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View Full Version : Into the darkness, and out again


Skybird
06-02-07, 06:05 AM
Such minds could live in Islam, too.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/02/world/europe/02husain.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print

I certainly do not soften my unforgiving stand on Islam, and I would like to talk with this man about why he still wants to be seen as Muslim, when he finds it to be so troublesome - Sufism never was accepted by the main branch of Muhammad's Islam, and even often was supressed or even persecuted, nevertheless stories like this add some needed "reason-over-emotion". For people like this man - and for critics like me as well.

P_Funk
06-02-07, 06:19 AM
...and I would like to talk with this man about why he still wants to be seen as Muslim, when he finds it to be so troublesome.... Maybe because he doesn't want to be chased out of his own beliefs by extremists. Having the courage to reconsider your beliefs against the grain of the majority and stand by them openly is something that many people can't do. As recently as the last few days my feelings about my own views are shifting, as they always are. Having a belief or a philosophy about the world is a river that runs along the same banks but still changes in character as the water erodes the walls into new subtler shapes.

I suppose wanting to be "muslim" is his identity and he sees no shame in it. It could be like wanting to be an American when many people around the world show disdain for them. Of course we hear about Americans who backpack with Canadian flags on their gear to avoid harassment (not sure how accurate that really is). He is just wearing his true colours on his sleeve though others have tarnished it. It could be something like that.

robbo180265
06-02-07, 06:23 AM
Couldn't read the article - asks for my e mail addy and a password.

And it's not getting it;)

Happy Times
06-02-07, 06:36 AM
Such minds could live in Islam, too.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/02/world/europe/02husain.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print

I certainly do not soften my unforgiving stand on Islam, and I would like to talk with this man about why he still wants to be seen as Muslim, when he finds it to be so troublesome - Sufism never was accepted by the main branch of Muhammad's Islam, and even often was supressed or even persecuted, nevertheless stories like this add some needed "reason-over-emotion". For people like this man - and for critics like me as well.

http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=115794 ;)

kurtz
06-02-07, 07:42 AM
Couldn't read the article - asks for my e mail addy and a password.

And it's not getting it;)

You sure? it didn't ask me.


As for Sufism AFAIK it is to Islam what Zen is to Budhism. It came from the faith but can exist apart from it. In fact the similarity goes so far as to teach by riddles, can you believe it? a religion which asks you think...been here before I think.

Edit Punctuation

Skybird
06-02-07, 08:30 AM
...and I would like to talk with this man about why he still wants to be seen as Muslim, when he finds it to be so troublesome.... Maybe because he doesn't want to be chased out of his own beliefs by extremists. Having the courage to reconsider your beliefs against the grain of the majority and stand by them openly is something that many people can't do. As recently as the last few days my feelings about my own views are shifting, as they always are. Having a belief or a philosophy about the world is a river that runs along the same banks but still changes in character as the water erodes the walls into new subtler shapes.

I suppose wanting to be "muslim" is his identity and he sees no shame in it. It could be like wanting to be an American when many people around the world show disdain for them. Of course we hear about Americans who backpack with Canadian flags on their gear to avoid harassment (not sure how accurate that really is). He is just wearing his true colours on his sleeve though others have tarnished it. It could be something like that.
I see that different. True Muhameddanism is Muhammed's Islam - not Sufism. I fail to see Sufism up untilt he 12rd century being fully covered and backed up by Quran, Sharia , Hadith. so I want to ask him: you have been closer to true Islam when being with those you now call extremists, you left them, but still want to be associcated with this ideology, while at the same time you revealed the inhumanity in it. Why don't you turn your back on being called musim?

I compare it to a Nazi who realised by entering a Nazi orgnaization how sick it is, and thus he left it and now argues for freedom, tolerance and liberty - while insisting on still being called a Nazi. that is queer. And it is inconsequent.

One can also argue if today's Sufism is really what sufism orginally was about. because Islam's mystic tradition (that is what sufism was, like Chan for Buddhism, and the Chrisztian mystics for christianity) very much was wiped out when the Mongoles overran Persia and Bagdhad was seized and obliterated - as good as all of Sufism'S teachers and representatives were slaughtered during that event. Centuries later only a new thing named suifism emerged. But what cam,e of that I have seen in an Eastern-Anatolian monestary: it was an adventurous mixture of cultic superstition, unreasonable and very queer explanations that in no way I could bring toigether with Zen or Mystic, and disgusting practices of self-inflected physical injuries, which left no real injuries (needles through your tongue and such), but where understood to be what it mystic experience really is about, so - it they had taken cult and turne3d cult into content, missing the essence of mystic experience and spirituality completely. Before that visit I thought like you, that sufism is Islamic mystic. I have corrected that. Dancing derwishes I have not seen, and their concept of a derwish being the "son of all time" sounds a bit more promising to discuss. However, i wonder how much their dances today is only tourist attraction anymore.

Teaching in riddles, as kurtz said, in itself is no sufficient condition to classify something as "mystic".

Skybird
06-02-07, 08:39 AM
Such minds could live in Islam, too.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/02/world/europe/02husain.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print

I certainly do not soften my unforgiving stand on Islam, and I would like to talk with this man about why he still wants to be seen as Muslim, when he finds it to be so troublesome - Sufism never was accepted by the main branch of Muhammad's Islam, and even often was supressed or even persecuted, nevertheless stories like this add some needed "reason-over-emotion". For people like this man - and for critics like me as well.

http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=115794 ;)
you mean the msn article, I assume.

that article said something like "oputting blue water between Muslims and Islamists. As I often have argued, that difference is a Wetsern invention, born duringa Maroc uprise aguinst the imperial powers, and called those muslims suddenly using force "fundamentlaists", while they had been used to be challenged in words only before. the quran fully back and supports the use of force and violence, not only in self-defense, but also to enforce islam onto the "house of war". So, I see that difference we ioften make between islam on the one hand, and extremists, fundamentalists, islamists on the other, as pointless. The moderate Muslim is who violates the rules of Muhammed - not the violeant one! ;) Sol why the heck does he still insist on being seen as a loyal follwer of muhammad? We do ourselves no good service if we allow muslim to avoid and manouver around this contradiction in their thinking forever. we must confront them with this cotradiction, and demand that they make a choice if they want to live here. Allowing them not to do so is wrong and a dangerous misconception of "tolerance".