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Gaza Voices, American Silence

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Topic: Gaza Voices, American Silence
Posted By: Sign*Reader
Subject: Gaza Voices, American Silence
Date Posted: 27 December 2008 at 11:57pm
December 27, 2008
Gaza Voices, American Silence
by Kenneth Ring

Author's note: Just after this article was written, it became evident that Israel is likely to launch at least a limited attack on Gaza, which only heightens the sense of urgency for action that is advocated here.

The baby is crying again. You wake up. Cold. There is no electricity in the house; it went off during the night. For the last week � weeks, months � it has been on only sporadically. You throw on a coat and go to check on the baby. It seems listless. There is no milk in the house, and very little food. The UN shipments have stopped again, and you are not sure when they will resume.

In the other room, you hear your husband coughing. He has been sick for weeks and lately he has been spitting up blood. He has tried to get permission to get to a hospital in Israel, but every time he has been denied permission to leave.

You go outside to see if a neighbor can give you any milk. The first thing that hits you is the stench. The garbage has not been collected for weeks, and the sewage problem, because of the recent rains, has become even worse. No wonder so many people are sick. You are living in a cesspool. And you, and everyone else, is trapped inside this prison because the borders are sealed. This has been going on now for a year and half, and there is no telling when it will be over. And with the end of the truce, such as it was, there is a renewed threat of violence from the Israelis. Even now, you see an Israeli drone overhead and know that a missile could be launched from it at any time.

This is ordinary life these days in Gaza, the thin strip of land along the southern Mediterranean coast, 25 miles long and 6 miles wide at its maximum into which about one and half million inhabitants, most of them originally refugees, are packed. Gaza has one of the highest population densities in the world, and most of its population, about 56%, is 16 or younger. Many are malnourished � some estimates put the figure as high as 75%. According to a recent study cited by the noted author, Chris Hedges, 46% of Gazan children are afflicted with acute anemia, and 30% suffer from stunted growth as a result of chronic malnutrition. About a tenth of these children have permanent brain damage. Eighty-two percent are afflicted with post-traumatic stress disorder; the great majority of them have witnessed death first-hand. Eighty percent of the population as a whole is dependent on food aid. Unemployment is rampant � upwards of 60%. Most Gazans subsist on less than $2 a day.

According to a recent report by Andrea Becker in an article entitled "The Slow Death of Gaza," the effects of the siege, which has been imposed on Gaza by Israel, ever since Hamas took control of this territory in June, 2007, have been devastating, and the situation is, if anything, only growing worse. Many on-the-spot observers and prominent international spokesmen have not hesitated to call Israel's actions genocidal both in intent and effect. The U.N. special rapporteur for human rights in the Occupied Territories, Richard Falk, for example, has condemned the Israeli siege of Gaza as "a crime against humanity" and "a prelude to genocide." It's easy to understand why when you read such reports as Becker's where she recounts the various forms of misery and deprivation from which Gazans suffer daily:

"In practice, Israel's blockade means the denial of a broad range of items � food, industrial, educational, medical � deemed 'non-essential' for a population largely unable to be self-sufficient at the end of decades of occupation. It means that industrial, cooking and diesel fuel, normally scarce, are virtually absent now. There are no queues at petrol stations; they are simply shut. The lack of fuel in turn means that sewage and treatment stations cannot function properly, resulting in decreased potable water and tens of millions of litres of untreated or partly treated sewage being dumped into the sea every day. Electricity cuts � previously around eight hours a day, now up to 16 hours a day in many areas � affect all homes and hospitals. Those lucky enough to have generators struggle to find the fuel to make them work, or spare parts to repair them when they break from overuse. Even candles are running out."

Articles such as Becker's are easily found on the Internet and even occasionally in the American press; there is no dearth of damning statistics that can be cited to illustrate the immensity of the problems Gazans face in coping with the challenges of this siege, seemingly without end. But my purpose here is not merely to provide another such recitation of numbers, percentages and other quantitative indices of this situation. Instead, I would merely like to present to you some voices from Gaza that speak directly of what their own lives are like and how they have come to feel as this siege continues.

The people whose stories I will cite are friends of mine � though I have never met them. Although I spent most of November in Palestine myself, I was never able to get into Gaza since the walls of a prison often exclude visitors as well as those they incarcerate. But they have become friends of mine through correspondence, and all of them will be contributing to a book I'm writing about life under the occupation. Here, however, I will just let them speak for themselves, quoting from the letters they have sent or otherwise made available to me.

One man, a professor, in writing about the siege, sent me this summary several months ago, although conditions have not really changed significantly from the time of his letter:

"Sorry to disappoint you and tell you that Israel, in fact, is still preventing us from having fuel. They only allowed the only electricity station we have here to have some industrial diesel. But that was not enough at all. I spent the whole night in total darkness.

"The severe shortages in fuel have affected our teaching program. Our students and lecturers cannot attend their classes. Yesterday, I had only three students out of 80! Those who can walk long distances try their luck. But yesterday we had a heat wave and many of those who tried to walk to school had dehydration. Mind you that most of our students already suffer from malnutrition. To add insult to injury, UNRWA has halted all its activities yesterday, for the first time in 60 years. 80 percent of Gazans depend on food handouts provided by UNRWA. So you can imagine the situation now.

"Israel's continued tightened siege on the Gaza Strip has a catastrophic effect on all of us here. In addition to the chronic shortages of fuel, we also have shortages in medicine and some basic food stuffs. The situation is simply disastrous. I've just heard that patient number 138 has passed away. He is one of thousands of terminally ill patients who need urgent treatment outside Gaza, in Israeli, Jordanian, Egyptian, or even West Bank hospitals, but Israel is refusing to give them the necessary permits. Two days ago I visited Al-Shifa hospital and was told that almost all major surgical operations have been suspended due to regular power cuts and the absence of fuel to run their generator!

"In addition to the dangerous shortage of electricity that threatens the lives of critically ill patients in all of Gaza's hospitals, and the chronic shortages of petrol and diesel and gas for domestic use, we are also suffering widespread shortages of bread, due to lack of electricity to run the ovens at bakeries across Gaza."

Another friend, this one a college student, who wrote me only two weeks ago, after alluding to similar conditions that were affecting her personally, summed up her feelings this way:

"My dear, I don't want to break your heart with the awful news of the late Gaza, peace be upon that place of earth. I am sure you follow the news wherever available, yet media can not and will never be able to honestly describe the truth of our reality. People here have reached a point in which they feel as if they are isolated from the rest of the world (which the are). I have personally heard some saying: 'This is not a life, we are dead, we have been for a long time but lying to ourselves saying that we are alive, we're just some moving dead people.'

"Believe me, it is worse than that, but there are still many people who truly believe that salvation is very close. I am not sure which one of them I am�."

And. finally, a letter that was written a year ago showing that even then, only five months into the siege, the situation was just as grim as today and the feelings of hopelessness and abandonment fully as pronounced. As you'll see, this woman's remarks foreshadow and articulate even more powerfully the same sentiments my college student friend expressed in her recent letter.

"I'm sorry for not being in touch and for not writing sooner, but words are failing me, and I cannot articulate what Gaza feels like right now. A hopeless prison with a dark gloomy cloud over it. It's been raining for three days now and its starting to get cold. Unfortunately with rainstorms come power outages, so that means there is no water or electric heaters. Gas heaters are not operational either because of the high gas price, that's when gas is even available. But also because most people are saving their gas for cooking food, rather than using it for heaters, especially with a possible invasion coming in two weeks and the possible cutoff of gas. I feel for people without access to heat. I also feel for people like my aunt whose house was demolished and is living in a half-built house with no windows that UNRWA stopped building because they ran out of cement and other building materials. It's the beginning of the winter. It's only going to get colder.

"I also can't help but think of Gaza's sick and dying...in their frailty, lying there helpless�wishing�hoping�praying that by God's mercy they would be allowed a permit to leave Gaza, or by some sort of miracle someone will save them. But most are denied access�and most die a slow agonizing death, and only then are their bodies free.

"And the world reads about it, but it's just another story, another one of Gaza's tragedies. But I wish the world would realize how real this is and how real these sick people are. Some of these sick patients are my uncle who has heart disease, or my little cousin with a tumor, and now unfortunately my aunt's husband who one day was walking, and the next day woke up crippled from a brain tumor. And when you see people you care about so sick and unable to leave Gaza, you first get angry for having such shi*ty luck, and for the injustice of the world...the type of anger that turns into fury and consumes you, until it becomes exhausting. You then resign yourself to the reality of Gaza's fate�which finally sinks in. But with that reality comes hopelessness and the crippling feeling of helplessness. And so my uncle, my cousin and my aunt's husband lie in a hospital, waiting for their permits, and none of us can do a thing other than pray or chase around people who may know someone who knows someone who can help us with a permit. But we know full well how real death is, and that most just die while waiting. And then a human rights organization issues a statement, yet again, another Palestinian dies because they were denied access to medical care. And their only crime was being born Palestinian in Gaza and falling ill. Nowhere else will you see this but in Gaza. And no place else will the world remain silent at the obscenity of Israel's inhumane acts, except in Gaza.

"It's hard to not feel like we're in a large concentration camp as I see Gaza's empty streets, and the hopeless feeling in the air�and just the gloominess that has covered Gaza. I think most people feel abandoned as we are literally locked up in this small, concentrated space and we don't know what the world plans for us, or what to expect next. It's hard to imagine what being in Gaza does to someone's will until you've come here. You no longer feel alive, in fact, you're not living; you're just killing time until some sort of change happens. Sadly, Gaza has become desensitized to the rest of the world, as it feels like the international community has turned a blind eye to the reality that is Gaza, and as long as Israel is allowing some food in and hasn't completely cut off electricity or gas�and as long as we are kept alive, no one will ask about us.

"But just because we are breathing, that doesn't mean we're alive."

Again, like the statistics I cited at the beginning of this article, these despairing Gazan voices could be multiplied ad infinitum, but redundancy would not strengthen my case that the people of Gaza have been suffering, and continue to suffer, grievously from this terrible siege that has been imposed on them collectively because of the actions of a few. Of this, you are probably already convinced, whatever you may think of the justifications � or lack of it � for Israel's actions. The point is that more than a million people are experiencing a calamitous humanitarian crisis, which has been made even worse by so many American voices remaining silent in the face of this ongoing and, in the view of many, obscene strangulation of Gaza.

Of course, you could say, "well, there are many people who are suffering throughout the world � look at Darfur, the Congo, Kenya, India, etc., etc." True enough, but Americans must remember this: It is our unremitting financial support of Israel, amounting to about 3 billion dollars every year*, making it the recipient of more of our foreign aid that any other country, that makes this siege possible. We are paying for all those planes and missiles, for all those bulldozers that demolish the houses of Gazans (and other Palestinians), and for the salaries for all those guards who are keeping the Gazan people locked up in their fetid open-air prison. Yes, these are your tax dollars at work. Do you really want to continue to see them spent in this way?

If not, then please, as the Obama administration is about to take office, write to the incoming president, to your senators and congressmen, and even to the government officials in Israel, which is holding its own election soon, to protest as vigorously as possible against the continuation of the siege and to call for its cessation. Americans have a special responsibility here, and by adding our voices to those around the world who have already condemned in the strongest way the siege of Gaza, perhaps we can help to create a wave of irresistible pressure against the walls of Gaza that will finally bring them down. The people of Gaza, resilient as many of them doubtless are, are counting on us not to forget them. Listening to their voices, we must use ours not to fail them.

*Some analyses suggest that the actual amount may be closer to 5 billion dollars per annum, but whichever figure is used, the thesis is not affected.



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Kismet Domino: Faith/Courage/Liberty/Abundance/Selfishness/Immorality/Apathy/Bondage or extinction.



Replies:
Posted By: ak_m_f
Date Posted: 01 January 2009 at 10:39am
They brought it upon themselves, by going against ottoman empire and collaborating with British troops in favor of an Arab nationalistic state.

Now they have kaffirs are killing them in am open and no one can save them

Arabs leaders were st**id that instead of demanding better conditions in the Ottoman Empire they bought the idea of "freedom" to become slaves.The sharifs of Mecca were keen on this idea and in the end got nothing except Transjordan strip and salavery for ever. A good bargain for those who love "Arab" nationalism forgetting the Prophets last sermon.


Posted By: seekshidayath
Date Posted: 01 January 2009 at 10:44pm
But just because we are breathing, that doesn't mean we're alive."
 
I don't know if it is permissible in Islam or not, but a curse from within heart rises for these beasts {Jews}. How helpless we are ! Other than prayers, 'I' as an individual cud do nothing. Rallies or meetings held here, would make no difference to them. I don;t understand how cud we help our brothers and sisters there at Gaza. Its very paining !
 
Just meetings are held by these arabs. May Allah swt soon, wake up the muslims. What a bargain done by Arabs . As we say na ki lamho' ne khata ki aur sadiyo'n ne saza paayi.
 
Its our foolishness to expect that puppet of Jews to speak against these beasts {Israelites}


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Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said: �All the descendants of Adam are sinners, and the best of sinners are those who repent."


Posted By: Servetus
Date Posted: 02 January 2009 at 11:51am

Servie�s Tabloid American Press*

 

( *  a newspaper, wherein it is understood that all quotations are false and are from secondary, dubious, devious and, I might add, until recently very rich sources which shall in all cases remain anonymous.)

 

When asked to comment upon the situation in Gaza, the following people were either quoted or misquoted as saying:

 

G. W. Bush:

�Zzzzzzz�

 

Barak Obama

�Fore!�

 

Richard Cheney:

�So what?�

 

The President�s Librarian and writer of memoirs:

�The best of all possible duels -on the 17th Century model- is not between two parties who are equally armed, but rather between that party which has a recently forged Excalibur, stamped and delivered by American war factories, and the other which has managed, somehow, to obtain a butter knife.�

 

Condoleezza Rice:

�Democracy shall be the preferred mode of government (unless an undesirable �in this case, Hamas- is voted into power).  Oh yes, I forgot to say status quo ante.  Would you like to hear me play my piano?�

 

Henry Kissinger (from the background):

�The Prince, when he is attacked by Bob, retaliates by annihilating Mary and her neighborhood.�

 

Zbigniew Brzezinski (from the clouds):

�A few over-excited Islamists or the liberation of ��

 

Elliott Abrams:

�More weapons, please, with sugar on top ��

 

Benjamin Netanyahu:

�There is a substantive difference between � Israel has a right ��

 

Norman Podhoretz and Commentary Magazine:

�There is a substantive difference between � Israel has a right ��

 

The American News Networks:

�There is a substantive difference between � Israel has a right and Britney Spears has a new outbreak of cellulite.�

 

The Televangelists:

�Go Judah �err, I mean, Israel!  Kick so-called Palestine�s donkey for Jesus!�

 

The Blogs:

�Foul!�

 

The American People in Times Square (singing, as the lights go out):

�Auld lang syne.�

 



Posted By: nothing
Date Posted: 02 January 2009 at 12:28pm

When the people still have no idea how to make a pushbike - so to speak - than there is no point to be warriors, except for defensive honour and dignity. Pride has no place in it.

My niece's husband came from Arab family. He is planning to go holiday this year there, so I asked him when he go I like him to find one person - anywhere in the ME that is - that is found reading a book. If he does, take a photo of him/her and I will give him (my nephew) a sum of $100.
 
He asked me: Are you serious in this? But I just kept quite, it was not meant for debate. A picture is worth thousand words so we heard.
But in the end he seems awaken by it: You know uncle I don't read book myself.
 
Boeings, Airbus, Xrays, CT scanners, needles, pain reliefs, printers, computers, internets, TVs, pushbikes, motorbikes, phones, radios, MIGS, F15 F16 F18,  AK47  etc etc etc were non muslim inventions.


Posted By: abuayisha
Date Posted: 02 January 2009 at 12:38pm

..and the Arab League?



Posted By: Sign*Reader
Date Posted: 02 January 2009 at 12:57pm
nothing ....let me add necessity is the mother of invention, all the things you listed were necessities of war or wars...paid by the warmongering governments' or tax payers monies,  the commercial use was a byproduct....

The day Arabs got too fat, dumb & happy and quit fighting their fate was sealed to bondage- a normal stage of nations' in human devolution...

Currently some of them may have petro dollars now but mentally they are enslaved to the printers of the dollars(the American Jews who control the Fed.) and of course "the warmongers"

BTW the first scientist in the world was Ibn Haythem who wrote the first book on physics (optics) You can check .......But it was then......

As the saying goes Beating Will continue Till Morale  Improves......... 

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Kismet Domino: Faith/Courage/Liberty/Abundance/Selfishness/Immorality/Apathy/Bondage or extinction.


Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 02 January 2009 at 1:38pm
[QUOTE=seekshidayath]

I don't know if it is permissible in Islam or not, but a curse from within heart rises for these beasts. 

Such beasts are cursed in the Quran.

3:87 - Of such the reward is that, on them (rests) the curse of Allah, His angels and of all mankind.


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'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 02 January 2009 at 2:12pm
IMHO, We should not call these beasts 'Jews' out of respect for the anti zionist and peace loving Jews in and outside Israel. Infact these beasts are a zionist mix of atheists and theists with a twisted view of the Jewish scriptures. Even their version of zionism is much twisted from that of Nathan Birnbaum's. Check out these sites of anti zionist Jews.

www.nkusa.org
www.jewsforajustpeace.com
www.jewsagainstzionism.com

The Jews killed in Mumbai by the wannabe Jihadis / zero agents were anti zionists.


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'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 03 January 2009 at 4:04pm
Assalamu alaikum.

It is the greatest sign of indignation and ignorance for a Muslim to blame the Jews of what the world is facing today. Let us reflect on this assurance given by Allah not only to the followers of Muhammad Rasulullah but equally to all and sundry. Allah says in Qur'an 47:8-9, "But those who disbelieve for them is destruction and Allah will make their deeds vain. That is because they hate that which Allah has sent down -this Qur'an and Islamic Laws etc- so He has made their deeds fruitless".
From this verse and others in the Qur'an what evidence does one need now to convince himself that the Arab Muslim countries are disbelievers? They cannot up to today sit and agree on what to do according to the Sunna of Muhammad Rasulullah. Why? Now, is it true that Muhammad Rasulullah has come with a final Message and that whatever the world would require has been mentioned by him? We are only to ponder and reflect on the contents of the Qur'an, his Sunna/ahadith and in the absence of something to guide us to revert to the Bible? So the Muslim Ummas tongue and hands are tied to tell the truth, but untied in distorting the Message conveyed by Muhammad Rasulullah? Referring to Qur'an 51:36, "Is there in the household of the Muslims any Muslim?
Friendship.,



Posted By: Sign*Reader
Date Posted: 03 January 2009 at 8:18pm
Serve:
I like your Tabloid Thumbs%20Up!


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Kismet Domino: Faith/Courage/Liberty/Abundance/Selfishness/Immorality/Apathy/Bondage or extinction.


Posted By: Sign*Reader
Date Posted: 03 January 2009 at 8:31pm
Originally posted by Friendship Friendship wrote:

what evidence does one need now to convince himself that the Arab Muslim countries are disbelievers?


Why call Arab Muslim countries ..........Just Arab countries should do it if and when they are disbelievers I would reckonWink

As a matter of fact I was listening to an interview of Muhammad Nizal (Not sure on spellings --member of Hamas Shura ) that the Arabs states are really Zionist puppets and have failed the test, particularly those next door neighbors. He was also disappointed in OIC said it has no relevance left for its existence.

He appreciated the non Arab countries who have been active like Pakistan Iran, Bangladesh, Malaysia and Indonesia for the stands they have taken!

He said there are no plans to surrender to the Zionist forces at any cost!


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Kismet Domino: Faith/Courage/Liberty/Abundance/Selfishness/Immorality/Apathy/Bondage or extinction.


Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 03 January 2009 at 11:36pm
[QUOTE=Friendship]
51:36 Is there in the household of the muslims any muslims?    
    
[0]Quran 51:36 - But We found there but one house of those surrendered (to Allah).

ie. There was only one house of Muslims, that of Prophet Lot's in Lot's nation.

Friend, please dont mess around with the Quran.


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'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 03 January 2009 at 11:57pm
[QUOTE=Friendship]
Arab Muslim countries are disbelievers

Now I think you're some wannabe prophet. Getting revealations to make such blanket accusations?



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'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 04 January 2009 at 12:34am
Assalamu alaikum.

Saladin Posted:
[QUOTE=Friendship]
51:36 Is there in the household of the muslims any muslims?    
    
[0]Quran 51:36 - But We found there but one house of those surrendered (to Allah).

ie. There was only one house of Muslims, that of Prophet Lot's in Lot's nation.

Friend, please dont mess around with the Quran.

Response: I never messed with the Qur'an because as a practical believer I am not supposed to say a word but the saying of Allah and His Prophet Muhammad Rasulullah. Please ensure that you are honest to yourself and YOU HAVE READ. Rememebr what the Chiristians told Abu jahl, "We do not discuss or need the ignorant". Also remember the hadith of the holy Prophet, "Most of the time the one reading the Qur'an is abused by the Qur'an" He also said, "Anyone who reads the Qur'an and did not make us of it (does not obey its commandment) has not read it". So we are waiting or the Judgment on what we havle written.
Friendship.

Disclaimer:


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 04 January 2009 at 12:44am
Assalamu alaikum.

Saladin posted:  Now I think you're some wannabe prophet. Getting revealations to make such blanket accusations?

Response: You are proving that you do not understand the Final Message and that you are ignorant. How did Muhammad Rasulullah used the word 'Prophet' on his followers? What did the holy Prophet say about Umar bin Khattab after him?  I meant how did he praise him? Now to say that I am getting a Message is a blasphemy uttered by you. Remember what the Pharisees said to Jesus the son of Maryam; "You are the son of God!"
Friendship.



Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 04 January 2009 at 12:57am
Assalamu alaikum:

Nothing posted: He is planning to go holiday there, so I asked him when go I like him to find one person anywhre in the ME that is found reading a book. If he does, take a photo of him/her and I will give him (my nephew) a sum of $100.
 
Response: You are trying to honor them. The worst crime is not reading but understanding and not putting what on heard into practice. There are beautiful sermons given in their Satellite televisions, but they do not have a listening ear lest their hearts softens and believe.
Friendship.


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 04 January 2009 at 1:48am
Assalamu alaikum.

Sign*Reader quyoted Muhammad Nizal saying,
"He said there are no plans to surrender to the Zionist forces at any cost!

Response: The holy apostle sent Harith b, Umayr al-Azdi to deliver a letter to the ruler of Busra. Harith was tied and beheaded. On hearing the news the holy apostle sent a force of about 3,000 strong. When they reached Ma'an in Syria, they learnt that Heraclius have massed a force of 240,000 strong. They pondered for 3 days and decided to send a request to the holy Prophet for reinforcement. However they later decided to engage Heraclius. The Muslim forces suffered defeat after 3 of their commanders were killed. They retreated. When night came Khalid bin Walid took over the command and planned a strategy that showed that the Muslim forces have received a reinforcement. On seeing this and what happened the previous night Heraclius and his forces became disheartened and decided not to fight having the experience of fighting a force of only 3,000 strong.
Conclusion: The wisdom and insight of the Sahabas cannot be overestimated. Heraclius surrendered to save the lives of his troops.
Friendship.



Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 04 January 2009 at 5:15am
So whats the point you're trying to make here.

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'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 04 January 2009 at 6:37am
Assalamu alaikum.  

Saladin posted: So whats the point you're trying to make here.

Reply: If you tell me the books you read on the life history of Muhammad, I will give you the references for you to understand.

Friendship.




Posted By: Sign*Reader
Date Posted: 04 January 2009 at 1:35pm
I just realized that Baghdad had same number of people million and half at the time Halaku's mongol horde besieged and killed them all..as the Gaza strip has right now ...and whole Muslim middle east was in shock and awe and was Caliphless or leaderless as is now  ....then horde's end came at Ain Jalut near Nazareth Palestine at the hands of Sultan Baibers and rest is history......

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Kismet Domino: Faith/Courage/Liberty/Abundance/Selfishness/Immorality/Apathy/Bondage or extinction.


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 04 January 2009 at 2:53pm
Assalamu alaikum.

Sign*Reader posted: I just realized that Baghdad had same number of people million and half at the time Halaku's mongol horde besieged and killed them all..as the Gaza strip has right now ...and whole Muslim middle east was in shock and awe and was Caliphless or leaderless as is now,

Response: WoW! gentleman of history! Yes, I too remembered. But why are you so brief and not straight forward? Please do forget about what Allah says in Qur'an 27:80, "Verily you cannot make the dead to hear, nor can you make the deaf to hear the call when they flee turning their backs, Nor can you lead the blind out of their error". The similarity was the mischief of the citadel frontier governor Inaljuk, who confiscated the goods of the Mongols and the subsequent slaying of all the merchants at the order of Muhammad Shah . Yes, there cannot be two suns in the sky! Where Muhammad Rasulullah speaks no one can speak! I sensed so, and I hope the Jews will listen to my advice and wage in addition a call to establishment of the true Khalifate by the Muslim Umma across the Muslim world.
Friend


Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 05 January 2009 at 6:46am
[QUOTE=Friendship] If you tell me the books you read on the life history of Muhammad, I will give you the references for you to understand.Friendship.


Salaam Alaikum,

'The Sealed Nectar' by Saif ur Rahman al Mubarakpuri and 'The Life of Muhammad, the Prophet of Allah' by Etienne Dinet and Sliman bin Ibrahim.



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'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 05 January 2009 at 10:14am
Assalamu alaikum.

Saladin: Then read what he wrote on the battle of Mu'ta. I hope you will analyse the wisdom of their action.  Then read again my post. This lead eventually to the refusal of Heraclius to come and challenge Muhammad Rasulullah when he undertook the Tabuk campaign.
Friendship.


Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 06 January 2009 at 7:01am
I know about the Battle of Mu'tah. I wanted to know whats the relevance or comparision you were trying to make with the current happenings in Gaza.

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'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 06 January 2009 at 7:46am
Assalamu alaikum.

Saladin posted: I know about the Battle of Mu'tah. I wanted to know whats the relevance or comparison you were trying to make with the current happenings in Gaza.
Response: If you knew about the battle of Mu'ta and that what I quoted is also in your book, then you should understand that was what the sahabas understood about warfare according to the Sunna of Muhammad. We are to deduce the Shari'a from their actions according to our cicumstances. Let me ask these questions. Did Muhammad send them to fight Heraclius in the first instance? Could he have sent 3,000 forces to match 240,000? When Muhammad was going out for the Hunayn expedition why did he not go unarmed but had to loan arms from a Jew?
Friendship.


Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 06 January 2009 at 9:46am
Wa alaikum salaam,

Correct me if i'm wrong, I assume you're making the point that we should be well prepared before going to war, like, under a Caliph, requiredly armed and well planned. Fair enough, I hold that view too. But should there be sanctioning from an International Caliph, which we dont have now, to defend ourselves when we have no other choice but fight in defence or stay put and get killed? Isnt it enough to appoint an Amir abiding by the Quran and Sunnah and defend ourselves?



-------------
'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Sign*Reader
Date Posted: 06 January 2009 at 10:16am
Originally posted by Saladin Saladin wrote:

Wa alaikum salaam,

Correct me if i'm wrong, I assume you're making the point that we should be well prepared before going to war, like, under a Caliph, requiredly armed and well planned. Fair enough, I hold that view too. But should there be sanctioning from an International Caliph, which we dont have now, to defend ourselves when we have no other choice but fight in defence or stay put and get killed? Isnt it enough to appoint an Amir abiding by the Quran and Sunnah and defend ourselves?


This is absolutely correct..... As a matter of fact it is Prophet's call when three or more Muslims e travel together they are to elect an Amir, a Speaker and an  l( Organizer for proper handling of the any situation... and there they will find security and success with Allah's blessings! If this grass root process is practiced the Caliph selection will be a natural outcome!


-------------
Kismet Domino: Faith/Courage/Liberty/Abundance/Selfishness/Immorality/Apathy/Bondage or extinction.


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 06 January 2009 at 12:48pm
Assalamu alaikum.

Saladin posted: But should there be sanctioning from an International Caliph, which we dont have now, to defend ourselves when we have no other choice but fight in defence or stay put and get killed?

Response. But where is Muhammad Rasulullah?. Have you never  come across in a Tafsir of the Qur'an in which is emphazised that the moment one is holding the Qur'an, Muhammad Rasulullah is infront of him? The holy Prophet said, I have left two things with you: the Qur'an and my Sunna. You cannot go astray if you hold to them". And Allah says in Qur'an for example in chapter 18:54, "And indeed We have put forth every kind of example in this Qur'an, for mankind. But, man is ever more quarrelsome than anything".
Tell me what Allah needs to tell you about choosing a Khalifa more than what He says in Qur'an 17:16, "And when We decide to destroy a town (popultion), We (first) send a definite order (to obey Allah and be righteous) to those among them who lead a life of luxury. (What kind of life are the Muslim leaders leading? Tell me one of them who leads in a prayer!). Then they transgress therein, and thus the word (of torment) is justified against it (them). Then We destroy it with complete destruction".  Then to confirm the above Ayat, Allah drew our attention to history, "And how many generations have We destroyed after Noah (Nuh)?" Let us please think deeply.
Friendship.



Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 06 January 2009 at 1:15pm
Assalamu alaikum.

Sign*Reader posted: If this grass root process is practiced the Caliph selection will be a natural outcome!

Response: But why is it not practiced? Do we have choice in what Allah commanded us to do? Is Khalifate a pillar of Tawhid or not? Dr. Muhammad Yusuf Musa asked the following questions about the Muslim Umma:
1) Is it obligatory in Islam to establish a Daula? Or has Islam made it obligatory for the Muslims to establish a Daula?
2) Has Islam made it a condition that it is obligatory for the Muslims to enthrone a Hakim most renowned in the Daula?
3) What are the Shurut (conditions) layed down for enthroning a Hakim A'ala (most renowned leader)?
The following Wester Philosophers have all agreed that Muhamamd Rasulullah established a Daula in Madina did not separate politics from Ad-din (i.e. the fuction in a mosque and outside the mosque):
1) Dr. Fitzgerald.
2) C.A. Nollino.
3) Dr. Schacht
4) Setrautman.
5) Macdonald
6) T. Arnold
7) R. Jibb.
Now what is wrong with the Muslim Umma?  Are they not ignorant and arrogant!
Friendship.



Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 06 January 2009 at 2:25pm
Its not an obligation of a Muslim to establish khilafat. Whats obligatory for every Muslim is to follow the Quran and Sunnah and spread the Message, as best as possible, wherever they live. If thats done in a Muslim majority country, then like S*R said khilafat is inevitable. No point trying to force the issue. Good Muslims bring about khilafat, not vice versa. Thats how Rasoolullah established the Islamic state in Madinah. Allah will give us a rightly guided Khalifa when He Wills.



-------------
'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 06 January 2009 at 3:17pm
Assalamu alaikum.

Saladin posted: Its not an obligation of a Muslim to establish khilafat.
Response: I pitty you truely speaking. You are totally in the darkness and you do not understand the purpose of creating the world and mankind. I pray that Allah will make you understand the truth. But I am honestly advising you to desist from commenting on what you do not know on Islam especially the Sunna. One day Abdullahi ibn Abbas was asked to comment on the verse describing the creation of the heavens and the earth, Qur'an 65:12. He refused. When asked why he would not comment he said, "I fear that they will become Kafir, and the Kufr is that they will rejet my explanation!" What more of the one who rejected the Sunna of Allah and that of the holy Prophet.
Please do not throw yourself in the Hell-Fire. There is no excuse in the Hereafter for you not knowing what you rejected. Prophet Muhammad said, "Silence is half of faith".
Friendship.


Posted By: Sign*Reader
Date Posted: 06 January 2009 at 9:50pm
Originally posted by Friendship Friendship wrote:

Assalamu alaikum.
Now what is wrong with the Muslim Umma?  Are they not ignorant and arrogant!
Friendship.


There is no Ummah per se the bits and pieces are are under neocolonial control, and those who left the colonies are in Dispora like the Children of Israel were when most of their Tribes disappeared..Ignorant that goes without saying arrogant over their own masses but not with the colonizers!


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Kismet Domino: Faith/Courage/Liberty/Abundance/Selfishness/Immorality/Apathy/Bondage or extinction.


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 07 January 2009 at 12:31am
Assalamu alaikum.

Sign*Reader posted: There is no Ummah per se the bits and pieces are are under neocolonial control,
Response: Meaning and indicating what?
Friendship.


Posted By: Sign*Reader
Date Posted: 07 January 2009 at 12:54am
Originally posted by Friendship Friendship wrote:

Assalamu alaikum.

Sign*Reader posted: There is no Ummah per se the bits and pieces are are under neocolonial control,
Response: Meaning and indicating what?
Friendship.

All the Muslim lands that got occupied by the European colonist from nineteenth century onward seven... now they nominally free but they have been subdivided into smaller states and being ruled with remote control thru  a local corrupt dictator, king or what ever! So how do you call these bunch of western lackeys part of a ummah? I hope it is clear now!
Salam


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Kismet Domino: Faith/Courage/Liberty/Abundance/Selfishness/Immorality/Apathy/Bondage or extinction.


Posted By: Whisper
Date Posted: 07 January 2009 at 5:26am
Congratulations! Sign*Reader
Best of luck, this string hasn't  been attacked by the Troll in Chief!


-------------
Sasha Khanzadeh


Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 07 January 2009 at 10:22am
[QUOTE=Friendship]              

Saladin I pitty you truely speaking. You are totally in the darkness and you do not understand the purpose of creating the world and mankind. I pray that Allah will make you understand the truth. But I am honestly advising you to desist from commenting on what you do not know on Islam especially the Sunna.


Salaam,

Every true Muslim will want to live in a Khilafa governed by Sharia and to establish the Khilafa we got to follow the Quran and Sunna. Allah says :

Allah hath promised such of you as believe and do good works that He will surely make them to succeed (the present rulers) in the earth even as He caused those who were before them to succeed (others); and that He will surely establish for them their religion which He hath approved for them, and will give them in exchange safety after their fear.....(24:55)

So to say, the primary obligation of Muslims is to believe and do good. And for them Allah has promised Khilafa.

We have diverted from the topic, so I'll stop here. Perhaps this can be discussed in the other thread under the title Khilafa.



-------------
'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 07 January 2009 at 3:21pm
Assalamu alaikum.

Saladin posted:
Every true Muslim will want to live in a Khilafa governed by Sharia and to establish the Khilafa we got to follow the Quran and Sunna.

Response: Why not accept the truth? You are just dribbling making uncoordinated and unintelligent comments. Where ever you go you cannot run away from Imaan. Khalifate is part and parcel of Imaan. It stands in the position of whatever you are doing like the position of the holy Prophet leading you in prayer. Don't separate the Qur'an from Khalifate. And know the difference please between Qur'an and Sunna. The holy Prophet said, 'I have brought something similar to the Qur'an or even greater than it'. We talk of Jihad to distort Islam. We do not know that effective Jihad must be preceeded by Hijra. You need someone during your Hijra, versed in where you are going to lead you!. Despite Muhammad's position of Eminence in the presence of Allah, he was lead by a Mushrik to Madina. This translates into an effective Jihad must be accompanied by Imaan. Imaan reflects authority -Allah, Muhammad, Angels and then his Books. When Muhammad established peace in Madina within the first week of his arrival, only about 60% of the Qur'an was rev
ealed. But Muhamamd was already given leaderhip. What I am telling is not that I am superior to you or for you to agree. I am just telling what Muhammad has explained to us!
Friendship. 


Posted By: Saladin
Date Posted: 10 January 2009 at 1:13am
Alrite, I cant compete with your sophistry. Just answer these questions straight.

1. Whats Allah saying in the Quran 24:55 ?

2. Who's that mushrik you're talking about that accompanied the Prophet to Madinah? From what I learnt it was only Amirul Mu'mineen Abubakr with the Prophet during Hijra.



-------------
'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 10 January 2009 at 1:33pm
< ="Content-" content="text/; charset=utf-8">< name="ProgId" content="Word.">< name="Generator" content="Microsoft Word 12">< name="Originator" content="Microsoft Word 12"> file:///C:%5CDOCUME%7E1%5CDRSSMU%7E1%5CLOCALS%7E1%5CTemp%5Cmsohtmlclip1%5C01%5Cclip_filelist.xml - file:///C:%5CDOCUME%7E1%5CDRSSMU%7E1%5CLOCALS%7E1%5CTemp%5Cmsohtmlclip1%5C01%5Cclip_themedata.thmx - file:///C:%5CDOCUME%7E1%5CDRSSMU%7E1%5CLOCALS%7E1%5CTemp%5Cmsohtmlclip1%5C01%5Cclip_colorschememapping.xml - <>

- - Assalamu alaikum.

- - Saladin posted. I cant compete with your sophistry. Just answer these questions straight.

- - Response: Yu will recall that AsAdullah mentioned the importance of Shurud in Islam. It means alot of the forum membeers do not understand the implication of Shurut. I am not keen in contributing to the punishment of any Muslim in the Hereafter. I will first of all remind you that if I say something wrong about the holy Qur'an on what I do not know or out of my opinion I am buildding a house in hell-fire. It means therefore that whtever I am to say say must be what the holy Prophet said. - As a warning understand this incident please

- -  It was reported that one day a number of their learned men (th rabbis of the children of Israel in Madina) came to the holy Apostle, and assured him that if he would answer some 4 questions they will believe in him. - - -   He said, "Do you not know that the sleep which you alleged I do not have is when the eyes sleep but the heart is awake?" They all agreed.

- -   He said, "Do you know that the food he loved best was the flesh and milk of camels and that when he was sick and Allāh restored his health he deprived himself of his favorite food and drink in gratitude to Allāh?" #_ftn1 - - They all agreed.

(4) Lastly they asked him about the Spirit. He said, "Do you kow that it is Gabriel who comes to me?"  They agreed and said, "O Muhammad Gabriel is an enemy to us, an angel that comes to us only with violence and the shedding of blood. Were it not for that we would follow you". Allah rebuffed them in holy Qur�an 2:96-97, Say O Muhammad, �Whoever is an enemy to Gabriel, for indeed he has brought it (this Qur�an) to your heart by Allah�s Permission, confirming what came before it and guidance and glad tidings for the believers.  Whoever is an enemy to Allah, His Angels, His Messengers, Gabriel and Michael, then verily, Allah is an enemy to the believers�.  

The correct answers are in the Tafsir of the following, Shinkiti Adhwa'al Bayan, Fii zilal Qur'an by Sayd Qutb, Fathul Qadir by Shaukani and Abul Ala Maududi (English commentary and transltion). Also you must read Al-Ghazali's commentary of Amr bil Ma'rul wa nahy anil Munkar. This is to avoid my sophistry.
The guide of the

#_ftnref1 - -



Posted By: Whisper
Date Posted: 11 January 2009 at 2:33am
Sign*Reader posted: There is no Ummah per se the bits and pieces are are under neocolonial control,
Response: Meaning and indicating what?
Friendship

If you could ever understand that, my most beloved Friendship, then you will not have that limitless capacity to bore us out of our bones!

Is it possible that you could just leave us for a while and just join up with your soulmate other Robot from theland of those War Criminals? We could do with a break, please.



-------------
Sasha Khanzadeh


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 11 January 2009 at 6:26am
Assalamu alaikum.

Whisper posted: If you could ever understand that, my most beloved Friendship, then you will not have that limitless capacity to bore us out of our bones!
Response: Your most beloved Friendship could ever understand provided you  educate me on the technical juristic definition or meaning of an Umma. To help you, the word was defined or explained to the known exegesis Abdullah bin Abbas by An-Nabigha Az-zubyani. What did he say? Please be guided by Qur'an chapter 58:11. "Allah will exalt in degree those of you who believe, and those who have been granted knowledge".
Friendship.



Posted By: TruthRealm
Date Posted: 11 January 2009 at 11:45am
Originally posted by Whisper Whisper wrote:

Is it possible that you could just leave us for a while and just join up with your soulmate other Robot from theland of those War Criminals? We could do with a break, please.



Whisper,


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8dPb1bF-s4M -


Posted By: TruthRealm
Date Posted: 11 January 2009 at 11:49am
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YeTqheFnBM0 -


Posted By: Whisper
Date Posted: 11 January 2009 at 12:19pm
Whisper,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8dPb1bF-s4M - I take it that you need to get back to the business of educating your children in your own perverted interpretation of Shahada
 
Extremely hard for robots specially from that War Criminals land to grasp that all people on this board don't have to be Muslims! Obviously if you had just two braincells to rub together then you might have been able to find out that you are the best bore we have had here for ages.
 
And who has appointed you as some contractor for educating any children? The Black Hawk company?


-------------
Sasha Khanzadeh


Posted By: TruthRealm
Date Posted: 11 January 2009 at 5:35pm
Originally posted by Whisper Whisper wrote:

Whisper,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8dPb1bF-s4M - ... to grasp that all people on this board don't have to be Muslims!
 



Of course I know that. The ones (with your mindset) who aren't Muslims are Modern Liberals.

Imagine that; Muslims and Modern abortion-and-gay- marriage-loving,-christian-hating,- hypersensitive-rabid-pagan-god-hating-socialist Liberals having something in common.

You must be proud.

Do the true Muslims know who you're in bed with?



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      ï¿½Moses dragged us for 40 years through the desert to bring us to the one place in the Middle East where there was no oil.� -Golda Meir


Posted By: Whisper
Date Posted: 11 January 2009 at 11:02pm
Who ever I am, thank goodness, I am not some hate filled shameless scum bag from the War Criminals land! who glees at human tragedy and trys to scare us from Israeli Impatience.
 
Is it possible that you could somehow buy just another brain cell? The one rattles to much and in absolutely bad tune. And, also try and look outside, it's no longer 1732 BC. Those land titles you are flogging are a few centuries out of date.
 
Also, let me assure you, your Israeli and American might is no Gaad! And, it seems to be going down the way of your other gaad, el Dollar!


-------------
Sasha Khanzadeh


Posted By: mariyah
Date Posted: 12 January 2009 at 4:47pm
Friendship:
Are you a submitter, a follower of Rashid Khalifa? YOur estimation of the Quran sounds like his teachings did at one time. Their brand of "islam" is based out of our southern arizona town, Khalifa was found murdered in his mosque here. the mosque he was found slain in is now a pub.
It does not pay to deviate, entiendes?


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"Every good deed is charity whether you come to your brother's assistance or just greet him with a smile.


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 13 January 2009 at 5:23pm
Assalamu alaikum.

Maryam posted:
Friendship.Are you a submitter, a follower of Rashid Khalifa?
Response: Not exactly!
They are to us the opposite of the Spiritual story in Old Testament. They were the template of righteousness. If they succeeded no one after them will complain against his failure. We shall all be questioned by Allah and our deeds measured according to our ability. Yes, I always think of Umar bin Khattab and Ali bin Abi Talib. We cannot succeed without following their examples. I hope you know their history very well!. On the Day of Judgment I think I will stand like Umar and Ali. I don't fear anyone and I tell the truth. I am not looking for fame! I see no one but Muhammad Rasulullah! So, I may be killed!
2) Their brand of "islam" is based out of our southern arizona town, Khalifa was found murdered in his mosque here. the mosque he was found slain in is now a pub.
It does not pay to deviate, entiendes?
Response: Why was he murdered? You mean there are no more Muslims in Mexico?
Friendship.


Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 13 January 2009 at 5:35pm
Assalamu alaikum.

Sign*Reader posted: There is no Ummah per se the bits and pieces are are under neocolonial control, and those who left the colonies are in Dispora like the Children of Israel were when most of their Tribes disappeared..Ignorant that goes without saying arrogant over their own masses but not with the
colonizers!

Response: It was a very challenging point you raised from the point an Umma is defined in the Qur'an and by the Sahabas. Unfortunately when I wanted you to explain more and commit us, some members misunderstood me. Please can you explain the implication that
'There is no Ummah per se'. I have in my mind among the many verses in particular chapter 2:143.
Friendship.

 


Posted By: Akhe Abdullah
Date Posted: 13 January 2009 at 7:38pm
Originally posted by Sign*Reader Sign*Reader wrote:

<table width="100%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"><t><tr><td ="date">December 27, 2008


          </td>



        </tr>



        <tr>



          <td ="columntext">



            Gaza Voices, American Silence


            



            <span ="columntext">



            


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        </tr>



        <tr>



          <td ="showauthor">by Kenneth Ring</td>



        </tr>



        <tr>



          <td>



            <!--startclickprintexclude-->



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            <div id="columntext">
              

     Author's note: Just after this article was written, it became evident
that Israel is likely to launch at least a limited attack on Gaza, which only
heightens the sense of urgency for action that is advocated here.


     <font size="7">The baby is crying again. You wake up. Cold.
There is no electricity in the house; it went off during the night. For the
last week � weeks, months � it has been on only sporadically. You throw on a
coat and go to check on the baby. It seems listless. There is no milk in the
house, and very little food. The UN shipments have stopped again, and you are
not sure when they will resume.


     In the other room, you hear your husband coughing. He has been sick for
weeks and lately he has been spitting up blood. He has tried to get permission
to get to a hospital in Israel, but every time he has been denied permission
to leave.


     You go outside to see if a neighbor can give you any milk. The first thing
that hits you is the stench. The garbage has not been collected for weeks, and
the sewage problem, because of the recent rains, has become even worse. No wonder
so many people are sick. You are living in a cesspool. And you, and everyone
else, is trapped inside this prison because the borders are sealed. This has
been going on now for a year and half, and there is no telling when it will
be over. And with the end of the truce, such as it was, there is a renewed threat
of violence from the Israelis. Even now, you see an Israeli drone overhead and
know that a missile could be launched from it at any time.


     This is ordinary life these days in Gaza, the thin strip of land along
the southern Mediterranean coast, 25 miles long and 6 miles wide at its maximum
into which about one and half million inhabitants, most of them originally refugees,
are packed. Gaza has one of the highest population densities in the world, and
most of its population, about 56%, is 16 or younger. Many are malnourished �
some estimates put the figure as high as 75%. According to a recent study cited
by the noted author, Chris Hedges, 46% of Gazan children are afflicted with
acute anemia, and 30% suffer from stunted growth as a result of chronic malnutrition.
About a tenth of these children have permanent brain damage. Eighty-two percent
are afflicted with post-traumatic stress disorder; the great majority of them
have witnessed death first-hand. Eighty percent of the population as a whole
is dependent on food aid. Unemployment is rampant � upwards of 60%. Most Gazans
subsist on less than $2 a day.


     According to a recent report by Andrea Becker in an article entitled "The
Slow Death of Gaza," the effects of the siege, which has been imposed on
Gaza by Israel, ever since Hamas took control of this territory in June, 2007,
have been devastating, and the situation is, if anything, only growing worse.
Many on-the-spot observers and prominent international spokesmen have not hesitated
to call Israel's actions genocidal both in intent and effect. The U.N. special
rapporteur for human rights in the Occupied Territories, Richard Falk,
for example, has condemned the Israeli siege of Gaza as "a crime against humanity"
and "a prelude to genocide." It's easy to understand why when you
read such reports as Becker's where she recounts the various forms of misery
and deprivation from which Gazans suffer daily:



   
     
      

"In practice, Israel's blockade means the denial of a broad range of
items � food, industrial, educational, medical � deemed 'non-essential' for
a population largely unable to be self-sufficient at the end of decades of occupation.
It means that industrial, cooking and diesel fuel, normally scarce, are virtually
absent now. There are no queues at petrol stations; they are simply shut. The
lack of fuel in turn means that sewage and treatment stations cannot function
properly, resulting in decreased potable water and tens of millions of litres
of untreated or partly treated sewage being dumped into the sea every day. Electricity
cuts � previously around eight hours a day, now up to 16 hours a day in many
areas � affect all homes and hospitals. Those lucky enough to have generators
struggle to find the fuel to make them work, or spare parts to repair them when
they break from overuse. Even candles are running out."


    


     Articles such as Becker's are easily found on the Internet and even occasionally
in the American press; there is no dearth of damning statistics that can be
cited to illustrate the immensity of the problems Gazans face in coping with
the challenges of this siege, seemingly without end. But my purpose here is
not merely to provide another such recitation of numbers, percentages and other
quantitative indices of this situation. Instead, I would merely like to present
to you some voices from Gaza that speak directly of what their own lives are
like and how they have come to feel as this siege continues.


     The people whose stories I will cite are friends of mine � though I have
never met them. Although I spent most of November in Palestine myself, I was
never able to get into Gaza since the walls of a prison often exclude visitors
as well as those they incarcerate. But they have become friends of mine through
correspondence, and all of them will be contributing to a book I'm writing about
life under the occupation. Here, however, I will just let them speak for themselves,
quoting from the letters they have sent or otherwise made available to me.


     One man, a professor, in writing about the siege, sent me this summary
several months ago, although conditions have not really changed significantly
from the time of his letter:



   
     
      

"Sorry to disappoint you and tell you that Israel, in fact, is
        still preventing us from having fuel. They only allowed the only electricity
        station we have here to have some industrial diesel. But that was not
        enough at all. I spent the whole night in total darkness.
       
"The severe shortages in fuel have affected our teaching program. Our students
and lecturers cannot attend their classes. Yesterday, I had only three students
out of 80! Those who can walk long distances try their luck. But yesterday we
had a heat wave and many of those who tried to walk to school had dehydration.
Mind you that most of our students already suffer from malnutrition. To add
insult to injury, UNRWA has halted all its activities yesterday, for the first
time in 60 years. 80 percent of Gazans depend on food handouts provided by UNRWA.
So you can imagine the situation now.
       
        "Israel's continued tightened siege on the Gaza Strip has a catastrophic
        effect on all of us here. In addition to the chronic shortages of fuel,
        we also have shortages in medicine and some basic food stuffs. The situation
        is simply disastrous. I've just heard that patient number 138 has passed
        away. He is one of thousands of terminally ill patients who need urgent
        treatment outside Gaza, in Israeli, Jordanian, Egyptian, or even West
        Bank hospitals, but Israel is refusing to give them the necessary permits.
        Two days ago I visited Al-Shifa hospital and was told that almost all
        major surgical operations have been suspended due to regular power cuts
        and the absence of fuel to run their generator!
       
        "In addition to the dangerous shortage of electricity that threatens
        the lives of critically ill patients in all of Gaza's hospitals, and the
        chronic shortages of petrol and diesel and gas for domestic use, we are
        also suffering widespread shortages of bread, due to lack of electricity
        to run the ovens at bakeries across Gaza."


    


     Another friend, this one a college student, who wrote me only two weeks
ago, after alluding to similar conditions that were affecting her personally,
summed up her feelings this way:



   
     
      

"My dear, I don't want to break your heart with the awful news of the
late Gaza, peace be upon that place of earth.�I am sure you follow the
news wherever available, yet media can not and will never be able to honestly
describe the truth of our reality. People here have reached a point in which
they feel as if they are isolated from the rest of the world (which the are).
I have personally heard some saying: 'This is not a life, we are dead, we have
been for a long time but lying to ourselves saying that we are alive, we're
just some moving dead people.'


      

"Believe me, it is worse than that, but there are still many people
who truly believe that salvation is very close. I am not sure which one of them
I am�."


    


And. finally, a letter that was written a year ago showing that even then,
only five months into the siege, the situation was just as grim as today and
the feelings of hopelessness and abandonment fully as pronounced. As you'll
see, this woman's remarks foreshadow and articulate even more powerfully the
same sentiments my college student friend expressed in her recent letter.



   
     
      

"I'm sorry for not being in touch and for not writing sooner,
        but words are failing me, and I cannot articulate what Gaza feels like
        right now. A hopeless prison with a dark gloomy cloud over it. It's been
        raining for three days now and its starting to get cold. Unfortunately
        with rainstorms come power outages, so that means there is no water or
        electric heaters. Gas heaters are not operational either because of the
        high gas price, that's when gas is even available. But also because most
        people are saving their gas for cooking food, rather than using it for
        heaters, especially with a possible invasion coming in two weeks and the
        possible cutoff of gas. I feel for people without access to heat. I also
        feel for people like my aunt whose house was demolished and is living
        in a half-built house with no windows that UNRWA stopped building because
        they ran out of cement and other building materials. It's the beginning
        of the winter. It's only going to get colder.
       
"I also can't help but think of Gaza's sick and dying...in their frailty,
lying there helpless�wishing�hoping�praying that by God's mercy they would be
allowed a permit to leave Gaza, or by some sort of miracle someone will save
them. But most are denied access�and most die a slow agonizing death, and only
then are their bodies free.
       
"And the world reads about it, but it's just another story, another one
of Gaza's tragedies. But I wish the world would realize how real this is and
how real these sick people are. Some of these sick patients are my uncle who
has heart disease, or my little cousin with a tumor, and now unfortunately my
aunt's husband who one day was walking, and the next day woke up crippled from
a brain tumor. And when you see people you care about so sick and unable to
leave Gaza, you first get angry for having such shi*ty luck, and for the injustice
of the world...the type of anger that turns into fury and consumes you, until
it becomes exhausting. You then resign yourself to the reality of Gaza's fate�which
finally sinks in. But with that reality comes hopelessness and the crippling
feeling of helplessness. And so my uncle, my cousin and my aunt's husband lie
in a hospital, waiting for their permits, and none of us can do a thing other
than pray or chase around people who may know someone who knows someone who
can help us with a permit. But we know full well how real death is, and that
most just die while waiting. And then a human rights organization issues a statement,
yet again, another Palestinian dies because they were denied access to medical
care. And their only crime was being born Palestinian in Gaza and falling ill.
Nowhere else will you see this but in Gaza. And no place else will the world
remain silent at the obscenity of Israel's inhumane acts, except in Gaza.
       
        "It's hard to not feel like we're in a large concentration camp as
        I see Gaza's empty streets, and the hopeless feeling in the air�and just
        the gloominess that has covered Gaza. I think most people feel abandoned
        as we are literally locked up in this small, concentrated space and we
        don't know what the world plans for us, or what to expect next. It's hard
        to imagine what being in Gaza does to someone's will until you've come
        here. You no longer feel alive, in fact, you're not living; you're just
        killing time until some sort of change happens. Sadly, Gaza has become
        desensitized to the rest of the world, as it feels like the international
        community has turned a blind eye to the reality that is Gaza, and as long
        as Israel is allowing some food in and hasn't completely cut off electricity
        or gas�and as long as we are kept alive, no one will ask about us.
       
        "But just because we are breathing, that doesn't mean we're alive."     
                         


    


     Again, like the statistics I cited at the beginning of this article, these
despairing Gazan voices could be multiplied ad infinitum, but redundancy
would not strengthen my case that the people of Gaza have been suffering, and
continue to suffer, grievously from this terrible siege that has been imposed
on them collectively because of the actions of a few. Of this, you are probably
already convinced, whatever you may think of the justifications � or lack of
it � for Israel's actions.                          The point is that more than a
million people are experiencing a calamitous humanitarian crisis, which has
been made even worse by so many American voices remaining silent in the face
of this ongoing and, in the view of many, obscene strangulation of Gaza.


Of course, you could say, "well, there are many people who are suffering
throughout the world � look at Darfur, the Congo, Kenya, India, etc., etc."
True enough, but Americans must remember this: It is our unremitting financial
support of Israel, amounting to about 3 billion dollars every year*, making
it the recipient of more of our foreign aid that any other country, that
makes this siege possible. We are paying for all those planes and missiles,
for all those bulldozers that demolish the houses of Gazans (and other Palestinians),
and for the salaries for all those guards who are keeping the Gazan people locked
up in their fetid open-air prison. Yes, these are your tax dollars at work.
Do you really want to continue to see them spent in this way?


If not, then please, as the Obama administration is about to take office, write
to the incoming president, to your senators and congressmen, and even to the
government officials in Israel, which is holding its own election soon, to protest
as vigorously as possible against the continuation of the siege and to call
for its cessation. Americans have a special responsibility here, and by adding
our voices to those around the world who have already condemned in the strongest
way the siege of Gaza, perhaps we can help to create a wave of irresistible
pressure against the walls of Gaza that will finally bring them down. The people
of Gaza, resilient as many of them doubtless are, are counting on us not to
forget them. Listening to their voices, we must use ours not to fail them.


*Some analyses suggest that the actual amount may be closer to 5 billion
dollars per annum, but whichever figure is used, the thesis is not affected.

</td></tr></t></table>
As Salaamu Alaikum Sign * Reader. May Allah give my brothers and sisters Jannah(Ameen)


Posted By: Whisper
Date Posted: 14 January 2009 at 9:24am
Response: It was a very challenging point you raised from the point an Umma is defined in the Qur'an and by the Sahabas. Unfortunately when I wanted you to explain more and commit us, some members misunderstood me. Please can you explain the implication that 'There is no Ummah per se'. I have in my mind among the many verses in particular chapter 2:143
 
My brother, we wait for you. Perhaps you can now educate us as to the location of the Ummah?


-------------
Sasha Khanzadeh


Posted By: ak_m_f
Date Posted: 14 January 2009 at 7:25pm
Answer to above post:

Here is your "Ummah"



Posted By: Friendship
Date Posted: 15 January 2009 at 2:43am
Assalamu alaikum.

Posted by ak m f. Here is your Umma.
 
Response: The above form of an Umma is allowed since it is based on 'Muamalat'. What of the other one as described in Qur'an 2:143 and the many Ahadith of the holy Prophet and virtually the way of life of all the Messengers of Allah.
Friendship.



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