hehehe, orang yang punya otak nddak bakal terus terusan kerja jadi tukang jaga 
game online kayak elo tem ...

menyedihkan.

--- In [email protected], item abu <itemabu@...> wrote:
>
> Hehehe... perintah auloh dilanggar oleh orang yg "berpikir".
> 
> 
> 
> 
> >________________________________
> > From: pinpinyuliansyah <pinpinyuliansyah@...>
> >To: [email protected] 
> >Sent: Friday, July 27, 2012 3:47 PM
> >Subject: [proletar] Re: Arctic Muslims' unique dilemma in Ramadan: The Sun 
> >never sets here
> > 
> >
> >  
> >Pernah denger nddak tem bahwa SAAT INI di dunia ini adzan bersahutan tiada 
> >henti ? Saat adzan subuh berhenti berkumandang di daerah anu, maka adzan 
> >subuh mulai berkumandang di daerah yang lain seiring berjalannya matahari ...
> >
> >Muslim di kutub tentusaja nddak perlu nunggu sampai matahari tenggelam, 
> >kalau itu yang dilakukan, maka bertentangan dengan klausul bahwa Islam 
> >diturunkan hanya bagi orang yang berpikir.
> >
> >Maksutnya bukan untuk orang yang males berpikir kayak elo tem ...
> >
> >Gimana game online nya rame ?
> >
> >Kasihan.
> >
> >--- In [email protected], item abu <itemabu@> wrote:
> >>
> >> Orang Islam di kutub ini kepaksa hrs make "akal sehat" spy ga mati waktu 
> >> puasa di musim panas.
> >> 
> >> Padahal auloh jelas2 ngasih perintah spy puasa dr fajar sampe matahari 
> >> terbenam. Kalo orang hrs berpikir dan make "akal sehat" spy ga mati, 
> >> berarti perintah auloh itu adalah perintah ga masuk akal sehat dan konyol, 
> >> bukan?
> >> 
> >> Siapa yg sebenarnya goblok? auloh yg ngasih perintah konyol, atau orang 
> >> Islam yg ga sadar akan kegoblokan auloh itu shg biarpun jelas2 mereka 
> >> ngebangkang perintah auloh, tp mereka msh ngejilat pantat auloh?
> >> 
> >> Satu2nya mukjizat yg ada di Islam itu adalah begitu banyaknya orang goblok 
> >> yg msh mau ngejilat pantat auloh.
> >> 
> >> 
> >> http://www.emirates247.com/arctic-muslims-unique-dilemma-in-ramadan-the-sun-never-sets-here-2012-07-24-1.468650
> >> 
> >> Arctic Muslims' unique dilemma in Ramadan: The Sun never sets here
> >> By AP
> >> Published Tuesday, July 24, 2012
> >> 
> >>  How do you observe dawn-to-dusk fasting when there is neither dawn nor 
> >> dusk?
> >> 
> >> It's a question facing a small but growing number of Muslims 
> >> celebrating the holy month of Ramadan on the northern tip of Europe, 
> >> where the the sun barely dips below the horizon at this time of year.
> >> 
> >> In Rovaniemi, a northern Finland town that straddles the Arctic 
> >> Circle at 66 degrees north, the sun rises around 3:20 a.m. and sets 
> >> about 11:20pm. That means Muslims who observe Ramadan could be required 
> >> to go without food or drink for 20 hours.
> >> 
> >> In a few years, Ramadan will begin even closer to the summer solstice in 
> >> late June, when the sun doesn't set at all.
> >> 
> >> "We have to use common sense," said Mahmoud Said, 27, who came to Finnish 
> >> Lapland from Kenya three years ago.
> >> 
> >> To Said, that means following the fasting hours of the nearest Muslim 
> >> country: Turkey.
> >> 
> >> "It involves 14 or 15 hours of fasting which is okay, it's not bad," 
> >> said Said, who works for a non-governmental organization helping 
> >> immigrants settle in the area. He estimates there are a little over 100 
> >> Muslims in Rovaniemi, mainly from Iraq, Somalia and Afghanistan.
> >> 
> >> There is no unanimity on how to deal with the issue, which is 
> >> becoming more pressing as more Muslim immigrants find their way to 
> >> sparsely inhabited areas near the Arctic.
> >> 
> >> In Alaska, the Islamic Community Center of Anchorage, "after 
> >> consultation with scholars," advises Muslims to follow the fasting hours 
> >> of Makkah, Islam's holiest city.
> >> 
> >> The Dublin-based European Council for Fatwa and Research, however, 
> >> said Muslims need to follow the local sunrise and sunset, even up north.
> >> 
> >> "The debate on how to do this in the north has been on going on for a few 
> >> years," said Omar Mustafa, the chairman of the Islamic Association 
> >> of Sweden. "We fast according to the sun. As long as it is possible to 
> >> tell dusk from dawn. This applies to 90 per cent of Sweden's Muslims."
> >> 
> >> The few Muslims who live so far north that they are awash in 24-hour 
> >> daylight should follow the daylight hours the closest city in Sweden 
> >> where you can tell dawn from dusk, he said, noting that it's permitted 
> >> to break the fast for health reasons.
> >> 
> >> Kaltouma Abakar and her extended family of nine relatives came to 
> >> Finland from Sudan's Darfur region four years ago. She opts to observe 
> >> the local Lapland sunrise and sunset times before breaking the fast in 
> >> her downtown Rovaniemi apartment.
> >> 
> >> Kaltouma explains that she gets up early and works until the 
> >> afternoon, then starts cooking the family's iftar meal around 5 p.m.
> >> 
> >> "The time of Ramadan fasting is very long, and breaking the fast can 
> >> be around 11:30 in the evening. The time you're supposed to eat your 
> >> breakfast is 2 o'clock in the morning," the 31-year old said.
> >> 
> >> In the kitchen, Kaltouma's two daughters â€" aged 11 and 6 â€" help 
> >> prepare the food. They fry chicken and pastries filled with tuna in 
> >> scalding hot oil. A pot of rice simmers on the stove while one girl 
> >> kneads cornmeal dough which they'll dip into a chicken broth and eat 
> >> with their fingers â€" traditional Sudanese style â€" a few hours 
> >> later.
> >> 
> >> Apart from the late sunset times, Kaltouma said the lack of "Muslim 
> >> food" locally in Rovaniemi can be a challenge. She sometimes has to wait 
> >> several days for halal meat and other traditional ingredients to come 
> >> from the larger cities of Oulu, or Helsinki in the south.
> >> 
> >> Even though, technically, there is nightfall in Rovaniemi at this 
> >> time of year, there is no true darkness. Instead, there's a grey 
> >> gloaming with occasional dappled rays of sun reaching over the northern 
> >> horizon, giving the city a mystical quality even in the supposed dead of 
> >> night.
> >> 
> >> The dates of Ramadan change according to the lunar calendar, moving 
> >> back 11 days each year. That means that by 2015 there will be no sunset 
> >> for a month when Ramadan falls closer to midsummer.
> >> 
> >> Still, Kaltouma says "there is going to be at least 10 minutes for us to 
> >> break the fast."
> >> 
> >> She said there is one positive aspect of observing long fasting hours in 
> >> the Arctic during Ramadan: the cool temperatures.
> >> 
> >> "Unlike Africa, here in Finland you don't get thirsty often. No matter how 
> >> long you fast, you don't get the urge for water."
> >> 
> >> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >>
> >
> >
> > 
> >
> >
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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