Why don't you go ask that at a Christian forum? I don't know, there are so many different sects of Christianity that I lose track of what they do and do not believe.
Yep, and like it or not, there are many different sects of Islam.;D
Why don't you go ask that at a Christian forum? I don't know, there are so many different sects of Christianity that I lose track of what they do and do not believe.
No my dear, that is a delusion of yours.All land is Muslim land.
So you're answer is "yes the Americans are justified in invading Saudi Arabia"? How else do you stop someone? And how about Iraq and Afghanistan which also prohibited Christians and Jews preaching Christianity and Judaism?
uhmmm...do you have a link toi where it sys this as as far as i know you are allowed to preach judisem and christianity in saudi you jut need a permit as they dont want the wrong kind of faith being taught as in evanglists who have not read the full bible etc...
it would be against islam to stop them preaching there own religon you cant force islam...
you can teach it in saudi but you need a permit...
I do not deny that the British did some bad things in India. But what do you know that they did that was bad?
So they encouraged the Indian economy by developping markets in Britain? This is oppression? They helped India by bringing their exports within three weeks of Europe. This is oppression?
So they built railways, roads and ports to help Indian exports? How dare they! An expanding Indian market? You mean the Indian economy was growing?
Development projects? The swine! Massive irrigation projects? The dogs! Not encouraged is (a) not true - ask the Tatas and (b) is not the same as forbidding. Look at the Tatas.
Although some industrialisation took place. Wow. You mean they actually built factories in India? One thing is for sure, no industrialisation means that no benefits reach any Indians.
No it is not. It is called slow but sure minor economic improvement.
Why do you think it would be against Islam to stop preaching considering that pretty much every Muslim I have come across, especially around here, and pretty much every Muslim country thinks otherwise?
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2002/14012.htm
The Government prohibits public non-Muslim religious activities. Non-Muslim worshippers risk arrest, imprisonment, lashing, deportation, and sometimes torture for engaging in overt religious activity that attracts official attention. The Government has stated publicly, including before the U.N. Committee on Human Rights in Geneva, that its policy is to protect the right of non-Muslims to worship privately; however, it does not provide explicit guidelines--such as the number of persons permitted to attend and acceptable locations--for determining what constitutes private worship, which makes distinctions between public and private worship unclear. Such lack of clarity, as well as instances of arbitrary enforcement by the authorities, force most non-Muslims to worship in such a manner as to avoid discovery by the Government or others. Those detained for non-Muslim worship almost always are deported by authorities after sometimes lengthy periods of arrest during investigation. In some cases, they also are sentenced to receive lashes prior to deportation.
The Government does not permit non-Muslim clergy to enter the country for the purpose of conducting religious services, although some come under other auspices and perform religious functions in secret. Such restrictions make it very difficult for most non-Muslims to maintain contact with clergymen and attend services. Catholics and Orthodox Christians, who require a priest on a regular basis to receive the sacraments required by their faith, particularly are affected.
Proselytizing by non-Muslims, including the distribution of non-Muslim religious materials such as Bibles, is illegal. Muslims or non-Muslims wearing religious symbols of any kind in public risk confrontation with the Mutawwa'in. Under the auspices of the Ministry of Islamic Affairs, approximately 50 so-called "Call and Guidance" centers employing approximately 500 persons work to convert foreigners to Islam. Some non-Muslim foreigners convert to Islam during their stay in the country. According to official reports, 942 foreign workers converted to Islam in the past year. The press often carries articles about such conversions, including testimonials. The press as well as government officials publicized the conversion of the Italian Ambassador to Saudi Arabia in late 2001.
Im sorry are you actully trying to prove that british rule was good for india?
of course it was india loved being a slave to britan look at all that we learnt from it! you trying to tell me india would not have had railway or roads if britan never came?? i dont think so mate...
the amount of taxes that were imposed on the rural people starved them out and majority of indias hertige was looted still to be recovered today!
you say britan done india a favour by taking it over? i say india paid its worth in gold gems and slavery to pay for those advancements!
leaving Indian in two pieces was also a nice gift from the british!
you say there was no oppression!? no one was raped? no one killed?
what basis are you talking from? lets see you be treated as a slave for a week and see how you like it then come and say there was no oppression!
built a railway say thanks for that...can i have the cown jewels back aswell while your at it!?
how dare you just sit there and pretend you know anything about being in a country that is ruled by others!
Which muslim said that it is part of islam to stop others preaching!?
i dontthink so for centuries others have lived under islamic rule while preaching and following there oen religon and in saudi as i said you can preach WITH a permit...
Yep, and like it or not, there are many different sects of Islam.;D
It looks that way. Can hardly believe it myself.
Look at the rest of the Muslim world. Tell me how many railways they built without foreign colonial rule. As it happens the British had an obession with railways and so built a lot. Yes, I think India would not have had as many, if any, if the British had not come.
Well it is silly for Muslims to be complaining about the destruction of India's heritage as the main threat to it was Muslims. But the British government was a low taxing government - lower than the Mughals. And it did a lot to preserve India's heritage. More than most. India has a lot more than Iran does for instance.
Really? One day there will be a proper balanced accounting for British rule in India. Today is not that day obviously.
Are you complaining about the creation of Pakistan? No, tell me you are pulling my leg.
Nope. I do not say that.
Before you get all worked up into your usual lather, perhaps you might like to find where I said there was no oppression?
And whose Crown Jewels would they be exactly? Care to trace the recent history of the Koh-i-Noor?
Oh such outrage.
How about we compare British rule in India with Muslim rule in India?
Yep, and like it or not, there are many different sects of Islam.;D
You do realize this make no sense right?
How about we compare British rule in India with Muslim rule in India?
The Colonial Legacy - Myths and Popular Beliefs
Urban Development
It is undoubtedly true that the British built modern cities with modern conveniences for their administrative officers. But it should be noted that these were exclusive zones not intended for the "natives" to enjoy.
In 1854, Sir Arthur Cotton writing in "Public Works in India" noted: "Public works have been almost entirely neglected throughout India... The motto hitherto has been: 'Do nothing, have nothing done, let nobody do anything....." Adding that the Company was unconcerned if people died of famine, or if they lacked roads and water.
Irrigation and Agricultural Development
There is another popular belief about British rule: 'The British modernized Indian agriculture by building canals'. But the actual record reveals a somewhat different story. " The roads and tanks and canals," noted an observer in 1838 (G. Thompson, "India and the Colonies," 1838),
''which Hindu or Mussulman Governments constructed for the service of the nations and the good of the country have been suffered to fall into dilapidation; and now the want of the means of irrigation causes famines."
Montgomery Martin, in his standard work "The Indian Empire", in 1858, noted that the old East India Company "omitted not only to initiate improvements, but even to keep in repair the old works upon which the revenue depended."
Sir William Willcock, a distinguished hydraulic engineer, wrote" Not only was nothing done to utilize and improve the original canal system, but railway embankments were subsequently thrown up, entirely destroying it. Some areas, cut off from the supply of loam-bearing Ganges water, have gradually become sterile and unproductive, others improperly drained, show an advanced degree of water-logging, with the inevitable accompaniment of malaria. Nor has any attempt been made to construct proper embankments for the Gauges in its low course, to prevent the enormous erosion by which villages and groves and cultivated fields are swallowed up each year."
Poverty and Population Growth
unprecedented number of famines were recorded during the period of British rule.
In the first half of the 19th century, there were seven famines leading to a million and a half deaths. In the second half, there were 24 famines (18 between 1876 and 1900) causing over 20 million deaths (as per official records).
Particularly galling is how the British colonial rulers continued to export foodgrains from India to Britain even during famine years.
Annual British Government reports repeatedly published data that showed 70-80% of Indians were living on the margin of subsistence. That two-thirds were undernourished, and in Bengal, nearly four-fifths were undernourished.
Contrast this data with the following accounts of Indian life prior to colonization:-
" ....even in the smallest villages rice, flour, butter, milk, beans and other vegetables, sugar and sweetmeats can be procured in abundance .... Tavernier writing in the 17th century in his "Travels in India".
The French traveller, Bernier also described 17th century Bengal in a similiar vein: "The knowledge I have acquired of Bengal in two visits inclines me to believe that it is richer than Egypt. It exports in abundance cottons and silks, rice, sugar and butter. It produces amply for it's own consumption of wheat, vegetables, grains, fowls, ducks and geese. ."
Ancient Monuments
Perhaps the least known aspect of the colonial legacy is the early British attitude towards India's historic monuments and the extend of vandalism that took place. Instead, there is this pervasive myth of the Britisher as an unbiased "protector of the nation's historic legacy".
R.Nath in his 'History of Decorative Art in Mughal Architecture' records that scores of gardens, tombs and palaces that once adorned the suburbs of Sikandra at Agra were sold out or auctioned. "Relics of the glorious age of the Mughals were either destroyed or converted beyond recognition..". "Out of 270 beautiful monuments which existed at Agra alone, before its capture by Lake in 1803, hardly 40 have survived".
Lord William Bentinck, (governor general of Bengal 1828-33, and later first governor general of all India), went so far as to announce plans to demolish the best Mogul monuments in Agra and Delhi and remove their marble facades. These were to be shipped to London, where they would be broken up and sold to members of the British aristocracy.
India and the Industrial Revolution
Perhaps the most important aspect of colonial rule was the transfer of wealth from India to Britain.
Moreover, several of these patents, particularly those concerned with the textile industry relied on pre-industrial techniques perfected in the sub-continent. (In fact, many of the earliest textile machines in Britain were unable to match the complexity and finesse of the spinning and weaving machines of Dacca.)
Actually that number is likely to be an exaggeration, although more, as a percentage, were killed during the initial French invasion. But that is beside the point. I did not say they did not kill people who rose in rebellion. I said they were far more tolerant of Islam than the Arabs were of Christianity. And they were - the French did not execute anyone for stating their religious beliefs.
how hipocritical is that! the french in this modern day and age, were ther is so called democracy, the french still are dicriminating against muslim, not allowing them to practice their religion, by wearing the hijab. the west such as AMERICA and BRITAIN hav invaded many countries, brutally killing and opressing people however many of the history tought in schools seem to avoid that, and make up a lot of nonsense! America and Britain however are still invading, BUT its for the war on TERROR not for the OIL! GIVE ME A BREAK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:heated: :heated: :heated: :heated: :heated: :heated:
There are so many things wrong with these claims - and I assume you, or the website, gets them out of a single book on Victorian genocides - I hardly know where to start
Care to fill me in on the massive public works program launched by the Mughals? To whom are you comparing the British?
So to what are you comparing the British? Can we agree that the British did massive amounts of public works in the end even if in 1854 they were a little slow - they built massive canal prjects, roads, railways, hospitals, schools and so on?
Mike Davis points out that here were 31(thirty one) serious famines in 120 years of British rule compared to 17(seventeen) in the 2000 years before British ruleThis means nothing unless it is a claim that more famines took place.
Care to name one Hindu monument that the Mughal government spent a cent on preserving prior to the British? No one is saying they managed to preserve every single monument. Just many of them. More than their predecessors did.
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