Archive for May, 2008

May 31 2008

What role do you believe the media should pay in interfaith dialogue?

Published by ilana under 00, BLAH

A question I was facing on my internship app
Media is a powerful medium. Plato describes the elements of media such as images and music best in the Republic when he uses it to influence the masses and suppress individualism to create a peaceful and stable society.
Plato is political theory and this is reality; yes, media can be used to create a peace and stability but in the most everlasting way. The only way is entrusting humanity through education and empowerment since by default and the nature of our existence, we already have the trust and power.
So through artificial and super-supplementary means media can elevate communication of the human experience and introduce a greater comprehension. Introducing a narrative, not to be argued over (unlike dogma) but to be considered and to enlighten and widen the horizon of human understanding.

One response so far

May 29 2008

f00

Published by ilana under 00, wood

Life is flowing with the clouds ease and stars above, a glimmering delight sun on twilights glosummer of grey misty sight of confusion. Perchance these zeal and oppertunites is just an illusion? I see the losers fail, struggling so hard, hungry and weights in eyes the window to the soul, pangs of hunger just wanting to live without fear–homelessness cometh near and yet the esteem and high regard is here. No one knows, and dependents hugs so soft. Doing thikir to fight the mess of doubt, depression, and yet somehow fighting for expression

No responses yet

May 29 2008

Books

Published by ilana under wood

books that make me cry at night
creating a catharsis
challenging what I thought was right
killing off my narcissus
taking my sight and making it bright
Leaving me with true light

One response so far

May 29 2008

Random thoughts

Where is home–who’s native land? Try to recuperate and hold up to catharsis stand. Iconoclast’s man I have become, bridging two places within one.

talking about someone’s spoken word

Qari: whoa. You really thought I did good? I thought I did a whole bunch of mistakes… I am my own worst critic.

Me: I find that in front of others we are the most critical and when we are with our ownselves we are the least critical.

Qari: very true

No responses yet

May 20 2008

A blessed day

A joyful day a laughing day of eyes wit and hearts then upon pictures I gaze and an aura is transcribed, my interpretation might be a lie but here I shall tell and try: a mist of gray twilight of confusion and beauty and a gaping hole. tis the beauty of humans the spirit, the hurt and trust…overwhelmed by it all ran outside under the full moon, sobbed wepted the glory of God and bestowed with an inkling of it’s depth.

One response so far

May 15 2008

Zionists & Land

me:
Ugh I have to write an essay about Pali and Israeli nationalism
9:23pmLibrarian:
interesting
i was reading an article about the origins of palestinian nationalism in the Ottoman era
9:24pmme:
you can tell I have essayes because all of a sudden I’ll make a billion events
ohh yeah
9:24pmLibrarian:
lol
9:24pmme:
have you read…
9:24pmLibrarian:
yes
i have
i’ve read everything
my brain is a gigantic compendium of all things
jk
9:25pmme:
Palestine and the Israeli-Arab Conflict
by
Smith something
if very halal and balanced
waging peace is alright too
I am kinda skipitcal of when memiors are writing about teh oslow accords and such
b/c they are so biased and so limited in perseptive
but I know rabinovich’s kid
soo.. I read it anyway
9:29pmme:
but in the end I think Locke’s theory on government is on solid ground an helps explain the underlying issues
haha, sorry, now if I was so motivated to write my paper
meh
Alhumdullah
9:36pmLibrarian:
sorry
i had a patron come
(i’m working at the circulationd esk at my school library)
hmm, smith eh? i’ll have to take a look at it
what’s the relationship
between locke’s theory and thep palestinian conflict?
9:37pmme:
That government is initially created to protect property
9:39pmLibrarian:
i’m not fololowing you
explain yourself
9:41pmme:
haha, because I am being obvious
what do you want me to explain?
Lockes thoery?
9:41pmLibrarian:
whats the relationship between the concept of creating government for attaining property and the palestinian-israeli conflict?
9:45pmme:
In the two treaties of government Locke says man was a peaceful being, independent, nomadic etc. And basically he started to accumulate food and plant and sow
9:45pmLibrarian:
k
9:45pmme:
but other then “first come first serve” which even human children seen to understand
seem*
what warrants protection of the fruit of labor and your land other then a general rule of law?
and therefore “civilzation” and government was made to ensure these rights–or at least to the illusion of them
and even I am part Pali and I never really grasped the importance of land
until then I suppose
9:49pmme:
you see in Jewish culture
or European Jewish culture
Land isn’t a big issue
unless you come from a zionistic stance
becuase the culture has developed without being to own land for centuries
so scholarship and city work is encourage instead
hence cities in Israel that contain over 8- percent of the population
80*
or over I believe
9:53pmme:
anyways from the Israeli part of my familia we weren’t big on land
even though my mother’s parents were super zionists
blahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
ok I totally need to write this paper
salaam
9:58pmLibrarian:
sorry
my cmputer got messed up
10:00pmLibrarian:
thats an interesting connection
whats ur major again?

No responses yet

May 15 2008

kitab al imara (government) Saheeh Muslim

two: I need to find Saheeh Muslim book 20, hadith in arabic on hadith.al-islam.com/Display/hier.asp?Doc=1&n=4365 so was wondering if you can help

one: one sec inshAllah

two: iA. jazakAllah

one: do you want to know what this page says?

two: im trying to find kitab al imara (government) from ssaheeh Muslim

one: what do you need?

two: can you find… book. I need to find Saheeh Muslim book 20, hadith 4561 saheeh muslim

one: ok one moment you got the book of government “imara”
one: but anymore clues??

two: umm i dont have arabic hadith 4561

one: give me the wording

two: Book 020, Hadith Number 4560. —————————— Chapter : Instruction to stick to the main body of the Muslims in the time of trials and warning against those inviting people to disbelief. It has been narrated (through a different chain of transmitters) on the authority of Ibn Abbas that the Messenger of Allah (may peace be upon him) said: One who dislikes a thing done by his Amir should be patient over it, for anyone from the people who withdraws (his obedience) from the government, even to the extent of a hand-span and died in that conditions, would die the death of one belonging to the days of jahilliyya.
this 1 actually Book 020, Hadith Number 4561. —————————— Chapter : Instruction to stick to the main body of the Muslims in the time of trials and warning against those inviting people to disbelief. It has been narrated on the authority of Ibn ‘Abdullah al-Bajali that the Messenger of Allah (may peace be upon him) said: One who is killed under the banner of a man who is blind (to his just cause), who raises the slogan of family or supports his own tribe, dies the death of one belonging to the days of Jahiliyya.

one: ok gimme me a sec Arabic right?

two: yes and if there is commentary i’ll take that as well

one: what exactly is this for? im asking because i know alot of youths who use these kinds of hadiths for ulterior purposes

two: HAHAHA on my notes

one: here’s ur hadith with the commentary: hadith.al-islam.com/Display/Display.asp?Doc=1&Rec=44275/15/200812:13:39 AM

two: jazakAllah
so what do you thiink about this hadith

one: well let me give you a big and clear warning when he (asws) said, “he dies the death of Jahiliyya”, it does NOT (and i repeat NOT) mean that they die as a Kafir
actually what it really means is that he dies as if he lived during the period of jahiliyya when there was no ruler and no unity, and everything was chaos

two: umm… there are so many hadiths that jahaliyya=kufr

one: haha, i KNEW this would come up

two: go on

one: be careful esp with these things

two: umm the purpose of these hadiths

one: and dont stick to the apparent face value of things

two: is to unite Muslims we have Muslims vs Muslims

two: what purpose does this serve? I mean.. we have so many commandments by Allah not to do so….tell me, is it allowable in Islam for a turkish Muslim to attack an iraqi Muslim???

one: do you know the difference between unity and uniformity?

two: which do you mean? unity as an ummah under an amir? or uniformity in deen as we progress as a society?

one: only to defend if the iraqi is threatening his life or property unity is islamic, uniformity is anti-islamic

two: answer this: can you kill another Muslim? and who has the right to use this authority to remove oppression?

one: only in Hadd reasons can the judge (not me) kill a muslim

two: in Islam, if the ruler is on the right aquidah, we folllow him

one: anyway, this hadith (like others) calls for unity and against uniformity

two: if he is not, we do not anyways
Muslim :: Book 20 : Hadith 4533 It has been narrated on the authority of Ibn ‘Umar that the Holy Prophet (may peace be upon him) said: It is obligatory upon a Muslim that he should listen (to the ruler appointed over him) and obey him whether he likes it or not, except that he is ordered to do a sinful thing. If he is ordered to do a sinful act, a Muslim should neither. listen to him nor should he obey his orders.
I have another question for you
is khilafah fard?

one: if you’re thinking “huh?”, i’d say on the surface (or beginning) of things, the difference between unity and uniformity is too subtle to be noticed. but once you bring each of them to its logical conclusion, then they are world’s apart.

two: umm.. the purpose I asked the hadith is because it supports unity

one: can i ask you what the conlusion you are trying to draw here is?

two: we see, today Islam is not uniform because there is no unity, evidently enough compare pakistan sharia vs saudi sharia

one: that wud help me in knowing what answers to give

two: the answers? simple? I am a Muslim wanting to know if what I hold as Islamic values are on the right path anyways another commentary on the hadith I asked is: Ahmed b. Hanbal was asked: What is the meaning of the hadith: ‘Whosoever dies and he does not have an imam he dies the death of jahiliyyah’ He said: Do you know what is an imam? An imam is the one around who all the Muslims unite. This is its meaning.’ ( al-Muntaqa min minhaaj al-I’tidaal of az-Zahabi)

one: one sec it’s good your asking these questions one thing i want to say is, we shouldn’t go in depth examining certain people’s aqida

two: I do not examine, I only ask if what I hold are in lined as yours

one: not only is it wasteful of time/energy, but also blameworthy, and is so effective at dissolving bonds of brotherhood/sisterhood like corrosive acid

two: well what happened to unity under an amir? when I only ask if it is fard is this too much to ask?

one: and the main point here is: whether talking about a ruler or your neighbor, it is enough to know that he believs and says the shahada, and that he prays to the qibla and the main point here is: whether talking about a ruler or your neighbor, it is enough to know that he believs and says the shahada, and that he prays to the qibla

two: I only asked if my values are aligned to yours

one: once you determine those two (and you can check what im saying here in the law books), then no more delving and inquiring is permitted the only time it is, is if that person publically does or says something that is blasphemous that’s it really

two: I have not asked these things I only asked if my values are correct by asking if you believe it is fard if what you say it is not, then I would ask myself why then? are my values incorrect

one: tell me your values

two: I asked if khilafah is fard… you have yet to answer this question

one: thats a hard question, because i can think/remember arguments for either way… what do you say?

two: one can think but what is the strongest argument

two: brought up by the salaf

one: if you say khilafa is fard… and obviously we dont have, then upon whose shoulders does that sin fall…. yours and mine?
I’ll tell u one reason why this is so tricky and slippery because the Prophet (asws) specifically prophesied about our time that there would be no khilafa

two: first we distinguish what is fard as an ummah as a jmaat and does this negate the fard as an ummah? I mean one can say: Allah will bring us victory, we can just be lazy about it too!

one: another reason, because on the individual level, the presence or absence of khilafa doesnt determine whether the individual finds success in the next life… khilafa is required for certain grand functions of the state, an example of which is jihad i.e. no khilafa = no lawful declaration of jihad

two: aye, but I asked is khilafah fard? as an ummah is it fard?

one: as an umma, yes it is fard

two: that is all, thank you

one: hahaha, wait im not done with you, i want to see where this is all going you cant suffice with black and white answers like that, its dangerous

two: black and white? umm the only purpose I asked this quesiton is to know if I am on the right track, that is all recall I said: if my values are correct these values comes after this question and yes thank you it has been answered

one: but what exactly are ur values

two: what exactly? ask myself what did rosulah(saws) did to establish the state of Islam? ask myself, what did the ijmaa said about this matter

one: you came in understanding one thing about “the death of the jahiliyya”, and now you’ve discovered that it is very different from what you thought it mean

two: different? to know someone is in this state is in fact “scary”, therefore we know then it is “fard” it is not something I “discovered” through this “hadith”

one: there is a difference between intentionally departing from the Khalif, and between there not even being a khalif to begin with

two: of course, but the intention of having one must exist, for an action to happen, there must be intention

one: do you still really think it means that person is a kafir?

two: no and I did not “think” of it neither did I claim

one: i thought u did, because u wrote above that many hadiths show that “jahiliyya” = kufr

two: I did not claim that a person is kafir, the state of the ummah today is where the governments is kufr, this is where I am pointing out if I expand more unto it

one: Thats exactly what i wanted to avoid and clarify, and now that u’ve said that i have to say that no i dont agree with that because that sounds 99.9% like the khawarij and their arguments

two: I see, well what is the only “government” Allah taala revealed?

one: 1) “government” is an abstraction, not a living organism, and so by definition can’t be “kafir” or mu’min

two: did Muhammad(saws) participated in kufr government? such as the mushriks in makkah? government is a system, so which system do you supposedly agreed that is not kufr? is it not that any system outside of Islam not Islam?

one: 2) governments in middle east and other islamic populations are unislamic, yes…. Dhalim (oppressors), yes. these are adjectives, not nouns (like Kafir) wait hold on i dont know what it is but there’s a certain uneasy tone in your questions

two: first of all, who made these “governments” in the middle east?

one: ultimately, decreed by Allah, but practically, it was both foreign colonial hands, and certain native peoples

two: but is this “system” an Islamic system? is western secular democracy part of the system of Islam?

one: yes, they are unislamic oppressive regimes that dont belong there at all

two: oppressive or not, a Muslim takes a step back and look if the system is correct

one: I agreed they are unislamic but i am asking, what is the response you are trying to illicit?

two: any system we have today whether it is monarchy, democracy, communisim has its own benefits and disadvantages, however this does not mean this is right

one: yes, ok, continue

two: You said: Thats exactly what i wanted to avoid and clarify, and now that u’ve said that i have to say that no i dont agree with that and then you labelled the government as oppressive instead of kufr, do you imply therefore that there are “Islamic” government that is acceptable by the laws of Islam?

one: I gave the reason for my distinction, which was: 1) “government” is an abstraction, not a living organism, and so by definition can’t be “kafir” or mu’min and

two: I said “kufr” not “kaafir”

one: these are words which it is dangerous to fuse and mix up

two: I have not used “kafir”, I said “kufr”

one: in either case, it is still mistaken

two: this does not say that everyone belonging to the system is a kaafir, I only imply that the system is kufr, meaning the system is a sytstem of disbelief, unacceptable

one: but the way you’re asking the question…. its like a black/white thing, where the answerer is binded into either/or choice, when there is in reality more to it
ok i can see that

two: one can claim that the saudi system is a system of “ISlam”, first distinguish what is the system of Islam before it

one: what is the next step?

two: what are the criterions that a system is Islam?

one: I dont believe the saudi system is islamic, not one bit

two: then what is it therefore classified unto? is it not clear that we have dar al Islam, and dar al harb?

one: unislamic

two: throughout the history of Islam for 1300 years?

one: haha and that is for a number of reasons the main one being, that the founding family (Saud family) conspired with the british colonials against the Ottoman Khilafa, and that established the saudi state

two: I have used kufr because: kufr is the attribute of everyone who rejects something that Allah has commanded us to believe in

one: it is actually Dar al-Silm and Dar al-Harb

two: we can also use dar al kufr instead of dar al harb

one: you know what the salaf called it

two: but anyhow, it is distinguished that a system is kufr if it rejects a principle of aqeedah/… which salaf?

one: instead of dar al kuft, they called it dar al-thaghr…. do you know why?

two: ok explain if you will

one: thaghr means “fronteir land”

two: ok…

one: meaning that those lands outside of the current islamic state, is a “frontier”, a land of possibilities of new muslims, not a land of people to fight and kill and make automatic war against

two: you sound like an HT member

one: what’s HT?

one: you sound like a wahhabi

two: hizb ut tahrir

one: or ikhwani

two: hahahahaa that is the very first time I heard hahaaha even more funnier ickwanis go into politics

one: hahah same for HT

two: hahaha, HT is the only group that does not engage in politics

one: honestly tell me, what is the ACTION you propose out of all of this, that is the crux of the issue?

two: the root of the problem of the ummah today is the lack of an amir, that is all I can see, the action? engage a dialogue with the ummah for the goal of establishing Islam. Islam is not just established in the heart but also as a jamaat

one: who is the Ummah? are you going to take a loudspeaker to the Haram of Makka, honestly who are you going to talk to? (not you you, its just a rhetorical question)

two: who is the ummah? who is the “Muslim?” loudspeaker? did Muhammad(saws) did this? what did he do in makkah when he started dawah to Islam? did he engage the mushriks and shouted AllahuAkbar in the streets?

one: practically, i’ve come to realize the only way to do it is start with yourself, then your family, then neighbors, then city, and grow like that but from the getgo to have your sights on the whole ummah is way too much ambition and misplaced too

two: we change as a jamaat just as the sahabah changed around Muhammad(sws) ambition? who is to take up lead if there is no jamaat that calls to enjoin good and forbin munkar?

one: ill say that the one who abandons amr-bil ma’ruf has lost half his deen (or her deen)

two: if one says to change oneself, and everyone doing this, without guidance from a sheikh, what purpose does it benefit for the ummah if one’s views are different from another? I mean one can take music as an example

one: right, that is the thing, sheep dont guide sheep, you need a knowledgeable guide

two: exactly, and this is where faults of the ummah lies, and also the fact that there is no amir, now the core of Islam is Quran and Sunnah and the salaf

one: and one bad thing is that any possibilities of good guides are oppressed or suppressed by the governments, or ignored by the people

two: this is where one studies in order to make oneself better and engage the ummah, a core as a jamaat, with the right aqeeddah, not any aqeedah that is wrong

one: yeah u do sound like a wahhabi, why this emphasis on testing ppl’s aqida right and left?

two: of course, we have concepts of “lesser of two evil” popping out of nowhere and saying “this fatwa is the daleel”, I mean there are many things that are “reformed” but this reformation is not consistent with Islam as its own core principle

one: thats what splits up the jama’at!

two: I have not read any books by Muhammad wahab actually and neither am I wahabi neither have I studied under any sheikh or imam

one: i know you aren’t.. but it comes from what so many muslims are saying around us

two: is the word “salaf” scary word? I mean salaf means early generations the “sayings” are reformations

one: look at where muslims are killing each other, isn’t it mainly because aqida-testing and aqida-differences?

two: the best thing to do is to read what the classical scholars wrote

one: sunni vs shi’a etc…

two: sunni shia? let me ask you, how many battles there have been between the shias and ahl us sunnah for the past 1300 years—1300 years, not 1400

one: read what they wrote and also have the wisdom and intelligence to apply it to our time, because they never experienced a lack of khilafa like we did…(yes i caught the number)

two: of course I know this, but they have written what the ummah should do if there is a lack of khilafah

one: as for a number of battles historically, i dont know of the top of my head…. i was giving that as an example of the whole aqida issue, which again - no surprise - goes back to my original point of unity vs uniformityit goes like this:

two: unity as an ummah, ahl us sunnah to be exact uniformity, we have uniformity in sects, simple as it is, but this is not unity

one: a person says, “we must unite the Ummah, enough of this chaos!” so they go out and examine who has the right aqida to readily unite with them, and who has the wrong aqida, to either change them or erase them…. and at that point this forcing uniformity is the essence of what dissolves the hoped-for unity

two: that is a fault you have shown, because one can say “I give my bay’ah to this jamat specifically more like a sect now if seen in the other view

one: look at TWO things only: do they say/accept the shahada? do they pray to our qibla? that’s it, those are the only two criteria

two: but however, this does not stop the individual to carry his duties to learn the core of Islam and to engage in dialogue what is fard, al haqq stands out

one: and again im not making that up, that comes from the law books of those classical scholars you mentioned

two: it is not limited to two criterias

one: what i am saying is, dont ask beyond those two things because once you do, chaos and division begins

two: so do you then accept that shirk can be accepted? I mean tawheed is simple but it is very detailed

one: im well aware of what constitutes aqida hamdillah and i hope my point is clear that we aren’t supposed to test and examine each other’s aqida5

two: ok of course not, but you engage in dialogue and find a common ground with your next Muslim as I have said, the root of all the problems is the lack of an amir the sahabahs didn’t change by their own, the presence of Muhammad(saws) changed them also

one: thats a pretence if i ever heard one!

two: two keypoints I will state: -enjoin good and forbid evil -truth stands out

one: thats not the root, thats the manifestation
here’s another keypoint: “as you are, so shall you be ruled”

two: ruled by Allah

one: ahaha, what that means is, if you are evil to each other and oppress each other, you will end up with rulers and goverments who will be evil and unjust with you

two: I will give an example: If there was no rosulah(saws) to bring a message, who will progress the message if there is no messenger? a simple concept

one: and vice versa

one: go on…

two: for a message to be engaged unto the community, to tell what is right, there is a messenger, isn’t this why the khilafah is fard unto the ummah? the imam is a sheild of the Muslims first of all, in the system of Islam, oppression by the ruler is acceptable for him to rule as long he establishes Islam and has the right aquidah and practices it Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal (164-241 AH): ‘The Fitna (mischief and tribulations) occurs when there is no Imaam established over the affairs of the people.’

one: oppression is acceptable!?

two: yes and hold on

one: isnt all the curses you find in the Qur’an against the oppressors?

two: what I meant is, you are not allowed to fight the imam even if he is an oppressor hold on

one: no leader = chaos and anarchy is obvious, you dont need Imam Ahmad to say that
iam go ahead

two: Muslim :: Book 20 : Hadith 4573 It has been narrated on the authority of ‘Auf b. Malik that the Messenger of Allah (may peace be upon him) said: The best of your rulers are those whom you love and who love you, who invoke God’s blessings upon you and you invoke His blessings upon them. And the worst of your rulers are those whom you hate and who hate you and whom you curse and who curse you. It was asked (by those present): Shouldn’t we overthrow them with the help of the sword? He said: No, as long as they establish prayer among you. If you then find anything detestable in them. You should hate their administration, but do not withdraw yourselves from their obedience.

Muslim :: Book 20 : Hadith 4570 It has been narrated (through a different chain of tmnamitters) on the authority of Umm Salama (wife of the Holy Prophet) that he said: Amirs will be appointed over you, and you will find them doing good as well as bad deeds. One who hates their bad deeds is absolved from blame. One who disapproves of their bad deeds is (also) safe (so far as Divine wrath is concerned). But one who approves of their bad deeds and imitates them (is doomed). People asked: Messenger of Allah, shouldn’t we fight against them? He replied: No, as long as they say their prayer. (” Hating and disapproving” refers to liking and disliking from the heart.)
a fasiq is still a Muslim, however it does not mean we can fight a fasiq

one: Yes no one said anything here about violence but you can’t say oppression is acceptable “one who approves of their bad deeds and imitates them (is doomed)”

two: ok misword, of course unacceptable, but what I meant is, we cannot fight a Muslim if he has the right aqeuidah and establishes Islam completely

one: go on

two: Muslim :: Book 20 : Hadith 4559 It has been narrated on the authority of Ibn ‘Abbas that the messenger of Allah (may peace be upon him) said: One who found in his Amir something which he disliked should hold his patience, for one who separated from the main body of the Muslims even to the extent of a handspan and then he died would die the death of one belonging to the days of Jahiliyya.

Muslim :: Book 20 : Hadith 4542 It has been narrated on the authority of Abu Huraira that the Prophet of Allah (may peace be upon him) said: A commander (of the Muslims) is a shield for them. They fight behind him and they are protected by (him from tyrants and aggressors). If he enjoins fear of God, the Exalted and Glorious, and dispenses justice, there will be a (great) reward for him; and if he enjoins otherwise, it redounds on him.5/15/20081:41:25 AM

one: and remember what that explanation is of death of jahiliyya)

two: of course I knew that and of course there is a criteria to it

one: can i ask you now, how would you determine if someone has a right aqida (since you’re always mentioning it) ??

two: asking and finding common ground so far, things are in order is it not? what arguments do we differ? I mean, the purpose of this is that, when time comes that an army off khuroshan comes, who and what are they and what are the people supposed to do? do they know khilafah is fard? (just an example)

one: i wanted to ask that question on aqida based on what i wrote before

two: ok go on

one: if you want to talk about what will happen in the future (Mahdi etc) we can discuss that too i mean that i dont think we shud examine other ppl’s aqida (beyond those 2 criteria i wrote)

two: I have given only a scenario, anyways go on if there is any things to be discussed did I mean to examine? which scholars devised those two criterias?

one: i want u to respond specifically to my statement about not asking in depth about ppl’s aqida the ones who wrote chapters about jihad and government and so on in the fiqh references

two: I see, I ask myself, did Muhammad(saws) sought common ground in aquidah with the nasarah? and the yahood? he did so and did dawah of Islam to them, likewise similarly we do

one: like Ibn ‘Abidin in his Hashiya for example (if u want a name)i bn Qudama in his Mughnietc5/15/20081:47:36 AM

two: thanks this matter of examining aquidah, wahabis are famous for, but I only asked 1 black and white question, that is if khilafah is fard, that is all

one: ok lets say ur talking to a muslim “examining their aqida” and they turn out to be shi’a…. so now what??

two: I would not care

one: ok, let me write this answer to your question

two: the authority does not lie unto me to “examine”, I only propagate, not examine, and in terms of examine, there is only one question I have

one: khilafa is fard on the ummah, yes, however, a lack of khilafa does not mean that it must be the first fard to be addressed… what question is that??

two: it is not fard on every individual to address, I know this– I did not say it is fard to be addressed (notice you can read all the things I said) when one sees evil or something that is not right, it is fard for him to address

one: i know you didnt say it, im just providing a complete answer

two: (remember the hadith, if one sees munkar, he needs to change it by action, by tongue,, by heart..)

one: but go ahead, what is your question you ask to examine someone’s aqida (yes)

two: I only asks one aqeedah question and that is if khilafah is fard

one: you mean that is your question? HAHAHAHA

two: that was

one: whoa whoa whoa hold on there

two: and have been answered by saying “yes it is fard on the ummah”

one: do you realize tho that isnt in the realm of aqida at all?????

two: ahahahahahaahahhahahahahahaa first of all, aqedah does not pertain to all theological sense aqeedah means belief
actually I’ll throw on a question for fun
Is punishment of the grave part of our aqeedah?

one: aqida is theological

two: of course but it is not only theological

one: yes it is

two: Islam consists aqeedah and the rules (sharia) derived from it. rules are not independent opinion but part of Islam

one: otherwise there is a different term for it if ur talking about non-theological shari’a doesnt derive from aqida…. what shari’a ruling do u derive from knowing the qur’an isnt created?

be continued

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May 02 2008

Losing a Friend

Published by ilana under sisterwood, solmen golmen, thoughts, wood

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assalamlaaykumwarathmatullhbaraktuhu
I read an aching poignant post.

It moved me and caused me to write this: Bismillah

A loss of love. A moment of despair. This hurt becomes a shivering numb–churning in the stomach, pang in the heart, weightlessness, silent cries, a lump in the throat–something dies. Realization’s heavy hand and stronger acceptance becomes maturity’s land.

A truely pure exquisite love, where you hurt so much and remain utterly thankful to the One above.

Wallah, jazakullahkhair.

“We call that person who has lost his father, an orphan; and a widower that man who has lost his wife. But that man who has known the immense unhappiness of losing a friend, by what name do we call him? Here every language is silent and holds its peace in impotence.”

- Joseph Roux
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