty to using a firearm to further that conspiracy.

James faces up to 20 years in prison when he is sentenced March 31. Washington faces up to 20 years in prison on the conspiracy charge and five years to life for the firearms offense when he is sentenced April 28. Read more ...

Source: AP
H/T: The Intelligence Summit

Islamic Extremist Convention 2007

By Joe Kaufman

KaufmanStarting December 21st, Rosemont, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, will play host to two organizations tied to the Muslim Brotherhood (MB), the inspiration for so many of the world’s worst terror groups. The organizations, the Muslim American Society (MAS) and the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA), have an extremist history of their own. Soon Chicago, December 2007, will become a part of that history, as the Hyatt Regency O’Hare packs in thousands of Muslims that refuse to speak out against those that use their religion as a means to commit violence.

Most people in America are unaware of the fact that the Muslim Brotherhood is not just an overseas group – that it’s here in America, as well. Indeed the group has had a presence in the United States starting in the 1950s. MAS was established in 1992, because MB leaders thought that previously created American MB groups were becoming too assimilated into Western society. ICNA was founded in 1971 as an embodiment of MB Pakistan or Jamaat-e-Islami (JI).

Both MAS and ICNA use the internet to spread violent forms of bigotry. MAS is currently propagating material via the internet calling for the murder of Jews and the waging of war against non-Muslims, while ICNA runs a website, Why Islam (WI), where WI leaders and members target Jews and discuss the merits of Hamas and Hezbollah.

Also, both MAS and ICNA have had individuals involved in their organizations that are serving prison sentences after having been charged with terrorist activity. Randall Todd “Ismail” Royer, the former Communications Director for MAS, was convicted of conspiring with Laskar-e-Taiba (LeT), an Al-Qaeda related group, to attack Americans and Indians overseas. And four members of the ICNA-related ‘Houston Taliban’ were charged with jihad training with firearms for the purpose of joining the Taliban to, as well, attack Americans overseas; so far, three of the four have been found guilty.

Furthermore, ICNA has been involved in terror financing. When the Al-Khidmat Foundation (AKF), a Pakistani “charity” run by JI, gave $99 thousand to the head of Hamas, Khaled Mashaal, in August of 2006, ICNA was the group’s top donor. As well, shortly before and shortly after the attacks of 9/11, the Southeast division of ICNA (ICNA-SE) was soliciting funds for Al-Qaeda related groups via the web.

None of the above has raised any eyebrows in Chicago, as the city will be opening its arms to MAS and ICNA for their 6th Annual Convention, commencing on December 21st and ending December 25th. Included in the gathering, much like all of the groups’ past conventions, will be a large list of the country’s most outspoken Islamic radicals. This year’s event features:

  • Jamal Badawi. Badawi was named by the U.S. government as an “Unindicted Co-conspirator” for the Holy Land Foundation (HLF) trial that began in July, which dealt with millions of dollars in fundraising for Hamas. Badawi has authored a book entitled Gender Equity in Islam, in which he justifies the beating of women by their husbands.
  • Jamal Said. Said is the imam of the Mosque Foundation, located in Bridgeview, Illinois, an Islamic center with ties to Hamas. Said served as the Treasurer of the Al Aqsa Educational Fund, an entity identified by the FBI as a Hamas “charitable” front. Said, like Badawi, was also named as an “Unindicted Co-conspirator” for the HLF trial.
  • Raed Tayeh. Tayeh is a former Executive Board Member of the Chicago chapter of the Islamic Association for Palestine (IAP), the now defunct American propaganda wing of Hamas. In November 2001, Tayeh was fired from his job as a Congressional aide to then-U.S. Representative Cynthia McKinney, when a letter of his was published by a newspaper accusing Jewish lawmakers of exhibiting inappropriate loyalty to the State of Israel.
  • Zulfiqar Ali Shah. Shah is the former South Asia Director of KindHearts, an Islamic “charity” that was shut down by the U.S. government in February 2006 for raising millions of dollars for Hamas. In a June 2001 article in Islam Online, Shah is quoted as saying, “If we are unable to stop the Jews now, their next stop is Yathrib (The Prophet's city of Medina), where the Jews used to live until their expulsion by Prophet Muhammad (SAW). That’s the pinnacle of their motives.”

While MAS and ICNA are portrayed in the media as “mainstream” and “moderate,” their involvement in extremist activity makes them anything but. They are groups that openly promote violent organizations and propagate hate towards non-Muslims. This is evidenced in the type of speakers they invite to their events; in the way they use the internet to spread radical Islam; and in their members’ direct involvement with terrorist groups. Yet, regardless of this, MAS and ICNA have built up a tremendous following.

When the American public asks why Muslims haven't mobilized against the radicals in their community, one only has to look upon the MAS ICNA convention, where thousands of Muslims in attendance will be turning a blind eye to violence in the name of their religion. The theme they are using for this year's event is “Islam Universal Message & Universal Values.” If the Islam that is portrayed by MAS and ICNA - one that is violent and intolerant of others - truly is the religion's universal message and values, then there can be no place for it in our society or anywhere else.

However, if the religion of MAS, ICNA and the Muslim Brotherhood is a false expression of Islam, then Muslims of good conscious need to come out from hiding, stand up and say so - loud and clear - so that all in their community, radical and otherwise, hear their voices. “Chicago beware!”

Source: FrontPage Magazine
H/T: The Intelligence Summit

Going Easy on Espionage

By Joel Mowbray

MowbrayDespite using a sham marriage to fraudulently obtain citizenship and having multiple personal connections to a suspected Hezbollah financier, Nada Nadim Prouty, a 37-year-old illegal alien from Lebanon, rose quickly through the FBI, then the CIA.

While at the FBI, Prouty conducted unauthorized searches to see what law enforcement had on her, her sister (who is now in jail for tax evasion) and her sister's husband, a suspected Hezbollah financier, who is now on the lam. From her plea agreement earlier this month, where she pleaded guilty to three counts, we also know that Prouty illegally accessed top-secret FBI information about an investigation into Hezbollah.

So why are the Feds downplaying the case? And why is much of the mainstream media playing along? Most important, why is she going to do less jail time than many petty thieves?

Given the major lapses exposed by this embarrassing episode, the FBI and CIA understandably want the story to go away. With the mainstream media, it appears to be part of a much larger problem, wherein the threat of domestic Islamist terrorism is largely ignored.

Here's the backstory: Prouty came to America in 1989 on a student visa. After it expired the next year, she schemed to stay in the country by marrying a U.S. citizen. The two never lived together and did not consummate the marriage. She received her citizenship in 1994, and divorced her paper husband in 1995.

When the FBI went looking for more Arabic speakers, Prouty was snapped up in 1999. But this is where the stunning series of security breaches begins.

How did the top-secret security clearance process not pick up a phony marriage where she had done very little to cover her tracks? Consider that, according to the Detroit Free-Press, she never paid her contractual husband the promised several hundred dollars.

It appears the reason that neither the FBI nor the CIA detected that the first husband was just a pawn in her fraud is simple: They never talked to him. The Free-Press quoted the man's current wife saying that the first they've heard from law enforcement was just a few months ago.

Prouty didn't wait long to break the law. In September 2000 — one month after her sister, Elfat El Aouar, married suspected Hezbollah financier Talal Khalil Chahine — Prouty checked the FBI database to see what the agency had on herself, her sister and her new brother-in-law. Mr. Chahine, as it happens, had a pre-existing relationship with Prouty, serving as her boss in the early 1990s and filing a statement testifying to the validity of her fake marriage.

Shortly before she was hired by the CIA, Prouty went digging into FBI files again in June 2003, this time pulling up top-secret information about a Detroit field office investigation into Hezbollah.

The timing was suspicious. Her sister and brother-in-law, both Detroit-area residents, were allegedly already neck deep in Hezbollah fundraising at this point. They not only attended a Hezbollah fundraiser in Lebanon in August 2002, but Chahine was also one of the two keynote speakers. The other was Hezbollah spiritual leader Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah. The two keynoters were even photographed sitting next to each other.

Despite stealing classified information on Hezbollah while having strong connections to someone who has spoken at a Hezbollah fundraiser and is now a fugitive from tax evasion charges stemming from a plot to funnel $20 million to Lebanon, Prouty is facing just six to 12 months in jail, according to the terms of her plea bargain.

What's truly mind-bending, though, is the lengths to which U.S. officials are going to portray this as nothing more than a case of fraudulent citizenship. Prouty easily could have passed sensitive information on to her sister and brother-in-law, two people close enough to Hezbollah to help lead a fund-raiser for the terrorists.

No matter how trivial the government claims the case is, there are more than enough questions for a media feast. Yet aside from the Detroit papers, the L.A. Times and Newsweek, few major print outlets did much investigation. The New York Times stressed the Hezbollah angle, but buried the story on page 21. The Washington Post ran the story on page A3, but buried the Hezbollah connection. Neither famed paper did a follow-up.

But this drama became completely absurd in the pages of the NY Daily News. Paraphrasing a “source,” the article declared: “She was so good that some in the agency want to hire Prouty back one day.”

That’s not all. The article offers an explanation with a deceptive doozy: “‘There is no indication at this point that she was engaged in espionage’ for Hezbollah while at the CIA, said a senior U.S. official familiar with the case.” Notice the careful phrasing. Prouty’s plea bargain suggests only espionage while at the FBI, not at the CIA.

As dangerous a precedent as it is that Prouty can get a slap on the wrist for potentially harming national security, the real travesty is that without sufficient media pressure, the FBI and CIA might not take the necessary steps to prevent someone else who might do even more damage.

Source: FrontPage Magazine
H/T: The Intelligence Summit
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Islam is O.K. The Imam's are NOT!

A couple of days ago we told you the story of a 16 year old Canadian Muslim girl who was strangled to death by her father because she refused to wear a Hijab (head cover) when she went out in public.

(Even though Toronto is the most cosmopolitan city in the world, wearing a Hijab for a sixteen year old suburban Muslim girl is still a traumatic experience. Especially at school!)
Her father thought that her intransigence on correct Muslim dress was bringing dishonor to the family and this led to the altercation that claimed young Aqsa's life!

The irony in all of this is the fact that it is NOT Islam that is making a big deal out of proper dress, but rather the Imam's themselves.

Here we have a group of misogynist men who have been brought up with a sense of "Fundamentalist, Islamic" beliefs, (Otherwise they would not have become Imam's to begin with!) and hammer their own prejudices and interpretations of Islam into the faithful five times a day.

(Imam's are not the same as a priest in the Christian faith in that Islam, on the surface, let's every man communicate directly with God, while in actual fact it is the Imam's that control public opinion and the direction of the faith.)
Here is an example of this from my book "The Plain Truth About God!"

The Islamic State, as it has come to be known, exists in the Middle East on the principal of obedience being due to God only and that Muslims reject the Western, secular idea of separation of church and state!

This is a nice trick fostered by the Islamic clergy to hold on to as much power as possible in spite of the emergence of democratic and populist movements in the world at large.

One of the greatest drawbacks to Islam is that it operates on the surface as being infallible, much as Christianity did.

Among Muslims however, it is acknowledged that the Prophet Muhammad left no actual interpretation of the Koran, but rather said it should be read and taken literally as the word of God.

This means we have a Divine text that is adding to the confusion by being interpreted differently from scholar to scholar and person to person.

This interpretation by individuals depends on every one’s personal understanding, experience, social, political, and economic environment.

(In fact, this happened almost exactly the same way among the early Christians.)

In Islam, no one, not an individual dictator, an elected national body, or a scholar of religion, theoretically has the right to make any legislation that contradicts what is stated in the Koran or the Hadith of the Prophet.

If they do so, they are committing an act of grave Shirk, or “putting themselves in God’s place.”

BUT, the clergy interprets and decides which part of the Koran they want the general population to use.

They are also the ones that give guidance as to “what it really means.”

It is one of the greatest con-jobs in history since anything that goes wrong or not according to their particular plan is obviously “God’s Will.”

(It is also the one of the main reasons that a Muslims will end every second sentence with the phrase “Insh-Allah” - or –“ God willing!” Being as pragmatic as they are, this puts the onus back on God for whatever happens and absolves them of being in “Shirk.”)

As a believer, a man (remember this is a male dominated organization that would put the Catholic Church to shame) can offer his own proposals for the renewal of his religion, so it is always open to change.

The sad truth of the matter is that in Islam, as in every other religion in the world, there are no shortages of people who try and put themselves in positions of influence and power. (The Imam's)

This, for the purpose of spreading their own version of reality amongst the masses.
Another one of the other great threats to the Islamic state comes from a source that has been kept in check for the last 1400 years.

Of course we are talking about the subjugation of women throughout the Muslim world.

Men are concerned that any loosening of the reins that keeps their females in a position of subservience will lead to an all out revolution by women.

(In light of this, it is interesting to note that women enjoyed an almost equal position with men in Arab society before the coming of Islam.)

This makes us wonder how much of the abolition of rights for women was a cultural phenomenon and how much can be attributed to a misogynistic group of men (Imam's)using religion to undermine a woman’s place in society.

We are not just pointing the finger at Muslim society here, since it is a fact that the Christian community has also done its fair share in the subjugation of women. (After all, it was Jesus who championed the cause of women, only to have it put on the back burner again by Paul!)

From the book;

It might seem a bit unfair to bring this subject up in the section on Islam but the Muslims are, for the moment, the greatest perpetrators of injustice to women, and since the matter must be addressed, it may as well be here.

As we saw earlier in this book, throughout history it has been the men who waged war, made laws, and generally ran things according to their outlook. That was fine when the men went hunting while women stayed back at the campsite or early settlements.

Over the centuries, however, we have seen a gradual shift in responsibilities and division of work, with females taking an ever more proactive role in society, as they should!

Men, by their very nature of being the hunter-gatherers, have always had the inclination to “shoot first and ask questions later.”

This might have worked well in the past, but society is at a point now where the more reasoned and analytical approach employed by women might be a lot better for us in the long run. The natural balance that the female mind gives to a male deserves to be listened to much more than it has been so far in history.

Remember, in the Jahili culture of old, women used to mix freely with men. They used to dress in the same way as women in the secular societies now dress themselves.

It was only after the advent of Islam that it became the custom for Arab women to spend most of their time at home, to cover their bodies, and be kept away from other men.

You will now find some people who tell you that the Hijab (women’s Islamic dress) is an Arab custom, and not an Islamic requirement. Wrong!

Arab society was at one time much more enlightened than now and it is through the diligence of a few religious extremists through the centuries that the population has become narrow-minded in their world and cultural views.

This is one of the first things that have to be changed for women to take their rightful place in Arab society.

But then again-the difference between the wishing and the doing is great.
** Women have three roles - obey the father, obey the husband, obey the son.—Mid-East Proverb.

Allan W Janssen is the author of The Plain Truth About God at www.God-101.com and the blog "Perspective" at http://God-101.blogspot.com

A State Department Official Praises Saudis on Terror

WASHINGTON — A Saudi Arabian re-education program that treats terrorists as victims of a misguided ideology and not criminals to be warehoused for life in a cell is winning praise from America's top ambassador for counterterrorism.

At a talk yesterday at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Ambassador Dell Dailey said, "The Saudi program is about the best program in existence today. ... It is geared for the Saudi people, it is focused on their people and treats them as a victim, not a criminal."

Mr. Dailey, a retired lieutenant general in the Army who commanded special operations at MacDill Air Force Base before taking his counterterrorism post at the State Department, said that when he first asked about the program, a prison break inside the kingdom came up in conversation with his Saudi counterparts. Eventually, the Saudis found the escaped convicts and killed them in a bloody shoot out. Read more ...

Source: The New York Sun
H/T: The Intelligence Summit
Lt.Gen. Dell Dailey, USA (Ret.arded)
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Mistrial for six men accused of plotting to bomb Chicago tower
Seventh man acquitted by Miami jury

U.S. prosecutors lost a major terrorism case on Thursday, when a mistrial was declared in the case of six men accused of plotting to blow up Chicago's Sears Tower.

A seventh man was acquitted.

The mistrial was declared after a federal jury in Miami failed to reach a verdict following nine days of deliberations. The jury of six men and six women twice sent notes to the presiding judge indicating they could not reach verdicts, but were told to keep trying. Read more ...

Source: CBC News

Until the government gets it through their thick skulls that terrorism is a military issue and terrorism suspects have no place in civilian courts, terrorists will be getting off.
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Thursday, December 13, 2007

Jihad noted in wiretaps
Jurors hear conversations of 2 in charity fraud case

BOSTON— The jury in the case of three officers of a defunct Muslim charity listened yesterday to wiretaps in U.S. District Court in which two of the defendants spoke to two men who subsequently were convicted with Jose Padilla on terrorism conspiracy charges.

However, when jury members heard Emadeddin Z. Muntasser and Samir Al-Monla, successive presidents of Care International from 1993 through 1998, talk to Kifah Jayoussi and Adham Hassoun, they were not told that Mr. Jayoussi and Mr. Hassoun are awaiting sentencing in federal court in Miami after having been convicted in August with Mr. Padilla. Mr. Jayoussi and Mr. Hassoun and Mr. Padilla were charged with belonging to a North American terrorism support cell that provided money, recruits and supplies to Islamic extremists around the world. Read more ...

Source: Worcester Telegram & Gazette
H/T: The Intelligence Summit
This is the supplementary essay I promised to send to comments sent by readers o f my piece "The Quran's Status as Scripture in Islam" published under the rubric Muslims against Sharia on 12/12/2007. I am hoping this essay is featured on or copied on that site. Rasheed Talib.

SITUATING THE QURAN IN HISTORY

A justification of my radical thesis on Islamic reform
by Rasheed Talib

Abstract

The Quran, it is argued in the piece that follows, is a unique scripture. The history of how it came into existence, as narrated by Islam's early Traditionists, shows that the revelations were received by the Prophet not as a whole or in a single session. They came down to him 'from on high' at various times and stages of his 22-year prophetic career – as and when he needed divine guidance during his career as prophet-cum-political-leader.
A close examination of the Quran's verses leads one inescapably to the conclusion that these are of two kinds: i) verses which convey cosmic and spiritual truths; and ii) verses which deal with mundane and routine issues. The whole of the Quran can hardly be treated as being of equal significance. And it is only reasonable to conclude that while verses of spiritual import are obligatory on the Believer, those of a mundane, this-worldly nature are not.
A major constraint in Islam's developing a modern world-view has been that its followers are discouraged – from fear of a massive clerical backlash – to examine closely the historical facts that underlie the Quran's origin. As a result, the community has been led (misled?) into believing that the Quran so completely embodies a set of divine instructions, aimed at solving the world's problems no matter how complex, that it is sinful even to lift its covers as it were and confront the truth that so glaringly stares one in the face. This has in turn led to the common belief among Muslims that the Quran is God's eternal word, aimed at governing every aspect of life on earth, a quick-fix for all human problems, a complete code of life. Put in words favoured by the ulema, the Quran is "Word of God, true and valid for all times and places".
When one takes into account the varied circumstances and situations in which the Quran was revealed, however, it is truer to say that the Holy Book contains both historical/political verses and scripturally significant ones and is thus best seen as part-scripture, part-history.
Once one views the Quran in this light, many of the difficulties posed by Islam's medieval human and social value-system disappear – difficulties arising specifically from verses that prescribe: a) cruel forms of punishment; b) unequal treatment of women; c) outdated gender-insensitive rules of inheritance; and d) the waging of 'jihad' in the sense of holy war against 'kafirs' or non-Believers.

Introduction

Now, half-way in my effort to write a book on Islam – with the tentative title "Islamic Reform and Renewal: Transforming a Tradition from Within" – friends who have read my earlier essays have rightly raised questions. What, they ask, do I mean by the expression 'Situating the Quran in history'? How does my approach to Islamic reform differ from that of my predecessors, especially those from the India-Pakistan subcontinent who in the past two centuries made valuable contributions to the subject?
This note is an attempt to answer these questions. It is divided into three major Sections: I) Background, II) Argument, III) Answers (and sub-sections under some of the heads).

Section I. Background

An Indian Muslim myself, I believe Indian Muslims are in a better position than their co-religionists from other regions to think and write freely on issues of Islamic reform. I say this for the following reasons.

First, with a population which at last count was estimated to be more than 120 million, Indian Muslims today constitute the third largest such community in the world - after those of Indonesia, Bangladesh and Pakistan.

Secondly, Muslims in India live in a country which is constitutionally, and most of the time politically too, a secular state. And, it is my belief that a secular ethos makes for an environment in which an individual is free to take a radical position on sensitive religious issues – a privilege not available to people in an ideology-bound 'Islamic state'. (I must add, however, that few Indian Muslims since the subcontinent's partition in 1947 have utilized this freedom).

Along with some other writers, I make a distinction between a country with a large Muslim minority like India and a Muslim-majority country like Pakistan – or, for that matter, Indonesia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia et al – a list which must now include Bangladesh. While all these are Muslim-majority countries, they are also by constitutional choice 'Islamic states'.

Thirdly, pre-Partition India was home to a rich tradition of radical writings on Islam to which scholars of all shades of opinion contributed. To take examples from each of the two camps into which they can be broadly divided – 'radical-conservative' and 'radical-reformist' – there were Syed Abdulla Barelvi and Maulana Abul Ala Mawdoodi from the former and Saiyyid Ahmad Khan and Allama Iqbal from the latter.

While their perspectives on the subject were vastly different, they shared one objective in common. Moved by the sad state into which a once-vibrant Islam had fallen in comparison with Christianity, each, according to his vision, sought to redefine the role of Islamic tradition in the modern world.

Section II. Argument

I shall begin this Section by laying out the first premise of my argument. I believe if Muslims are to find their way to a Reformation of the faith, they must start by taking a fresh look at their most sacred book, the Quran. One way, they could do this is by 'situating the Quran in history'. To put it another way, by locating the Quran in the context of its times.

While maintaining this, I do not in any way mean to undermine the traditional belief, cherished by a majority of Muslims worldwide, that the Quran is in its most literal sense 'the Word of God' – a divinely revealed scripture directly revealed to Muhammad in 7th century Arabia. For a journalist-writer like me, who lacks the necessary credentials, it is futile to try to do so.

The secular-minded in India had this lesson drilled into them in the early 1990s – when despite loud protests, a historic mosque was razed to the ground by fundamentalist mobs for the only reason that it was built by a Muslim ruler on a site believed to be the birthplace of a Hindu warrior-deity of uncertain historical origin. The lesson we learnt then was: Matters of faith cannot be resolved by arguments of reason.

Time is the best solvent

But there is hope yet for Islam. History shows, time is the best solvent. Muslims today may take comfort from the fact that they are not the only people to hold that their scriptures are a direct revelation delivered from the Heavens. Until recently, Christians subscribed to a similar doctrine, called 'the inerrancy of the Bible'. Today, apart from a fundamentalist fringe, found chiefly in parts of the United States, few Christians take the belief seriously.

Of the three great monotheistic faiths of the East, Islam today is the youngest. Historically, it can be traced back a mere 1500 years. Christianity by contrast is more than 2000 years old and Judaism twice that old. The two religions have had time to mellow and mature. They have now been able to assimilate the human and social values of the modern age into their traditional belief-systems. Islam too will no doubt before long evolve a rational view of the Quran's true status as scripture.

A moderate interpretation fails

The eminent Pakistani scholar, Fazlur Rahman, had put out a moderate interpretation of the traditional doctrine about the Quran's being the literal word of God. Without disturbing the belief, he sought to rationalize it so that it was more in accord with the modern temper. But instead of examining his suggestion critically, the ulema accused him of seeking to subvert the faith. He was hounded out of the office he held as director of Pakistan's official Institute of Islamic Research where he was doing useful work on updating Islam's tenets.

What was Rahman's "sin"? All he had done was to suggest tentatively that a rational view of the Quran required Muslims to accept that it was a divinely 'inspired' rather than a directly 'revealed' scripture. He supported this view with scholarly citations from the Quran. Yet his effort failed to satisfy the ulema. They nipped it in the bud although many modern Muslims felt it was carefully enough formulated to come within the bounds of tradition.

The following lengthy excerpt from Rahman's book, entitled "Islam", will help readers see what exactly he had in mind and how hesitantly – and somewhat ambiguously - he had put the point across. (Incidentally, these may be the very passages that led to his downfall).

For the Quran itself, and consequently for the Muslims, the Qur'an is the Word of God (Kalaam Allah). Muhammad, too, was unshakably convinced that he was the recipient of the Message from God, the totally Other . . . so much so that he rejected, on the strength of this consciousness, some of the most fundamental historical claims of the Judaeo-Christian tradition about Abraham and other prophets. This 'Other' through some [ineffable non-human] channel 'dictated' the Qur'an with an absolute authority. The voice from the depths of life spoke distinctly, unmistakably and imperiously. Not only does the word qur'an, meaning 'recitation', clearly indicate this, but the text of the Qur'an itself states in several places that the Qur'an is verbally revealed and not merely in its 'meaning' and ideas. The Qur'anic term for 'Revelation' is wahy which is fairly close in its meaning to 'inspiration', provided the latter is not supposed to exclude the verbal mode necessarily (by 'Word', of course, we do not mean sound). The Qur'an says, God speaks to no human being (i.e. through sound words) except through wahy (i.e. through idea-word inspiration) or from behind the veil, or He may send a messenger (an angel) who speaks through wahy . . . Even thus have We inspired you with a spirit of Our Command . . . (chapter 42, verses 51-52).
When, however, during the second and the third centuries of Islam, acute differences of opinion, controversies partly influenced by Christian doctrines, arose among the Muslims about the nature of the Revelation, the emerging Muslim 'orthodoxy' [meaning the ulema], which was at the time in the crucial stage of formulating its precise content, emphasized the eternality of the Prophet's Revelation, its 'otherness', objectivity and verbal character. The Qur'an itself certainly maintains the 'otherness', the 'objectivity' and the verbal character of the Revelation, but it had equally certainly rejected its externality vis a vis the Prophet. It declares, The Trusted Spirit [meaning presumably Angel Gabriel] has brought it down upon your heart [ i.e. Muhammad's} that you may be the warner' (chapter 26, verse 194) and again, 'Say: He who is an enemy of Gabriel (let him be), for it is he who has brought it down to your heart upon your heart (chapter 2, verse 97: emphasis in the original).

Reason for failure

Like a good academic, Rahman went on to explore the reason for the ulema's failure to interpret 'revelation' in terms he had done. The reason may be, he observed, because of the medieval scholar's inability to make the distinction between the 'externality' or 'otherness' of the Quran and its nonetheless being a part of the subjective personality of the Prophet. Orthodoxy, he wrote, indeed all medieval thought

lacked the necessary intellectual tools to combine formulation of the dogma the otherness and verbal character with the work of the religious personality of the Prophet on the other, i.e. it lacked the intellectual capacity to say both that the Qur'an is entirely the Word of God and, in an ordinary sense, also entirely the word of Muhammad. (Rahman 1966:30-1)

A distinction, one feels, too subtle for the layperson to grasp.

Christianity's 'inerrancy of the Bible' doctrine

Since, as just noted, Islam's problem may be resolved with the passage of time, it is useful to inquire how Christianity overcame its 'inerrancy of the Bible' difficulty. Change in Christian thought - writes the Canadian scholar Andrew Rippin significantly in his slim 2-volume book, "The Muslims: Their Religious Beliefs and Practices" - came between the late 18th and early 19th centuries when scholars began to apply the 'historical-critical method' to the study of the Bible. (One wonders whether a critical study of the Quran based on historical principles may not do the same for Islam).

Taking his cue from the gloss Rahman had boldly put on orthodox dogma, and observing the potential in Islam for a similar transformation, evidenced by the recent spate of Modernist writings in some parts of the Muslim world, Rippin writes:

Another common tendency is to conceive the Quran [as Rahman does] not as revealed literally but as installed in Muhammad's heart and then spoken through the human faculties of the prophet. The language, therefore, is Muhammad's although it is still possible to hold that this is ultimately God's word also.
The impetus behind these discussions rests with the basic drive of the Modernist movements: the need to modernize, reform and rejuvenate Islam. The means to do this is found in removing what is envisioned to be the stumbling block: anti-rationalistic ideas along with norms which are perceived as not being in keeping with modern society.
In addition, there has been the methodological influence of the historical-critical method as developed in Europe. Basic to this method are a number of assumptions, all revolving around the scientific rational impulse – that history moves by causality and that those causes may be determined and studies. History must be studied according to the laws of reason, for that is the way the world works. Religion is nothing special in this regard: it is like philosophy or literature and like nature itself. It must be coherent, logical, and capable of being incorporated into an understanding of human history. Biblical scholarship of the eighteenth century enunciated this stance quite plainly, for example, in the case of Johann Salamo Semler who published a study of the Bible between 1171 and 1775 which 'called for a purely historical-philological interpretation of the Bible, in the light of the circumstances surrounding the origin of the various books, without any concern for edification'. . .
For the most part, the impact of the historical-critical method has been slow to be felt in the Muslim world, at least within the study of the Quran. The reasons for this lie within the traditional discussions concerning the nature of the Qur'an which have just been mentioned. It must be remembered how much Muslims perceive to be at stake here: the existence of Islam classically depends upon the miracle of the Qur'an. Thus, for those who have determined that this is the route to go, caution is a continuous feature. Assessing the basic character and nature of the Qur'an must be accomplished first, and that means raising the questions of the rationality of the text and its relationship to historical fact. The issue still lingers, as the following examples will show, of just how far Muslims can go in pursuing these questions while still remaining Islamic. (The Muslims, Volume 2: The Contemporary Period, p 104-5). [My note: Examples of modern reform movements referred to by the author towards the end of the excerpt were summarized in my last essay entitled "Jihad in its many avatars" e-mailed to many of you in August 2005].

Section III. Answers

I must turn now to the two pointed questions asked by the readers of my earlier pieces and mentioned in the Introduction. My replies are set out under Sections marked below as A) Situating the Quran in History; and B) Difference between my approach and that of earlier reformers.

A) Situating the Quran in history

In my earlier essays, I had set out at length the reason why I regard the Quran to be a unique scripture. Unique, not in the sense of contents but in the manner in which it was revealed. The revelations, it may be recalled, 'came down' to the Prophet not as a whole or at a single sitting, but at various times during his prophetic career (610-632).

On this point, all major sects of Islam seem to be agreed. The Shiites hold however - for what looks to me as being political rather than theological reasons - that the verses of the Quran (all 6,000-plus of them) were collected and compiled into a volume in the Prophet's lifetime, and a copy was actually presented to him by his cousin and favourite son-in-law, Ali bin Abu Talib. The Sunnis on the other hand argue that this was not possible since the last of the revelations was communicated to him only a week or so before his death. They staunchly believe that the Quran in volume form first came into existence a decade or two after the Prophet's death thanks mainly to the efforts of the third caliph, Uthman bin Affan (ruled 644-656).

The common ground between the two sects, however, is that the revelations came down as and when the Prophet needed divine guidance to cope with situations he faced during his career first as prophet in Mecca, and later as prophet-cum-political-leader in Medina. This is why the Quran may be called a unique scripture inasmuch as the manner of its delivery differs from that of other scriptures. Also the reason why I call it an 'instalment scripture'.

But, even if one accepts the traditional view that the Quran's verses are equally binding on the Believer, no matter what their nature, can it be seriously urged that everything contained in them is sacrosanct enough to make them 'scriptural'? Or, is it better to say that the verses fall into two different categories: the first comprising verses of spiritual significance (which are no doubt absolutely binding); and the second made up of verses dealing with politico-historical issues (which, being of lesser spiritual value, are not)?

If this way of looking at the Quran is accepted, the latter category of verses would include those that I have listed in the opening Section under items a) to d) – namely, a) cruel forms of punishment; b) unequal treatment of women; c) gender-insensitive rules of inheritance; and d) intolerance of and violence against non-Believers through 'jihad' in the sense of a holy war.

These and other similar verses are not, I submit, an integral part of the Prophet's religious mission; they are more in the nature of divine advices and instructions to the Prophet rather than scriptural prescriptions, often meant to help the Prophet steer the ship of state through the stormy seas of tribal politics.

To this, my radical suggestion that the Quran's verses need to be separated into 'binding' and 'non-binding' types, two objections could plausibly be raised: a) that the Quran is either wholly divine or not divine, thus some of its verses cannot be treated as binding while others are not; and b) that the concept of God is too elevated for Him to be seen playing a role in human affairs. I answer these objections under their respective heads below.

a) My reply to the first objection

Splitting the Quran's verses into different categories is not unknown to Islam. Early Muslim scholars often separated verses dealing with mundane matters from verses prescribing spiritual requirements calling the former 'muamalaat' and the latter 'ibadaat'. There is also the division that the text itself makes between verses revealed during the Prophet's first decade (when he functioned purely as prophet) called the 'Meccan' verses; and those revealed in Medina (where he had become head of what was virtually the world's first Islamic state) called the 'Medinan' verses.

This trend continues to this day and can be seen in the writings of contemporary Muslim scholars, the most eminent of them being the late Fazlur Rahman of Pakistan (discussed above). In one of his books, Rahman wrote that the Quran's messages of a moral and ethical kind need to be differentiated from those laying down legislative ordinances. In recent years, Columbia University 's professor of philosophy Aqueel Bilgrami, canvassed the view that while interpreting the Quran, its 'Meccan' verses need to be treated differently from its 'Medinan' verses.

Once a separation of some verses of the Quran from others is accepted as legitimate, it is but a short step to my point that its truly spiritual verses are significant in a higher sense than those dealing with mundane issues.

b) My reply to the second objection

I have a two-fold reply to give to the second objection:

i) Allah is often represented in anthropomorphic terms

There is a tendency among Muslims to see Allah in anthropomorphic terms; to see Him, in other words, as some kind of super-person rather than - as strict Islamic doctrine requires - as a wholly Abstract Being.

The strict position, however, is good merely in theory. In actual fact, Islam could not avoid going down the alternative path of lending to its abstract doctrine a human touch in order to make it popularly acceptable. Indeed, the Quran itself encourages the tendency. Some of its verses expressly refer to Allah's Hands; His Throne; His being able to see humans on Doomsday; and so on. And, at least two of the major schools of theology (the Hanbalite and even the more formidable Asharite) reinforced this view in arguing that the Quran's references to God should be seen as literal and real – a subject I hope to deal with in a subsequent essay.

Western scholars provide a historical basis for this dilution. Islam from its inception, they say, was involved in fierce competition with Christianity. It was necessary for it to make a clear-cut departure from Christian dogmas. One way this was achieved was to define Islam in wholly abstract terms since it was felt that Christianity had moved away from strict monotheism because of its belief in the Trinity. Similarly, Islam's doctrine of God being totally non-human helped it to distance itself from the other Christian dogma about Jesus being both Man and Son of God.

Arabic-knowing Malise Ruthven reinforces the Western theory with the following linguistic analysis:

As is suggested by the inclusion of the definite article in his name the God of the Quran is rather more abstract than that of the Old and New Testaments. Fatherhood is explicitly rejected, a matter of considerable significance in a society which set such store by kinship and paternity . . . It is the overwhelming presence of this deity, unique and unknowable, which makes itself felt in every verse of the Quran. Allah is supra-personal rather than abstractly impersonal. (Ruthven 1988:114). [A point for the interested reader to note: The prefix 'al'- in Arabic stands for 'the' the name Allah being a grammatical derivative of 'al-ilah', meaning 'the High God'. Cf also Waines, 1995:7-8]

There is here an interesting coincidence between two totally dissimilar sources. Malise Ruthven, in my reckoning the most popular of writers on Islam, reminds us that Alexander Pope's cryptic dictum, 'Presume not God to scan', meaning it is presumptuous of Man to analyze God in human terms: God's nature is above and beyond human understanding.

The same argument was curiously made by Islam's theologians during the debates that waged in the 9th century between the Asharites and the Mutazilites. To recapitulate it here briefly: One issue in those debates was whether some of Allah's 99 attributes mentioned in the Quran did not contradict some others. The Asharites, who took a literalist view, trumped the Mutazilites with their innovative doctrine of 'bi la kaif', which may be paraphrased as: "It is not for humans to ask 'how God is what He is'".

Ruthven writes:

Ashari's point was similar to Alexander Pope's 'Presume not God to scan'. God's omnipotence and his omnibenevolence cannot be reconciled within the bounds of ordinary logic. By the same argument, the Quran, God's revelation cannot be subjected to rational expectations. (Ruthven, 1988: 201).

ii) The Quran itself speaks of Allah taking a hand in human affairs

This second objection to my scheme of the Quran's verse-separation is simplistic. My reply to it has necessarily to be simplistic.

The Quran portrays God as an All-Powerful, All-Knowing Being. How can it be beyond His powers should he wish to intervene directly and influence history and politics of the Prophet's time? More so, when such intervention was in the interest of Islam.

Again, the Quran itself has verses which point to Allah's taking a hand in worldly affairs. A conspicuous example of this are verses of chapter 66 where God is shown as intervening to sort out a sensitive situation in the Prophet's family life. (See chapter 66, verses 3-5 and the much-respected translator-commentator Maulana Yusuf Ali's cautious comment in footnote 5529-32 of his well-known work, "The Meaning of the Glorious Quran").

B) Difference between my approach and that of others

We now come to the more crucial of the two questions posed by readers of my earlier writings: How exactly does my proposal on reform differ from that of previous reformers.

Muslim modernizers of the 19th and 20th centuries - Sir Saiyyid Ahmad Khan, Muhammad Iqbal and other like-minded scholars – based their reform proposals mainly on the interpretative device of 'ijtihad' ('independent interpretation' of the Quran) for which there is scriptural sanction. Moderate though these proposals were, they failed to secure, as we saw, the ulema's support. This is not surprising – for the following, among other, reasons:

Consensus on interpreting the Quran's verses on the basis of an individual's subjective judgment, no matter how scripturally valid, has little chance of getting ulema approval in Sunni Islam. Without such approval, there is little chance of getting the community's acceptance. Why? Because Sunnism, unlike Shiism, does not recognize an institutionalized priestly hierarchy with an authority at the apex ( e.g. Shiite's Chief Ayatollah or Imam) whose 'fatwas' on theological issues are final and binding on its followers. (And, remember, the Sunnis constitute 85-90 percent of the Muslim population worldwide).

The doctrine of 'ijtihad' itself had been in disuse from the 10th century onwards until the attempt by early Modernists to revive it. The ulema, fearful of losing control over their self-appropriated right to Quranic exegesis, had virtually killed it, replacing it with the twin conservative doctrines of 'closure of the gate of ijtihad' and 'blind imitation of the past' ('taqlid'). Since then, there has been a vacuum on the reform front.

It should be easy now for readers to appreciate how my approach differs from that of the early reformers. Pragmatists that they were and indeed wisely for their time, they took the piecemeal route to reform, addressing through the 'ijtihad' mechanism individual verses that needed fresh interpretation. My approach, on the other hand, insists on looking at the Quran as a whole. The time has come to stop taking recourse to a tinkering sort of solution to Islam's problem of 'unchangingness'. Islamic tradition is now so totally 'out of synch' with modern realities that to set it right calls for a bolder strategy.

Of interest in this regard may be the recent news story in which a Saudi Arabian court is reported to have delivered a verdict that orders the gouging of a criminal's eye as punishment for damaging the eye of his victim in a fight - a cruel parody of the old Mosaic law of 'an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth', carried over by medieval Islamic law.

But, there is reason for hope of change, reflected in the evidence of new thinking among Muslims, as the brief survey of recent radical writings by Muslim scholars from different countries in Andrew Rippin's book referred to above suggests. (See my essay, "Jihad in its many avatars" where his findings are paraphrased).

The 'created Quran' versus 'uncreated Quran' controversy

One clinching point that strengthens my case in for a radical reform. During the theological debates of the early centuries discussed above, the freethinking Mutazilites joined issue with their conservative rivals, the Asharites, on the Quran's status as scripture. Some of the points made in those exchanges have a resemblance to what we have been discussing in this note.

Unfortunately, reports of their exchanges are either too fragmentary or too obscure for one to reach a definitive conclusion. But scholars, working on the available material, have been able to reconstruct enough of the debates in their secondary writings on the subject.



Based on these, the Mutazilite position on the issue seems to have been as follows: The Quran is indubitably the Word of God. But from this fact alone, it cannot be deduced that it is timeless or eternal. Especially when there are such specific references in the Holy Book to the condemnation of an unkind uncle of the Prophet's (abu Lahab) who had tormented him during his preaching mission in Mecca, or to the fate that befell some of the earlier prophets like Noah, Saul and others.

The Mutazilite conclusion was that the Quran was scripture 'created in time' - not 'uncreated' or 'eternal' in the sense of existing since Eternity, as the Asharites believed. (Despite the difficulty of unravelling their arcane dialectics, I hope to make the early theological debates in Islam the core chapter of my book – one reason why I have had so much difficulty in completing it).

What is particularly noteworthy - and encouraging - is that even though the Mutazilites came close to committing what would now be considered 'heresy' by the ulema of Islam, a free and frank discussion between these two mainstream schools of theology went on unhindered for more than two centuries.

More reason to feel that Islam has an in-built capacity for change.

Muslim hero breaks up train beating

Source: New York Daily News


BY MELISSA GRACE
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER


The Good Samaritan who tried to stop the Christmas-versus-Chanukah subway beating has two black eyes and a sore nose - but no regrets.

"I did what I thought was right," said Hassan Askari, 20. "I did the best that I could to help."

Askari, a Bangladeshi Muslim studying at Berkeley College in Manhattan, was on a Q train headed to Brooklyn late Friday when he came to the aid of young women confronted by a group of 10 thugs.

Fearful for the women's safety, he pushed one of the men away - and was then pounced on by the group, he said.

"They grabbed me and punched and beat me up," Askari said.

"They punched me first. I didn't get a chance to punch him back."

Askari, all of 5-feet-7 and 140 pounds, said he was left with a swollen face.

He said he didn't go to the doctor because he's too busy working two waiter jobs and doesn't have the money for medical care.

He was mystified as to why the men became so outraged when the women and their male friends wished them a "Happy Chanukah" while they were yelling "Merry Christmas" on the train car.

"I don't understand," he said. "They were just being nice."

One of the Jewish victims, Walter Adler, expressed amazement that Askari took the risk to try to help.

"That a random Muslim kid helped some Jewish kids, that's what's positive about New York," said Adler, 23, who suffered a broken nose and required four stitches to close a lip wound.

Askari's interference allowed Adler to pull the emergency brake, which alerted police to trouble on the train.


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