Tag: ISIS

  • Damanhuri Abas: Be Those Who Champion For The Weak And Oppressed

    Damanhuri Abas: Be Those Who Champion For The Weak And Oppressed

    In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Dispenser of Grace.

    Neo-Khawarij… an Islamic historical reality undead and simmering. A chronic parasite unleashed by the invasion of Iraq. Less we forget, an invasion that opened the pandora box and killed thousands of Iraqi citizens on a lie to stop Sadam’s non-existent weapons of mass destruction.

    In truth the invasion and the war on terror are crafty invocation of a perpetual threat designed to allow for a methodical and systematic destruction of the Islamic middle east for the black gold it has.

    A massive energy grab now fully underway with a full checklist after Iraq; Libya, Yemen, Syria, and eventually the Gulf States, Iran and Saudi Arabia. All scripted by the new great game for the middle east that began in the modern era.

    Collateral damages are small prices to pay in Iraqi, Palestinian, Libyan, Yemeni, Syrian, Iranian, Saudi, and the occasional western blood to sustained the self-serving blood-lust imagery. The compliant media will continue spewing the scripted deception and exhaust the Islamic blame-game. Focusing on symptoms but never the cure for the disease.

    Isis or more accurately known as Daesh is good currency for now, the latest priceless premium brand that encapsulate the ultimate fear invoking terror bogeyman, ever-ready to brutally kill under self-proclaimed divine order texted and received from their social media savvy gods on Instagram, Facebook and Tweeter to the tune of their pay-master.

    The Afghan Mujahideen, the Taliban, Sadam, Daesh aka Isis and their lookalikes or wannabes world over are mere black pieces, while the Bushes, the Blairs and their present heirs are the white pieces in the grand chessboard of the neo-colonial project for full economic control of world resources that began in the modern era.

    The endgame has only begun for full spectrum dominance and control of energy and world economy by the powerfully rich, the same group that brought millions of death upon death in the 2 world wars not too long ago. The same preachers with blood still dripping from their hands and now owners of nuclear weapons that can destroy the world many times over, are preaching their lies and fooling mankind again.

    Humanity is now ever polarized and poised to pit themselves against each other to their total and ultimate destruction. An ordained everlasting cycle of battles between the good that wishes to care, partake and share equally from God’s earth, loosing to an evil wanting to wrest and hoard the temporary riches from the Maker of the world only for themselves and Satan, their vindictive Master. A narrative scripted since times of old found in all books of ancient wisdom, sadly much lost in contemporary translation by the mainstream media through misleading labels and superficial journalism.

    Patient is a virtue in this time of spell-binding deception. Institutionalized religion has all but abandoned the Prophetic driven project of action for mankind and sadly outsourced their relevance to melodious rhythms for self delectable pleasure sold for mere pittance. A leader to exit mankind from their impending doom must be at hand. The Word of God will return to fulfill and complete his Divinely disrupted mission. A missing earthly piece to be Divinely returned seeking justice and championing the oppressed on earth.

    The Messiah will unite mankind in a new peace to reign again on earth albeit for a moment before another cycle repeats itself and will end with the final destruction. The book mentioned of our beautiful earth to one day mirror the parched desolation of Mars. A testimony of abandoned past Divine theaters with the show long ago ended. The scripts were Divinely written and the inks are all exhausted. The actors and audiences are judged and resides forever justly in their deserved eternal abode. A lesson for mankind today that seemed long forgotten.

    God is the Greatest. I am a mortal witness. Let me be among those who will walk in life in the ranks of the champions for the weak, the powerless, the oppressed and the down-trodden. May God have mercy on us all.

    End Ramadan Self-Reflection
    30 Ramadan 1437H

     

    Source: Damanhuri Bin Abas

  • Noor Mastura: Solidarity Of Humankind Required As ISIS Attacks On Muslims Dampens Ramadan

    Noor Mastura: Solidarity Of Humankind Required As ISIS Attacks On Muslims Dampens Ramadan

    ISIS/Radicals Ramadan ‘worship’ checklist (update -)
    Destroy :
    Istanbul
    Bangladesh
    Iraq
    Medina
    …Basically make Muslims all over the world mourn in our holiest month

    This is the worst Ramadan ever. With all the attacks from not only ISIS but raging Islamophobia in the west shooting random Muslims down and hitting them black and blue in the streets. Eid this year is going to be Muslims all over the world mourning the tragic loss of lives and burying their loved ones.

    Lord knows the worst part about this is there are millions of people who actually think we deserve it.
    I cant even begin to express anger, the anguish and the pain of an entire community of 1.6 billion people in the world who are slammed and attacked and targeted on BOTH sides.

    Keep fighting the good fight? We are tired, tortured, drowning and fighting a never ending uphill battle.
    Lord help us.. because we are not giving up. We cant. Not even when it burns our soul and rips our hearts. We wont.

    And to the world that’s watching – WE ONLY HAVE EACH OTHER. Humanity is literally being torn apart. Stop fighting your factions. Stop labelling yourselves. Stop dividing your brethren. Shias, Sunnis, Sufis, Salafis, Christians, Jews, Sikhs, Athiests, Buddhists- I dont really care. We need each other more than ever.

     

    Source: Noor Mastura

  • Mohd Khair: Learn About Islam From The Correct And Credible Sources

    Mohd Khair: Learn About Islam From The Correct And Credible Sources

    My Dear Non-Muslim Friends,

    For any non-Muslim interested to know more about Islam, the Quran and its text, please seek assistance from the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS) or any nearby mosque or the Singapore Muslim Converts Association or the Singapore Islamic Teachers and Scholars Association (PERGAS).

    Do not rely on online sources, especially those sites used by extremist or terrorist groups which subvert Islam by claiming to be Islamic or an authority in Islam whereas they are NOT.

    Those online sites do not represent Islam nor the Muslim World.

    And please remember that ISIS and its predecessor Al Qaeda are unIslamic groups. The entire Muslim World and entire Islamic Scholars have condemned all the terrorist acts by such groups.

    And as far as suicide bombers and their actions are concerned, they are neither Islamic nor sanctioned in Islam and by its Scholars.

    So, please do yourselves a favour. If you need more information about Islam. Muslims and interpretations of the Quranic texts, seek help from MUIS, Mosques or PERGAS or other Recognised Muslim Organisations like the Singapore Muslim Converts Association.

    Do not ask Google Sheikh for it will only lead you astray and make you an extremist in your views about Islam and Muslims

     

    Source: Mohd Khair

  • ISIS Terrorist Murdered French Police Commander & Wife In Front Of 3 Year Old Son, Act Streamed Live On FB

    ISIS Terrorist Murdered French Police Commander & Wife In Front Of 3 Year Old Son, Act Streamed Live On FB

    A man who was previously convicted of terrorism and pledged allegiance to ISIS killed a French police commander and his partner at their home in Magnanville in an horrific attack France’s president says was “incontestably” a “terrorist act.”

    Larossi Abballa, 25, posted video of the killing online during the rampage, referencing the so-called Islamic State, The Guardian reports.

    The officer was named as Jean-Baptiste Salvaing. His partner has not yet been identified, but she was also a police employee.

    Abballa, who was born in France and called himself Mohamed Ali on Facebook, was killed in a SWAT raid that saved the slain couple’s 3-year-old son, who was being held hostage inside the home, authorities said.

    The attack came as France hosts the 2016 UEFA European Championship soccer tournament and is in a heightened state of security as a result. The country has been under a state of emergency since the November 2015 attacks in Paris by ISIS terrorists.

    Magnaville is west of Paris.

    Here’s what you need to know:


    1. Abballa Livestreamed the Killings on Facebook & Told His Followers ‘I Don’t Know What I’m Going to Do With the Boy’

    French special forces RAID vehicle leaves after an assault on June 14, 2016 in Magnanville, 45 kms west of Paris. (Getty)

    French special forces RAID vehicle leaves after an assault on June 14, 2016 in Magnanville, 45 kms west of Paris. (Getty)

    Abballa live streamed the attack on Facebook Live. The video and his Facebook page were deleted, but it has been distributed online by ISIS propagandists.

    In the 12-minute video he expressed his allegiance to ISIS and its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. At one point in the video, Abballa referenced the police officer’s 3-year-old son, who he was holding hostage.

    “I don’t know what I’m going to do with the boy,” Abballa said. Police later raided the home, killing Abballa and saving the boy.

    You can watch the video at the link below:

    WATCH: Magnanville Attacker Larossi Abballa ISIS Video

    Larossi Abballa, the ISIS sympathizer who murdered two French police officers in the Paris suburb of Magnanville yesterday, filmed a 12-minute video while he was barricaded inside their home. Watch it here.

    Click here to read more


    2. A List of Targets, Including Other Police Officers, Politicians & Journalists, Was Found at Abballa’s Home

    (Getty)

    (Getty)

    Police found a list of targets, including other police officers, politicians and journalists, at Larossi Abballa’s home in Mantes-la-Jolie, a suburb of Paris, Prosecutor Francois Molins said at a press conference.

    Three knives used in the attack were found at the police officer’s home.

    In his video, he urged more attacks by French Muslism, according to SITE. He said, “”kill them even if their name is Mohammad or Aisha,” SITE says.

    3. He Was Sentenced to 3 Years in Prison for the Prior Terrorism Conviction & Was on a Watch List

    larossi abballa, larossi abballa france, larossi abballa facebook, larossi abballa video, larossi abballa isis

    Larossi Abballa.

    Abballa was sentenced to three years in prison for “criminal association in view to preparing terrorist attacks,” for recruiting jihadis to Pakistan and Afghanistan, The Guardian reports.

    He was 20 at the time of that 2011 conviction and was released from prison in September 2013.

    Abballa was more recently investigated by French authorities and was on a watch list, according to officials. He was being monitored for being part of the entourage of a French man who had recently traveled to Syria.

    4. An Official ISIS News Agency Called Abballa an ‘Islamic State Fighter’

    In a statement, the ISIS Amaq news agency said “Islamic State fighter kills deputy chief of the police station in the city of Les Mureaux and his wife.”

    The phrasing of the statement is similar to one posted after the terrorist attack in Orlando, Florida. In both messages the killer was referred to as an “Islamic State fighter.”

    In Orlando, the FBI is investigating whether gunman Omar Mateen had any official ties to ISIS. Like Abballa, Mateen pledged allegiance to ISIS during his attack at Pulse, a gay nightclub. Mateen killed 49 people and wounded 53 others before he was shot dead during a police raid.

    5. Salvaing Was a Commander & His Partner Worked as a Secretary at a Police Headquarters

    French policemen stand guard on June 14, 2016 near the house in Magnanville where a man claiming allegiance to the Islamic State group killed a French policeman and his partner on the night of June 13. (Getty)

    French policemen stand guard on June 14, 2016 near the house in Magnanville where a man claiming allegiance to the Islamic State group killed a French policeman and his partner on the night of June 13. (Getty)

    Jean-Baptiste Salvaing, 42, was a police commander in the city of Les Mureaux, according to officials. His 36-year-old partner, who has not been named, worked as a secretary at a police headquarters.

    He was not in uniform when he was ambushed at about 8:30 p.m. Monday, Fox News reports.

    “The toll is a heavy one,” ” Interior Ministry spokesman Pierre-Henry Brandet told reporters.

     

    Source: www.heavy.com

  • When Religion Becomes  A Commodity

    When Religion Becomes A Commodity

    Living as we do at a time when identity-based politics has become the norm the world over, it is hardly a surprise that religious identity has likewise been commodified.

    Since the 1970s, we have witnessed the rise of a form of identity politics where the attachment to, and promotion of, one’s own ethno-cultural identity has become commonplace – from the promotion of “negritude” by Francophone African intellectual-activists such as Aime Cesaire and Leon Damas; to the “Asian values” debate of the 1980s-90s.

    The global marketplace has been able to adapt itself to these new trends and developments with ease, and so by now it is hardly a novel thing to encounter expressions of Asian or African essentialism in commodified form: We talk about “Asian food”, “Asian fashion”, “Asian architecture” et cetera in a manner that somehow presupposes there is such a thing as an ostensibly-definable “Asia” to begin with. And having presented “Asia” as a “thing”, it is just a simple logical step away to state that there are also “things” that are Asian, and can be marketed as such.

    This poses a particularly tricky question that needs to be addressed: In an age of near-global commodification, how do we study cultural and ethnic difference, and how do we navigate the complicated map of plural multiculturalism?

    The irony of multiculturalism today is that in many multicultural contexts, groups demand universal recognition of their particular identities, and seek to foreground the particular on universal terms. And so, community A – which may hold certain cultural practices to be unique and essential to it – demands that all other communities respect their values, though that same community may not be able to deal with, or accept, the values and norms of communities B, C and D.

    PIETY ON THE MARKET

    It was just a matter of time before the same logic of commodified identity-politics moved on to the domain of religion and religious practice as well; and today, we see around us the unmistakable signs of a plurality of “religious markets” on offer. This has become a phenomenon that is truly global, and which cuts across the religious spectrum worldwide.

    Religious behaviour and norms – which include dress, symbols, rites and rituals but not the essential core of the religious practice itself, namely faith – have all been rendered commodities in a world that is already saturated by over-determined identity-markers. On a daily basis, we see mundane examples of this: From the sale of “religious” symbols such as prayer beads to the phenomenon of “religious” TV channels, fashion items, holiday tours and so on, promoted by a class of “religious entrepreneurs” who combine the skills of preachers and businessmen together.

    Some scholars have taken a dim view of these developments, reading them as signs of growing conservatism in society, particularly across Asia. While it is true that across the Asian continent, religiously-inspired politics is and has been on the rise since the 1980s, I would argue that the emergence of such “religious markets” is not new and does not necessarily lead us to some dystopian world of religious obscurantism in the future. But they do point to the manner and extent to which our societies have become susceptible to the charms of the market, and the logic of commodification.

    After all, if ethnic identities could be so easily commodified – to the point where one can literally “self-exoticise” oneself and “buy” one’s ethnic identity off the rack – then why shouldn’t the same happen to religious identities? If a person can render himself or herself “Asian” by buying all things “Asian”, then surely one can also become visibly Christian, Muslim, Hindu or Buddhist by buying the trappings of religious identity as well.

    Making sense of these developments means having to take a step back from the contested terrain of identity-politics, and taking a wider look at the broader landscape of society as a whole. And this means analysing society as it is today, in an age of late industrial capitalism where the logic of commodification is, for all intents and purposes, hegemonic. But there are two hurdles that need to be overcome if we are to understand this phenomenon in an objective manner.

    THE TWO CHALLENGES

    Firstly, we need to get over the hang-up that any expression of identity – be it ethnic, cultural, linguistic or religious – is necessarily divisive. Identity politics may rest on the premise that each group/community is particular or different, but that does not necessarily suggest that all such claims are detrimental to the greater good of society.

    But we also need to recognise that these claims are being made in the marketplace of ideas and the public domain where commodification is the norm. If that be the case, then the second hurdle to overcome is the tendency to see expressions of religious identity politics through the lens of religion or theology.

    To put it somewhat bluntly, just because a product or totem is “sold” as a religious item does not make it so. What really happens is that it becomes a commodity. We can purchase symbols of religious identity, but what is really taking place is a commercial exchange where something is bought: One can buy a religious icon or religious text, but one never “buys” piety – for faith remains something that cannot be objectified and put in a can or shopping bag.

    The commodification of religious identity is no different from the commodification of ethnic-linguistic-cultural identity, or any kind of commodification for that matter. To analyse such developments through the lens of religious studies or theology would be to give spiritual/religious value to something that has been rendered a commodity/product with a price; and that would validate only the claims of the “religious entrepreneurs” who say their products have a higher transcendental value, when they are simply goods that can be traded on the market like any other.

    Thus the emergence of this market of ‘religious products” (that may range from clothes to music to food to package tours deemed religious) ought to be studied through the lens of political economy instead, where we will see the emergence of new markets within markets, enclaves within enclaves and the creation of different communities that are busy with the task of identifying themselves and reproducing that identity again and again.

    If this be the state of identity-politics today – and no nation or religious community seems to be immune to the lure of commodification – then it poses a challenge for states that wish to somehow retain the positive aspect of multiculturalism without going to the other extreme of having identity politics become divisively centrifugal.

    I would argue that this is precisely why a humanities approach – using the tools of socio-economic analysis – is called for at this juncture, to give us a different way of understanding this unfolding phenomena without the trappings of paranoia or anxiety that so often accompany cursory observations of contemporary society.

    When security analysts try to be theologians and explain the appeal of groups like the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria through the lens of religious studies, they miss the point that the propagandists for ISIS are really religious entrepreneurs themselves, who have created a more radical narrative that competes against other forms of mainstream Islam.

    Understanding its appeal means looking beyond scripture and having to consider the socio-economic context that has made this radical and reactive narrative appealing to those who otherwise feel marginalised in wealthy societies.

    But it takes off only when we see religious commodities as commodities, and religious markets as markets – mundane things in the world of the free market today.

    •Farish A. Noor is an associate professor at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com