Raphael
Esteemed Member
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The problem is, Muslims have become obsessed with petty differences
A wild understatement :exhausted
The problem is, Muslims have become obsessed with petty differences
Dear Thomas
I too am from the South Coast of U.K. My father is an 'indigenous' Englishman by which I assume you mean the 'white' descendants of the Celtic, Roman, Anglo-Saxons, Germanaic, Nordish people and so forth who migrated there from Europe across the centuries.
My mother is one of the immigrants who came from Pakistan in the 70s.
I find that your perception of Islam is highly blinkered. Muslims are not a uniform homogeneous mass.
I also feel you have been hoodwinked by the rhetoric of parties like UKIP and BNP, who masquerade under the guise of defending British/Christian values when you know as well as I do that any 'Christian' values England holds as a country today is merely paying lip service.
Muslims couldn't care less about a tree being called a 'Christmas Tree'. I was involved in many school nativity plays, yes, as a Muslim child! I played one of the three wise men, and even a sheep (ironic maybe)! As to why the tree was renamed 'Tree of Light', I think you are asking the wrong people. I think you have that wonderful post-enlightenment 'secularism' movement to thank for that one, which has been politically correcting and championing 'freedom from religion' for the last few decades.
Regarding this mass influx of crazy burka-wearing placard-waving Muslims who are swimming across the channel just to get a chance to live in Mighty Blighty, you do realise that this is, 1. A scaremongering vote-grabbing bogeyman stereotype the likes of which was used to caricature communists during the Cold War, and, 2. A problem which reflects more on the ridiculous open door policy the government adopted as a means to boost the economy, that it does on the immigrants themselves? If you open the door, how can you blame the man who walks in?
Now look Thomas, the majority of true practising Muslims (I won't call them "moderate", because that is like saying "watered down" and is therefore oxymoronic), who follow the Qur'an as it is meant to be followed, do not, I repeat NOT want to bomb you. For a Muslim to take one innocent life is like killing all of humanity. Also, they do not want shariah law in the U.K. They don't even want you to rename your Christmas Tree!They just want what you want: to practise their beliefs, to coexist alongside their fellow human being and People of the Book (Christians and Jews - people held in high regard in the Qu'ran) and to have a good future for themselves and their family. That's IT. No fine print, no BS'ing.
I would also like to talk to you Grace Seeker.
Firstly, what 'radar screen' are you talking about? The wonderfully free and fair agenda-less media coverage? Muslims do not need to apologise for the acts of someone who flagrantly contradicts their core beliefs and values. Islam is not the only religion of whose some alleged 'followers' have innocent blood on their hands. Yes, people got bent out of shape over the issue of the Danish cartoon - I wrote an entire thread dedicated to condemning these placards - but why are you judging Islam based on a select group of Muslims? Why don't you do your research into Islam with a rational mind, find out whether the 1 percent of verses that deal with fighting are referring specific contexts of self-defence against those who attack Muslims, or if they are referring to clandestine acts of mass violence against entire populations. I think you will find it is the former. Thomas: I would kindly advise you do the same.
Peace, may we come to a common understanding.
The mention of christianity abuse was meant to be a quite seperate issue and whilst moslems dont neccessarily use profain language, millions of others do and christians just have to put up with it. It was in this sense that I think Moslems are wimpish about wanting to make an issue of things every time Mohammed or Allah is perceived as being abused. Why cant they just take it on the chin and pray for those who are offending them, like christians have to?
Are the Christians who are purposefully drawing offensive cartoons to dismay Muslims praying for Muslims as well?
How do you know that the people drawing what you consider to be offensive cartoons are in fact Christians? I don't know the faith of the Danish cartoonist one way or the other. But it wouldn't surprise me if he was of no particular faith, as that seems to be the dominate category of people in Europe these days.
I do seem to recall the lady teacher who taught in the school was a Christian. She was there because she loved teaching and loved children, and was motivated by her faith to go and be of service, not as an evangelist,for she also loved Muslims without feeling a need to convert anyone. She simply did it because it needed to be done and she could do it. And the name was chosen for the Teddy bear was chosen not by her, but by the students themselves at the suggestion of a Muslim classmate. But, of course, once it made the news, the unorganized masses were somehow able to find their voice and unify themselves in order to make her the focal point of their anger. How strange the things that they can get organized for, and the things they can't.
While I know that sounds like an accusation (and I admit it is), it is one that I express because I just don't understand why one is so easy to have happen and the other is so hard. That just doesn't compute. Why is it that way?
First of all, it is "Muslim", not "Moslem".
I would say the inital reaction by the Muslims would give them a hint.
Apparently both terms are used within the Ummah: American Moslem Foundation
Grace Seeker said:You said that the cartoons were drawn by Christians. How do you know that the cartoonists were in fact actually Christians?
First of all, it is "Muslim", not "Moslem".
Second, it is funny to read "Why cant they just take it on the chin and pray for those who are offending them, like christians have to?"
Are the Christians who are purposefully drawing offensive cartoons to dismay Muslims praying for Muslims as well?
But Muslims are smarter than that, we don't say Christianity is at fault because a christian decides to do so.
I would say the inital reaction by the Muslims would give them a hint.
Edit: I don't know anything about the teddy bear incident to be honest, I was just speaking of the cartoons which were drawn purposefully as I said in my post.
You are misunderstanding my post- It is concerning immigration TO THE UK.
90% of its residents are not practising christians but agnostics, sceptics or atheists and merely living in country that has long term christian traditions which they like because our traditions are not oppresive. The remainig 10% of real christians are unlikey to have drawn any 'offensive' cartoons but they DO have to hear and accept constant profanities and abuse from the 90% of unbelievers... And if you came to live here or already do live here you would need to cope with many more daily problems than worrying about whether somebody has drawn a cartoon that you dont like! I think the cartoons you mention may be the ones drawn by a Danish artist which country has the same tradions as the UK.
I am not accusing you of being faulty in any way. I just want you to learn to accept that anybody with any kind of faith has to suffer ridicule and take it on the chin. I am a practising christian and suffer ridicule from my friends who tell me I am believing in fairies and when they swear and use the name of Jesus and God in vain I just let it go over my head. YES. I expect some christians ARE praying for muslims - and even for their conversion to christianity! So you need to lay off the sarcasm as it could be you!
Finally, if you look at all my posts you wll see that I politely asked which is the polite form of address:. MOSLEM or MUSLIM? The response was that it depends on where you are in the world. The answer is there for you to read.... So I will be polite to you instead of sarcastic and call you a muslim.
If you are already in the UK, learn to assimilate!.
If you are not but thinking of coming here, you will need to accept criticism.
If you are not but unlikely to ever come to uk, you are free to stay as you are...
As for your comment regarding criticism, people can criticize Islam all they want because we all know what happened when people criticized Islam after 9-11. They all ended up becoming Muslims. That's right! So please, go read the Qur'an. Think you've found something your stomach cannot digest? Then come argue with us, you will only end up loving Islam more and more, by Allah's mecry, If Allah wills. It is said statistically, in a few years Islam will be the majority int he world anyway.
@Thomas,
Just read through the last few pages of the thread, and saw a couple of digs which I think may well be aimed at me, and if they are or are not, either way I am sorry.
The point I was trying to argue is that no land is anyone, no one has a greater right that anyone else. But I doubt that many see it that way as obviously a person who has lived their life in a place would obviously feel or have a greater belonging than those who move in yesterday. I guess what I was trying to argue with is my view using Islam, that land matters not to anything, we are all equal and should gladly welcome one another to each other's houses.
Again, for any offence I'm sorry. Just angers me than in a country I was born in and have lived my whole life and my grandfather lived in, being asian I am still seen classed as an immigrant and not belonging here by many, whilst I truly do feel at home in England.
@Thomas,
Just read through the last few pages of the thread, and saw a couple of digs which I think may well be aimed at me, and if they are or are not, either way I am sorry.
Assalaamu alaikum bro Mahi
Just to clarify, anything I said in my post was not aimed at you or any other single person. My point was that everyone was getting heated up, and when that happens, barriers come down, and that's not conducive to a good and rational discussion.
Nice to know you have go the pointThank you Insaan
Like you, I had no intention of being personally offensive to individuals.
All I wanted to do was put over we English's case and why we (collective 'we', meaning several millions..) are a worried nation in such a small island.
As a result of this thread I DO now believe that what we read in the press about christmas trees being renamed, carol concerts being re-branded etc or cancelled is NOT as a result of pressure from muslims but derives from agnostic/atheistic people with their own personal agenda to marginalise christianity. OR, there could be a few hot-headed muslim extremists who, if they got the chance, would want a church closed if within 50 yards of a mosque and that sort of silly irrational stuff. We already have a so called 'immam?' with a hook replacing his hand (which I understand is as a result of him making something that exploded..!) in prison here in uk. Before he went to prison he was, apparantly holding what we would see as extreme political meetings in his mosque and firing up very young men to do extremist things. He is clearly a dangerous man and probably making himself as big a nuisance as he can whilst in prison... The problem is that millions of English people here see him as representing Islam, especially within memory distance of a terrorist explosion such as 7/7 in London. Its like a civil war situation where you cant distinguish friend from foe so all muslims are suspect and get the blame.
It has been nice corresponding with you Insaan. God Bless you. Thomas
Thank you Insaan
We already have a so called 'immam?' with a hook replacing his hand (which I understand is as a result of him making something that exploded..!) in prison here in uk. Before he went to prison he was, apparantly holding what we would see as extreme political meetings in his mosque and firing up very young men to do extremist things. He is clearly a dangerous man and probably making himself as big a nuisance as he can whilst in prison... The problem is that millions of English people here see him as representing Islam, especially within memory distance of a terrorist explosion such as 7/7 in London.
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