Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Monday, October 25, 2010
The Problem with Sunnism
...is that their religion is based entirely off countering Shi'a Islam. Their translators purposely manipulate the Qur'an and even their own hadith to support their cause. Their fatwas are published for the sole reason of admonishing Shi'a acts.
Ask Muhammad abd al Wahab the change he wanted to see in the world (and which he sadly got). It's to see and end to every opposition to Sunnism -- not to spread Allah's deen, kitab, or rasa2lah for the betterment of mankind.
Why else would he side with the British in destroying the once great Ottoman Empire?
Why else would he side with the greedy Sauds?
Their religion is based off of hate and opposition.
What kind of [objective] religion is that?
Ask Muhammad abd al Wahab the change he wanted to see in the world (and which he sadly got). It's to see and end to every opposition to Sunnism -- not to spread Allah's deen, kitab, or rasa2lah for the betterment of mankind.
Why else would he side with the British in destroying the once great Ottoman Empire?
Why else would he side with the greedy Sauds?
Their religion is based off of hate and opposition.
What kind of [objective] religion is that?
Monday, October 18, 2010
What is the difference between Islam-Shi'a and Sunnism?
I. Shi'a Islam existed before any political strifes, murders, or battles ensued. In fact, the term "Sunnism" didn't begin to appear until years after Shi'as referred themselves as "Shi'at Ali" (at the time, they were "Shi'at Uthman / Muawiyah" but they won't tell you that :p).
II. Shi'a Islam was not influenced by any other figures of history than that of the first thirteen infallibles (Prophet Muhammad, Lady Fatima, Imam Ali, and the rest of Imams who have preceded us).
Abdullah ibn Saba is a fabrication created by Wahabbites, and expanded through Sunnites, to demean the Shi'i name. Many scholars deny his significance in any form of Islam.
III. The problem of succession leading up to the martyrdom of Imam Hussain are what made Shi'a Islam more manifest. At the death of Imam Hussain, Shi'as realized that they could no longer respectfully integrate themselves with the actions of the so-called "Islamic" Caliphate.
IV. The problem was much more fundamental. It was a question of how to interpret Islam, and only two approaches were constructed:
The problem for Zaheri thought, as can be seen in Sunnism, is that a large number of madhhabs came into existence -- each for Shari'a alone, Sufism, and Sunnism.
Yet somehow, all of the differing interpretations brought along by those less qualified are somehow expected to be considered "one" and represent Islam.
Despite the contradictions.
Despite the fallacies.
Despite the obvious incongruousness with the standards set by the Qur'an al Kareem.
The SECOND interpretation approach was...
The Imamate has been justified through many sources and is logically competent on its own.
V. Hence, after the death of the Prophet Muhammad, the question wasn't **who** would be his successor, but what the function, qualifications, and nature of such a person should be...i.e. a man of Ahl al-Bayt.
II. Shi'a Islam was not influenced by any other figures of history than that of the first thirteen infallibles (Prophet Muhammad, Lady Fatima, Imam Ali, and the rest of Imams who have preceded us).
Abdullah ibn Saba is a fabrication created by Wahabbites, and expanded through Sunnites, to demean the Shi'i name. Many scholars deny his significance in any form of Islam.
III. The problem of succession leading up to the martyrdom of Imam Hussain are what made Shi'a Islam more manifest. At the death of Imam Hussain, Shi'as realized that they could no longer respectfully integrate themselves with the actions of the so-called "Islamic" Caliphate.
IV. The problem was much more fundamental. It was a question of how to interpret Islam, and only two approaches were constructed:
- Zaheri - meaning exoteric, or the idea that knowledge of Islam is objective, can be learned by anyone and acquired by anyone. Therefore, any leaders (or Imams) are justified if they claim to be so.
The problem for Zaheri thought, as can be seen in Sunnism, is that a large number of madhhabs came into existence -- each for Shari'a alone, Sufism, and Sunnism.
Yet somehow, all of the differing interpretations brought along by those less qualified are somehow expected to be considered "one" and represent Islam.
Despite the contradictions.
Despite the fallacies.
Despite the obvious incongruousness with the standards set by the Qur'an al Kareem.
The SECOND interpretation approach was...
- Bateni - which means esoteric in English, and states that knowledge of Islam can only be harbored by some. This is where the Imamate was justified. It has been a transcendental theme throughout the history Islam (starting from the very first prophets/messengers) and was especially crucial after the Prophet Muhammad, since he is the last prophet of Islam.
The Imamate has been justified through many sources and is logically competent on its own.
V. Hence, after the death of the Prophet Muhammad, the question wasn't **who** would be his successor, but what the function, qualifications, and nature of such a person should be...i.e. a man of Ahl al-Bayt.
Sunday, October 17, 2010
The Status of Non-Arabs During the Ummayad Dynasty: Part I
Muslim and Sunnite perspectives on racism:
*al-Qur'an 49:13}
- O mankind! We created you from a single (pair) of a male and a female, and made you into nations and tribes, that ye may know each other (not that ye may despise (each other). Verily the most honoured of you in the sight of Allah is (he who is) the most righteous of you. And Allah has full knowledge and is well acquainted (with all things).
*al-Bukhari}
- "An Arab is no better than a non-Arab. In return, a non-Arab is no better than an Arab. A red raced man was not better than a black one except in piety. Mankind are all Adam's children and Adam was created out of clay."
However, these guidances seemed to have eluded a "knowledgable" sahabi such as Muawiya.
The evidence goes as following-
I. Western Historian's Opinions
Patrick Clawson, a prominent Islamic scholar, states,
- "The Iranians chafed under Umayyid rule. The Umayyids rose from traditional Arab aristocracy. They tended to marry other Arabs, creating an ethnic stratification that discriminated against Iranians. Even as Arabs adopted traditional Iranian bureaucracy, Arab tribalism disadvantaged Iranians."
Naturally, the native population did not appreciate this exploitation. Many Arab Muslims under the Ummayad Dynasty believed that Iranian converts should not clothe themselves as Arabs, among many other forms discrimination that existed.
II. Muawiyah and the Banu Ummaya's Opinion of Non-Arabs
In his famous letter to Ziyad ibn Abih, Muawiyah stated,
- "Be watchful of Iranian Muslims and never treat them as equals of Arabs. Arabs have a right to take in marriage their women, but they have no right to marry Arab women. Arabs are entitled to inherit their legacy, but they cannot inherit from an Arab. As far as possible they are to be given lesser pensions and lowly jobs. In the presence of an Arab, a non-Arab shall not lead the congregation prayer, nor they are to be allowed to stand in the first row of prayer, nor to be entrusted with the job of guarding the frontiers or the post of a qadi."
- "Ansab al Ashraf" or "Futuh al-Buldan" by Baladhuri. p.417
Mistreatment of Persians and other non-Arabs during early Islam is well documented. To begin with, the Umayyids did not recognize equal rights of a Mawali and believed that only "pure Arab blood" was worthy of ruling.
Neither did they make any effort to mend relations with the Mawali after making declarations like,
- "We blessed you with the sword (referring to the conquests) and dragged you into heaven by chains of our religion. This by itself is enough for you to understand that we are superior to you."
- ممتحن ، حسینعلی ، نهضت شعوبیه جنبش ملی ایرانیان در برابر خلافت اموی و عباسی ، تهران : باورداران ، چاپ دوم ، 1368
- "During the early centuries of Islam when the Islamic empire was really an 'Arab kingdom', the Iranians, Central Asians and other non-Arab peoples who had converted to Islam in growing numbers as Mawali or 'clients' of an Arab lord or clan, had in practice acquired an inferior socio-economic and racial status compared to Arab Muslims, though the Mawali themselves fared better than the empire's non-Muslim subjects, the Ahl al-dhimma ('people of the book'). The Mawali, for instance, paid special taxes, often similar to the jizya (poll tax) and the kharaj (land tax) levied on the Zoroastrians and other non-Muslim subjects, taxes which were never paid by the Arab Muslims."
- زیدان، جرجی، تاریخ تمدن اسلام ، ترجمه علی جواهرکلام، تهران: امیرکبیر ، چاپ نهم
- وقتی قتبیه بن مسلم سردار حجاج، بار دوم بخوارزم رفت و آن را باز گشود هرکس را که خط خوارزمی می نوشت و از تاریخ و علوم و اخبار گذشته آگاهی داشت از دم تیغ بی دریغ درگذاشت و موبدان و هیربدان قوم را یکسر هلاک نمود و کتابهاشان همه بسوزانید و تباه کرد تا آنکه رفته رفته مردم امی ماندند و از خط و کتابت بی بهره گشتند و اخبار آنها اکثر فراموش شد و از میان رفت
- "When Qutaibah bin Muslim under the command of Al-Hajjaj bin Yousef was sent to Khwarazmia with a military expedition and conquered it for the second time, he swiftly killed whomever wrote the Khwarazmian native language that knew of the Khwarazmian history, science and culture. He then killed all their Zoroastrian priests and burned and wasted their books, until gradually the illiterate only remained, who knew nothing of writing and hence their history was mostly forgotten.
- Biruni. From The Remaining Signs of Past Centuries (الآثار الباقية عن القرون الخالية)
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Friday, October 8, 2010
Islam: Western Perspectives of the Sunnite-Shi'a Split
Spend your time reading the following reviews for this book (upon which I happened to stumble) -
Amazon
My favorite: "If you don't know the background of the Sunni-Shi'a split, it seems to be a strange custom.
The reasons cannot be told in sound bites. Their sadness results from the disrespectful treatment of the Prophet's family for two generations. The complex series of events culminates in extreme cruetly at Karbala."
Amazon
My favorite: "If you don't know the background of the Sunni-Shi'a split, it seems to be a strange custom.
The reasons cannot be told in sound bites. Their sadness results from the disrespectful treatment of the Prophet's family for two generations. The complex series of events culminates in extreme cruetly at Karbala."
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Politics: Ayatollah Khomeini
Radi Allah anhu
Warning: the things which you're about to read and discover may bring you to one terrifying realization: it is probable that everything you've ever read about Khomeini and Iran was written by people who didn't bother to read what the Imam himself actually wrote about the revolution he led.
No man in history has been ever so systematically slandered than this man.
Your typical Western reader will approach Khomeini with one standard -- an exclusive comfort to political theories which are only concerned with questions of sovereignty, exception, and checks + balances on abuses of power. Hence, such a reader will automatically interpret Khomeini's Islamic Platonism as, in essence, extremely dangerous.
No doubt, the Islamic Revolution has since marked its failure within his era -- but there is a lot to be optimistic about.
Khomeini was very egalitarian; within the political, social, and even economic facets of his nation. At every turn, he tried to reject sectarianism and willfully attempted to include Sunnites, Jews, and Christians in his revolutionary plan.
He was also incredibly democratic. The ulama were not in place because they were some kind of dynasty -- established through hierarchy (such as the House of Saud) -- but rather through prestige, merit, respect, and taqwa. And subsequently, the need for "checks and balances" diminished with such a trustworthy cabinet.
Khomeini wrote about relinquishing the Shah from a scholarly point of view; the Shah was incompetent and, quite frankly, very foolish. Khomeini sought to battle opposites with opposites, and in doing so, he sought to enlarge the role of intellectualism in society.
You'd be shocked at how rich Khomeini's ideals were. How it lacked the moral bankruptcy that ever so marks the politics of the Ba'ath (Iraq) and the Wahabbis (Saudi Arabia).
"Everything," Khomeini writes, "is in the name of Allah."
Friday, October 1, 2010
Islam: Sunnite or Shi'a -- why Muhammad al-Wahab would still hate you
What many people fail to realize about this man, Muhammad al-Wahab, is that despite the fact that you or anyone else may support, follow, or worship admire him, it's very likely that he will deem you as an untrue Muslim --
- Reason 1}
al-Wahab professed that any idea added to Islam after its third century of existence (i.e. ~950 CE) was bid'aa. That automatically rules out Shi'aas and Sufis. Also those who admire any of the following men are also promoting bid'aa:
al-Ghazali
ibn Sina (Avicenna)
al-Kindi (Alkindus)
ibn Tufail
al-Ghazali
ibn Sina (Avicenna)
al-Kindi (Alkindus)
ibn Tufail
- Reason 2}
al-Wahab passionately countered modernity, secularism, and the Enlightenment -- three topics which are inevitable influence on just about any human being (Muslim or not).
--If you live in the west, you are a munafiq
--If you brush your teeth with a toothbrush instead of a miswaak, you are a munafiq
--If you actually think for yourself instead of blindly following mullahs, you are a munafiq
--If you resist their violence against you or your masjids, you are a munafiq
--If you are a woman and go out to the store on your own, you are a munafiq
--If you don't love Yazid, Muawiyah, Abu Sufyan, or Hind, you are a kaafir
- Reason 3}
al-Wahab compares the world outside of his extremism to era of Jahiliyah, and therefore many of us are not "true Muslims at all."
Yes, that's right, you're no better than the pagan Arabs to whom the Prophet was sent; Wahab ironically compares himself to the Prophet by exaggerating his struggle to revert this jahil world back to righteousness -- sounds like shirk, n'est-ce pas?
- Reason 4}
al-Wahab stated that it is indeed halal to kill the "untrue" Muslims, as defined by reason three. Hence, you, your family, and probably many of your friends (Muslim or not) deserve to be killed.
And if you are not killing for the sake of Allah subhanahu wa ta'ala, then you are also a munafiq.
- Reason 5}
If you are not a Wahabbi and do not follow the way of the Salafs to the strictest / extremist standards, then you're basically screwed in the hearafter and...oh yeah...a munafiq.
- Reason 6}
al-Wahab stated that those who remain passive to their unIslamic authorities (whether you live in a Muslim country or not) are also jahil until the day they choose the exterminate all of the untrue Muslims and overthrow their governments in favor of a Wahabbist administration.
Are you doing any of that?
If not, then you are a munafiq.
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