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raushan
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
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Topic initiated on Thursday, June 4, 2009 - 12:41 PM
Full text of Barack Obama's speech in Cairo
As a student of history, I also know civilization's debt to Islam. It was Islam - at places like Al-Azhar University - that carried the light of learning through so many centuries, paving the way for Europe's Renaissance and Enlightenment. It was innovation in Muslim communities that developed the order of algebra; our magnetic compass and tools of navigation; our mastery of pens and printing; our understanding of how disease spreads and how it can be healed. Islamic culture has given us majestic arches and soaring spires; timeless poetry and cherished music; elegant calligraphy and places of peaceful contemplation. And throughout history, Islam has demonstrated through words and deeds the possibilities of religious tolerance and racial equality.
I know, too, that Islam has always been a part of America's story. The first nation to recognize my country was Morocco. In signing the Treaty of Tripoli in 1796, our second President John Adams wrote, "The United States has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion or tranquility of Muslims." And since our founding, American Muslims have enriched the United States. They have fought in our wars, served in government, stood for civil rights, started businesses, taught at our Universities, excelled in our sports arenas, won Nobel Prizes, built our tallest building, and lit the Olympic Torch. And when the first Muslim-American was recently elected to Congress, he took the oath to defend our Constitution using the same Holy Koran that one of our Founding Fathers - Thomas Jefferson - kept in his personal library. .... Read the full text |
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hkhan
UNITED KINGDOM
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Posted - Thursday, June 4, 2009 - 9:37 PM
I think it's a great opportunity for the Islamic world for a constructive dialogue with the West & such God given opportunities must not be missed. |
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hkhan
UNITED KINGDOM
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Posted - Friday, June 5, 2009 - 4:40 AM
and looks quite relevant to our ph:11 work s; chk out. h |
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raushan
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
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Posted - Saturday, June 6, 2009 - 7:38 AM
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raushan
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
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Posted - Sunday, June 7, 2009 - 8:38 AM
Thank You for the Nildus Speech, Mr. President By M.J. Akbar | June 06, 2009
“Islam and the West” is another phrase wandering through a dialectic shaped within the Queen of Alice’s Wonderland. Islam is a faith; the West is geography. How do you construct a relationship between faith and geography? You can have a debate on Islam and Christianity, or indeed between the West and West Asia, or the West and South Asia, or South East Asia. There is a past and a future to discuss. “Islam and the West” is straight out of 19th century Orientalism, laden with a subtext that is best left to warmongers. Peace requires a different idiom.
We understood your problem as you weaved through political and rhetorical swamps, because your predecessor managed to achieve what the mightiest of Muslim rulers failed to do – unite Muslims, albeit against him, rather than for something. But every Muslim does not need a homily on democracy. Muslims of Indonesia, Malaysia, Bangladesh and India, who add up to nearly half the Muslim population, are not democracy-deficit. http://www.mjakbar.org/mjblog.htm |
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hkhan
UNITED KINGDOM
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Posted - Monday, June 8, 2009 - 6:02 AM
something interesting i came across at the annual covention of muslim council of britain over the wkend:(arches from the cordoba foundation)
This Islamic acceptance of the other is not a reluctant concession to the reality of a plural and interdependent world. To the contrary, Islam recognizes and accepts the other out of principle. This paper concludes with the assertion that the Islamic sources leave no room for religious indifference, agnosticism, or moral relativism in its extreme forms, but that Islam has that dose of relativism that is necessary for the normal functioning of multi-religious societies. Therefore, claims that Islam is an exclusivist religion are entirely unfounded, since we have seen that Islam allows a Muslim quite legitimately to have non-Muslim parents, wives, business partners, neighbours, teachers, rulers, and so on; and that it requires him to behave justly towards all of them, and recommends benefaction. What perplexes many people and leads them to pass harsh judgment on Islam is the Qur'anic self-assurance of possessing the truth, which usually leads to the conclusion that nothing but political absolutism could come of this theological absolutism. As we have seen, this is not the case. The fact that European pluralism is largely based on epistemological as well as moral relativism and agnosticism, and that the Islamic form is not, has confused many people.
We have also noted in this paper that in some cases the norms of Islamic law need not be taken as given once and for all. According to many Islamic jurists, Islamic law too is evolving in many of its aspects, though not all. The influence of social and political circumstances on legal thought in that process is not negligible. Keeping in mind that Muslim and the Christian worlds have spent most of the past centuries at war, the norms on non- Muslims that the classical Islamic jurists defined during that period should sometimes be compared with the emergency laws occasionally introduced by democratic societies in the case of war. In a world of entirely different internal and international circumstances, we witness the turning away from wartime law towards peacetime Islamic law. An example of this transformation is the view of a growing number of modern Islamic jurists and thinkers that non-Muslims in an Islamic political system, if they take on the same obligations in their country's defense as Muslims do, are not required to pay the special tax-jizyathat has raised so much controversy, and that they do not necessarily have to be ahl al-dhimma, protected people, but can be full-fledged citizens of such a state. To show that this is not view of marginal thinkers and jurists, let us note that this it is shared by Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Tawfiq Shawi, Muhammad Salim 'Awwa, Fahmi Huwaydi, and others. The first two, at least, are widely read and popular adherents to the largest revivalist movement in today's Muslim world, the Muslim Brotherhood. Al-Qaradawi a few decades ago wrote that the dhimma is a permanent agreement between Muslims and non-Muslims, in which God, His Messenger and the Muslims guarantee the security of the other side. Today, he says, this is citizenship. The principles and norms sited above form only part of the "liberal ethos of Islam," as professor Muna Abu al-Fadl puts it. It is true that we do not believe that Islamic sources leave space for religious indifference, agnosticism, and moral relativism in its extreme forms. Nonetheless, Islam posseses that dose of relativism that is necessary for the normal functioning of a multi-religious society. see full paper @ http://www.thecordobafoundation.com/attach/arches_4.pdf _____________________ |
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