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Theme Changer

 Topic: Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?

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  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #30 - March 14, 2016, 08:19 PM

    The issue with reinterpreting symbolism is that it is done in a subjective manner which undermines the very concept of authority, dogma, tradition, etc within certain religions. However many that do so rather than accepting that their view is subjective begin to attach the typical authority parameters to their views so that it is not subjective but appearing objective and backed by authority of some type. Some go as far as to claim their modern view were the "true" view the whole time. It is not that people shouldn't do it but should be honest enough to admit their view is subjective. Nor is about removing the supernatural but that the dogma of communication involved many not be as presented.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #31 - March 14, 2016, 08:52 PM

    I wanna get high with you and talk about this.


    abshir Grin

    I don't think it's that novel an idea, really, and no THC really has to go into it.

    I think people accept it when it comes to other creeds and traditions. Non-Hindus do yoga. Non-Buddhists meditate. Non-Christians celebrate Christmas. Non-Daoists use the yin yang symbol. But heaven forbid anything Islamic ever survive the stranglehold of the fanatics.

    I was just out over the weekend with a bunch of very non-Irish people slugging around downtown after far too many drinks in honor of the patron saint of Erin. I can assure you that neither was Christianity on anyone’s mind at the time, nor was anyone accused of being dishonest.

    The strangest part is that this re-appropriation of symbols has already happened in the Muslim world and amongst Muslims throughout history, over and over again. The only thing that has really stayed the same are the names and the symbols.

    Look at the havoc 18th century wahhabiyya has brought upon the Muslim world. The very name of Allah meant something very different to sufi saints than it did to ibn Abdel Wahhab. You might as well be talking about two different entities, and in many ways, you completely are. But somehow, now that the scales have tilted largely in favor of the Wahhabis, we believe we’re forced to use their definitions.

    I think there is something to be said for realizing that the whole thing is subjective and made up. There is no “true” Islam just like there is no “real” way to understand “god,” so people are free to make those things into whatever they want. All it takes is time and acceptance.

    Look at what Christianity did with the idea of the Jewish Messiah. It’s a completely different concept, and yet no one really cares anymore because of acceptance.

    What would happen to the Muslim world if ex-Muslims, skeptics, or those with non-traditional views on Islam reclaimed the space of the “Masjid,” for instance, to be a place for seriously critiquing Islamic text and scriptures?

    What would happen if I decided to call my secular meditation “salah,” and other people caught on and did the same?

    What would happen if you referred to whatever dietary regimen you committed yourself to as “sawm,” and retained perhaps some vague idea of self-restraint and delayed gratitude for the overall betterment of yourself.

    And so on.

    I’m not saying that people have to do any of this. I’m not saying it’s the “correct” or “intended” application. I’m just saying it can be done. And I’m beginning to think it might be better than asking people (like me) to discard their traditions and symbols wholesale.
     
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #32 - March 14, 2016, 09:07 PM

    abshir Grin

    I don't think it's that novel an idea, really, and no THC really has to go into it.

    Nowhere did I say I was talking about pot. Grin

    I don't think it's a novel idea at all, but personally it's something that I struggle to articulate and it's nice to know some people get it. It's a very spiritual experience for me, recognizing that religions are all a struggle towards the same thing—understanding the human condition.

    Quote
    Look at the havoc 18th century wahhabiyya has brought upon the Muslim world. The very name of Allah meant something very different to sufi saints than it did to ibn Abdel Wahhab. You might as well be talking about two different entities, and in many ways, you completely are. But somehow, now that the scales have tilted largely in favor of the Wahhabis, we believe we’re forced to use their definitions.

    THIS THIS!! People don't recognize that their experience of Islam is subjective and historical. Islam like all other religions changes and evolves perpetually.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #33 - March 14, 2016, 09:52 PM



    I think there is something to be said for realizing that the whole thing is subjective and made up. There is no “true” Islam just like there is no “real” way to understand “god,” so people are free to make those things into whatever they want. All it takes is time and acceptance.


     

    I think the true islam is whatever we would see if we traveled back in time and observed what Muhammad was doing. 

    Given the fact that the salafis and orthodox sunnis and shias are trying their best to emulate all of Muhammads actions its pretty fair to say that they are the ones interpreting the texts the way the author intended them to be interpreted.

    The fact that Muhammads Islam mutated into all sorts of different forms like sufism and ismailism does not mean that we can or should ignore the history of early islam.

    In my opinion a life without curiosity is not a life worth living
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #34 - March 14, 2016, 10:17 PM

    ^I think this is assuming that 'early Islam' really was Islam as it was understood later.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #35 - March 15, 2016, 12:21 AM

    I love Maryam <3
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #36 - March 15, 2016, 02:09 AM

    Given the fact that the salafis and orthodox sunnis and shias are trying their best to emulate all of Muhammads actions its pretty fair to say that they are the ones interpreting the texts the way the author intended them to be interpreted.

    Orthodox Sunnism was created sometime in the 10th century, if I'm not mistaken. It was centuries after Muhammad's death. And the reason Islam was codified into schools of thought was entirely political. It was a way to silence dissent.

    Just because a bunch of people claim they're the real Muslims and the ones following Muhammad's footsteps doesn't mean they are. It's funny how people "trying their best to emulate all of Muhammad's actions" defer so greatly that they call each other infidels.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #37 - March 15, 2016, 03:08 AM

    I'm coming at it from POV as an amateur historian/sociologist.

    There is no doubt that an idea has been interpreted and reinterpreted in society. Examples abound.

    But Islam, the Quran and Hadith, the foundations of Islam were conceived of both temporally and spatially in a particular context. You can infer values from that context which provide a true representation of Islam than what came centuries after it.

    Your symbolism, reinterpretation, hyper-subjectivism is not only frowned upon by mainstream Muslims but rejected by the Quran and Hadith itself. You don't have to be a Wahhabist or salafist to say 'biddah' or 'shirk' when trying to insert your own meaning somewhere down the line.

    You can never present Islam as anything but a literal belief in x y or z. This idealistic yet foolish attempt to downplay literalism and the supernatural for the sake of spirituality will backfire eventually as it collides with Islamic scripture.

    Such debates have been had in history and the argument has always been won by those academics that argue 'let the book speak for itself' by locating it in its context rather than have people reinterpret it in modern times to mangle and dismantle all meaning. Deconstructivists foundation rests on pulling meaning out of books and saying 'ah this is what it means'. The evidence part is crucial as the evidence you present must be as objective as possible using different fields such as literary criticism and archaeology for instance.

    To go down the subjectivist post-modernist route is playing into the hands of the science in the Quran crowd. It's silly. Of course things change and evolve over time. Any serious student would acknowledge that. But there are some that recognise this change as BS for it bastardises what originally came before it. Just because you can't have a 100% true Islam doesn't mean you abandon academic inquiry to date and replace with a hippy like lets-hold-hands dream. It's for us to get as close to the original meaning of the texts as possible, which is, for all the liberal minded posturing, the one thing that all Muslims will return to.

    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #38 - March 15, 2016, 03:12 AM

    ^I think this is assuming that 'early Islam' really was Islam as it was understood later.


    But there is such a thing as 'early Islam' from which the later traditions rested upon and there has been much intra-Muslim debates as to the extent we adhere to early Islam. How can we deny history? Academics as you must know rest their careers on discovering this.

    BTW these are genuine questions.

    If you can change my mind then please do so.

    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #39 - March 15, 2016, 03:36 AM

    abshir Grin

    I don't think it's that novel an idea, really, and no THC really has to go into it.

    I think people accept it when it comes to other creeds and traditions. Non-Hindus do yoga. Non-Buddhists meditate. Non-Christians celebrate Christmas. Non-Daoists use the yin yang symbol. But heaven forbid anything Islamic ever survive the stranglehold of the fanatics.

    I was just out over the weekend with a bunch of very non-Irish people slugging around downtown after far too many drinks in honor of the patron saint of Erin. I can assure you that neither was Christianity on anyone’s mind at the time, nor was anyone accused of being dishonest.

    The strangest part is that this re-appropriation of symbols has already happened in the Muslim world and amongst Muslims throughout history, over and over again. The only thing that has really stayed the same are the names and the symbols.

    Look at the havoc 18th century wahhabiyya has brought upon the Muslim world. The very name of Allah meant something very different to sufi saints than it did to ibn Abdel Wahhab. You might as well be talking about two different entities, and in many ways, you completely are. But somehow, now that the scales have tilted largely in favor of the Wahhabis, we believe we’re forced to use their definitions.

    I think there is something to be said for realizing that the whole thing is subjective and made up. There is no “true” Islam just like there is no “real” way to understand “god,” so people are free to make those things into whatever they want. All it takes is time and acceptance.

    Look at what Christianity did with the idea of the Jewish Messiah. It’s a completely different concept, and yet no one really cares anymore because of acceptance.

    What would happen to the Muslim world if ex-Muslims, skeptics, or those with non-traditional views on Islam reclaimed the space of the “Masjid,” for instance, to be a place for seriously critiquing Islamic text and scriptures?

    What would happen if I decided to call my secular meditation “salah,” and other people caught on and did the same?

    What would happen if you referred to whatever dietary regimen you committed yourself to as “sawm,” and retained perhaps some vague idea of self-restraint and delayed gratitude for the overall betterment of yourself.

    And so on.

    I’m not saying that people have to do any of this. I’m not saying it’s the “correct” or “intended” application. I’m just saying it can be done. And I’m beginning to think it might be better than asking people (like me) to discard their traditions and symbols wholesale.
     



    It really is absurd to think we can 'reclaim' a space for not critiquing but rejecting the Quran in a mosque. Whenever, was the mosque a centre for serious debate inquiry as to the Qurans origins and legitimacy as a divine text? Sure there were debates and studies OF the Quran but they always presumed its divine authorship.

    Of course some Sufis may have a different interpretation of Allah. They may be wrong. You can't make stuff up because it's to fact check with the Quran. It could be that they are accentuating a particular attribute whilst discarding all others. What are we going to do? Re-brand Allah as a babyface as opposed to a heel (wrestling terminology). We need honesty here. It's like that Ahmadi community completely head in sand approach to Muhammad, Allah, the Quran and their concepts of the living Messiah.

    There are some people that call meditation a form of worship. But physical act of worship as practiced by Muslims is what 'slat' truly is. You can call it what you want but to say that this is what Muhammad or the authors of the Quran or the architects of early Islam intended as salat is dishonest. The other thing about 'sawm' is so wishy-washy it reads like a joke. There are very specific reasons that you know better than me why this is observe as per the texts. That is the true reason. Why some Muslims do it is another all together. Of course, e should recognise that ideas are fluid and people are taking ownership of these ideas all the time - but these people do so for a particular agenda. Either they are ignorant of the original intent-meaning or they want to replace with something better whilst retaining membership of the in-group.

    This 'reclaiming' or re-branding' of Islam is farcical as it is, I'll say it again, dishonest and if there's anything I particularly have been fighting for as an ex-Muslim is an honest debate on Islam. Not Muslims, but Islam as it was initially conceived and conveyed. I hate to say it, that there are shades of my former wahabist/salafist self emerging here. And there's a reason why I tended towards that approach in my youth - it made a lot of sense as there was a wide recognition that Muslims had strayed so far from the true meaning of the Quran and Hadith (Islam).  My fellow Pakistanis may sympathise with me when it comes to things like 'taweez' and 'grave worshipping'.

    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #40 - March 15, 2016, 03:39 AM

    I'm coming at it from POV as an amateur historian/sociologist.

    And I'm coming at it from a social justice perspective where I don't invalidate people's beliefs just because they don't fit my worldview. I recognize that many Muslims are literalists, but I also recognize that many aren't. All of them, together, form Islam.

    Also keep in mind that I originally responded to this thread only to give a leftist perspective and explain why some leftists might not agree with Maryam Namazie's approach. I'm not having this discussion with you. If you wish to invalidate the beliefs of the many non-literal Muslims, then good for you for doing the work of the literalists and traditionalists and takfiris. I'm sure they're happy to have you on their side.

    You pretend that history is all about objective truths when in fact Foucault, one of the world's most well-known historians and historiographers, is the founder of post-structuralism and the recognizing of small-t truths and bringing to light the unheard voices of history.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #41 - March 15, 2016, 03:47 AM

    Quote
    And I'm coming at it from a social justice perspective where I don't invalidate people's beliefs just because they don't fit my worldview.


    And good for you for doing that. But my world view on certain subjects is not based upon my desire for making others happy or a hippy mentality. It's based upon the fact that people, whole groups of people can be wrong. Therefore its quite right to say that I will invalidate a persons beliefs if it doesn't fit my world view. You're doing it in fact to me - so off that pedestal Social Justice Warrior - and we can't live in a society were for sake of conformity and harmony we discard historical evidence. Look at the arguments and provide me with a compelling argument. Saying that you want to respect peoples beliefs does you no favour. Are you trying to say that I don't?

    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #42 - March 15, 2016, 03:48 AM

    Yet again you're twisting my words. Nowhere did I say you should respect everyone's beliefs. I'm tired of having to explain and reword everything I say to you.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #43 - March 15, 2016, 03:49 AM

    You pretend that history is all about objective truths when in fact Foucault, one of the world's most well-known historians and historiographers, is the founder of post-structuralism and the recognizing of small-t truths and bringing to light the unheard voices of history.


    When did I argue that historical inquiry is all about objective truths. And Focault?? He was not a respected historian but a philosopher of ideas.

    'The unheard voices of history'? It's the historians that given them voice. Once you try force feeding an argument in my mouth that I never made then you lose credibility my friend.

    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #44 - March 15, 2016, 03:50 AM

    Yet again you're twisting my words. Nowhere did I say you should respect everyone's beliefs. I'm tired of having to explain and reword everything I say to you.


    To be fair your explanation was rather vague and left yourself open to that charge.

    Oh and this is like the second time you've replied to me so why are you a cting as though you've had to reply to me a ton of times.

    Either have a calm conversation or let's call it quits.

    I'm genuinely interested to know this 'world-view' you have. As I can elarn from it. If you have a compelling argument then let's hear it rather than make accusations. If you want clarity then ask for it.

    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #45 - March 15, 2016, 03:51 AM

    Quote
    There are no small t truths.


     fest42
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #46 - March 15, 2016, 03:52 AM

    To be fair your explanation was rather vague and left yourself open to that charge.

    No it wasn't. You're just projecting your own strawman of the postmodernist leftist onto me. You're having a conversation with a prototype in your head, not with me.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #47 - March 15, 2016, 03:55 AM

    Ok fine. If I misread or misrepresented that particular view then I apologise. I say I didn't But for the sake of dialogue let's move forward.

    Quote
    And I'm coming at it from a social justice perspective where I don't invalidate people's beliefs just because they don't fit my worldview.


    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #48 - March 15, 2016, 03:59 AM

    I'm not having this discussion with you. If you wish to invalidate the beliefs of the many non-literal Muslims, then good for you for doing the work of the literalists and traditionalists and takfiris. I'm sure they're happy to have you on their side.


    I'm also happy to take on the literalists as well. Not everything int he Quran that is taken literally is literally true. Again honesty is the key thing here.

    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #49 - March 15, 2016, 04:16 AM

    fest42


    And read the context of that one snippet. It's not denying everyone the right to an opinion. But their opinion does not equal 'true'. No matter how you language it. Small t or green t.

    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #50 - March 15, 2016, 04:54 AM

    if it doesn't have “supernatural” element/s, then it is not a belief and you can not call it as religion. It is as good as any scientific hypothesis



    I'm not sure that supernatural elements are a necessary condition for belief. Would you say that the Soviet Union or North Korea or some other non-theist cases do not demonstrate belief? I agree that it cannot be called religion, but it still relies on faith, as opposed to observation, discovery and understanding. And it is most certainly not "as good as any scientific hypothesis".

    New general blog, Autonomous Individual, under construction at Freethought Blogs to be launched soon with posts on Pedagogy, Religion, Cities and Marriage Equality. http://freethoughtblogs.com/anjuli
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #51 - March 15, 2016, 05:03 AM

    It really is absurd to think we can 'reclaim' a space for not critiquing but rejecting the Quran in a mosque. Whenever, was the mosque a centre for serious debate inquiry as to the Qurans origins and legitimacy as a divine text? Sure there were debates and studies OF the Quran but they always presumed its divine authorship.

    Of course some Sufis may have a different interpretation of Allah. They may be wrong. You can't make stuff up because it's to fact check with the Quran. It could be that they are accentuating a particular attribute whilst discarding all others. What are we going to do? Re-brand Allah as a babyface as opposed to a heel (wrestling terminology). We need honesty here. It's like that Ahmadi community completely head in sand approach to Muhammad, Allah, the Quran and their concepts of the living Messiah.

    There are some people that call meditation a form of worship. But physical act of worship as practiced by Muslims is what 'slat' truly is. You can call it what you want but to say that this is what Muhammad or the authors of the Quran or the architects of early Islam intended as salat is dishonest. The other thing about 'sawm' is so wishy-washy it reads like a joke. There are very specific reasons that you know better than me why this is observe as per the texts. That is the true reason. Why some Muslims do it is another all together. Of course, e should recognise that ideas are fluid and people are taking ownership of these ideas all the time - but these people do so for a particular agenda. Either they are ignorant of the original intent-meaning or they want to replace with something better whilst retaining membership of the in-group.

    This 'reclaiming' or re-branding' of Islam is farcical as it is, I'll say it again, dishonest and if there's anything I particularly have been fighting for as an ex-Muslim is an honest debate on Islam. Not Muslims, but Islam as it was initially conceived and conveyed. I hate to say it, that there are shades of my former wahabist/salafist self emerging here. And there's a reason why I tended towards that approach in my youth - it made a lot of sense as there was a wide recognition that Muslims had strayed so far from the true meaning of the Quran and Hadith (Islam).  My fellow Pakistanis may sympathise with me when it comes to things like 'taweez' and 'grave worshipping'.


    You don't get it. I'm saying, fuck the text, and yes I can do with them what I please. And yes, I'm taking some of my inspiration from the countless religions, including Islam,  that did the very same thing with whatever beliefs came before them.

    Do you think Christians care that Jews say Jesus could not have been a messiah?  Do you think Muslims care that Christians don't recognize Muhammad as a prophet?

    I'm saying that I can do with Islam what I want. The same way that gays took an optimistic word and made it their own.

    The same way my black friends who call it "some real nigga shit" when I do something nice for them mean it as a term of endearment.

    The same way that a group of descendants of Jamaican slaves took a look at the bible and said, fuck it, we're interpreting Zion as Ethiopia and calling the messiah black, because who says we can't?

    I really don't care what historic academics have to say about it. I consider the reclaiming of Islamic terms to be my right as a free human being. Tell me I can't and I'll do it anyway.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #52 - March 15, 2016, 05:21 AM


    Nowhere did I say I was talking about pot. Grin

    I don't think it's a novel idea at all, but personally it's something that I struggle to articulate and it's nice to know some people get it. It's a very spiritual experience for me, recognizing that religions are all a struggle towards the same thing—understanding the human condition.
    THIS THIS!! People don't recognize that their experience of Islam is subjective and historical. Islam like all other religions changes and evolves perpetually.


     001_wub
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #53 - March 15, 2016, 09:43 AM

    BuraqRentalsInc  is right in thes highlighted words
    Quote
    I'm not sure that supernatural elements are a necessary condition for belief.
     Would you say that the Soviet Union or North Korea or some other non-theist cases do not demonstrate belief? I agree that it cannot be called religion, but it still relies on faith, as opposed to observation, discovery and understanding. And it is most certainly not "as good as any scientific hypothesis".


    well then what you said before is no use.,    if it doesn't have “supernatural” element/s.,then it is not a "(RELIGIOUS) belief"  and you can not call it as religion. ..............



    I missed a word there ., we human beings believe in lots of stuff   so  I should have  said  "Religious belief" instead of just "belief" ....

    so what is cooking here?? love, anger and frustration??   .. emotions ..human emotions..

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #54 - March 15, 2016, 12:44 PM

    You don't get it. I'm saying, fuck the text, and yes I can do with them what I please. And yes, I'm taking some of my inspiration from the countless religions, including Islam,  that did the very same thing with whatever beliefs came before them.

    Do you think Christians care that Jews say Jesus could not have been a messiah?  Do you think Muslims care that Christians don't recognize Muhammad as a prophet?

    I'm saying that I can do with Islam what I want. The same way that gays took an optimistic word and made it their own.

    The same way my black friends who call it "some real nigga shit" when I do something nice for them mean it as a term of endearment.

    The same way that a group of descendants of Jamaican slaves took a look at the bible and said, fuck it, we're interpreting Zion as Ethiopia and calling the messiah black, because who says we can't?

    I really don't care what historic academics have to say about it. I consider the reclaiming of Islamic terms to be my right as a free human being. Tell me I can't and I'll do it anyway.


    You can. But whether it's accurate or true is another thing. When you're wrong you're wrong.

    To use your 'nigga' example. Using it a colloquial sense with friends is one thing as you no doubt do. But to say that 'nigger' originally meant friend or your BFF is another as it is absolute rubbish. Not to say you have done but it's an example. It has a particular historical context from which you can locate it's intended meaning.

    Similarly, certain words in the Quran are like that in which they have a particular meaning but the dawaghandists take it to mean something else all together.

    I'm all for positive engagement but not when it is dishonest and requires you to abandon common sense.

    Also, Muhammad was a white man, Zion is Pakistan and Islam allows you to drink alcohol because who has the right to tell me I can't reinterpret historical facts, events and figures as it is my human right. If this sounds rather silly to you it's just as silly as what I've read from the examples.

    No free mixing of the sexes is permitted on these forums or via PM or the various chat groups that are operating.

    Women must write modestly and all men must lower their case.

    http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?425649-Have-some-Hayaa-%28modesty-shame%29-people!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #55 - March 15, 2016, 01:37 PM

    Yeah. You still don’t get it. It’s OK though. You don’t have to.

    If we want to speak “historically,” then we know full well that the sources that illustrate Muhammad’s life are disputable at best. They were codified centuries after his alleged death by men with their own personal and political agendas. The crafting of the story has already been done! The usage of the symbolism of Muhammad has already been exploited. I’m just saying we could do it again.

    It’s the same as the example of Jesus in the Bible. Regardless of what may have been written and codified about him in the scriptures over the centuries, the “historical” Jesus will always remain an elusive figure. Others have capitalized on the idea of the meek messiah and made the symbolism of the Jesus figure work for their own objectives throughout the ages.

    No matter how many details you fill in, it’s like trying to base a religion on the deeds of the “historical” Robin Hood. It’s Ludicrous. In the face of this lunacy, though, comes the freedom to do with those symbols what you will.

    This is the point I’ve been trying to make, and I’m not convinced you’ll ever get it.

    Quote
    Similarly, certain words in the Quran are like that in which they have a particular meaning but the dawaghandists take it to mean something else all together.

    I'm all for positive engagement but not when it is dishonest and requires you to abandon common sense.
    Also, Muhammad was a white man, Zion is Pakistan and Islam allows you to drink alcohol because who has the right to tell me I can't reinterpret historical facts, events and figures as it is my human right. If this sounds rather silly to you it's just as silly as what I've read from the examples.


    The Qur’an contains numerous unique words that can only be understood using the definitions given to them by mufassiroon decoding the text after the fact. Look through any tafsir book and see how many times “wa qeela annahu…” is used: “And it is said that it means…”

    Maajid Nawaz actually makes this point about alcohol, and I agree with him. Some early mufassiroon only considered wine made from grapes to be considered khamr, excluding drinks like whiskey, beer, etc. There is nothing saying that this interpretation is incorrect apart from the fact that it diminished in acceptance over the years.

    Further - and I get that you were just trying to reduce my argument to an absurdity, but I’ll go there with you - one actually CAN make the case that Islam allows the consumption of alcohol. If you look beyond this ad hoc nonsense of abrogation, then certainly the Qur’an does recognize the use of alcohol.

    Surah Nahl, verse 67 reads: “And from fruits of the date-palm, and the grapes, you take therefrom intoxicant and a provision good. Indeed, in that (is) surely a Sign for a people who use reason.”

    Further, Surah Nisa Verse 43 reads “O you who believe! Approach not the prayer when you are in a drunken state until you know what you utter.”

    So yeah, this verse clearly describes believers getting drunk.

    And lastly, the verse that supposedly prohibits alcohol all together never actually says that alcohol is forbidden. It encourages believers to avoid it in order to be successful. It is the same language that is used to encourage believers to avoid suspicion. It doesn’t necessarily mean that suspicion is a forbidden act. It could be understood as an act that should be avoided.

    Ultimately, the Qur’an leaves it up to the individual to decide what they will do regarding alcohol, “fa hal antum muntahoon” – “Will you then desist?”

    Even looking at what's there in the text, the argument against alcohol is not as water tight as the literalists would have you believe. Imagine if you stop understanding the text as literal and divine all together? It opens the doors for the light of reason to shine in on them. And there is still plenty someone from a Muslim background might extract from these traditions.

    Quote
    Muhammad was a white man, Zion is Pakistan


    Again, I get it. Reductio ad Absurdum. It’s a good technique for dismissing an argument, but I’m afraid you’re still missing the point. If you do not take a text literally, then you can interpret it to fit into the understanding and the reality in which you find yourself. The argument can be made that this was the intention all along, and many have done so.

    I used the example of Rastafarian theology because they are often dismissed as a silly or uninformed religious movement. When you look closer, though, you see a deliberate attempt at reclaiming symbols that had been used to oppress an entire people.

    They understand that the Hebrew bible does not say that Zion is Ethiopia or that the Messiah was black. But faced with an oppressive creed that was forced upon them, they reclaimed the symbolism and made it work for them in new and creative ways. It’s a way to truly break free from the shackles of the symbolism, stories, and abstract concepts that exist at the heart of all religions.  

    So, yeah, it’s really not that hard to approach the Qur’an without all of the layers of imposed interpretation and scholarship medieval jurists have forced onto the text. You can claim all you want that there is some pure, original version out there, but there isn’t. It’s all up to interpretation and there is really no one whose approval I’m going to wait for as I figure out what the text will mean to me. I do believe that this is an approach that can work.

    And I still love you, Jedi.

     far away hug
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #56 - March 15, 2016, 02:25 PM

    Quote
    What would happen to the Muslim world if ex-Muslims, skeptics, or those with non-traditional views on Islam reclaimed the space of the “Masjid,” for instance, to be a place for seriously critiquing Islamic text and scriptures?


    Simply brilliant.  Afro

    hm, please have a plan somehow to actually do it. We need this to happen. Reformreformreform!
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #57 - March 15, 2016, 03:34 PM

    The same way that a group of descendants of Jamaican slaves took a look at the bible and said, fuck it, we're interpreting Zion as Ethiopia and calling the messiah black, because who says we can't?


    I think is too simplistic to say that if this has somehow worked out for others, it can work for Islam as well. Why we always suppose this is possible? Why we forget that we are still talking about 2 religions/things, different in many ways, each with their scripture and each with its own particularities. It is not wrong to start with this in mind? That if has worked for others it means that surely it can work for Islam as well? Islam is unique and the right approach is to look at how Islamic scripture and history are and starts from there, without making various assumptions.

    It seems to me that we are setting some targets for what Islam should be and we are using false analogies and we are trying to interpret the texts and traditions some way, just to arrive there. And we want this so much, that we forgot to be honest and this is what I think Jedi is saying.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #58 - March 15, 2016, 03:58 PM

    Again. I’m not saying it’s a goal. I’m not saying it’s what “should” happen. I’m saying it’s what CAN happen, and in many ways, it’s what I do NOW.

    I was a Muslim for nearly 3 decades. I spent a number of years at the end of that time losing my faith and trying to distance myself from Islamic symbolism all together, only to realize that those symbols are really just ways of interpreting the world, our values, and our conditions.

    I now find myself not abandoning those symbols and I find it liberating. If it’s not for you then it’s not for you.

    But I won’t listen to someone who says, for example, that I can’t call a self-imposed diet “sawm” because some medieval jurist defined it another way.

    I’ll say it again, even the Qur’an borrowed the practice of sawm from earlier traditions and redefined it in certain terms. Not all Muslims even agree on those terms today, by the way.

    Many shia, for example, view the time of iftar to be when the stars appear, while sunnis make iftar when the sun dips below the horizon. The Qur’an does not clearly define these times, nor does it clearly define exactly what should be avoided during the sawm. This was all codified after the fact of the text itself – and I don’t consider the text infallible.

    Knowing that the concept of sawm derived from earlier spiritual traditions, and that even secular members of those religious traditions still observe fasting in their own way for their own benefits today, I will always consider myself free to do the same.

    (Some personal context: I was out with a secular Christian last week who was observing Lent. She mentioned that she was avoiding red meat in observation of the tradition. Another person from a Christian background commented to me that instead of avoiding meat, she was deliberately abstaining from behaviors she found distasteful. No one was there screaming at any of them because they were getting the details of Lent wrong or being dishonest about what was “actually” intended. But heaven forbid someone from an Islamic background re-adapt a concept like sawm, which linguistically only means imsaak, or restraint, for their own personal benefit. Again, if it’s not for you it’s not for you. But let’s stop playing the game that says the fundamentalists are really the ones who got it right. They don’t even agree amongst themselves. )
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #59 - March 15, 2016, 04:23 PM

    Out of curiosity would you consider  identifying as a progressive or secular muslim ?


    In my opinion a life without curiosity is not a life worth living
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