вторник, 12 февраля 2013 г.

жена мухамеда аиша сколько лет

Ali-Karamali writes that Aisha (Aysha) was “the one virgin Muhammad married… She was contracted to the Prophet at a young age, given variously as somewhere betweenВPnine to twelve years. However, the marriage was a formality and unconsummated until she was well past puberty. The sources variously cite her as somewhere betweenВPtwelve and sixteen…” (p. 143, emphasis added)

I hope she’ll answer them.

Because after reading the book, I still have a few.

I am very glad that Ms. Ali-Karamali is open to well-intentioned questions.

The book’s back cover asks, “What if you could sit down at a kitchen table with an American Muslim mom and ask anything you wanted about her faith and religious practice?” In the book’s acknowledgments, she writes: “And to everyone who ever asked me a well-intentioned question about Islam: this book is a result of your desire to cross cultures.”

According to Dr. Carole Hillenbrand, Professor of Islamic History at the University of Edinburgh, The Muslim Next Door is “refreshingly frank.”

Reza Aslan, the “internationally acclaimed” author of No God but God and guest on the Jon Stewart show, calls her “beautiful book” a “corrective” against the “misinformation about Islam” that “most Americans are bombarded with.”

Dr. Khaled Abou El Fadl, Professor of Islamic Law at the UCLA School of Law, calls it “one of the best three books published on the Islamic faith in the English language since the tragedy of 9/11.” It’s “refreshing in its honesty” and “consistently reliable.” (A web site run by El Fadl’s “Students, Supporters, and Friends” describes him as “the most important intellectual in Islam and Islamic law today.” Among other honors, he was “appointed by President George W. Bush as a commissioner on the US Commission on International Religious Freedom.”)

The book aims to “clear away the misconceptions about Islam,” explaining why these “tall tales” continue to “flourish” and “persist.” [...]

Our reliableВPdisinformationВPmedia have excelled themselves once again by simply ignoring the real cause of the violent riots currently sweeping Greece,

* Newslink:ВPAsylum seekers riot in Athens

Her book,ВPThe Muslim Next Door: The Qur’an, the Media, and that Veil thing, is in part an effort to avert a “clash of ignorances” because the “Western perception of Islam has become an evil caricature of reality.” As she writes, “moderate Muslims try to chip away a great wall of media misinformation.”

The November/December 2008 issue of Stanford University’s alumni magazine features a story about Stanford grad and author Sumbul Ali-Karamali. She has just published her first book, a guide to Islam that she wrote in part because bookstores only carried “dry textbooks,” “the occasional slim volume of Sufi poetry,” andвІ after 9/11вІ ”tomes on terrorism and the ‘clash of civilizations.’”

While purporting to clear away “misconceptions” about Islam, Sumbul Ali-Karamali adds some more. Reform or deception? You be the judge. “Ten Questions for the Muslim Next Door,” by Kamala atВP

A big, hot, steaming pile of taqiyya attracts a lot of green flies. The flies are having mid-air crashes when they buzz around the writings of Stanford Alumni Sumbul Ali-Karamanli, who proves once again that Islam stifles mental growth:

ВPВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP ВP

by sheikyermami on December 7, 2008

Ten Questions for the Muslim Next Door

The Latest From Winds Of Jihad:

Ten Questions for the Muslim Next Door вІ Winds Of Jihad By SheikYerMami

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