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| Abrahamic Religions Neutral discussion area for topics that cross-over between Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. |
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#61 (permalink) |
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
OOPS! Seems I have an apology to make!
I am sorry, bob x--I have just read some of your comments on another thread, and I see that you have indeed already done on your own exactly what I suggested, which was to get out there and find out a little more about MW's views. I don't usually slam people the way I did you with my last post on this thread, and it is out of character for me. I kind of knew I shouldn't really do that. Seems I should have taken the advice I gave you, and got out there and looked around a bit more before I said anything. I know when I am wrong....well, not always at the time, but when I find out, I do try to correct my error. Again, my apologies. InPeace, InLove |
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#62 (permalink) | ||||
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,574
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
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I hope you are keeping a positive mental attitude and will return to us soon, I miss you so much. Quote:
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Salaam and may Allah strengthen you with love and respect Sally |
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#63 (permalink) | |||||||
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,574
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
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By the way if you type [ /quote ] but without the spaces after my comments it will show up as quotes and make it easier to read. Quote:
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Sorry if this gets a bit long but I would like you to understand why we dress the way we do. The Quran says that both men and women must lowert their gaze and dress modestly - not just women. Certain parts of the body are seen as 'private'. So my husband must, even on a beach, be covered from navel to knee. His chest can be uncovered because it is not seen in the same sexual way as a womans chest. That does not mean he can walk in the street in long shorts. He must remain appropriately dressed. Obviously it is very hot in Egypt so my hubby and I tend to wear very little in the home. Depending on who comes to the home, we have to adjust our dress. Some examples if I may: If my mother and sister in law visit, with the small children - I would put a small dress (to the knee) on and my husband would wear his shorts. There is no fear of us being intimate. If my husbands female cousin visits - I would put a house dress on but my husband would be required to also put a t-shirt on and longer shorts. If my husbands male cousin visits - My hubby can stay in his small shorts but I would put on a full dress and cover my hair. Everything depends on the relationship of the visitor and respect for their position in life. Am I so gorgeous that I would drive his male cousin wild with desire - absolutely not but his cousin is required to remain a virgin until marriage. So would it be fair of me to sit around in skimpy clothes and remind him that he cannot have sex until marriage? What if he is married but is unhappy in his marriage, or his wife doesn't like sex? That is not something I would know, so again I could remind him of what he is not getting and cause him to feel more frustrated. Same rules apply to my husband and our female visitors. This may sound insane to you but for the Muslim community it is all about respect, respect for others and yourself. Would I allow a man into our home when my husband is not there - no way, because of my reputation. The same applies to my husband. I am currently staying in the UK with my family, so my hubby has a cleaning lady. For both their reputations he sleeps at his parents one night a week so the cleaning lady can come into the home knowing he will not be there. There is then no possibility of rumours and it protects the reputation of both my husband and the lady. These ideas do not sit well with western freedom, which I accept but believe me I have never been so confident in my relationship with a man. I know after some months away, I can go back and be completely confident in my husbands fidelity - it simply isn't an issue for us. My husband also knows, because of my beliefs that I would not stray from our marriage in any way. So we have mutual respect. Should that be left to trust? Perhaps but we know people are weak and easily led astray. If I can protect a fellow Muslim from that sin by dressing in a way that does not provoke feelings of lust, then I have done a good thing. Quote:
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Oh now come on, I am western remember and spent more years than I would care to mention living in the west. Are we suggesting that western men do not see it as their right to ogle and harrass women? Do we not use the female sexuality to sell everything from hair dye to power tools, cars to chocolate? We have sold women in the west a myth of freedom and the guys are rubbing their hands together and laughing because they get the goodies on display. That is not freedom. I am now judged by my views, my actions, not by how skinny my ass is or whether my boobs are the right size - it is VERY liberating. Quote:
You are still mentally stuck in Saudi. Yes the rules there are offensive and outrageous and women are oppressed and persecuted by virtue of gender, I agree. But again I say judge the religion based on itself, not on one small wierd country full of male chauvinist pigs. |
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#64 (permalink) |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Michigan, USA
Posts: 912
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
[quote]I feel that you are more intelligent than that, you are aware I was talking about their choice of dress and that because they are cloistered their dress is not sending out any 'messages'.[\QUOTE]
I intended to put a laughing smiley after that, to indicate that I was making a joke, but the smiley did not make it to the post as it appeared on the board. The browser on my home computer interacts strangely with this board (for a long time I could not sign on here at all). In any case, the question was not originally put to me "How would I feel about *cloistered* nuns?" but how I would react to encountering a nun in the old-fashioned habit. I am in my mid-fifties, so I can remember the days when encountering nuns so dressed was not at all rare, and in those days it conveyed no message except that they were loyal to the Catholic Church, which might or might not imply ultra-conservative attitudes on their part. But since I turned twenty, the nuns I occasionally meet (nuns are getting thin on the ground in the United States, but there are still the Sisters of Mercy at the Bon Secours hospital, and there was Sister Bertrille who used to teach at one of the local parochial schools, and some of the helpers at the Capuchin soup kitchen downtown I think are nuns though I don't really ask) dress in modest but not unusual fashion (as the bishops now tell them to)-- except some unpleasant representatives of the anti-Pope medieval-throwback faction. I cannot say whether there are any "cloistered" nuns in the United States (it is a big country, and you can find almost anything somewhere), or how they dress if they exist: all I can say is I have never heard of a cloister here; and I am surprised to learn that such things are still common enough in Europe that people on this board think of that first when they think of "nuns". [quote]By the way if you type [ /quote ] but without the spaces after my comments it will show up as quotes and make it easier to read.[\QUOTE] Maybe; maybe not. That is another feature that only works sporadically for me. We will see how it shows up this time. [quote]Why would you say this ["thank God" that the US has no cloisters]? Should it not be a persons choice to join the church and devote their life to G-d, instead of materialistic persuits?[\QUOTE] For one thing, cloisters functioned in earlier Europe largely as prisons for inconvenient women, like the "Magdalen houses" which you earlier, somewhat inaccurately, characterized as "lunatic asylums" (the reason I did not recognize what you were referring to). I am principally thanking God that coercive institutions of that kind have never been part of our culture. But, to move on to the issue here: solitary contemplation definitely has its place, but if it never leads to any positive activity in the world (like the teaching, nursing, etc. which US nuns engage in), I regard it as not just sterile and unproductive, but also as contemptuous of the world God created. No, I would not deny anyone the "choice" to shut themselves up in such a way, but I wouldn't regard it as holy, or even respectable. [quote]This may sound insane to you...[\QUOTE] Yes, it does. If someone starts a rumor because a cleaning woman comes over, that person is a malicious gossip: why you do allow such base people to control your lives so thoroughly? [quote]If that girl chooses to go against societal norms and have sex before marriage, would I choose to stop her - no. It is her choice, I would try to persuade her against it but I have no right to stop her if that is the choice she makes. I also have no right to judge her for that choice.[\QUOTE] Most Muslims do not seem to agree. Certainly the Qur'an does not, treating it as a criminal matter for society to punish. [quote]Again you are just talking about Saudi, you seem to be a bit stuck on Saudi for some reason. [\QUOTE] Variants of the same kind of culture are found in Morocco (the only place that I brought up as an example: you were the one who brought up Saudi), or Pakistan or Nigeria (both have had recent cases where raped women were treated as having "confessed" to sex and therefore threatened with death), etc., any of those places where a woman is treated as if she is asking for abuse if she does not keep thoroughly hidden. But Saudi Arabia isn't just "one weird little country", it is Muhammad's country, and I do not see how you reconcile disparaging their variety of Islam out of one side of your mouth, and yet presenting yourself in the face-veil which so strongly symbolizes that style of Islam. (In another post you said you were surprised to find such a reaction, which only goes to show how very alien our worlds are to each other: around here the face-veil is second only to the bomb-vest as a symbol for Islam at its worst.) [quote]Rubbish, I do it to protect myself in the same way as I would not go out to a biker bar wearing skimpy clothes and get drunk. [\QUOTE] What you are saying is that simply showing your face, to Muslim men, is like showing yourself drunk and barely dressed, to a bunch of bikers. Are Muslim men so much lowlier than bikers? [quote]You talk about women "choosing" the veil, but is that really "choice"? It sounds like, a Jew might "choose" to wear a yellow star of David rather than be killed for refusing to do so. You are still mentally stuck in Saudi.[\QUOTE] I didn't say anything about Saudi: I was responding to your own account of why you sometimes put on a face-veil, because you take it for granted that it is normal for Muslim men to abuse you if you hide yourself to any lesser degree; you did not say in which countries you feel compelled to do this. |
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#65 (permalink) | |||||||||||
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,574
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
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What you are talking about are areas under Sharia law - which I in no way support. The only country in the world that is actually fully under Sharia law is Saudi. The other countries simply have pockets of local villages that decide to introduce Sharia themselves (like local government). There are Muslim societies fighting against these attrocities to women. Having said that most of the cases I can find state that the womans silent confession is her pregnancy - sort of a give away. They never stated that they were raped until their pregnancy showed. That is not to say some were not raped and women are seriously discouraged in these areas from going to the police, as if they cannot prove they were raped they are then subject to punishment for fornication or adultery. I believe Sharia states that a woman must scream and try to defend herself, she should then show some defensive marks. In Pakistan some women have been ordered to be gang raped by court officials - this is nothing to do with our religion, it is a throw back to India's old 'honour killing' days. This is another example of culture meeting religion and people thinking the religion allows it - Islam does not in any way allow the raping of women (there is the issue of slavery and sex with slaves, there is also a whole thread on that issue you can read rather than discuss it again here). Quote:
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Did you hear about the recent attempted terrorist attacks on British airports? These were carried out by doctors, they dress as everyone else, they have non Muslim friends and they lived what appeared to be normal european lives - yet clearly they were extremists. You cannot judge an extremist by their clothing. I can also show you many moderate, peaceful Muslim leaders that dress in very Islamic clothing, have long beards, etc but preach peace. Before I went to live in the Middle East I had similar views to yours but I quickly learned by talking to the women there. All this "we are coming to save you from your oppression" is met with shrugs of "what oppression"? Muslim women on the whole want to wear their hair or face covered, it is about faith not society. Here are a couple of Muslim websites run by women for women, they may give you an insight into the issue: If you look at the first topic on the right, it is dress and has some very good articles about Islamic dress: Welcome to the Website of Muslim Women's League This lady has spent years studying Islamic dress for women and the verses of the Quran and Sunnah that require modest dress, she goes into the root arabic words used, she also agrees that the face veil is only oppressive when it is not a choice, worth a read: Understanding the Face Veil |
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#66 (permalink) | |
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,574
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
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1. I do not like strange men looking at me, so I cover myself. I could choose to just let them look and ignore them but my days of being a sexual object are over. That is not an arab thing, men all over the world ogle and I now say NO, you don't get to ogle me, my body is now my own. 2. It shows respect for my husband that I choose not to let strange men look at me. It is a public statement that I am for my husbands eyes only and a statement my husband and I are very proud of. 3. Some arab men think that because I am european I still have some of my old european traits and am therefore open to being chatted up. The veil stops this idea in it's tracks. My choice of dress is mine alone. I cannot speak for every Muslim woman in the world. My choice is about my faith, my modesty, about being my own person and not an object. I am not in competition with my Muslim sisters, I do not want admiring glaces from men. The respect I do have now comes from the person I am not the amount of makeup or weight I carry. I used to use my sexuality to get what I want, and it worked most of the time, but now I have to use my brain and I feel more confident, more liberated and have more self respect. That is not saying that women that wear other clothing have a lack of self respect, a womans dress is her choice and her level of confidence comes from within. I do get a bit peeved when I am told that I dress to meet some stereotype or tourists look at me with sympathy (the poor deluded woman). I am a very strong woman and I make my own choices, if I choose to wear a face veil or just wear the hijab, that choice is mine alone and I am proud of the choice I have made for my life. If you see my choices as sending a message to you, other than I am not yours for the taking, then that I am afraid we shall both just have to live with but it saddens me that you cannot see past a piece of cloth. |
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#67 (permalink) | |||
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Executive Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Michigan, USA
Posts: 912
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
I posted a long reply last night, but that was on my home computer and Windows decided to crash completely when I hit Submit... I see it did not show up on the board, so I will try again.
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We miscommunicated about nuns in habits because you did not know that such creatures are nearly extinct here, nor did I know that the habit in Europe, as formerly in the US, remained common, denoting nothing but loyalty to a certain Order within the Catholic Church (which could cover a wide variety of possible attitudes). It is a "uniform", certainly: in the present-day US it denotes membership in a movement which rejects modernity and toleration entirely. For a cloistered nun, it would denote membership in an Order which rejects "the world" in its entirety: and no, I cannot respect that. Quote:
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"The most extreme case was in Venice, where in the period 1580-1642 around half the women in the city's wealthy ruling class became nuns, thus saving their families a fortune in marriage dowries, as well as performing a useful task of prayer for their loved ones. The Patriarch of Venice Giovanni Tiepolo rather gave the game away when he described these nuns as 'locked up in convents as if in a public tomb... making of their own liberty... a gift not only to God, but to the fatherland, the world, and their closest relatives.' [note here cites J.G. Sperling, Convents and the Body Politic in Late Renaissance Venice, pp. 3-4] "The mushrooming of female participation in the regular life was far more than just a cynical development in the economy of wealthy families. Much of its impetus came from women who wanted to play their full part in the movements of renewal that the Church was fostering. It was thus a powerful reaffirmation of an independent role for women in the Church, but just because of that the male Church authorities had mixed feelings about the growth: all those nuns needed controlling. The men were especially determined that women should not exercise an active ministry in the Church; their ministry must be an enclosed life of prayer and contemplation, with minimal contact with the outside world. Even before the Council of Trent, the battle-lines were being drawn up. As with so many Counter-Reformation policies, it was Fernando and Isabel's 'Reformation before the Reformation' in fifteenth-century Spain that began the campaign to confine women to the cloister, but Trent formalized the move, followed up by a papal Bull from Pius V in 1566... "The new move to enclosure faced formidable opposition. Many well-born nuns had only regarded life in the convent as a bearable option because there would be plenty of possibilities for a social life involving the wider world, and they were appalled when new grilles were installed at the convent entrance... Yet by no means all the opposition to strict enclosure was from outraged social butterflies. Many women desparately sought to play an active part in the revivalist work of the Church in the world at large, particularly as they watched the achievements of the friars and the Jesuits. The problem was that there was very little precedent in western Christianity for such a role for women, and there was the alarming contemporary parallel of female prophets among the radical sects of the Reformation." |
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#68 (permalink) | ||||||||
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Executive Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Michigan, USA
Posts: 912
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
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I tried before to get you to comment on the fundamental asymmetry here, but while some of the information you presented about male Muslim dress was interesting, nothing touched on why your face "belongs" exclusively to your husband in a way that his does not "belong" to you. Quote:
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#69 (permalink) | |
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
Hi bob x--InLove again (sorry)
![]() I feel like I may be sort of intruding again, but you have said something that I just can't let pass without a comment--the part I have put in bold letters, especially (I did not want to refer to anything out-of-context). Quote:
![]() Sorry to interrupt again--please do go on with the discussion at hand. InPeace, InLove |
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#73 (permalink) | |
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
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![]() That is the problem with stereotyping. If you see someone in cowboy boots or even a t-shirt with a GOP emblem on it for that matter, if you automatically say to yourself, "That person is, without a doubt, a supporter of W" then you may make an incorrect assumption. Just the same as if you see a woman in a face-veil, and you automatically assume she is a supporter of the Taliban, then you might be wrong. It can lead to lots of misunderstanding. InPeace, InLove |
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#75 (permalink) | |
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,574
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Re: Keys to the Kingdom
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