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http://www.policymic.com/articles/89627/50-actual-facts-that-challenge-what-you-ve-been-told-about-muslims?utm_source=policymicFB&utm_medium=main&utm_campaign=social
I learned some facts that i didn't know, sharing with others
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| Such as? |
You knew everything that was on the list?
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| Interesting. Thanks for sharing! |
| How convenient they left off all the abuses against women. |
That isn't relevant to Muslims - it's relevant to pretty much every culture, society, and religion since the beginning of time. |
What percentage of muslims do you think abuse women? |
Says the oppressed Muslim woman |
Actually, no - says the atheist woman who left Islam
Misogyny and patriarchy are human abuses - (some) Muslims engage in it, but so have people in every kind of category you can come up with. Race, religion, culture, etc. Doesn't matter - it's a tragic human universal. |
Do you really think that every muslim woman is abused? I am a Muslim Woman and I don't even remotely know a Muslim Woman who is abused besides what I see on the media
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There were lots of facts on that that I didn't know, but I already knew the big idea which is that Muslims are a diverse group of people doing diverse things, just like other cultures, and that most of those things are pretty mundane and boring, just like other cultures, but also important to our economy. So, while I didn't happen to know the religion of the people who founded Ediblearrangements was Muslim, it wasn't exactly shocking list.
I think it's a good list, because there are people who don't know that Muslims are a diverse, often boring, group. |
one way to fight it off
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Abuse can be mental. Subjugation can be abusive. You don't need a black eye to prove you've been abused. |
What's your point? |
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As someone who loves Islam, I have often felt drained spiritually and emotionally by the never-ending battle to overcome the false image of my faith. An ugly picture painted by anti-Muslim bigots and Muslim extremists who both embrace an empty and shallow vision of Islam. As a child, I loved reading Greek myths and was in particular fascinated by the tale of Sisyphus, the condemned man who was punished by Zeus by being given a never-ending task. Sisyphus was forced to push a boulder up the side of a mountain and was promised freedom from the underworld once he got the boulder up to the peak. But Zeus had a dark sense of humor. After centuries of toil, Sisyphus would finally manage to inch the boulder up to the mountaintop -- only to see it roll back down. And he was forced to start all over again.
I loved that myth -- and sometimes I feel I am living it today. Being a defender of Islam in the Western media often feels like a Sisyphean task. Every day there is another drama somewhere in the Muslim community, whether it be another vile act of terrorism committed by evil people in the name of my faith, or an attack by an Islamophobe on some aspect of Muslim religion and values. For years, I have been condemning the former and trying to educate the latter about the true nature of Islam as a vibrant, positive force in the world. And it often feels like my efforts are doomed to failure -- the stupidity continues and the discourse about Islam in the media remains controlled by imbeciles among both Muslims and non-Muslims. The story of Islam, like history itself, often feels like just "one damned thing after another." The recent movement by Saudi women to confront the idiocy of those who would deny them the right to drive is a shining example of courage exhibited by those who know that Islam was revealed to help women, not to hurt or oppress them. Despite some Muslim men's efforts to interpret the Quran and Islamic law as a vehicle of oppression, Muslim women remember that Prophet Muhammad was by all accounts a feminist. He gave Muslim women the right to own property and inherit, rights denied to their Jewish and Christian sisters by men until the late 19th century. He ended the Arab practice of female infanticide and worked tirelessly to protect widows and orphans in a barbaric desert world. The Prophet was centuries ahead of the men of his time in his attitudes toward women, and not surprisingly, right after he died, men started rolling back the reforms he began. The Prophet may have been too advanced for the mindset of 7th-century men, but his compassion for women is exactly the model that Muslims in the 21st century need to emulate today. Many people have called for a "reform" of Islam, but the truth is that Islam needs to be rediscovered, not changed. The deeper one goes into Islamic scholarship, the more the harsh images of Islamic law as a vehicle for stonings and amputations fades away, and is replaced by a surprisingly sophisticated and progressive approach to faith that dates back to its earliest days. Muslims don't need to throw out their religion and create something new, they need to re-examine the original scriptures and find the original meanings as the Prophet, a man of progressive vision, would have seen them, even if his earliest followers did not always see as far as he did. |