Tag: Islam

  • Eric Cantona On Fanaticism, Freedom Of Speech and Charlie Hebdo

    Eric Cantona On Fanaticism, Freedom Of Speech and Charlie Hebdo

    Eric Cantona has kept himself busy since retiring from football in 1997. The Manchester United legend has turned his hand to acting and film-making and his latest venture is a documentary titled, “Football and immigration – a 100 years of common history”.

    Speaking to euronews to promote his new film, Cantona has shared his thoughts on the issues of immigration and racism, as well as the latest tragedy to befall France, last week’s Charlie Hebdo massacre.

    “It’s shocking, it’s very regrettable, but unfortunately it’s not the first time that the freedom of expression has been attacked,” he said.

    “In October 1988, the Saint Michel Theater was set on on fire during an attack. Inside there were people watching Martin Scorsese’s film “The Last Temptation of Christ”. The attackers belonged to a Catholic, integralist group and it was in 1988, in France, in Paris. 40 people were injured, four seriously and it was a criminal attack, the aim was to burn alive 50 people.”

    “What I want to say is that today, what just happened doesn’t have to be used against Islam. Fanaticism is everywhere, but it concerns just a minority of people. The rest are just simple Catholics, Buddhists, Muslims.

    “I think that it’s important to take the long or historical view. If we just focus on current affairs, if we limit our view to today’s news, it’s like things never happened before. It’s important to recall that all this has already occured, it’s already happened with terrorist groups which were not Islamic.”

    In the wake of the attack, Cantona said it was important that not all Muslims are tarred with the brush of terrorism.

    “The danger would be to say that all Muslims are like that, but I’m convinced that 90% of Muslims feel very uncomfortable today and are ashamed of what’s happened,” he added.

    “It’s important not to say, that a Muslim, is “moderate”, if he’s just a citizen like you or me. What does “moderate” mean anyway? Does it mean that Islam is an extremist religion? This is a latent provocation, you see? And it’s very dangerous. We don’t have to paint everybody with the same brush. That’s the danger I think.”

    Asked whether he was afraid of the rise of extremism, Cantona suggested that the growth in support for the far right was a reflection of the depressed economic times.

    “It seems to me that all this is linked to the economic crisis,” he noted. “It seems to me that if there hadn’t been a crisis in 1929 then Hitler would never have obtained power. And unfortunately, during crises, people fall into despair, they don’t know anymore what to hang on to and all this gives birth to extremism.

    “What is dangerous, once again, is to take advantage of the despair of some people, to spread crazy ideas. Those who do it, create and develop hate for political purposes, for power purposes. And I think it’s sad and reprehensible.”

    Asked whether football could help with social integration, Cantona said it had a role to play but that away from the pitch, even successful players still suffered discrimination.

    “Yes, I think that sport in general, and football in particular, can do it,” he continued. “Because in sport, if you’re better than someone else, you play. This is what is beautiful in sport. What is regrettable, as Tigana says at the end of the documentary, is that as soon as you leave the football field – among managers, or within national football associations, the situation becomes like it is in the rest of society: if the colour of your skin “doesn’t correspond”, you might not have the place that you deserve.

    “If in the rest of the society there were models, if youngsters in inner city schools, difficult schools, if only they had successful role models as businessmen, or lawyers who made it… But today they don’t have such models. They don’t exist, because our society is unfair, I think.”

    Maverick and outspoken, Cantona continues to chart his own course. Last year he launched a withering attack on UEFA president Michel Platini for his support for the Qatar, but also for the Frenchman’s decision to award the European Under-21 Championships to Israel.

    “Blatter begins to say it’s true Qatar is a bad idea, but it was an idea of Platini. It was also Platini who gave the European Championship under-21 in Israel, which is also disrespectful to the level of human rights,” Cantona told Le Parisien.

     

    Source: www.worldsoccer.com

  • Islamic State Pamphlets Abuses Quranic Verses

    Islamic State Pamphlets Abuses Quranic Verses

    Everything anyone might want to know about the Islamic State (Isis) is a few keyboard strokes away on the Internet. From its fighters’ daily activities, recipes cooked by the militants’ wives, to the terror network’s bigger agenda in forming a new caliphate across the Middle East.

    Isis has savvy strategists who look after their online propaganda, and this includes producing content to convince others to take up their cause.

    One of their recent productions is a pamphlet with Quranic verses on female slaves that they have manipulated and used to their benefit.

    “Isis is well structured but the two main departments that they focus on are the online team and their (physical) armies. They are strong because they know how to get through to the masses using the social media and online media. They know where to find people who would submit to their beliefs,” said a source working in counter-terrorism.

    Intelligence officials said Isis recently published a pamphlet which was shared through one of its Twitter accounts in November.

    The hardcopy version is printed by its publishing house, the Al-Himma Library, and is titled Su’al wa-Jawab fi al-Sabi wa-Riqab, or Questions and Answers on Taking Captives and Slaves.

    In the pamphlet, certain Quranic verses are used to justify the acts of taking slaves for sex and having sex with underage girls.

    Using the question-and-answer format, one of the questions in the pamphlet asks: “Is it permissible to have intercourse with a female captive?”

    In the answer, it says this is permissible and cites: “Allah the almighty said: ‘(Successful are the believers) who guard their chastity, except from their wives (or the captives and slaves) that their right hands possess, for then they are free from blame (Quran 23:5-6)’…”

    “Quranic verses are being manipulated over and over again to show that their actions are permissible, (it is) the same with killing non-Muslims and that it was not a sin to kill them,” said the source.

    The verses, read in isolation, lead many to believe in Isis cruelty when the Quran should be read as a whole to understand its context, the source added.

    “They came up with their own holy book using Quranic verses to convince people. Those who lack knowledge and are seeking guidance can be easily influenced.

    “One verse is linked to another so one should read as a whole. This is the problem with those seeking guidance but are not reading correctly,” he said.

    Another problem, however, is that propaganda material, like the pamphlet, is easily available online.

    So far, Malaysian police have yet to confiscate any such material in printed form from Malaysians arrested for their links with Isis. It is learnt that the items seized have mainly been flags and small items.

    To date, 67 Malaysians are known to have gone to Syria and Iraq, Home Minister Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi was reported as saying recently.

    Another 120 people are in police custody for suspected Isis links or for being sympathisers, he had also said.

    The Malaysians fighting alongside Isis forces in the Middle East were influenced to take up the struggle via social media, intelligence sources had said previously.

    Five, so far, have been killed in fighting there.

    Some, like former Kedah PAS Youth information chief Lotfi Ariffin who was killed in Syria, had not only posted about their activities with the militants on Facebook, but had issued call-to-action messages, too.

    On November 26, Parliament approved the White Paper on combating the threat posed by Isis, with a promise to enact a new law to help prevent such threats in future, Bernama had reported.

    Zahid had said that the proposed Anti-Terrorism Act would stress on prevention.

     

    Source: www.themalaysianinsider.com

  • Muslim Groups In Malaysia Say No To Hooters

    Muslim Groups In Malaysia Say No To Hooters

    KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 24 ― Several Muslim groups here have vowed to foil any attempt by Hooters to open an outlet in Malaysia, accusing the American restaurant chain of an “evil” ploy to create discord and destroy the conservative local culture.

    The groups said, however, that they were confident that Hooters would likely never open its doors in Malaysia due to strict regulation here against obscene entertainment.

    “This is a step that can bring chaos to the country’s harmony. It is meant to create a continuous clash,” Abdullah Zaik Abd Rahman, president of Islamist group Ikatan Muslimin Malaysia (Isma), told Malay Mail Online in a text message.

    “I believe there is an evil hand behind the move. They are deliberately trying to stir anger,” he added referring to Hooters, and urged the authorities to act swiftly on the matter.

    Abdullah predicted that should Hooters formally attempt to open a Malaysian outlet, Muslims who protest the move would inevitably be labelled fanatics and extremists.

    Echoing the sentiment, Pembela chairman Mohamed Hafiz Mohd Nordin said “crazy people” were behind Hooters’ expansion plan.

    “This is the work of ‘crazy people’… Hooters will become ‘haunted’ if they try to plant roots in this Muslim country… Don’t ever dream about it!!” he told Malay Mail Online.

    The Pembela chairman did not explain what he meant by “haunted”, however, though he later said that he was merely being sarcastic.

    Malay Mail Online reported yesterday plans by Hooters of America LLC to open up 30 outlets over the next six years in Southeast Asian locations like Malaysia, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

    The move, according to the firm’s statement on Business Wire, is part of Hooters’ development agreement with international franchisee Destination Resorts Co Ltd.

    Hooters’ first foray into Asia was in Singapore in December 1996.

    Weighing in on the news, Datuk Nadzim Johan of Muslim Consumers Association of Malaysia (PPIM) labelled the plan “illogical” due to the sexual nature of Hooters’ dining concept.

    “Their plan does not gel, because we have moral guidelines… We will hold demonstrations in front of the outlet,” he added, when asked of PPIM’s plan should an outlet opens.

    “I am confident that the government will not allow Hooters in Malaysia… We are strongly against its existence in Malaysia and will act strictly if there are parties working towards it,” said Mohamed Hafiz.

    The Hooters name is a double entendre that refers to women’s breasts, as well as the company’s logo of an owl, a bird known for making “hooting” sounds.

    Its wait staff, who are primarily young, voluptuous girls in revealing outfits, are referred to as “Hooter girls”.

    The restaurant serves typical all-American grub including hamburgers, steaks, sandwiches, seafood platters and a variety of appetisers, and is famous for its specialty, the “Hooters buffalo-style chicken wings”.

    According to the restaurant’s website, the chain currently has 430 outlets in 28 countries. Almost all Hooters restaurants have alcoholic beverage licenses.

    In January last year, several leaders in Muslim-majority Malaysia lodged protests over reports that world-famous Hard Rock Cafe was planning to open an outlet in Putrajaya, the country’s administrative capital.

    Responding to objections by Malay-rights group Perkasa, authorities here said should the franchise, which is known as a live music venue that serves alcohol, ever open its doors in Putrajaya, it would have to abide by regulations set by the local council .

    The council’s guidelines includes, among others, a ban on the sale of alcohol and obscene entertainment.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • #IamRaviPhilemon – Charlie Hebdo Cartoon Not Attack On Islam

    #IamRaviPhilemon – Charlie Hebdo Cartoon Not Attack On Islam

    Dunno if our community knows this. I read on another alternative media actually. As a Muslim I am offended.

    After the Charlie Hebdo incident, this Ravi Philemon tweeted #IamCharlieHebdo and express “solidarity with victims of terror attack in France”. This he share himself on his Fb and blog – some people later advise him not to share in bigotry and racism of Charlie Hebdo.

    Ravi Philemon - TweetBut he stubborn.  He say from what he understand, Charlie Hebdo’s cartoon was “not against Islam but against ultra-fundamentalism and extremism” (this is his own word you can see his blog on 9 January).

    Ravi Philemon IamCharlie

    Everybody who follow the Charlie Hebdo saga know they attack Islam…bukan only I say but many other ppl also say! Even the Pope pun lebih open-minded.

    If Ravi bother to know Islam he will find out that Islam do not allow picture or drawing of Nabi Muhammad (saw).  We Muslims pun dont do it kan! If against extremism then do caricature on Osama or IS or whoever extremist.  Why must use Nabi Muhammad (saw)???

    Even more funny, Ravi said even his Muslim friend tell him that “we need to stand on the right to offend because if not we go down slope of censorship”.  Apa ni? Muslim friend? Who is this Muslim friend? Apa advise dia give Ravi ni? Tak ke ni Charlie Hebdo cartoon is attack on Islam? So just because dier tak nak censor then he is ok with people making fun of Islam?

    I shock lar bila tahu dier actually politician from NSP.  Is this the calibre of politician we have?  Or just NSP? Yang NSP Malay members macam mana pulak?

    Then last I tengok dier ada make police report on one blogger who also write about this.  The blog is kat sggeneralelections2016.blogspot.com you tengok 11 January punya entry. Dia boleh offend orang tapi orang cannot offend him? Dia confuse ke?

    What about Muslims like me yang offended? What about me and my friends who are offended with dier punya pandai-pandai on Islam? Who is he to say that Charlie Hebdo cartoons not attack on Islam? What right he have?

    Entah lah why have this kind of people…I dunno why dier mesti action pandai macam dier understand Islam sangat and dier understand intention Charlie Hebdo.  To me dua-dua pun salah.  Condemn lah yang attackers memang patut…they deserve it. Tapi must be fair lar and condemn Charlie Hebdo juga kan?  I betul concern ada politician macam gini.

    Tolong publish so that our Muslim friends will be aware.

     

    Muslimah Singapura

     

  • Thousands March Through Karachi To Protest Against Charlie Hebdo

    Thousands March Through Karachi To Protest Against Charlie Hebdo

    Thousands of people marched through Pakistan’s largest city on Thursday in the country’s biggest protest yet against French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo for publishing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

    The march through the streets of Karachi is the biggest in a series of demonstrations against the magazine, whose Paris offices were attacked on January 7 by Islamist gunmen, killing 12 people.

    An intelligence official overseeing the rally told AFP that the protesters numbered in the “thousands”, still a relatively small turnout in a city of 18 million people.

    Protesters carried green flags printed with the prophet’s mausoleum and chanted anti-Charlie Hebdo slogans as they marched.

    “Down with Charlie Hebdo, down with the blasphemers,” they shouted.

    Many carried placards demanding blasphemers be killed.

    One of the protest leaders, Sarwat Ejaz Qadri, demanded the Pakistani government cut diplomatic ties with France.

    “Their ambassador should be declared persona non grata and must be expelled from the country,” Qadri said.

    In the southwestern city of Quetta, some 400 activists of Markazi Jamiat-e-Ahl-e-Hadith, a Sunni Muslim organisation, held a demonstration in front of the press club and burned a French flag.

    The demonstrators, many of them children, carried placards condemning the satirical magazine and shouted slogans including: “Let blasphemers be hanged, we will not tolerate anyone ridiculing our prophet.”

    Across the border in Afghanistan, around 50 people gathered outside the French Embassy in Kabul to protest against the magazine, chanting “France you are the devil”.

    Charlie Hebdo last week published a “survivors” issue with an image of the Prophet Mohammed weeping on the cover. The issue quickly sold out before more copies of an eventual print run of five million hit newsstands.

    Under Pakistan’s strict blasphemy laws, insulting the prophet can carry the death penalty, and the country’s prime minister and parliament last week strongly condemned the publication of the cartoons.

    At least three people were injured on Friday when protesters and police clashed at an anti-Charlie Hebdo demonstration outside the French consulate in Karachi.

    They included AFP photographer Asif Hassan, who was shot in the back and is now recovering in hospital.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com