Wah, ini betul2 hebat. Anak ingusan 11 thn berdebat lawan ulama ahli Islam.

Si ulama dgn bangganya bilang bhw dia ngedukung praktek pedophilia tsb.

Ga heran kalo si habe terus ngejilat pantat Islam, bukan?


http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2013/10/marriage-islamic-style-11-year-old-girl-debates-with-muslim-cleric-on-child-marriage-in-yemen.html#more
Thursday, October 10, 2013 Marriage Islamic Style: 11-Year-Old Girl Debates
With Muslim Cleric on Child Marriage In Yemen


  So handsome, how could a 10 year old help herself?


An eleven-year-old girl debating a Muslim cleric? No contest. Atlas readers
know Nada well; I posted the video of her
here<http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2013/07/-id-rather-kill-myself-11-yr-old-yemeni-girl-escapes-forced-marriage-tells-how-other-girls-arent-so-.html>--
the incredible video from the 11-year-old Yemeni girl who fled her
home
because her mother was going to force her into marriage. She said she’d
rather kill herself before being forced into marriage. Unfortunately, she
said, other girls weren’t so lucky, and did kill themselves by burning
themselves alive and plunging themselves in the river.


 Child Marriage In Yemen: 11-Year-Old Nada Debates With Egyptian Cleric
MEMRI

*When 11-year-old Nada Al-Ahdal's video, in which she explained why she was
fleeing a forced marriage, went viral (**to view MEMRI TV Clip 3919, click
here* <http://memri.convio.net/site/R?i=aOaGtiNmPTIQODXu0ExrNQ>*), Nada was
catapulted to fame, and the issue of child marriage in Yemen, along with
its often tragic consequences, was brought to the
limelight.[1]<http://memri.convio.net/site/R?i=MCmUWLBIDq2KSEJf2oDraw>
A
recent TV show hosted Nada and her uncle in a debate on the topic of girl
brides, along with Egyptian cleric Sheikh Abu Yahya, who defended the
practice. In this debate, broadcast on September 16, 2013 by the Lebanese
Al-Jadid/New TV channel, Sheikh Abu Yahya said **that "contractual
marriage" can take place "from the moment the baby girl is born, draws her
first breaths, and is given a name," but that sex is not permitted until
the girl reaches puberty and then only "if the girl can tolerate it." Asked
by the TV host how one could tell whether a 9- or 10-year-old girl could
"tolerate" sex, he responded: "It depends on her physique and on what her
mother and aunts [say]." Sheikh Abu Yahya further said that he would marry
off his own daughter at nine years of age if she had reached puberty.*

*Nada recounted details of her ill-fated marriage, saying that her parents
had promised her a new dress when she was supposed to marry the 26-year-old
man. "They told me it was a game, but it isn't. It turns you into a
servant, and places a burden that is greater than you can bear on your
shoulders," said Nada. She made an impassioned plea to set up an
organization to help young girls like her. **To view MEMRI TV Clip 4002,
click here* <http://memri.convio.net/site/R?i=lt12k9IhVXPPA3i3-0BWZg>*.*

* *


*On September 18, Sky News Arabia aired a report giving an insight into the
fate of Yemeni girls not as fortunate as Nada. It portrayed the fate of
Saada, a Yemeni girl whose husband abandoned her to fend for herself and
her two children, and her 13-year-old sister Amina, who was married for
only a few months before fleeing back to her family. "In the absence of
laws… setting a minimum age for marriage, the tragedy of minor girls being
married off continues," says the reporter. "But every time another victim
joins the ranks of the so-called 'death brides,' the debate flares up
again." **To view MEMRI TV Clip 4004, click
here.*<http://memri.convio.net/site/R?i=da2yuDMM5M2CuJrHje7N6A>
*Nada Al-Ahdal: "They Told Me It Was A Game, But It Isn't"*

*Following are excerpts from the September 16 Al-Jadid/New TV debate:*

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "As you know, I fled marriage and ignorance, so that I
could continue to study. I didn't run away just because of the [intention]
to marry me off, but because of the ignorance and because I wanted to
study."

*Interviewer*: "How old were you when they married you off?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "Ten years old."

*Interviewer*: "How old was the man who married you?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "26 years old."

*Interviewer*: "When they told you they wanted to marry you off, what did
you know about marriage?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "They told me it was a game, but it isn't. It turns you
into a servant, and places a burden that is greater than you can bear on
your shoulders."

*Interviewer*: "[Your parents] told you that marriage was a game?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "Yes."

[image: 16716.JPG]

*Interviewer*: "How long did you stay with the man you were married to?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "I didn't marry him. I was engaged to him."

*Interviewer*: "So you ran away before you were married to him?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "A week before."

*Interviewer*: "You fled to your uncle?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "Yes."

*Interviewer*: "Was [the bridegroom] Yemeni or of a different nationality?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "He's Yemeni."

*Interviewer*: "Who encouraged you to flee marriage?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "Nobody did."

*Interviewer*: "You felt you had to run away…"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "Yes. I told myself that I would call Abd Al-Jabbar, and
that if that didn't help, I would call somebody else, or else this would be
the end of my life."

*Interviewer*: "Who told you that you had to get married? Your father? Your
mother?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "Both of them."

*Interviewer*: "What did they tell you?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: |They said: 'You're going to get married. You'll get a new
dress.' Things like that."

*Interviewer*: "Are you a poor family?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "Sort of… Yes."

*Interviewer*: "Do you know how much the bridegroom paid [your parents]?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "Yes."

*Interviewer*: "How much?"

*Nada Al-Ahdal*: "2,000 dollars."

[…]

"My mother told the police that my uncle kidnapped me, but it was me who
fled to him."
*Nada's Uncle: Nada's Two Sisters, Aged 12 And 14, Soon To Be Married*

*The interviewer turns to the uncle*

*Interviewer*: "Abd Al-Salam, Nada fled to you. How come you didn't think
the same way as your brother, when he decided to marry off his daughter?"

*Abd Al-Salam Al-Ahdal*: "As a matter of fact, Nada doesn't live with her
parents. If she had been living with them, she would have ended up just
like her sisters, who were married off…"

*Interviewer*: "She has sisters who were married off?"

*Abd Al-Salam Al-Ahdal*: "One sister, who is 12 years old, will be married
soon, after the holiday. Another, who is 14, will be married off on Thursday.
[Nada] lived with me for two years, and would spend her summer holidays
with me, so I could devote more time to her education and culture."

[…]
*Sheikh Abu Yahya: As Soon As A Baby Girl Is Born, A "Contractual Marriage"
Is Permitted*

*Egyptian cleric Sheikh Abu Yahya*: "There is a difference between
contractual marriage and consummated marriage. A contractual marriage can
take place from day one. From the moment the baby girl is born, takes her
first breaths, and is given a name, her guardian, who is her father only –
and there is consensus about this in the Muslim world – is allowed to marry
her off. This is an accepted custom, and perhaps even my grandparents and
your grandparents married this way. The boy is kept for the girl, and vice
versa.

"This marriage – a contractual marriage or engagement – is permitted [at
this age]. As for consummation of the marriage – it is not permitted until
the woman is ready to bear it. A guardian who acts otherwise is harming the
girl under his charge."

*Interviewer*: "At what age is she ready for him?"

*Sheikh Abu Yahya*: "This varies from girl to girl. One girl may be ready
at the age of nine, and another may not be ready even at 25."

[...]

[image: 16717.JPG]

*CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL
REPORT.<http://memri.convio.net/site/R?i=ki6f2BnO27mh3VW5WpIuSg>
*
 Posted by Pamela Geller <http://profile.typepad.com/atlasshrugs2000> on
Thursday, October 10, 2013 at 04:15 PM in Women and children in
Islam<http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/women/>

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