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Theme Changer

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

 (Read 23544 times)
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  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #90 - March 17, 2016, 02:33 PM

    Sam Harris recently had a conversation with Namazie (which can be found at this website).  It was a really frustrating segment to listen to.  I didn't realize how irrational and confusing Namazie could be.  For someone who is routinely abused by false accusations of bigotry and insensitivity, she certainly has no qualms about slapping her detractors with the same slanderous charges.

    "Belief can blunt human reason and common sense, even in learned scholars. What is needed is more impartial study." - Ali Dashti

    https://certainlydoubtful1.wordpress.com/

    https://twitter.com/certainlydoubt1
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #91 - March 17, 2016, 04:41 PM

    I do the same with the Exodus narrative and a lot of the NT. Reading it as a novel can provide a drastically different perspective while helping me drop prior positions of history, accuracy, "truth", etc. The Exodus narrative has some basic themes most can identify with in some way; oppression, the fight against it, freedom from it and rediscovery. As with any good novel there are character flaws including God. I view the character of God as a manifestation of the hopes and desires of the people. Good and bad. It is far easier to relate to the story for me this way while avoiding the justification and relativism gymnastics I used as a believer.
    Honestly I identified with these themes for years before coming to any realization regarding the moral implications. Humans in general do think this way. We emphasis the positives and minimize the negatives.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #92 - March 17, 2016, 06:30 PM

    Yeah. I get that the actual title of "Muslim" might not be the thing that people want to reclaim. As I said, I only ever call myself "Muslim" if I'm in a group of atheists anyhow and we all know what I mean by it.

    But whatever you do with the things that you want to reclaim (or don't want to reclaim) is entirely up to you. This is the huge point I think is worth making. We can't be so quick to want to restrict Islamic traditions to what fundamentalists say they have to be.


    For those of us growing up in Christian lite country singing hymns in primary through to junior school, being acquainted to biblical stories, a very heavy leaning RE curriculum and exchanging gifts and cards on Easter and Xmas I debated am I as much a cultural Christian as I am a Muslim. Of course, the Islam aspect was greater in my youth but it no doubt has greatly diminished. Not least because Allah is absent.

    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 #93 - March 17, 2016, 06:35 PM

    I do the same with the Exodus narrative and a lot of the NT. Reading it as a novel can provide a drastically different perspective while helping me drop prior positions of history, accuracy, "truth", etc. The Exodus narrative has some basic themes most can identify with in some way; oppression, the fight against it, freedom from it and rediscovery. As with any good novel there are character flaws including God. I view the character of God as a manifestation of the hopes and desires of the people. Good and bad. It is far easier to relate to the story for me this way while avoiding the justification and relativism gymnastics I used as a believer. Reading it as a novel can provide a drastically different perspective. I can drop

    Honestly I identified with these themes for years before coming to any realization regarding the moral implications. Humans in general do think this way. We emphasis the positives and minimize the negatives.


    I think must humans gravitate towards such 'universal' desires which is why most cultures have familiar tales. We needed these stories as moral and inspirational tales. The liberating thing is that once you abandon religion you have a greater range of cultural narratives to choose from. It's intensel liberating. So long as you know that large portions of those stories are most likely fantastical.

    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 #94 - March 17, 2016, 08:12 PM

    A greater range but without the baggage each contains
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #95 - March 17, 2016, 11:16 PM

    I can bore everyone more but I think I have made my methodological resistance clear enough in my previous post above.

    Another thing I find interesting to think about though, is the problem of Islamic violent extremists about whom we are talking all along if indirectly. That is to say, is it contentual or contextual?

    So far, political leaders and so-called ‘moderates’ tell us it is conclusively contextual i.e. they have genuine situational grievances such as racism, poverty, precariatism, dysfunctional families, single-parent families, bad neighbourhoods, lack of education and or employment opportunities etc. that make them self-actualise by turning to jihad in the name of Islam. “This”, they point to X, Y or Z act of mass killing or civilian bombing “is not Islam”. It so happens that this gets followed not necessarily all the time by the non-sequitur “Islam is a religion of peace”.

    I get the fact that in political calculations, it is foolish for any country, blighted by acts of Islamic bombings, to throw the front line widely open with 1.5 billion people by calling their faith terrorism. Indeed it is foolish for a Western government adviser, let alone secretary or minister, to tie such acts up with anything but contextual ideation — and progressive agendas — because they’d probably face the chop and be speedily officially dissociated with. To complete this dramatis personae, now the role of the ‘moderates’ kicks in; you see them with their Taqiyahs and non-Western attire on television screens, on different channels, making the exact claim “this is not Islam”. The fact of these ‘moderates’ having beards or not is moot. But the unmistakable traditionalist imagery being projected is usually to legitimise and give the exact claim “this is not Islam” contentual compliance.

    Others say that the problem of Islamic violent extremists is contentual. That is, it is the content of the Islamic texts that justifies and encourages such acts of barbarism. For such thinkers, there’s no point in trying to fight verses with other verses. Revealed in Mecca or in Madina.

    Thus, no amount of fanciful interpretations can contextualise the stench of permanent Jihad against the Kuffs found in this Madina verse in At-tawbah [9:29]:

    قاتلوا الذين لا يؤمنون بالله ولا باليوم الآخر ولا يحرمون ما حرم الله ورسوله ولا يدينون دين الحق من الذين اوتوا الكتاب حتى يعطوا الجزية عن يدٍ وهم صاغرون

    Officially and on governments’ level, the West cannot say or accept contentualising terrorism because of political considerations, some of which I have eluded to above. In addition to this, freedom of religion is guaranteed in law and this freedom is all encompassing and would render banning certain aspects of contentual Quran as unlawful.

    Not to forget policies of social cohesion. I speak as the co-author of a legal report to Family Court in the UK on the validity of an Islamic marriage and how the court was being encouraged by the professor and legal jurist I was assisting to consider social cohesion and practise its discretionary powers not to send the wrong message upsetting governmental cohesive policies.

    It’s really interesting that it has fallen to the Egyptian President Abdul Fatah Al Sisi to say unequivocally that the problem of Islamic violent extremism is contentual. His speech was plastered all over the news and was the headline on many news websites, including those showing signs of what some would call regressive leftism. It is as if everybody was waiting for Wa Shahida Shahid Min Ahhliha. As if Sisi himself was an authority in such matters for Muslims in Egypt and elsewhere.

    Indeed, it is not far-fetched to suggest that the issues being dealt with in My Ordeal with the Quran are contentual in nature. To mistake its contentuality for what is largely incidental is to miss the relevant point in its entirety.

    Although I have come to see the Islamic violent extremism problem to be partially contextual, it remains for me to be massively contentual. I myself had believed it was my contentual duty in 2001 to aid my Muslim brothers and sisters in Afghanistan against the West. If my father didn’t learn about my plans and didn’t confiscate my passport, I would really have been one of those Islamic violent extremists.

    When the chance came again in Iraq, six out of my thirty Quranic students crossed the Syrian border to Iraq and died fighting in the way of Allah. My brother in-law was one of those fighters who attacked Abu-Gouraib Prison facilitating detainees’ mass escape.

    All of this was under the influence of a contentual duty.

    My brother in-law managed then to fight in Yemen before finally opting for a sedentary life on civvy street. He is happily married now but still believes it is his Islamic contentual duty to hate and fight the filthy kuffars anywhere they may be. His somewhat early retirement from fabulous Jihad is something he puts down to his laziness and weakness. Not ideological or contextual.

    I appreciate this is now turning autobiographical, in the same manner the previous post risked appearing glossological. I am thinking here and though I've always been an auto-didact, I am no didact. Only standing up for a method of truth discovery which, at least, enjoys a modicum of rigour and academic respectability against experimental approaches to traditional Islam.

    Contextual or contentual. It is a bit of both and in practice a lot of either. This 'either' for now at least I'm persuaded to say it is the content of the Quran for a lot of the otherwise educated, affluent violent extremists.

    ----------------------
    Edited to remedy etc.



    May I share this in my Facebook group, habibi?
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #96 - March 17, 2016, 11:21 PM

    Sam Harris recently had a conversation with Namazie (which can be found at this website).  It was a really frustrating segment to listen to.  I didn't realize how irrational and confusing Namazie could be.  For someone who is routinely abused by false accusations of bigotry and insensitivity, she certainly has no qualms about slapping her detractors with the same slanderous charges.


    I listened to the same podcast. I like Maryam's humanism, empathy and emotion. Sam's a smooth talker, very logical and rational and of course an excellent communicator, but he seems to be missing a human heart. He scares me.

    Sometimes the logical thing to do is not always the right thing to do.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #97 - March 17, 2016, 11:22 PM

    But then I'm a soppy emotional guy  Tongue
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #98 - March 18, 2016, 12:45 AM

    It was an enlightening debate.

    I second the love in the forum.

    I'd like to think I've been enough of an active member of the forum and forged such relationships that when we get into debates, adversarial or otherwise, we don't need to reinforce our love. It's a given. I don't take things personally, especially when it's attacking ideas.

    Three, I agree that the more sympathetic issues. But keep in mind that those involved in canonisation wee too part of the ummah from all classes so I wouldn't characterise it as canon v ummah. Also, the ummah hold the Quran and Hadith in very high regard. It's only when the masses truly invest time and energy into Islamic scripture that they learn of its literalism. Those who pick and choose are the more saner and peaceful but it must be accepted, and we know this too, that the kind of Islam they practise is Islam lite. And that's not the issue either as canon can be subject to revision. It's that any informed debate on Islam must be informed by academic standards, which I don't want it to come across as arrogant, but I do apply a positivist/lesser interpretivist model.

    Remember my whole contention was with 'truth' and smaller 't' truths as absurdist pointed out. Which of these has higher value? In polite conversation we may say 'yes you have a right to interpret Islam in such a way' then how can we form any form of coherent argument as to what Islam is and what the laws are? How can we reform society from the clutches of Islam when we are focusing on the wrong thing - we should attack those silly words, injunctions and the various laws imposed via Islam and the abolishing the supernatural foundations of Islam. If not, then the debate is a non starter. It's only providing a facade to Islam.

    Of course, as HM if it's a personal thing then that's not an issue. But what if those ideas or personal preference and reinterpretation seep it to the public are and muddy the waters of the debate about Islam and what it prescribes? How will this alleviate the suffering of those subjected by Islam inspired violence? Discrimination? Reform is not enough. The complete annihilation of superstition is key as that removes the perceived legitimacy and authority that the Quran and Hadith have.

    But characterising the debate as simply canon v. Muslim ummah is missing the point.


    Yeah, it could be that I am missing the point. It could be that I see it too simply, that I take the points given previously on this thread and strip them a bit too thin. But I see the vast teeming masses of the simple good people in Islam and I am outraged that this Quran, these hadith, would declare them outside the faith.
    I think that we have to accept that Islam is a juggernaut, that conquered half the world, and spawned cults and deviations in the thousands. This is due to the various influences of the Ummah- in the billions. If Shia and Sunni cannot resolve their differences, surely we cannot point out what is and is not Islam, either.
    I do agree that the canon is much at fault. I do agree that what you refer to as superstition and I refer to as canon (as there is proof of superstition in canon) is the real instigator in the relationship between religion and follower.
    If we point at so and so and declare them outside of Islam because they do not follow canon or pick and choose or have split off from the main and found a new prophet- then we succeed only in splintering further what we wish to reform. We isolate groups who share our root, and we achieve nothing. If we point at works that fly in the face of this verse or that, we silence the progression and we lose a voice.
    So we cannot. We cannot define Islam by canon. We instead claim Islam. We claim autonomy. We claim that no one defines Islam but Muslims. We can all agree on the roots, on the canon, but we can forge the religion´s future, as it´s followers. We can embrace and highlight it´s varied history, the contradiction in verses, the previous interpretations that butt up against each other- ready as any to fight it out, as proof that anything goes.
    I know you feel strongly that this belittles the suffering of those who have been abused in the name of Islam. But even those of us who have been abused in ways forbidden by Islam have been told ¨this is Islam¨ and can still claim their experience as religious. Because it is not a book abusing us. It is the people who believe, all too readily, whatever they want in order to justify their base desires who are abusing us. Islam has justified much, and will continue to be used in such a way until we strip it of it´s power. That is what abuse is, you know, no matter whether it lies within codified Shariah or not. The key is to call it out wherever it is found. That is how we honor the victims, in my opinion.
    I never knew what to do. I knew the problem lay with the Seal and the Divinity of Quran, but I did not know what to do about it.
    I think we should do what Hassan is doing. We kick the bucket out from under them (the canon) and let centuries of fiqh strangle itself. There is no leg to stand on without Divinity. We take a page from Christianity, the most malleable of the three, and claim Inspiration. We use the new information age to show the fallibility in every verse and collected work. We use it to showcase the history and the variance and let those two speak for themselves. This what we do. No other reform will strike at the root.

    Don't let Hitler have the street.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #99 - March 18, 2016, 02:42 AM


    May I share this in my Facebook group, habibi?


    Yes sure, habibi. Share it changing whatever you like to make it fit your purpose as it’s all my thinking out loud and nothing really serious. Though, I’d be interested to get some feedback on it on my email (quassimodorp@gmail.com) because now I’m less insecure about my personal identity being discovered. But even that is up to you completely — leave my email out of it if you think it’d distract your readers or divert their comments away from your Facebook xx
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #100 - March 18, 2016, 03:30 AM

    Wahhabist... it's probably better to pm your email to hassan instead of leaving it open in public.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #101 - March 18, 2016, 04:39 AM

    Wahhabist... it's probably better to pm your email to hassan instead of leaving it open in public.

    No, no, this is me trying to be subtle in sharing it with everyone after having made it public earlier today in my profile on the forum. Thanks x

    -------------------------------
    P.S.  I used to write in a few famous Arabic forums in which I formed interesting mainly literary but also intellectual friendships. As they grew stronger, I became my pathetic self even though, just like here now, I was always writing under a pseudonym. Thus, I started feeding others soft balls when I should have been driving a pantechnicon through their occasional inanity.

    So, I created more users or secondary accounts some of which were intended as suicide vehicles as I logged in using them from different machines and had tried to cover my IPs solely to criticise the mods when they seemed to think that they were bestest placed to know what was good for others. Suicide vehicles, because banning was the outcome of criticising the seemingly infallible mods. I can’t stop laughing at this because I was a mod myself (albeit it dormant and it being more of a sinecure). So I was able to read the perplexed reactions of those mods concerned in privileged sections, and tended to express sympathetic views towards these banned sods. "What they said was wrong in tone and approach", I would begin . . .

    I forgot what I was saying now. Let me see. Oh yes, so I used these fake accounts to check the free flow of praise between friends on literary matters and creative writing on these Arabic forums. You need to be an Arab or have selected your acculturation in its social and interactional generosity to really get how hard it was to not personalise ideas. How could you when these were people of extremes when they loved and hated?

    I forgot again where this was going. Really now. Focus. Ah yes, in both incarnations (as a normal member and a mod), try as I may I always risked being discovered and did so by a few people with pathologically expert eyes. I denied it was me of course, but there were a few pretty close shaves,

    Even now that I’m trying to be simple and chatty, perhaps, on the strength of Jedi’s advice above, I bet there are people -- like pen pals and irate old flames --- who can connect the dots very quickly if they read anything I have typed. By virtue of thrilled bookwormery and careful collection of useless information about nothing in particular, and by virtue of monstrously elaborate style and pompous words in English and Arabic alike, they would have a fairly good idea who this mad playful chatterbox really is. This is more my paranoia than conceited foolery that comes from being aware of being aware of being.

    P.P.S. This email is secondary.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #102 - March 18, 2016, 04:57 PM

    I listened to the same podcast. I like Maryam's humanism, empathy and emotion. Sam's a smooth talker, very logical and rational and of course an excellent communicator, but he seems to be missing a human heart. He scares me.

    Sometimes the logical thing to do is not always the right thing to do.


    Its not even about emotions.  Her conversational skills were very poor and her antics were childish.  Everytime Sam tried pinning her down on a point, she would just default to "but....thats my opinion".

    Harris' recent conversation with Omer Aziz was better.

    "Belief can blunt human reason and common sense, even in learned scholars. What is needed is more impartial study." - Ali Dashti

    https://certainlydoubtful1.wordpress.com/

    https://twitter.com/certainlydoubt1
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #103 - March 18, 2016, 06:28 PM

    ....................".

    Harris' recent conversation with Omer Aziz was better.

    well put the  link here certainlydoubt1

    Sam Harris talks to Omer Aziz about Islam, Islamism, free speech,



    Quote
    Omer Aziz is a writer, activist, and J.D. candidate at Yale Law School, where he is a Fellow at the Yale Information Society Project. Omer was most recently a Visiting Researcher at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and a Kirby Simon Fellow working at the Office of the U.N. Special Envoy for Syria.

    Omer has traveled extensively and written for a variety of publications, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Globe and Mail, The New Republic, Salon, The Diplomat, The Toronto Star, The National Post, Project Syndicate, among others. He has worked in management consulting, investment banking, and government.

    Omer was born and raised in Scarborough, Ontario on Toronto’s east end. He holds an MPhil in International Relations from Cambridge University and a B.A. in Politics from Queen’s University in Canada.


    and let us read this  blog from Omer Free Speech and Fanatics: A Final Rejoinder to Sam Harris   and that is written by Omer Aziz on Mar 10, 2016

    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 #104 - March 18, 2016, 07:09 PM

    Yeah, it could be that I am missing the point. It could be that I see it too simply, that I take the points given previously on this thread and strip them a bit too thin. But I see the vast teeming masses of the simple good people in Islam and I am outraged that this Quran, these hadith, would declare them outside the faith.
    I think that we have to accept that Islam is a juggernaut, that conquered half the world, and spawned cults and deviations in the thousands. This is due to the various influences of the Ummah- in the billions. If Shia and Sunni cannot resolve their differences, surely we cannot point out what is and is not Islam, either.
    I do agree that the canon is much at fault. I do agree that what you refer to as superstition and I refer to as canon (as there is proof of superstition in canon) is the real instigator in the relationship between religion and follower.
    If we point at so and so and declare them outside of Islam because they do not follow canon or pick and choose or have split off from the main and found a new prophet- then we succeed only in splintering further what we wish to reform. We isolate groups who share our root, and we achieve nothing. If we point at works that fly in the face of this verse or that, we silence the progression and we lose a voice.
    So we cannot. We cannot define Islam by canon. We instead claim Islam. We claim autonomy. We claim that no one defines Islam but Muslims. We can all agree on the roots, on the canon, but we can forge the religion´s future, as it´s followers. We can embrace and highlight it´s varied history, the contradiction in verses, the previous interpretations that butt up against each other- ready as any to fight it out, as proof that anything goes.
    I know you feel strongly that this belittles the suffering of those who have been abused in the name of Islam. But even those of us who have been abused in ways forbidden by Islam have been told ¨this is Islam¨ and can still claim their experience as religious. Because it is not a book abusing us. It is the people who believe, all too readily, whatever they want in order to justify their base desires who are abusing us. Islam has justified much, and will continue to be used in such a way until we strip it of it´s power. That is what abuse is, you know, no matter whether it lies within codified Shariah or not. The key is to call it out wherever it is found. That is how we honor the victims, in my opinion.
    I never knew what to do. I knew the problem lay with the Seal and the Divinity of Quran, but I did not know what to do about it.
    I think we should do what Hassan is doing. We kick the bucket out from under them (the canon) and let centuries of fiqh strangle itself. There is no leg to stand on without Divinity. We take a page from Christianity, the most malleable of the three, and claim Inspiration. We use the new information age to show the fallibility in every verse and collected work. We use it to showcase the history and the variance and let those two speak for themselves. This what we do. No other reform will strike at the root.


    This is a place holder.

    I'm not ignoring this. I'll come back to it in a bit when I can invest the time in it that it deserves.

    Thanks for your response Three.

    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 #105 - March 18, 2016, 07:31 PM

    But then I'm a soppy emotional guy  Tongue

    Well you are not only self-indulgent  sentimental emotional guy  but a "Mooney "  .....  a "Reject_ Mooney "

    you have such terrific cross cultural/cross religious background along with multi-languages skills + abilty to express cleanly   without those two.., you would have easily replace bums & big mouths like this one on some political/religious talk show host


    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 #106 - March 18, 2016, 07:45 PM

    well put the  link here certainlydoubt1


    Sorry  Smiley

    "Belief can blunt human reason and common sense, even in learned scholars. What is needed is more impartial study." - Ali Dashti

    https://certainlydoubtful1.wordpress.com/

    https://twitter.com/certainlydoubt1
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #107 - March 18, 2016, 08:08 PM

    Its worth mentioning Omer Aziz is himself quite a dishonest rabble-rouser.  But I can process more than one hour of him than 30 minutes of Maryam Namazie's filibustering responses.

    "Belief can blunt human reason and common sense, even in learned scholars. What is needed is more impartial study." - Ali Dashti

    https://certainlydoubtful1.wordpress.com/

    https://twitter.com/certainlydoubt1
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #108 - March 20, 2016, 01:25 PM

    Yeah, it could be that I am missing the point. It could be that I see it too simply, that I take the points given previously on this thread and strip them a bit too thin. But I see the vast teeming masses of the simple good people in Islam and I am outraged that this Quran, these hadith, would declare them outside the faith.


    I am too, but the fact is the actual definition of what it means to be a Muslim or within the fold of Islam exists and though they have evolved amongst certain communities doesn't mean just accept these often contradictory variations. Doing the research allows you to pinpoint a time or event and say 'ok, this is what it means to be Muslim according to x or y' despite the fact that there is a 'core' requirement at the heart of what it means to be Muslim or with any other word. To decipher meanings one cannot just say 'well I think this' or 'from what I know of a community this' - you must invest time in shifting through the increasing academic literature and base your judgement on the evidence and not desire. There are membership conditions and just because some people bend them or twist them so that they can remain a member doesn't mean that the original meaning of hat it is to be a 'member' has changed.

    Quote
    I think that we have to accept that Islam is a juggernaut, that conquered half the world, and spawned cults and deviations in the thousands. This is due to the various influences of the Ummah- in the billions. If Shia and Sunni cannot resolve their differences, surely we cannot point out what is and is not Islam, either.


    Yes we can, because even amongst sunnis there are people that deviate from actual Islam. There are sunnis that listen to devotional Qawwali music, yet music is haram irrespective of how devotional you may think it is. There may be some shias who think that Ali had divine or mystical powers - no he didn't as there's no evidence of that in the Quranic or the totality of Hadith literature. There are clear distinctions we can draw from looking at the text and practices and saying that ORIGINALLY this is most likely what was intended and we steer towards that which is best supported by the evidence at the time. There's no need to do back flips to accommodate competing views. Acknowledge them and respect them, but respect is no substitute for truth.

    Quote
    If we point at so and so and declare them outside of Islam because they do not follow canon or pick and choose or have split off from the main and found a new prophet- then we succeed only in splintering further what we wish to reform. We isolate groups who share our root, and we achieve nothing. If we point at works that fly in the face of this verse or that, we silence the progression and we lose a voice.


    I'm not working towards an ideology. This is the problem that I perceive. In an attempt to reform or appear liberal we are at the risk of accepting views and ideals that are so alien to the Islamic scriptures because e have de-contextualsied them and elasticated their meanings that they become irretrievably meaningless. 'Found a new prophet' that is so incontrovertibly haram you can not spin it any other way. This si n't about winning an election but about having an honest discussion about what 'is' and 'isn't' Islam. I know that we can never have the absolute truth but we can get as sloe to the actual meaning, intentions and authentic interpretation of the Quran without humouring the multitude of voices that wish to be heard for ideological purposes.

    Quote
    So we cannot. We cannot define Islam by canon. We instead claim Islam. We claim autonomy. We claim that no one defines Islam but Muslims. We can all agree on the roots, on the canon, but we can forge the religion´s future, as it´s followers. We can embrace and highlight it´s varied history, the contradiction in verses, the previous interpretations that butt up against each other- ready as any to fight it out, as proof that anything goes.


    Now I get you. I accept this wholeheartedly that Islam has evolved. But Islam cannot be left to be defined by Muslims. Again, whose voice do you give value to? What is the purpose of this? Are you going to favour the barelvi over the shia or the ahl-e-hadith over the Quran-onlyists or the Salafists over the gay and Muslim crowd?? Can you not see the flaw in this thinking and if it's simply to instigate a Muslim civil war and see the various branches fight and explode then isn't this somewhat disingenuous.

    Quote
    I know you feel strongly that this belittles the suffering of those who have been abused in the name of Islam. But even those of us who have been abused in ways forbidden by Islam have been told ¨this is Islam¨ and can still claim their experience as religious. Because it is not a book abusing us. It is the people who believe, all too readily, whatever they want in order to justify their base desires who are abusing us. Islam has justified much, and will continue to be used in such a way until we strip it of it´s power. That is what abuse is, you know, no matter whether it lies within codified Shariah or not. The key is to call it out wherever it is found. That is how we honor the victims, in my opinion.


    Yes it is a book abusing us. There is systemic and structural violence that justifies and sanctifies the agents of said violence. Not to mention some of the racist, sexist and despicable ways in which the Quran refers to people. The word kafir and its application is a form of abuse within the Quran. How many people have had a psychological trauma because of the fear and guilt that this one book induces? You call out the ISLAM for what it is and not sugarcoat like most people have done by saying 'there is no beating of the wife' or 'kafir simply means this ir that' or 'Hell is just an idea'.



    Quote
    I think we should do what Hassan is doing. We kick the bucket out from under them (the canon) and let centuries of fiqh strangle itself. There is no leg to stand on without Divinity. We take a page from Christianity, the most malleable of the three, and claim Inspiration. We use the new information age to show the fallibility in every verse and collected work. We use it to showcase the history and the variance and let those two speak for themselves. This what we do. No other reform will strike at the root.


    I can not reform something that isn't mine because I don't belong to it. I don't seek to reform an ideology that I'm not a part of and to pretend to do it simply because I want to incite a crisis of conscious is not my aim. I'd rather have an honest debate and face the facts. I don't see how what I've stated is anything different to the above in fact. By exploring the actual history without sugar coating it and by saying see what you claim to be 'Islam' isn't really Islam at all is the way to go. To mock, ridicule and deride the IDEAS. that's what's important. Ideas are fair game here. But to use people, lure them using a taqiyah technique is not my cup of tea. You can not manipulate people into reform. State your interests honestly - I don't believe in god - and do it that way because the alternative is not only dishonest but the people you are speaking to will find out and this will further entrench the divisions.

    Oh, and we have been 'kicking the bucket from under them' for a long time. Academics have, laypeople have. Question Islam, Question the Quran, Question Allah. Question Muhammad. There is no need to reform Islam nor Muslims.

    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 #109 - March 20, 2016, 04:45 PM

    let me put this here..

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gKjcvZoxT9Q

    Sam Harris vs Reza Aslan Full Unedited Video  .,  Don't  you guys think Sam Harris has more radical ideas  than that Reza Aslan who talks smoothly..


    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 #110 - March 20, 2016, 06:48 PM

    I am too, but the fact is the actual definition of what it means to be a Muslim or within the fold of Islam exists and though they have evolved amongst certain communities doesn't mean just accept these often contradictory variations. Doing the research allows you to pinpoint a time or event and say 'ok, this is what it means to be Muslim according to x or y' despite the fact that there is a 'core' requirement at the heart of what it means to be Muslim or with any other word. To decipher meanings one cannot just say 'well I think this' or 'from what I know of a community this' - you must invest time in shifting through the increasing academic literature and base your judgement on the evidence and not desire. There are membership conditions and just because some people bend them or twist them so that they can remain a member doesn't mean that the original meaning of hat it is to be a 'member' has changed.

    Yes we can, because even amongst sunnis there are people that deviate from actual Islam. There are sunnis that listen to devotional Qawwali music, yet music is haram irrespective of how devotional you may think it is. There may be some shias who think that Ali had divine or mystical powers - no he didn't as there's no evidence of that in the Quranic or the totality of Hadith literature. There are clear distinctions we can draw from looking at the text and practices and saying that ORIGINALLY this is most likely what was intended and we steer towards that which is best supported by the evidence at the time. There's no need to do back flips to accommodate competing views. Acknowledge them and respect them, but respect is no substitute for truth.

    I'm not working towards an ideology. This is the problem that I perceive. In an attempt to reform or appear liberal we are at the risk of accepting views and ideals that are so alien to the Islamic scriptures because e have de-contextualsied them and elasticated their meanings that they become irretrievably meaningless. 'Found a new prophet' that is so incontrovertibly haram you can not spin it any other way. This si n't about winning an election but about having an honest discussion about what 'is' and 'isn't' Islam. I know that we can never have the absolute truth but we can get as sloe to the actual meaning, intentions and authentic interpretation of the Quran without humouring the multitude of voices that wish to be heard for ideological purposes.

    Now I get you. I accept this wholeheartedly that Islam has evolved. But Islam cannot be left to be defined by Muslims. Again, whose voice do you give value to? What is the purpose of this? Are you going to favour the barelvi over the shia or the ahl-e-hadith over the Quran-onlyists or the Salafists over the gay and Muslim crowd?? Can you not see the flaw in this thinking and if it's simply to instigate a Muslim civil war and see the various branches fight and explode then isn't this somewhat disingenuous.

    Yes it is a book abusing us. There is systemic and structural violence that justifies and sanctifies the agents of said violence. Not to mention some of the racist, sexist and despicable ways in which the Quran refers to people. The word kafir and its application is a form of abuse within the Quran. How many people have had a psychological trauma because of the fear and guilt that this one book induces? You call out the ISLAM for what it is and not sugarcoat like most people have done by saying 'there is no beating of the wife' or 'kafir simply means this ir that' or 'Hell is just an idea'.



    I can not reform something that isn't mine because I don't belong to it. I don't seek to reform an ideology that I'm not a part of and to pretend to do it simply because I want to incite a crisis of conscious is not my aim. I'd rather have an honest debate and face the facts. I don't see how what I've stated is anything different to the above in fact. By exploring the actual history without sugar coating it and by saying see what you claim to be 'Islam' isn't really Islam at all is the way to go. To mock, ridicule and deride the IDEAS. that's what's important. Ideas are fair game here. But to use people, lure them using a taqiyah technique is not my cup of tea. You can not manipulate people into reform. State your interests honestly - I don't believe in god - and do it that way because the alternative is not only dishonest but the people you are speaking to will find out and this will further entrench the divisions.

    Oh, and we have been 'kicking the bucket from under them' for a long time. Academics have, laypeople have. Question Islam, Question the Quran, Question Allah. Question Muhammad. There is no need to reform Islam nor Muslims.


    I wholeheartedly disagree with your premise here. When I'm at a keyboard I'll do a better job at explaining why.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #111 - March 20, 2016, 08:00 PM

    For now, I'll say that what modern academia appears to be teaching us about Islam is that it never has been a single, monolithic ideology; it has always been malleable. Its book, its Prophet, and even its deity have been interpreted and manipulated differently by different groups. Its origins are obscure and heavily influenced by beliefs and rituals borrowed from others in the period and the region.

    This is not to say that there was never an attempt to codify all of these disparate pieces into one coherent narrative known as "God's Way" as presented to the masses. There clearly was. It occurred mainly in the 9th and 10th centuries and exists largely as what we'd recognize as Sunni Islam.

    But the work of those jurists has never been known as the work of the Prophet, who - even as tradition has it - died without compiling his revelations and lived according to contradictory philosophies as dictated by the situation and period in which he found himself.

    So sure, we may be able to find a "True Islam," but the question remains: true to whom? True to the ash'aris? True to the mu'tazilah? True to the thaahiriyyah? True to the ithna'ashariyyah? True to the sufis? True to the Saudis? True to the Ottomans? True to the salafis? True to the Prophet himself, if he even existed in the way we've been told?

    The idea that academia can figure this out misses what academia will actually do to these traditions. It will expose their origins as being far more tenuous and obscure than any of their practitioners would like to admit.

    In the face of that, I say that it is up to us, We the People who have followed and incorporated aspects of this umbrella term known as Islam into our lives, to figure out what these ancient traditions will mean to us. That will be the future of Islam.

    I agree that it starts with scrutiny, but it certainly doesn't have to end there.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #112 - March 20, 2016, 08:01 PM

    I am too, but the fact is the actual definition of what it means to be a Muslim or within the fold of Islam exists and though they have evolved amongst certain communities doesn't mean just accept these often contradictory variations. Doing the research allows you to pinpoint a time or event and say 'ok, this is what it means to be Muslim according to x or y' despite the fact that there is a 'core' requirement at the heart of what it means to be Muslim or with any other word. To decipher meanings one cannot just say 'well I think this' or 'from what I know of a community this' - you must invest time in shifting through the increasing academic literature and base your judgement on the evidence and not desire. There are membership conditions and just because some people bend them or twist them so that they can remain a member doesn't mean that the original meaning of hat it is to be a 'member' has changed.

    Yes we can, because even amongst sunnis there are people that deviate from actual Islam. There are sunnis that listen to devotional Qawwali music, yet music is haram irrespective of how devotional you may think it is. There may be some shias
    who think that Ali had divine or mystical powers - no he didn't as there's no evidence of that in the Quranic or the totality of Hadith literature. There are clear distinctions we can draw from looking at the text and practices and saying that ORIGINALLY this is most likely what was intended and we steer towards that which is best supported by the evidence at the time. There's no need to do back flips to accommodate competing views. Acknowledge them and respect them, but respect is no substitute for truth.

    I'm not working towards an ideology. This is the problem that I perceive. In an attempt to reform or appear liberal we are at the risk of accepting views and ideals that are so alien to the Islamic scriptures because e have de-contextualsied them and elasticated their meanings that they become irretrievably meaningless. 'Found a new prophet' that is so incontrovertibly haram you can not spin it any other way. This si n't about winning an election but about having an honest discussion about what 'is' and 'isn't' Islam. I know that we can never have the absolute truth but we can get as sloe to the actual meaning, intentions and authentic interpretation of the Quran without humouring the multitude of voices that wish to be heard for ideological purposes.

    Now I get you. I accept this wholeheartedly that Islam has evolved. But Islam cannot be left to be defined by Muslims. Again, whose voice do you give value to? What is the purpose of this? Are you going to favour the barelvi over the shia or the ahl-e-hadith over the Quran-onlyists or the Salafists over the gay and Muslim crowd?? Can you not see the flaw in this thinking and if it's simply to instigate a Muslim civil war and see the various branches fight and explode then isn't this somewhat disingenuous.

    Yes it is a book abusing us. There is systemic and structural violence that justifies and sanctifies the agents of said violence. Not to mention some of the racist, sexist and despicable ways in which the Quran refers to people. The word kafir and its application is a form of abuse within the Quran. How many people have had a psychological trauma because of the fear and guilt that this one book induces? You call out the ISLAM for what it is and not sugarcoat like most people have done by saying 'there is no beating of the wife' or 'kafir simply means this ir that' or 'Hell is just an idea'.



    I can not reform something that isn't mine because I don't belong to it. I don't seek to reform an ideology that I'm not a part of and to pretend to do it simply because I want to incite a crisis of conscious is not my aim. I'd rather have an honest debate and face the facts. I don't see how what I've stated is anything different to the above in fact. By exploring the actual history without sugar coating it and by saying see what you claim to be 'Islam' isn't really Islam at all is the way to go. To mock, ridicule and deride the IDEAS. that's what's important. Ideas are fair game here. But to use people, lure them using a taqiyah technique is not my cup of tea. You can not manipulate people into reform. State your interests honestly - I don't believe in god - and do it that way because the alternative is not only dishonest but the people you are speaking to will find out and this will further entrench the divisions.

    Oh, and we have been 'kicking the bucket from under them' for a long time. Academics have, laypeople have. Question Islam, Question the Quran, Question Allah. Question Muhammad. There is no need to reform Islam nor Muslims.


    I see your points, but I think only Muslims have the right to determine if they are Muslim or not. Previously I have believed as you do, but I don´t think it right or even sustainable to decide if someone else is within the fold. We deny a voice to only the most pious, who accept the least hadith? The ummah is far more diverse than that, and they all get a say. I wouldn´t favor any voice over any other. We need to accept everyone as a part of the community, if they call themselves Muslim. What we have right now is what you describe, where the differing branches are fighting each other. I see it all the time on the news. I am asking for a different take on it, where Muslims accept other Muslims as Muslim even if they pray on something different or follow a caliph you have never heard of. I hope for a tolerant ummah, not this finger pointing nit picking disenfranchising mess I see on the news.
    I am not luring anyone, either.
    By ¨Kicking the Bucket¨ I am referring to the bucket as being the concept of the divinity of the Quran. What it all stands on.
    I still think you are looking at Islam as a book, rather than a flexible ideology shared by billions with a fiqh and history as contradictory and rich as any body of opinion.
    I want to put it all in black and white, but the ummah doesn´t cooperate.

    Don't let Hitler have the street.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #113 - March 20, 2016, 09:57 PM

    We are not the only living religious tradition with barbarism, misogyny, superstition,  ignorance, and scientific error contained within its text. We cannot be the only tradition that, on the whole, refuses to really admit, contextualize, and dismiss those elements of the true Days of Ignorance to our past, learning from their mistakes and calling them out for what they are, fearing not the rebuke of those who rebuke. 

    Nor should we be the only tradition that rejects wholesale our positive elements, or refuses to reinterpret them to suit the realities in which we now find ourselves. Religions older than ours have already done just that and are better off for it.

    Even our  literalists  believe that the "Word of God" was abrogated when the situation called for it.

    For those of us for whom Islam is not just an exercise in intellectual masturbation, or a part of our existence that we can just compartmentalize and try our best to forget, I do believe that this is the best course. And as a byproduct, I do think that our ideas  and the ideas of the countless Muslims who struggle with Islam will continue to benefit the ummah of Muhammad,  for as long as it remains on this earth.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #114 - March 20, 2016, 10:43 PM

    I actually disagree with you HM. I don't think on the whole religious traditions have offered all that much positive in addition to their barbarism, misogyny, etc. A general sense of community and togetherness, sure. But I think we can see this is not an exclusively religious characteristic.

    It's too late now for gradual change via the messy and haphazard approach of communities rejecting and reinterpreting aspects of the religion to suit their circumstances, as had traditionally led to the reform of religious movements including Christianity. The global social order is now moving at a much faster rate in the information age.

    Whether it's a lucky or unlucky coincidence, at the moment Islam as it is most commonly interpreted has the biggest collection of negative baggage that we mentioned, which is irreconcilable with subsisting in the modern world, let alone thriving in it. In my mind then it makes perfect sense that we'll see a lot of young apostates from Islam, and very black and white take it or leave it (if even that) sorts of interaction with the entrenched religious hierarchy.

    how fuck works without shit??


    Let's Play Chess!

    harakaat, friend, RIP
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #115 - March 20, 2016, 11:51 PM

    I think you're right. I think that in environments in which Islam is defined by the government, or the imams, or ones parents, one will have no choice but to completely reject those versions in a black and white sort of way.

    For those who had a more voluntary or pleasant connection with the tradition, then there certainly are things that can be worth holding on to or redefining in their own right. I still enjoy making wudhu after a stressful day, for example, and I still recite the Quran and ponder over its verses. I don't believe in God or Allah in any traditional or literal sense, but I do find the concept of deities to be a fascinating symbol for the superlative ideals that humans strive towards.

    And I suppose it's not worth arguing over semantics and labels. Call it Islam, ex-Islam,  post-Islam, agnostic Islam, reformed Islam, or what have you. I'm talking about us and what we still do with our heritage.

    Even given the freedom to choose, I believe that we all have aspects of our heritage that we couldn't get rid of if we tried. We spend hours on this forum proving just that, even if it's just that "sense of community and togetherness."
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #116 - March 21, 2016, 02:16 AM

    Even given the freedom to choose, I believe that we all have aspects of our heritage that we couldn't get rid of if we tried. We spend hours on this forum proving just that, even if it's just that "sense of community and togetherness."


    Oh, I have no doubt of that.  Smiley

    how fuck works without shit??


    Let's Play Chess!

    harakaat, friend, RIP
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #117 - March 21, 2016, 04:33 AM

    I thought more about this discussion and the possibility of my methodological resistance being motivated by something more than disciplined, proper and objective way of defining what Muslim means. It is not inconceivable that I might’ve been hiding my other reasons behind the obvious laudability of methodological thoroughness.

    But no. This is because what reclaiming the label Muslim in this discussion so far has meant still strikes me as a basic fallacy for whose discovery, inter alia, David Hume is known. That is, the problem of deriving an “ought” from an “is”.

    A Muslim is a person who believes in the divine nature of Allah and his messenger’s prophethood. This is the positive case for what a Muslim IS.

    No, say the normative and prescriptive people. Muslim, they say, OUGHT to be defined based on the other things related to the divine nature of Allah and the prophethood of Muhammed, the two things which we have come to reject as false.

    Thus, if Muslim-OUGHT sayers confine their definition to themselves, Muslim-IS sayers have nothing to say or do. The Muslim-IS people might shrug their shoulders and twiddle their thumbs.

    This inactive tolerance is because factually, Muslim-OUGHT people (luckily in this case, not ought to be) are free to do and say so as this freedom is guaranteed (when applicable) by their countries’ secular constitutions.

    However, Muslim-OUGHT people cannot rely too much on this basic freedom as to expect or demand Muslim-IS people to celebrate their definition, or take it seriously or even treat it less contemptibly.

    Again for clarity’s sake, this is not an argument against the Muslim-OUGHT people holding dearly, passionately, lyrically even on everything else beside the two objective criteria, of Allah’s divinity and Muhammed’s prophethood.

    To repeat as this is worth repeating, this is an argument the Muslim-IS people are not making and therefore nobody is trying to strip anyone from their cultural heritage, whatever that means in precise terms.
     
    Thus, the Muslim-OUGHT people can keep their Muslim names (in the same manner the excellent philosopher Dr Arif Ahmed has so far done. Ditto, Ayyan H Ali and others).

    In terms of acts of worship as per Islam-IS above, the Muslim-OUGHT people can annually give 2.5 % to charity calling it Zakat; they can be most dutiful to their parents and call it Bir; they can get stoned before they meditate five times a day as a way of doing salat; they can visit the sick in hospitals and at home calling it Iyadat Al-Marid.

    They however should not be surprised if they get dismissed and laughed out of town, by Muslims and Ex Muslims and other interested parties, for the simple fact that they lack belief in Allah’s divinity and Muhammad’s prophethood.

    As a matter of fact, going by these two (incredibly inclusive) criteria, it doesn’t matter if the believer is Shia or Sunni to be a Muslim. It doesn’t matter also what type of mathhab in figh they follow, how faithfully or otherwise.

    It is the belief in Allah’s divinity and Muhammad’s prophethood that are what make a person Muslim. These two are included in the Shahada, which fast tracts a believer to Jannah if it was the last thing they said on their deathbed.

    No serious person can persuasively argue against this through the texts.

    Evidence for the basic two criteria abound (available on demand), and these two were sufficient during the thirteen-year Meccan Era of Islam with its two stages of secret dawa and Jahr dawa during the very life of the ‘Prophet’ Muhammad and before the completion of Islam as a religion. Thus, it is not illogical to apply the same criteria post Islam completion and this is to argue against the point of Islamic texts being compiled after the death of Muhammad thereby anything might have gone.

    The first criterion has been constant for all the prophets who preceded Muhammed. The second criterion also includes belief in all the prophets who preceded Muhammed, individually as mentioned by name in the Quran and collectively.

    If you strip everything in the Quran down to the bone, you will find two things; either commands (اوامر) or news (اخبار). The latter, which is the relevant point in relation to the prophets who preceded Muhammed, obligates only submissive belief, not action in this case.

    Now, the justifying comparisons being brought to the discussion by the Muslim-OUGHT people are neither analogous nor factually proper. The idea of Jews being also secular or atheists is incongruent because Jewishness in its most basic definition contains an element of ethnicity and or religious conversion.

    If for the former, that’s ascription i.e. it happened by a person’s mere accident of birth, a process in which a person passively finds him or herself and as such, cannot reverse, not in intention nor by action or thought (thus, Christopher Hitchens, for example, was a Jew even before he found out). If the latter, it does not apply here.

    Secularist does not always mean the person is without divinity-based faith but rather it can all too easily mean that they confine their faith to the private sphere of life and keep it to themselves and in their own time. They are more likely to ask others to do the same. Moreover, there are secular and human rights activists who at the same time are divinity-based Muslim ( to my surprise, I met and came to know about a few of them when I worked for Amnesty International).

    Also, you are not thinking right if you thought that the case of the Arab Israelis weakens the argument being made about Jewishness in its most basic definition above. That of ethnicity based on matrilineality and or religious conversion of the non-ethnically Jew. Please enlighten me if this is a factual error and either of the two isn’t sufficient to make anyone a Jew.

    All this defective reasoning is based on a premise that says “in lived experience and throughout the history of Islam, there are a lot of criteria that are different and they contradict each other but all nevertheless constitute what a Muslim is.” The conclusion that follows it ought to be “therefore, anything I say it constitutes a Muslim goes because it’s my inalienable heritage and I lay equal claim to it as much as everybody else in the Ummah who shares Islamic heritage with me”.

    This is not dabbling in frivolous semantics by the way (which might come later) and is not pernickety of the dispassionate Muslim-IS people who are denying others the use of a label they were born into. Rather, these are crucial issues that subjective identifications with what otherwise has reducible objective criteria raise.

    Being an Ex Muslim is still defined by something related to Islam. If you still love your Ex, that's fine, we all regress sometimes and cry our misspent youth when we have had a few too many or have been high on the Dutch stuff. It's fine.

    If scripturally Ex Muslim doesn't work for you because it's not accurate or because you still have strong affinities with the faith as you used to practise it, then you can call it Formerly Muslim instead or better still, Cultural Muslim.

    Feel free to call it whatever you want. But if you make positive statements about it, if you don't want to keep the whole label thing to yourself or keep it under your nickname in the space you lavishly self identify as you desire; simply, if you want to write telling everyone else about it on a public forum, like dear Hassan did, then it's going to be up for discussion ad nauseam.

    Just because others respect your freedom to self identify it does not mean they should support its products or when its products are illogical, that they should not point them out because you might get angry or go all proprietorial on them.
     
    With a lot of love from the Ex Ayatullah, Ex Samahat Al-Imam and the Ex would-be Caliph: Wahhabist

    ---------------------
    Updated and proofread.
  • Why must Maryam Namazie take on the left in her critiques of Islamic extremism?
     Reply #118 - March 21, 2016, 12:14 PM

    Wahhabist writes one more post that makes me pull my hair for this simple Question  and that is .. well  let me add that to Wahhabist's post as he seems to be struggling to answer that same question and on the way  let me write  some Quran from  his words

    Quote
    Who Is  Muslim and What Is Islam?


    .............., the problem of deriving an “ought” from an “is”.........

    A Muslim is a person who believes in the divine nature of Allah
    and his messenger’s prophet hood.
    This is the positive case for what a Muslim "IS".
    Quote
    repeat the Shahadah in Arabic, out loud and in front of witnesses

    "La ilaha illa Allah; Muhammadur-Rasul Allah.
    'There is no god but Allah; Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah."'


    Quote
    Nay, say the normative....
    they say, You OUGHT to be .....
    Thus, we have  
    Muslim-OUGHT Sayers...
     and Muslim-IS Sayers......
     Muslim-OUGHT people
    and Muslim-IS people
    free to do and free to say
     freedom is guaranteed
    Muslim-OUGHT demand
    Nay.,  says Muslim-IS  

    the Muslim-OUGHT say
    they divine  passionately and lyrically
    everything   Allah to  Muhammad  Saw pubh

    To repeat is worth repeating,
    as Quran repeats umpteen times the same
    So who Muslim-IS and
    Muslim-OUGHT to be



    YES....yes....yesssssss...

    "La ilaha illa Allah; Muhammadur-Rasul Allah.
    'There is no god but Allah; Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah."'


    who is Muhammad?........ I don't know
    who was Muhammad?.....  I don't know
    what is Allah? .....  I don't know
    What was Allah...........  I don't know


    well that is enough  for now and  if I take words from of all  his posts I can write whole Quran  all 114 chapters.,   And me,  after reading Quran + umpteen books on Islam from Islam lovers and Islam haters ., Reading  books from Muslim haters and Muslim BABOONS.,  living life as Muslim kid and zebra kid in a confused large  religious family  related to many Zebras ..I still have the same question., and It is hard to get the answer to that simple Question.. So fuck it.....fuck the question.. suck it up  an say  Stupid  shud  up ... shud  up ..  don't ask..

    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 #119 - March 21, 2016, 02:08 PM

    Wahhabist, I'm more afraid of spam-bots to be honest  wacko

    I kind of think that both parties are arguing from different viewpoint.

    HM-side are arguing that Islam, just like every other religions (Christianity and Judaism, etc) can be changed. It doesn't matter what the "real definition" is, because what people feel like what the real definition is, changes overtime. There was a time when being Christian mean actually following Christianity.... Nowadays Christians are gluttonous and not very humble. It used to be full of guilt-tripping, now it's mega churches and stuff. Religions and their developments are not logical, religions are pretty much defined by what the religious think they should mean (ought). There is no "is" in religion, because the definition of "is" changes.

    Right now, muslims are salafi-ist and will probably laugh at secular muslims. That's true, for now. However, looking at every other religions on earth, Islam will change just like everything else. Salafism will probably die off, and hippy-Islam have a good chance to flourish then.

    I mean, I do agree that if you're a jew, by definition you can't be like "secular jews" who are only jew just because. No matter how you look at it, orthodox jews in Israel are more jewish. Ditto with orthodox Christians, of course the more literal and backward (closer to how it was when it's invented) then the "more right" it is. But nowadays most jews are secular and most christians are liberal christians...

    So it doesn't matter what religion "is", religions have always been about what the religious think it "ought" be.
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