Random Facts Meme

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8 random facts about me: ( thanks to the apostate for the tag!)

1. All right, here are the rules.
2. We have to post these rules before we give you the facts.
3. Players start with eight random facts/habits about themselves.
4. People who are tagged need to write their own blog about their eight things and post these rules.
5. At the end of your blog, you need to choose eight people to get tagged and list their names. Don’t forget to leave them a comment telling them they’re tagged, and to read your blog.

Really random.. this stuff:

  1. I am very bad at following rules! and i am a terrible terrible procrastinator also
  2. I used to sleepwalk regularly till I was about 21
  3. I used to paint - portraits mostly - but got burnt-out at 16 and never painted again after 17 ( ok so it was in the middle of a-levels i had to struggle for one more year!)
  4. I lived in a refugee camp in the jordanian desert for a week when i was 13
  5. I detest having to go shopping particularly for shoes, and particularly with other people
  6. I went to the same school that Queen Rania of Jordan went to (i.e. when she wasn”t a queen!)
  7. I still get a thrill when i get on the net - “just think what you might find today!”
  8. I don”t like talking on the phone - i actively avoid it, my to-do list usually has call such and such on it for ages.

i”m tagging: leighton cooke, ceridwen devi, golmal sid, leon, daniels counter and chairwoman of the bored.

( okay there”s been bending of rules going on..but as i said in no. 1..)

meme

War Child UK Gala Event : Those were the Days

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(via the brilliant UnitedDiversity blog)

One child dies every three minutes because of armed conflict. Children should never be affected by war. Full stop.

“Immodesty Blaize the famous burlesque dancer is headlining the first ever War Child UK fundraising ball this summer. Come and join in the fun at Koko”s club, Camden and help raise money for projects in Northern Uganda, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, on Thursday 28th June.

Want to help raise funds to support important work with children in worn torn areas across the globe? Tickets are £155 each or £1400 for a table of 10.

A bit pricey, but well worth it, and if you can’t afford it yourself, please forward on the details to someone who can. You can also donate at the War Child UK website if you would like to contribute something. Non-financial help I”m sure is also welcome - publicising the cause and contributing to raising awareness will go a long way towards helping!

Please contact wendy@warchild.org.uk for more information or check out the facebook event invitation page here. Some People have worked very hard at organising this event and I”m sure it will be really good.

war child flyer

Womens Learning Partnership: for Rights, Development and Peace

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morocco

I”ve been meaning to write about this wonderful network - the Women”s Learning Partnership (WLP) - before but have been procrastinating.

No time like the present:

In a nutshell, they”re about female empowerment as part of human equality, and positive thinking : they”re a network of networks - they work with 18 autonomous and independent partner organizations in the Global South, particularly in Muslim-majority societies, to “empower women to transform their families, communities, and societies.”

One of their particular campaigns that I wanted to highlight is “Claiming Equal Citizenship“: the Campaign for Arab Women”s Right to Nationality.

Women’s right to equal citizenship is guaranteed by the majority of Arab constitutions, as well as by international law. Yet across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region and the Gulf, women are denied their right to nationality – a crucial component of citizenship.

In almost every country in the MENA and Gulf regions, women who marry men of other nationalities cannot confer their original nationality to their husbands or children. Only fathers, not mothers, can confer their nationality to their children.

Discriminatory laws denying women equal nationality rights undermine women’s status as equal citizens in their home countries. Such laws send the message that women do not enjoy a direct relationship with the state, but must access their citizenship rights through mediation of a male family member, such as a father or a husband. Until women in the MENA and Gulf regions are recognized as full nationals and citizens, they cannot participate fully in public life, nor claim the other rights to which they are entitled as equal members of their societies.

The denial of women’s nationality rights also created real suffering for dual nationality families living in the woman’s home country. Children and spouses are treated as foreigners and must obtain costly residence permits. Children are often excluded from social services such as social security, healthcare and subsidized or free access to education. In many countries, spouses and children have limited employment opportunities and are unable to own property. In terms of psychological impact, many women feel isolated and guilty because they feel responsible for the difficulties faced by their families, while children suffer from low self-esteem because of their second-class status.

I have written about this problem as affecting Bangladeshi women in the past - not being able to confer nationality upon their children - as it is passed through the father. Essentially this is how I found out about this campaign, one of the WLP activists commented upon my post and pointed me to their work.

The goals of the campaign are to call for

  • Legal reform enabling women to confer their nationality to their husbands and children without condition
  • Full implementation of reformed nationality laws and equal access to these laws for all women
  • Recognition of women as equal citizens in all areas of life

Please sign the petitions to support equal rights to citizenship for men and women.

Your signature sends a message of support to partners, who can use the international visibility to strengthen their advocacy efforts for amending nationality laws.

image

On troubling Hadiths

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A few thoughts on hadiths and religion in general:

I had a difficult relationship with religion while I was growing up. As a child, I used to be a voracious reader and stumbled upon lots of things, including the Hadith collection my parents had. Now there was one particular Hadith that I read when i was about 10 - which was a real shock to the system. I cannot emphasize how shocking - and how much impact it had - but in any case, it”s something that troubled me for a long long time. Frankly I couldn”t believe it. And it wasn”t something you could speak about to people - a) it was extremely indecent or so I felt as a child ( and the horror of having found it in a Hadith collection, can you imagine) and b) not the sort of thing you can broach to “religious” people very easily - and plus the whole ” forbidden areas of thinking” thing. I felt terribly alone - had anyone else read this stuff? what did they think about it if they had? no answers for a long time.

Now fast forward to the days where you can look up anything on the net -hooray ! and ask all sorts of people questions on the internet and generally find out more about what”s going on in other people”s heads. I”ve had some discussions about this hadith - but not too many -and then I tracked it down just to be sure i hadn”t dreamed it up, thanks to the USC MSa Compendium of Muslim texts which is searchable and a handy resource.

And of course as a child I had no idea about sex slavery or concubinage (whatever you want to call it) - or that islamic fiqh had regulated the conditions of slavery. of course the war booty thing ties in with the “taking women ransom” but I”d never heard such justifications back then. If i had, i”m sure my feelings at the time of the Iraq invasion would have been even more complicated. {and plus all the stories you hear from relatives in bangladesh about the pakistani soldiers raping women in the war} These sorts of things are everywhere, but you don”t expect to read about them in compilations of “religious texts”. Why doesn”t it bother more people that”s what I wanted to know, what I still want to know, or how it can be “rationalised”. Some people are thinking about these knotty issues, but most people will brush them under the carpet. I daresay that is the natural thing to do - avoid controversy.

The Hadith in question is taken from Sahih Muslim, Book 8 which is the The Book of Marriage” (Kitab Al-Nikah)

Chapter 22: AL AZL (INCOMPLETE SEXUAL INTERCOURSE): COITUS INTERRUPTUS

Book 008, Number 3371:

“Abu Sirma said to Abu Sa”id al Khadri (Allah he pleased with him): 0 Abu Sa”id, did you hear Allah”s Messenger (may peace be upon him) mentioning al-”azl? He said: Yes, and added: We went out with Allah”s Messenger (may peace be upon him) on the expedition to the Bi”l-Mustaliq and took captive some excellent Arab women; and we desired them, for we were suffering from the absence of our wives, (but at the same time) we also desired ransom for them. So we decided to have sexual intercourse with them but by observing “azl (Withdrawing the male sexual organ before emission of semen to avoid-conception). But we said: We are doing an act whereas Allah”s Messenger is amongst us; why not ask him? So we asked Allah”s Mes- senger (may peace be upon him), and he said: It does not matter if you do not do it, for every soul that is to be born up to the Day of Resurrection will be born.

So that”s pretty much what rocked my boat: I don”t know what people manage to rationalize as adults but as a child that was pretty damn shocking to me, particularly given what I was told by my Mother about the “morals of sexuality in Islam”.

The next few narrations in Sahih Muslim which touch on this as well:

Book 008, Number 3372: A hadith like this has been narrated on the authority of Habban with the same chain of transmitters (but with this alteration) that he said:” Allah has ordained whom he has to create until the Day of judgment.” Book 008, Number 3373: Abu Sa”id al-Khudri (Allah be pleased with him) reported: We took women captives, and we wanted to do “azl with them. We then asked Allah”s Messen- ger (may peace be upon him) about it, and he said to us: Verily you do it, verily you do it, verily you do it, but the soul which has to be born until the Day of judgment must be born. Book 008, Number 3381: Abu Sa”id al-Khudri (Allah be pleased with him) reported that Allah”s Messenger (may peace be upon him) was asked about “azl, whereupon he said: The child does not come from all the liquid (semen) and when Allah intends to create anything nothing can prevent it (from coming into existence). Book 008, Number 3377: Abu Sa”id al-Khudri (Allah be pleased with him) reported that mention was made of “azl in the presence of Allah”s Apostle (may peace be upon him) whereupon he said: Why do you practise it? They said: There is a man whose wife has to suckle the child, and if that person has a sexual intercourse with her (she may conceive) which he does not like, and there is another person who has a slave-girl and he has a sexual intercourse with her, but he does not like her to have conception so that she may not become Umm Walad, whereupon he (the Holy Prophet) said: There is no harm if you do not do that, for that (the birth of the child) is something pre- ordained. Ibn “Aun said: I made a mention of this hadith to Hasan, and he said: By Allah, (it seems) as if there is upbraiding in it (for “azl).”

Apparently the reason they seem to talk about this “al-azl” thing so much is all tied up with the permissibility of contraception, or so it seems. So that”s what the men were bothered about: contraception - not - oh is it okay if i just have a quickie with this woman captive/slave girl here? and personally what i found the most shocking was that the Prophet was amongst them at the time - so what was he doing there while these men were “enjoying” the captive women? I really had a lot of trouble with this one - once I”d read that I felt really resentful when as a teenager - time and time again- people would say “well we are all very moral people. we do not believe in boyfriends or girlfriends”. Sure aunties and uncles..i wanted to say..how do you explain this stuff then? {but of course good asian girls are not mean to answer back to the “community” are they now, oh no}
Wholesome reading isn”t it. I can”t understand personally when you have lurid tales like these why anyone is bothered about cartoons. It seems to me if there is anything that would defame the character of a Holy Prophet then Hadiths like this one are the culprit. Would I choose to accept this as “religious tradition” - well no of course not. If this is meant to be true then I can”t say honestly that I am impressed at all.
A note on inauthentic and authentic hadiths: These Hadiths are from the Sahih Muslim collection. For a long time I was vaguely aware that there were “weak”" hadiths around - basically Hadiths that were “questionable” and didn”t have a reliable “chain” of narration. So for a while I assumed that this creepy stuff about coitus interruptus with captive women would surely fall into the “questionable” camp, oh no - it turned out to be in Sahih Muslim - which according to Sunni tradition after Sahih Bukharis meant to be the two most reliable ones! ( don”t take my word for it - read the wikipedia links below). Well as far as I know anyway - i”d love it if someone came along and said, actually this stuff is bollocks too. Apparently Shias dismiss Sahih Muslim as inauthentic - I wonder why?
“A Sahih hadith is the one which has a continuous isnad, made up of reporters of trustworthy memory from similar authorities, and which is found to be free from any irregularities (i.e. in the text) or defects (i.e. in the isnad)”

wikipedia tells us that:

Muhammad”s sayings and deeds are called sunnah and are transmitted through hadith. Imam Muslim (full name Abul Husain Muslim bin al-Hajjaj al-Nisapuri) was born in 202 A.H. and died in 261 A.H. He traveled widely to gather his collection of ahadith, including to Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Egypt. Out of 300,000 ahadith which he evaluated, only 4,000 approximately were extracted for inclusion into his collection based on stringent acceptance criteria. Each report in his collection was checked for compatibility with the Qur”an, and the veracity of the chain of reporters had to be painstakingly established. Muslim was a student of Bukhari and Ahmad ibn Hanbal.

It is important to realize, however, that Imam Muslim never claimed to collect all authentic traditions. He tried to collect only traditions that all Muslims should agree on its accuracy. There are other scholars who worked as Muslim did and collected other authentic reports. After Sahih Bukhari, this is the most authentic hadith collection in the Sunni perspective.

According to Munziri, there are a total of 2200 hadiths (with no repetition) in Sahih Muslim. This would bring the total of Sahih Bukhari and Sahih Muslim to 3000 hadiths. According to most Hadith scholars[1], there are 1400 authentic hadiths that are reported in other books (mainly the Six major Hadith collections).

hadith

Cyberwar?!

10

cyberwar

Very strange goings-on.

“Russia” is apparentlycyber-warring” “Estonia”!

The Loose Wire writes that Russian hackers have been carrying out denial of service (DDos) attacks on Estonian websites.

The Insights Blog gives us a bit of ..insight!..into the Estonian/Russian background and tensions.

The BBC says Estonia wants to stick this at the top of Friday”s EU-Russia summit agenda.
So what do the techies out there think about this funny business?

Blogging Procrastination?

4

on another note, i”ve been terribly slack with my writing lately yes i have been busy, but i have been reading many people”s blogs..i will finally get around to updating my links. and i shall be back soon ..i”ve got a “to-do” blogging list dating back from pre-xmas last year ( heh!) which i”ve managed to save in about 10 different formats and locations so i shall be digging it out - i had some “thank you”s” to write so that shall be up shortly, and lots of lovely people to mention. ( and of course slag off the not-so-lovely ones - heh). Now just a quick mention - i”ve been reading a lot about religion lately - the internet is wonderful from that perspective - so much information - and of course there are all sorts of things out there. Some very inspiring and some not so inspiring in fact heartily disillusioning. I”d like to say a quick thanks to Achelois for putting up with my comments on her blog and providing so much thought-provoking honest discussion.

** i need to get into the whole structured procrastination thing** it seems to be the only thing that works for me..

No to Military Rule and no to media censorship!

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tasneem khalil

well after all that drama, tasneem was released around 24 hours of his arrest…thank goodness! questions still remain unanswered and clearly it was a close shave..will the next journalist/critic of power be so lucky? the whole issue of media censorship can”t be ignored and the big thing of course is about military taking over power. there is good coverage on this …please check out Mash and Rezwan.. and I will update with links to other bloggers covering this very important topic.

BREAKING NEWS: Tasneem Khalil arrested by Military Police in Bangladesh

9

via Pickled Politics ( thanks Sunny!)

please help tasneem
“Prominent journalist and fellow blogger Tasneem Khalil has been arrested by the military police in Bangladesh, a serious attack on press freedom in the country.

An editor and outspoken journalist for the English daily newspaper Daily Star, he also worked for CNN and Human Rights Watch in the country. Of late he has been documenting the military’s attempts to take over Bangladesh and restrict political rights and free speech in the country.
Mash says:

Apparently Mr. Khalil’s crime is that he did his job. He spoke truthfully about the current situation in Bangladesh. He was interviewed by Nora Boustany of the Washington Post last month - that interview may have cost him his freedom and now possibly his life.

I have been speaking out over the last month about the military takedown of the democratic system in Bangladesh. One by one the fundamental rights of Bangladeshis have been taken away. But, Bangladeshis have recently started to fight back against the military. The press, the people and the courts have begun speaking out. The military now aims to silence them. Their thuggery is now plain to see.

Other bloggers covering: Drishtipat, Global Voices, Rezwanul, Golmal Sid, Salam Dhaka, Keep me honest, My dear Bangladesh, Adda, Deshi Voice and Butterflies and Wheels.

Human Rights Watch has also issued a press release. SD says this has also been elevated to the US State dept and Washington Post should be doing a story.

We need to organise joint protests in Washington and London in front of the Bangladeshi embassies to raise the profile of this arrest and highlight human rights abuses there. “

Please check out the discussion on Pickled Politics ..where we”re figuring out what we can do. Any ideas are welcome and much appreciated.

The CNN story is here - I can”t find anything on the BBC”s site ..or Amnesty International - see that”s the problem with all these big institutions - they can”t move quickly! Hopefully the blogosphere will be quicker in spreading the news.

Drawings by Frederic, Lord Leighton (1830-1896)

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Leighton Drawings Project
The Leighton Drawings Project aimed to catalogue, conserve, photograph and exhibit the collection of almost 700 drawings by Frederic Leighton at Leighton House Museum. It was carried out between 2005 and 2007 with the support of the Heritage Lottery Fund, and can be accessed, along with a database of all Leighton drawings in other public collections worldwide, from the website of the Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea.

“Flaming June” is the Leighton painting that I find the most sensuous: the imagery is evocative of glorious repose.
flaming june

Frederic Leighton”s studio is now open to the public as a museum : it is known as an amazing work of architecture in its own right- a fusion of Middle Eastern and European styles. Paintings on display include works by contemporaries of Leighton including Edward Burne-Jones.
Leighton House Museum

Iranian Women Activists Jailed

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iran

Urgent human rights alert from the Women”s Learning Partnership:

“Thirty-four of our colleagues and partners in the Iranian women”s movement were arrested on Sunday, March 4 outside of Tehran”s Revolutionary Court. They were staging a peaceful protest against the increasing government pressure on civil society activists and, in particular, the trial of five women activists charged with “endangering national security, agitating against the government, and taking part in illegal gatherings” because they had organized a peaceful protest for women”s rights on June 12, 2006. Four of them who were present at the trial were arrested with the demonstrators as they were leaving the court.

There are varying reports of police violence at the protest. One woman said that the police tried to intimidate the activists, using obscene words and insulting gestures. The thirty-four women leaders were detained in Eshratabad Prison for ten hours before being transferred to Section 209 of Evin Prison. Eight of the youngest detainees were released without charges on March 6. The detention occurred just ahead of the planned gathering in front of the Parliament on March 8, in honor of International Women”s Day.

In August 2006, Iranian women”s rights activists launched the “One Million Signatures” campaign to demand an end to discriminatory laws against women. Please support the campaign by going to our website here.

To express your solidarity with the activists and to demand the immediate release of the detainees, please write to:

Ayatollah Sayed “Ali Khamenei
The Office of the Supreme Leader
Shoahada Street
Qom, Iran
Email: info@leader.ir and istiftaa@wilayah.org
Salutation: Your Excellency

Dr. M. Javad Zarif
Ambassador to the United Nations
Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations
622 Third Ave.
New York, NY 10017
Email: jzarif@un.int
Salutation: Your Excellency

More on this from the BBC, Latest Iran News, and Global Voices

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