Ada juga binataang hina dina Idiot Kwadrat! Dan itu adalah kelompok anti Islam !

--- In [email protected], itemabu2 <itemabu2@...> wrote:
>
> Apa ada seekor muslim di milis ini yg berani buka mulut atas ocehan si
> Salafi tsb? Gua rasa, ga ada, krn para binatang tsb sibuk kaing2 kayak
> anjing kejepit buntut, atau saling jilat pantat dgn sesama.
> 
> Tp, hehehe.... orang2 Shia jg akan melakukan hal yg sama ke orang
> Sunni kalo ada kesempatan.
> 
> Islam itu emang agama yg benar, hehehe... (Si Teddy pasti mikir gua lg
> muji2 Islam)
> 
> 
> http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=418944
> 
>  Date: 2013/05/14 - 09:01     source: Bikyanews               print
> 
> Egyptian Salafist: "Shia Are More Dangerous Than Naked Women"
> 
> A statement from a member of Parliament of the ultra-conservative
> Salafist Nour Party has argued that Shia are "more dangerous than
> naked women" in comments that have brought on an onslaught of sardonic
> comments as well as anger from Egypt's activist community, who have
> urged the government to make it clear that discrimination will not be
> tolerated.
> 
> 
> (Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - A statement from a member of Parliament of
> the ultra-conservative Salafist Nour Party has argued that Shia are
> "more dangerous than naked women" in comments that have brought on an
> onslaught of sardonic comments as well as anger from Egypt's activist
> community, who have urged the government to make it clear that
> discrimination will not be tolerated.
> 
> According to a report in al-Ahram – a government-run daily newspaper -
> members of the committee called on Tourism Minister Hesham Zaazou to
> discuss the issue in the council, the country's upper house of
> parliament which is holding legislative powers until a house of
> representatives is elected.
> 
> The committee, headed by Fathy Shehab El-Din of the Freedom and
> Justice Party (FJP), reportedly had an argument on the effects Iranian
> tourists could have on Egypt.
> 
> "The Shias are more dangerous than naked [women]," MP Tharwat Attallah
> of the Salafist Nour Party said during the meeting.
> 
> "They are a danger to Egypt's national security; Egyptians could be
> deceived into [converting to] Shiism, giving it a chance to spread in
> Egypt," he added.
> 
> Activist Nora Osman said that "this fear of the Shia is ridiculous in
> this country. We've had them traveling here for decades and there was
> no problem, but now with the rise of the conservatives, it has become
> one. Doesn't make sense to me."
> 
> Egypt's minority Shia Muslim population has long struggled for
> acceptance in the majority Sunni country. It is not looking to get
> better for the group, however, with the country's Grand Mufti warning
> of the spread of Shiism.
> 
> "Propagation of Shiism means spreading rifts and divisions," said
> Sheikh Ali Goma'a, Egypt's former state-appointed Grand Mufti two
> years ago.
> 
> "We advise the wise people among the Shiites against the misplaced
> propagation of Shiism, which will cause instability and threaten
> social security," Goma'a said at a lecture during a week-long forum
> hosted by the Islamic Research Center, an influential arm of the Sunni
> world's most prestigious institution al-Azhar.
> 
> In 2012, Shia activists were detained by Egyptian officials in what
> was seen as another attempt to push the group outside the norms in
> Egypt. With the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood to the top of the
> government, Shia in Egypt continue to face hardships in practicing
> their faith.
> 
> The February detentions came less than one month after Egypt's
> security closed the Hussein Mosque, arguing that the Sunni majority in
> Egypt would become enraged over seeing Ashura celebrations in Cairo.
> The celebrations mark the killing of the Prophet Mohamed's grandson
> Imam Hussein.
> 
> "It is not new for us Shia in Egypt," said Ali, 34.
> 
> "This is my country, but I feel there is so much pressure on me to be
> someone I am not and to believe in things that are not my own," he
> said.
> 
> The reason is simple: he is Shiite. In Egypt, a predominantly Sunni
> Muslim country, the minority Shia have been arrested and forced into
> silence.
> 
> In 2011, Egyptian police arrested at least four Shia Muslims,
> including a visiting Australian citizen. They were charged with
> insulting and denying tenets of religion, judicial sources were
> reported saying.
> 
> Security officials reported that the Shia men were part of a group of
> 24 that were rounded up last week in Cairo. According to the police,
> most have been released, but it is still unclear how many remain
> behind bars.
> 
> "This is the struggle we face on a daily basis and have been forced to
> live in silence and fear of what the police would do if they found out
> we were Shia," Ali continued.
> 
> The Australian man's family alerted the Australian authorities after
> Safaa al-Awadi, 44, did not return to Perth when scheduled.
> 
> He was freed one month later after facing charges of blasphemy.
> 
> Seven other Shiites have been in detention since mid-2009 and charged
> with "forming a group trying to spread Shi'ite ideology that harms the
> Islamic religion."
> 
> In 2010, Egypt's Minister of Religious Endowments, Mahmoud Hamdy
> Zaqzouq, said in statements during a meeting with the Grand Mufti of
> Mount Lebanon, Sheikh Mohamed Ali Jouzo, that Egypt has "no mosques
> belonging to any religious or sectarian schools." He added that there
> are no Shia Mosques in Egypt.
> 
> The minister stressed that all mosques and religious institutions that
> number some 104,000 are subject to full supervision of the Ministry of
> Religious Endowments.
> 
> Followers of Shia doctrine believe the Prophet Mohamed should have
> been succeeded by his cousin Ali rather than his companion Abu Bakr,
> who is considered the first Imam. Ali was the fourth in traditional
> Sunni belief.
> 
> Making matters difficult in Egypt is that Sunnis believe any
> suggestion that Abu Bakr was not the rightful successor is akin to
> blasphemy.
> 
> "We live under these conditions every day and most of the time I keep
> my mouth shut, but for our government to insist that we don't exist is
> insulting and wrong," added Ali.
>




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