Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a basis in the Koran for it being ok to wear makeup but requiring hair to be covered? I've seen several muslim women wearing headscarves with really terrific makeup on, it looked nice but I didn't understand how it was consistent.
Not OP but Another Muslim poster: nope it's not consistent... you're not supposed to beautify and attract attention in any way... everyone interprets that in a different way. I don't think wearing makeup (natural looking) is attracting attention but a headscarf is and so i don't wear a scarf.. other women feel differently about the subject. The Quran encourages modesty and has different rules for it. As always people interpret them differently. But a truly conservative person would say that a scarf with makeup in public is not allowed!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you forbidden to have dogs as pets?
Not OP but Another Muslim poster: Some schools of thoughts say no to having dogs as pets but another school of thought says it's okay. Many muslims have dogs as pets. The only thing is that clothes that have been touched by a dog or a place that has been touched by a dog is not considered to be clean for prayers and so families who have dogs may keep them outside or in limited spaces indoors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does Islam impose a higher moral standard for how you treat other Muslims than for how you treat non-Muslims?
Not OP but Another Muslim poster: nope- a person is a person.
My grad school friend's roommate wouldn't shake my hand because as a non-believer I was unclean. I thought there were special tax rules and protected statuses for People of the Book vs. atheists and polytheists, too?
Anonymous wrote:Is there a basis in the Koran for it being ok to wear makeup but requiring hair to be covered? I've seen several muslim women wearing headscarves with really terrific makeup on, it looked nice but I didn't understand how it was consistent.
Anonymous wrote:Are you allowed to take birth control? Can your husband have vasectomy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does Islam impose a higher moral standard for how you treat other Muslims than for how you treat non-Muslims?
Not OP but Another Muslim poster: nope- a person is a person.
A Muslim man once told me if want fine for him to sleep with non-Muslim women outside of marriage but that he would be defiling a Muslim woman if he did that with her before marriage. I found that insulting. What was he talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Does Islam impose a higher moral standard for how you treat other Muslims than for how you treat non-Muslims?
Anonymous wrote:Have you gone on Hajj? If not, when are you going to go? Is there some sort of "penalty" if you die before you have gone to Mecca?
Anonymous wrote:The modesty requiremen kicks in at puberty, so younger girls may wear fun, little girl clothing like swimsuits, short skirts, and not cover their hair (assuming they will even when they are older). Same with little boys and shorts. As a matter of practice, though, I believe it is easier to gradually accustom your children to modesty requirements rather than springing them at once; and girls will often wear headscarf to go to the mosque or Sunday School at a younger age, like 5-8. Toddler seems young, but recall that some women/girls *like* wearing the headscarf, think it's fashionable, and want to "be like mommy" -- the same way you might paint your toddler's fingernails for a fun treat.
Anonymous wrote:For religious muslim women who cover their hair, at what age are girls expected to start wearing a head scarf? I saw a toddler on the train with a head scarf, and was of the (perhaps mistaken) view that most girls did not cover their hair until they got older.
Anonymous wrote:What do you find yourself judging other Muslims over most often?
Is there racial discrimination in the Muslim community?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:not OP: but i go to the beach and wear a bathing suit 0 bikini versus tankini versus one-piece, depending on who we're with and the beach we're on.
my in laws are muslim and very republican. business people in the midwest. they want to keep their money. they are very anti-obama. they want no new taxes and don't believe in supporting social services too much.
Interesting. Because charity is very much a part of Muslim life. Is it because most tax money goes to non-Muslims?
My Muslim husband is a flaming socialist, FWIW.
Anonymous wrote:I've been wondering this ever since I moved to arlington.
What the heck is going on, noonish, Fridays on Leesburg Pike between 7 corners and Baily's crossroads.
EVERY SINGLE TAxi cab in the dc metro area is parked over there, there are cops, and burkas and men in pajama-looking cloths. and lots of normal looking people too but those are clues to me that this is indeed a question for a Muslim.
Namaste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard accusations leveled against liberal Muslims for not speaking out more strongly against terrorism and oppression in the name of radical Islam. Do you think there is merit to this position, and if not, why not? Thanks.
I'm not OP, I'm 7:37. But conservative and liberal Muslims alike speak out against terrorism ALL THE TIME. The mainstream media just doesn't cover it. But if you go to websites of Islamic organizations and/or read foreign papers or watch foreign TV news programs, you'll see a lot of outcry about terrorism in particular.
I really recommend folks here watch Al Jazeera English News. It's a real eye-opener. In a lot of ways.