Posts tagged Religion
are there any trips to africa not dealing with religion?
1Question: are there any trips to africa not dealing with religion?
id really like to take a trip to africa to learn about the culture and help the people out in some way. i dont want it to be a mission trip because im not too big on religion. i want to be able to play with the kids and be able to bring stuff that they need, im 16 years old and i would kinda like for it to be a group thing. if you know of anything like this can you please help me out with a link or something, thanks.
trips to africa
Best answer:
Answer by KIP
http://www.tourism.go.ke
Try Kenya so nice a place with a lot of stuff to do and so many places where you can help in a small way check at the website above
Volcanos R an “act of god” – travel insurers worsen Iceland ash cloud chaos with ‘religion’, uhh
9airline cancellation insurance
If you have been affected by the disruptions in air travel resulting from the plume of ash from the Icelandic volcano that is drifting across Europe your flight might have been re-booked …..many, however, will receive no compensation for the disruption to their plans because many insurance companies have deemed the volcanic ash chaos an “act of God”. A FRANCE 24 survival guide to air travel chaos www.france24.com AFP – A senior US official warned Monday of potentially serious damage to military jets from volcanic ash after a buildup of glass was found in the engine of a NATO fighter plane in Europe. “This is a very, very serious matter that in the not too distant future will start having real impact on military capabilities,” the official told reporters. “Allied F-16s were flying and they did find glass buildup inside the engines,” he told reporters in Brussels, adding that the ash had affected one aircraft. Ash from volcanos can be turned into a glass form at high temperatures when it passes through a jet engine. Airspace across much of Europe has been closed since Thursday due to an ash cloud sparked by an eruption at Iceland’s Eyjafjoell volcano. “I think the airspace is closed for a reason,” the US official said….. Air France, British Airways, KLM and Lufthansa have reported no problems after launching flights to test fears that the ash cloud would destroy jet engines….. www.france24.com Did God do an ‘act’ on your airplane? Your insurance company might think so …
More peace in the religion of peace?
3Question: More peace in the religion of peace?
Model to be detained before being caned for drinking beer
By ROSLINA MOHAMAD
KUANTAN: A 32-year-old part-time model from Singapore who was to be whipped with six strokes of the rotan after admitted to having a beer in a nightclub last year was ordered by the Syariah High Court to be detained for seven days effective Aug 24.
The order was obtained following an application by Syarie deputy public prosecutor Saiful Idham Sahimi who filed it at the court here Tuesday.
The application was heard before Syariah High Court Judge Justice Datuk Abdul Rahman Yunos, in chambers.
On July 20, Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno was ordered to be caned and fined RM5,000 for consuming alcohol at a hotel night club in Cherating.
She was arrested during a raid by a team from the state religious department at 1.20am on July 12, 2007.
Kartika paid the fine. However, she did not make an appeal against the whipping order.
The Syariah High Court court also granted the prosecution’s two other applications – for the caning to be carried out within the seven days Kartika was ordered to be detained at the women’s prison in Kajang and for it to be conducted by a woman officer, and for Kartika to be released as soon as the punishment was meted out.
The punishment is provided under Section 125(4) of the Syariah Criminal Procedure Enactment 2002 that spelled out how the caning should be carried out.
In Islamic law, the cane should not be thicker than the little finger on the hand and that the cane cannot be lifted so high that the upper arm is lifted away from the armpit.
The part-time model was charged under Section 136 of the Pahang Islamic and Malay Traditional Practices Enactment 1982 (amendment 1987).
Under the section, those who are found guilty can be fined up to RM5,000 or jailed a maximum of three years, or both, and sentenced to six strokes of the rotan.
The sentence for consuming alcohol was made stiffer when the Islamic Religious Administration and Pahang Malay Tradition Enactment 1982 was amended in 1987.
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/8/18/nation/20090818175749&sec=nation Here is the link you wanted
(cherating hotels)
Best answer:
Answer by Cher was here JPA
Can you provide a link to the article? (I like to judge context & source.)
Singapore is a modern city. How is this court applicable to their population?
The idea of caning for drinking, well I’m against corporal punishment. Judaism hasn’t had such as thing, well in forever. Even during Temple don’t think it applied (eye for eye wasn’t literal in Judaism – that’s a false info.)
….
I had trouble with that link so if others do, here are the two links again:
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/8/19/courts/4545406&sec=courts
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/8/18/nation/20090818175749&sec=nation
……………
I found an opinion piece in the same paper. It’s an excellent looking paper – extremely well developed & comprehensive.
http://thestar.com.my/columnists/story.asp?col=sharingthenation&file=/2009/8/2/columnists/sharingthenation/4434576&sec=Sharing The Nation
YA probably will cut off the article, but here’s a paste of it:
Brothers, be just to your sisters
Islam itself means submission to the will of God, but the submission of the self to faith and belief must be attained through conviction and reason, not through coercion and duress.
SO, Malaysia makes international news again. And for the wrong reason again. This time for the Kuantan Syariah Court’s decision to flog Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno with six strokes of the rotan for drinking a glass of beer with her husband in a hotel in Cherating two years ago.
Sudan is in the news too with the arrest of a journalist, Lubna Ahmad Hussein, and 12 other women for wearing trousers, deemed to be “inappropriate dress and conduct” under that country’s Islamic criminal law. Ten of the women were already found guilty and flogged with 10 lashes each.
Then there is the news from the Maldives that almost 150 women face public flogging after being convicted for indulging in extramarital sex. Interestingly, only 50 men face the same punishment.
What is it about men who want to implement Islamic law that they pick on women to shame and defame?
As Kartika surrenders herself to her fate, I wonder how the Pahang religious authorities are planning to execute the six lashes. Will the Prime Minister who comes from Pahang and the Cabinet yet again intervene in the enforcement of the draconian Syariah Criminal Offences law in this country?
There is much public debate now along the usual divide. Islamists who support the punishment in the name of Islam and others who are outraged on several different grounds:
> That the punishment does not reflect the gravity of the offence;
> That as a first-time offender who also pleaded guilty as charged, Kartika should not have been punished with the maximum sentence;
> Flogging is a violation of human rights as it constitutes a cruel, degrading and inhuman treatment;
> Flogging women under Syariah law constitutes yet another form of discrimination against Muslim women in this country as women are exempted from flogging under civil law;
> Neither the Qur’an nor the Hadith prescribes any form of punishment for drinking alcohol;
> There is no consensus on flogging of women or for alcohol consumption. Only three states –Pahang, Perlis and Kelantan – provide for such punishment;
> Islamic teachings emphasise forgiveness, compassion and positive personal transformation. So why punish in the first instance?
What is distressing about all these stories of women being flogged for alleged transgressions of Islamic teachings is the seeming determination of those who rule in the name of Islam to project a misogynistic, punitive and vindictive God.
And yet, more than any other religion, Muslims invoke the name of God, the compassionate and the merciful, numerous times a day as we say our daily prayers, read verses of the Quran, and before we start any action. Alas, all too often, this invocation of God’s name has become meaningless and has no relation to how we live our lives and treat others in the name of religion.
As Karen Armstrong said in her public lecture here two years ago, we have become so obsessed about being right in our doctrine, instead of being just in our practice.
No amount of explaining – that Syariah caning is not supposed to cause injury, it is moderate, the caning officer is not supposed to lift his arm above his shoulder – is going to take away the pain and humiliation of such a cruel and degrading treatment.
In many Muslim countries, this flogging is done in public. The Indonesian National Commission on Violence Against Women submitted a report to the UN Committee Against Torture listing the abuses that occurred in Aceh and other districts in Indonesia which implement Syariah law where women were arrested and flogged for their dressing, for being out at night, for being with men not related to them.
The victimisation of women and the absence of rule of law are common trends in countries that implement moral policing laws.
That the prisons in the Maldives hold more women than men waiting to be flogged is no surprise. Men get away simply by denying they had sex with the women. But women could get pregnant and this is used as evidence of illicit sex, or the patriarchs in their family would have turned them in; while boys get away by just being boys.
The situation is similar in Pakistan, too, when the hudud law on zina was enforced. Over a thousand women are in prison for illicit sex and hardly any men. Even women who reported rape were detained as their police report was seen as confession of illicit sex because they were not able to produce four pious males who witnessed the rape.
Women’s groups in Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore are jointly mobilising against Kartika’s sentencing, fearful of a precedent set that will have wide impact not just on Malaysian Muslim women, but also on the hundreds of thousands of Muslim women from neighbouring countries who travel, work or reside in Malaysia.
Once again, the questions arise. What kind of Malaysia do we want to live in, and project to the rest of the world? What kind of Islam do we want to practise? What kind of God do we want to envision? A God of kindness, compassion, beauty and goodness or a cruel, punitive and misogynistic God?
Does 1Malaysia include equality between men and women and equality between Muslim women and women of other faith?
The ever-so-often public outcry over arrests and abuses under the Syariah Criminal Offences laws show a clear disconnect between how the state views its role in controlling the lives of Muslims and how the citizens perceive their entitlements to privacy and personal choices.
If the Syariah Criminal Offences laws are implemented in full, Malaysia’s prisons would collapse. The vast list of crimes range from holding an opinion contrary to a fatwa, to possessing a book contrary to Hukum Syarak, and behaving in an indecent manner in a public place.
As religion is a state matter, different states have also added different offences. In Selangor, smoking is a crime. In Terengganu, it is a crime for a woman to reveal any part of her aurat that arouses passion in the public space or for a virgin woman to abscond from the guardianship of her parents without a reasonable justification valid under Hukum Syarak.
Is it the duty of the state – in order to bring about a moral society – to turn all “sins” into “crimes against the state”? Should the state extend the long arm of the law to what should be best left to the religious conscience of the individual?
We all know that faith comes from the heart. Islam itself means submission to the will of God, but the submission of the self to faith and belief must be attained through conviction and reason, not through coercion and duress.
Compelling obedience to God in this manner could suggest a failure in the way Islam is taught in this country. Is the solution then to turn to politicians to legislate on our lives and compel our obedience? Or is it for us to search for more effective ways to teach Islam, to imbibe Islamic values so that obedience to God comes from a genuine act of faith, belief and submission? Is it beyond our ability to lead the ummah to God’s way by love, beauty, kindness and compassion rather than through fear, coercion and punishment?