Kenapa orang Kristen seperti Gabby, item, ini selalu pikirannya cuman disekitar 
selangkangan doang ya?

Karena Alkitab isinya Kidung Agung mengajarkan ajaran cabul sih...




--- In [email protected], Gabriella Rantau <gkrantau@...> wrote:
>
> Si imam dungu itu berkata: "The important thing is  that the girl is ready 
> and can tolerate marriage!"
> 
> Sedang dia dan semua Muslim tahu bhw perempuan apalagi yg masih di bawah umur 
> tidak mungkin berani menyangkal, menolak kehendak orang tuanya. Jadi spt 
> halnya Aisha dia mau tidak mau ketika baru umur 9 tahun ditiduri oleh orang 
> yg sudah 50 tahun. [Dan mnrt hadist sebelum consumating the marriage, sang 
> calon suami sering ngejepitin torpedonya di antara paha si anak imut2 tsb.]
> 
> Ini jelas praktik yg tidak bisa diterima civilized society di abad ke-21 ini.
> 
> Gabriella
> 
> 
> 
> ________________________________
>  From: Bukan Pedanda <bukan.pedanda@...>
> To: [email protected] 
> Sent: Monday, 19 November 2012 9:12 PM
> Subject: [proletar] IPS:Radical Clerics Seek to Legalise Child Brides
>  
> 
>   
> 
> Islam itu, dan bukan hanya Salafi, sungguh nista dan menjijikkan...
> 
> Radical Clerics Seek to Legalise Child Brides
> By Cam McGrath 
> 
> CAIRO, Nov 14 2012 (IPS) - An ultraconservative Salafi cleric recently 
> sparked outrage among Egypt's liberal circles when he attempted to justify 
> his opposition to a proposed constitutional article that would outlaw the 
> trafficking of women for sex.
> 
> Speaking on privately-owned Al-Nas satellite channel, Sheikh Mohamed Saad 
> El-Azhary said he feared the proposed article could conflict with the local 
> practice of child marriage. He explained that in Egypt, particularly in rural 
> areas, there is a culture of marrying off girls as soon as they hit puberty.
> 
> "The important thing is that the girl is ready and can tolerate marriage," 
> El-Azhary declared.
> 
> He went on to protest proposed laws protecting women from violence, warning 
> that if allowed to pass husbands could be prosecuted for beating their child 
> brides or forcing themselves upon them.
> 
> "If you have intercourse with your wife against her will, she will be able to 
> file a complaint against you," he said. "That's where things are headed."
> 
> Followers of the Salafi trend believe in a literal reading of the Quran and 
> hadith (traditions of Prophet Muhammad) and aspire to emulate the lifestyle 
> of the Prophet and his companions. Their puritanical approach to Islam has 
> put them at odds with secular Muslims and minority groups, who denounce their 
> intolerant worldview.
> 
> For Salafis, the fundamental justification for child marriage is passages in 
> the hadith that state Prophet Muhammad married his third wife when she was 
> six years old, and consummated the marriage after her first menses at nine.
> 
> Sheikh Yasser Borhamy, spokesman for the Salafi Dawah, outlined his 
> interpretation of the Quranic texts during an interview with TV presenter 
> Wael El-Ebrashy. He argued that Egypt's marriage laws contradict the 
> provisions of Sharia (Islamic law), as girls should be married off once they 
> reach puberty, or before "if she can".
> 
> "If Islam allowed it during the Prophet's time, it will be permissible until 
> the End of Days," Borhamy asserted.
> 
> While Salafis represent just a small but vocal minority of Egyptians, the 
> recent election of an Islamist parliament and president has extended their 
> political clout.
> 
> But what deeply concerns child rights advocates is that El-Azhary and Borhamy 
> are members of the committee tasked with drafting Egypt's new constitution. 
> And they are not alone. Other members of the Islamist-stacked panel are known 
> to share their views on child marriage and may be attempting to enshrine them 
> in the constitution.
> 
> "We fought for years to raise the minimum age of marriage for girls (from 16) 
> to 18, and now the Islamists want to lower it," says women's rights activist 
> Azza Kamel. "There are Salafis arguing it should be as low as nine."
> Some battles may have already been lost.
> 
> When a copy of the constitution's first draft circulated last month, rights 
> advocates were shocked to find that a proposed clause banning the trafficking 
> of women had been omitted. Salafi members of the drafting committee had 
> argued to have it removed on the grounds that human trafficking "does not 
> exist in Egypt" and its mere mention "tarnishes Egypt's image."
> 
> International agencies strongly disagree. According to a 2010 report by the 
> U.S. State Department, human trafficking exists at many levels in Egypt. The 
> country is a transit point and destination for trafficked African and Asian 
> women and children, who are subjected to forced labour and prostitution.
> 
> It is also a source of trafficked women, including young girls exploited 
> under the guise of marriage.
> 
> Local NGO Memphis Foundation for Development says the phenomenon of child 
> marriage is widespread in Egypt, particularly in rural areas where parents 
> often marry off their daughters early to escape grinding poverty. Research 
> conducted in 2008 found that nearly a quarter of all marriages involved girls 
> under 16.
> 
> Afaf Marei, director of the Egyptian Association for Community Participation 
> Enhancement (EACPE), says many of these underage girls are sold by their 
> parents to wealthy Gulf Arabs who come to Egypt in search of "summer brides".
> 
> The marriages are arranged by lawyers who act as brokers, and may last from 
> hours to months according to the "dowry" paid to the parents. Often the 
> transaction is made without the girl's knowledge or consent.
> 
> "These marriages are a form of trafficking women (under the pretence of) 
> Islamic law," says Marei.
> 
> The Muslim Brotherhood, the conservative Islamic group that dominated this 
> year's parliamentary and presidential polls, has kept a low profile in the 
> discourse on child marriage. While some reformists in the group reject the 
> practice, its hardline leaders were the principal opponents of the 2008 law 
> that raised the minimum marriage age of girls to 18.
> 
> Now, as pressure mounts on the constitutional drafting body to have the 
> document ready by a Dec. 12 deadline, the Brotherhood's weight could prove 
> decisive both on the panel and at the polls. If the constitution goes to a 
> referendum without a clause explicitly banning the trafficking of women, it 
> is likely to pass given the Brotherhood's ability to rally public support, 
> say liberal activists.
> 
> "We're fighting to win, but rationally I don't think we can," concedes Amal 
> Abdel Hadi, head of the New Women Foundation. "This is just one battle and 
> we're fighting the Islamists on even greater issues such as (to guarantee) 
> the equality of citizenship." (END)
> 
> 
>  
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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