Pervez Hoodbhoy October 13, 2003
#63 Posted by fmshah on December 24, 2008 5:15:13 am
Here's a tale of two Pakistani self-haters and defeatists who enjoy every moment of hating themselves and their country: Dr. Pervaiz Hoodbhoy and Asma Jahangir.
Whenever there is a writing project in any newspaper anywhere in the world where they want to bash Pakistan using a Pakistani name, they call one man in Islamabad: Dr. Hoodbhoy. He spews more venom against Pakistan than Hamid Karzai and Bal Thackery - an Indian Hindu terrorist - combined.
Asma Jahangir, another defeatist who went to India to shake the hands of Narendar Modi, the killer of 2500 Indian Muslims, has just volunteered to Hindustan Times to confirm that Mumbai terror was a Pakistani conspiracy [see below].
Here's a letter sent by a Pakistani young man to Dr. Pervaiz Hoodbhoy, a Pakistani self-hater, and received no reply. And then watch Asma Jahangir's video.
Recommendation: We need to start a witch-hunt in Pakistan to cleanse our academia and public life of such self-haters and defeatists who poison the minds of young Pakistanis about their homeland. Such academics and human rights activists should not be allowed to hide behind the freedom of expression.
TO: Dr. Pervaiz A. Hoodbhoy
Professor and Chairman
Physic Department
Quaid-e-Azam University,
Islamabad.
E-mail: hoodb...@lns.mit.edu
NATION WILL NEVER FORGIVE YOU
Dear Dr Pervaiz Hoodbhoy Sahib,
I have been reading your articles and research reports and watching your interviews on different TV channels on different issues. I have tried to go through your articles again and again to satisfy myself that whatsoever you are speaking in the name of freedom of speech is just an ordinary criticism and could be a difference of opinion.
But I regret to say that I am unable to do so. In dozens of your articles and interviews you have never ever said a single positive thing about Pakistan and have always tried to portray a false picture of Pakistan, according to which Pakistan is a failed state. Whether it's the issue of extremism, or Pakistan's nuclear assets, or Pak-India relations, or if there is an issue of western and Indian allegations, you have always come up with your nasty ideas to prove to the world community that whatever the enemies of Pakistan are saying, you are more than happy to say it from them, using a Pakistani identity, which is an act for which you feel no shame.
I am not sure if Pakistanis have seen your massive one-man campaign against Pakistan where you have alleged that we are not capable of retaining our nuclear assets. Or, now, after the Mumbai attacks, when even the cheapest of Pakistani politicians have shown some kind of patriotism and unity for the sake of Pakistan, at this crucial time again you are trying to prove what the enemies of Pakistan are trying to do. I fail to understand what motivates you except gaining popularity in West or even in India.
India is a so-called democracy where low caste Hindus, Christians and Muslims are burned alive [a ritual unique to India, doesn't happen anywhere else], where Hindu extremists are in the government, where groups like Bajrang Dal are trained in Indian Army schools. But India seems like Switzerland after reading one of your articles on India, especially the one you wrote recently after a visit to India. India's terrorist and rogue intelligence agency, RAW, which is funding and supporting separatist movements in our tribal belt and in Balochistan, continues to be an untouchable issue for you. What really is important for you is to put all your efforts toward portraying a negative Pakistan.
I give you an example from the history which you will find self explanatory in reference to our current scenario.
I am not sure if our enemies will impose a war on Pakistan or not but at this crucial stage all your efforts to distort Pakistan's image is not going to remain unnoticed and the nation will never forgive you for what you have done.
Wassalam.
Waqas Ahmed
Muscat, Sultanate of Oman
Whenever there is a writing project in any newspaper anywhere in the world where they want to bash Pakistan using a Pakistani name, they call one man in Islamabad: Dr. Hoodbhoy. He spews more venom against Pakistan than Hamid Karzai and Bal Thackery - an Indian Hindu terrorist - combined.
Asma Jahangir, another defeatist who went to India to shake the hands of Narendar Modi, the killer of 2500 Indian Muslims, has just volunteered to Hindustan Times to confirm that Mumbai terror was a Pakistani conspiracy [see below].
Here's a letter sent by a Pakistani young man to Dr. Pervaiz Hoodbhoy, a Pakistani self-hater, and received no reply. And then watch Asma Jahangir's video.
Recommendation: We need to start a witch-hunt in Pakistan to cleanse our academia and public life of such self-haters and defeatists who poison the minds of young Pakistanis about their homeland. Such academics and human rights activists should not be allowed to hide behind the freedom of expression.
TO: Dr. Pervaiz A. Hoodbhoy
Professor and Chairman
Physic Department
Quaid-e-Azam University,
Islamabad.
E-mail: hoodb...@lns.mit.edu
NATION WILL NEVER FORGIVE YOU
Dear Dr Pervaiz Hoodbhoy Sahib,
I have been reading your articles and research reports and watching your interviews on different TV channels on different issues. I have tried to go through your articles again and again to satisfy myself that whatsoever you are speaking in the name of freedom of speech is just an ordinary criticism and could be a difference of opinion.
But I regret to say that I am unable to do so. In dozens of your articles and interviews you have never ever said a single positive thing about Pakistan and have always tried to portray a false picture of Pakistan, according to which Pakistan is a failed state. Whether it's the issue of extremism, or Pakistan's nuclear assets, or Pak-India relations, or if there is an issue of western and Indian allegations, you have always come up with your nasty ideas to prove to the world community that whatever the enemies of Pakistan are saying, you are more than happy to say it from them, using a Pakistani identity, which is an act for which you feel no shame.
I am not sure if Pakistanis have seen your massive one-man campaign against Pakistan where you have alleged that we are not capable of retaining our nuclear assets. Or, now, after the Mumbai attacks, when even the cheapest of Pakistani politicians have shown some kind of patriotism and unity for the sake of Pakistan, at this crucial time again you are trying to prove what the enemies of Pakistan are trying to do. I fail to understand what motivates you except gaining popularity in West or even in India.
India is a so-called democracy where low caste Hindus, Christians and Muslims are burned alive [a ritual unique to India, doesn't happen anywhere else], where Hindu extremists are in the government, where groups like Bajrang Dal are trained in Indian Army schools. But India seems like Switzerland after reading one of your articles on India, especially the one you wrote recently after a visit to India. India's terrorist and rogue intelligence agency, RAW, which is funding and supporting separatist movements in our tribal belt and in Balochistan, continues to be an untouchable issue for you. What really is important for you is to put all your efforts toward portraying a negative Pakistan.
I give you an example from the history which you will find self explanatory in reference to our current scenario.
I am not sure if our enemies will impose a war on Pakistan or not but at this crucial stage all your efforts to distort Pakistan's image is not going to remain unnoticed and the nation will never forgive you for what you have done.
Wassalam.
Waqas Ahmed
Muscat, Sultanate of Oman
#62 Posted by rsridhar on October 21, 2003 11:46:25 am
re: Romair`s ramblings
``Hindu countries, by the way, are even worse shape``
Let us see. How many Hindu countries are there? Nepal? I am running out of ideas here. Please somebody help me!
``Based on your logic, when the Muslims were ruling the world, the same Islam was the greatest thing in the world. Also, would you apply this rule to all religions. Hindus are poorer and more backwards than even Muslim nations. Should we all then spend our time, “discrediting, ridiculing, undermining and eventually destroying” Hinduism. African Black are the most backward group in the world. Should we do the same to them.``
When muslim rulers (and not muslims) ruled the world (whatever that expression means; they certainly did not rule the world), they set the rules. In collusion with the clergy, they made sure there were no dissenting voices. So, when they decreed that Islam was the greatest (remember they were the rulers), so it was. Does Romair really believe Islam was the greatest religion even then?
Hindus are poorer and more backward? Well, why does Romair the idiot not find a muslim Accountant? I see envy here. He is surrounded by Hindus at workplace. That must be hard on a closet Islamist like him. When you can`t compete, you can at least condemn, he seems to say. Besides, i recently read the report that India has outstripped Pak in GDP and PPP growth. Let Romair, the Chowk idiot chew on that.
Hinduism is not under the lens today. Islam is. Whether Romair likes it or not. I think the guy has reached the limits of his sanity.
``I have very unconventional views about Islam. I have yet to be declared a blasphemer.``
Tell you what. Write a book on your unconventional views of Islam. See what your mullahs have to say. It is one thing to have unconventional views on Islam and lock it up in your mind and it is another thing to say so freely, with conviction. Islamists and Jehadists will not allow any unconventional views. Did you, Romair, hear the news that barbers in Pakistan are all moving into another profession? Care to know why? Because, shaving is now prohibited by mullahs and barbers are all out of business!
Sridhar
``Hindu countries, by the way, are even worse shape``
Let us see. How many Hindu countries are there? Nepal? I am running out of ideas here. Please somebody help me!
``Based on your logic, when the Muslims were ruling the world, the same Islam was the greatest thing in the world. Also, would you apply this rule to all religions. Hindus are poorer and more backwards than even Muslim nations. Should we all then spend our time, “discrediting, ridiculing, undermining and eventually destroying” Hinduism. African Black are the most backward group in the world. Should we do the same to them.``
When muslim rulers (and not muslims) ruled the world (whatever that expression means; they certainly did not rule the world), they set the rules. In collusion with the clergy, they made sure there were no dissenting voices. So, when they decreed that Islam was the greatest (remember they were the rulers), so it was. Does Romair really believe Islam was the greatest religion even then?
Hindus are poorer and more backward? Well, why does Romair the idiot not find a muslim Accountant? I see envy here. He is surrounded by Hindus at workplace. That must be hard on a closet Islamist like him. When you can`t compete, you can at least condemn, he seems to say. Besides, i recently read the report that India has outstripped Pak in GDP and PPP growth. Let Romair, the Chowk idiot chew on that.
Hinduism is not under the lens today. Islam is. Whether Romair likes it or not. I think the guy has reached the limits of his sanity.
``I have very unconventional views about Islam. I have yet to be declared a blasphemer.``
Tell you what. Write a book on your unconventional views of Islam. See what your mullahs have to say. It is one thing to have unconventional views on Islam and lock it up in your mind and it is another thing to say so freely, with conviction. Islamists and Jehadists will not allow any unconventional views. Did you, Romair, hear the news that barbers in Pakistan are all moving into another profession? Care to know why? Because, shaving is now prohibited by mullahs and barbers are all out of business!
Sridhar
#61 Posted by rsridhar on October 21, 2003 11:46:25 am
re:#57 by RationalFaith
Islam in one stroke will become acceptable to non-muslims if it is kept as a personal faith and is kept out of public domain. But then that itself would be unislamic, would it not?
Sridhar
Islam in one stroke will become acceptable to non-muslims if it is kept as a personal faith and is kept out of public domain. But then that itself would be unislamic, would it not?
Sridhar
#60 Posted by munirsaami on October 20, 2003 6:09:11 pm
There has always been a vested interest lobby maligning people like Edward Said, Chomsky, Eqbal Ahmad and others. The reason for such attacks is that these symbols of humanity stood in front of hegemony and power despite their frailty and limited resources. Pervez Hoodbhoy is carrying the torch that should remain alive. Munir
#59 Posted by PM on October 20, 2003 8:34:35 am
_digit:
Just thought I`d tell you there`s an unplugged (Off the Wall) thread on `Real Men` and `sexual harrasment` that I thought you`d be interested in peeping into.
Just thought I`d tell you there`s an unplugged (Off the Wall) thread on `Real Men` and `sexual harrasment` that I thought you`d be interested in peeping into.
#58 Posted by _digit on October 19, 2003 12:01:31 am
AlephNull wrote:
[I prefixed ‘coreligionist’ with the word ‘erstwhile’...]
Yes, mistake was mine...missed the erstwhile there. Like I said, minor point.
[You say “Islam may not be under attack, but Muslims certainly are”. Well, in my very unsympathetic opinion, in many cases Muslims as a group are under attack largely because...]
To be clear, no one was trying to solicit your sympathy.
Anyhow, it is just as obtuse to think that there are no legitimate grievances on the Muslim side, (or that the violence is entirely unidirectional), as it is to think all problems of Muslims originate from outside Muslim lands. That is, however, beside the point.
Muslims are under attack. Whatever the reasons may be, the nature of the attack is at the very least as severe as whatever certain Muslims have been able to perpetrate in recent history, (I personally would argue that it`s much worse).
One would think, then, that those who proclaim a love or genuine concern for Muslims would voice some sort of concern for their welfare. One would think that when non-Muslims exhibit the same violent tendencies as Muslims, invoking a similar rationale no less, then the non-Muslims would be subjected to the same standard of criticism. The reasons why this is not done I know, so I don`t need a justification for this. Just spare me this feigned concern. Ibn Warraq hates Islam, however his challenge to it is not on behalf of Muslims. It is, arguably, in spite of them. On this, Dr. Hoodboy’s assessment deserves more than a casual brush off.
[If this diagnosis is accurate (an assertion with which you are welcome to disagree), the route to a cure for the woes of Muslims would be to root out the very Islam that causes the clueless backwardness. In which case ‘tough love’ of the Ibn Warraq school is the best way to ensure their future well-being.]
The Muslim/Islam distinction doesn’t work in this sense, since Islam cannot be physically attacked. Only it’s practitioners can. To attempt to make it work, you will need to come up with convenient or even absurd definitions of who a Muslim is. It would be best just to admit to the simple truth: some people would prefer it if Muslims were non-Muslims. For those who espouse “tough love”, then no doubt the use of violence to see this end is not out of the question. That, however, has no pretense of being tolerant. So I can see why this absurd “love the sinner, hate the sin” business is invoked.
Also, to be clear, I do not know for certain if Ibn Warraq is of this “tough love” school of thought…
[I prefixed ‘coreligionist’ with the word ‘erstwhile’...]
Yes, mistake was mine...missed the erstwhile there. Like I said, minor point.
[You say “Islam may not be under attack, but Muslims certainly are”. Well, in my very unsympathetic opinion, in many cases Muslims as a group are under attack largely because...]
To be clear, no one was trying to solicit your sympathy.
Anyhow, it is just as obtuse to think that there are no legitimate grievances on the Muslim side, (or that the violence is entirely unidirectional), as it is to think all problems of Muslims originate from outside Muslim lands. That is, however, beside the point.
Muslims are under attack. Whatever the reasons may be, the nature of the attack is at the very least as severe as whatever certain Muslims have been able to perpetrate in recent history, (I personally would argue that it`s much worse).
One would think, then, that those who proclaim a love or genuine concern for Muslims would voice some sort of concern for their welfare. One would think that when non-Muslims exhibit the same violent tendencies as Muslims, invoking a similar rationale no less, then the non-Muslims would be subjected to the same standard of criticism. The reasons why this is not done I know, so I don`t need a justification for this. Just spare me this feigned concern. Ibn Warraq hates Islam, however his challenge to it is not on behalf of Muslims. It is, arguably, in spite of them. On this, Dr. Hoodboy’s assessment deserves more than a casual brush off.
[If this diagnosis is accurate (an assertion with which you are welcome to disagree), the route to a cure for the woes of Muslims would be to root out the very Islam that causes the clueless backwardness. In which case ‘tough love’ of the Ibn Warraq school is the best way to ensure their future well-being.]
The Muslim/Islam distinction doesn’t work in this sense, since Islam cannot be physically attacked. Only it’s practitioners can. To attempt to make it work, you will need to come up with convenient or even absurd definitions of who a Muslim is. It would be best just to admit to the simple truth: some people would prefer it if Muslims were non-Muslims. For those who espouse “tough love”, then no doubt the use of violence to see this end is not out of the question. That, however, has no pretense of being tolerant. So I can see why this absurd “love the sinner, hate the sin” business is invoked.
Also, to be clear, I do not know for certain if Ibn Warraq is of this “tough love” school of thought…
#57 Posted by RationalFaith on October 18, 2003 8:24:50 am
Fuzair #18
That last paragraph was brilliant. Only if all Muslims could see that to non Muslims, it matters not at all what some fictional `true` Islam is so long as `real` Islam continues to cast an evil and cancerous influence across the globe.
Instead of accusing non Muslims for distorting the `true` Islam, believers in the `true` Islam should fight to put into practice an Islam that is worthy of being tolerated by non Muslims. But that is much harder to do, or no such thing can be created because no such thing exists, except in the minds of those who are desperate to win respectability but yet be Muslims.
The most despicable part is that no matter what, these people would come back with `you are distorting Islam` sh%t.
That last paragraph was brilliant. Only if all Muslims could see that to non Muslims, it matters not at all what some fictional `true` Islam is so long as `real` Islam continues to cast an evil and cancerous influence across the globe.
Instead of accusing non Muslims for distorting the `true` Islam, believers in the `true` Islam should fight to put into practice an Islam that is worthy of being tolerated by non Muslims. But that is much harder to do, or no such thing can be created because no such thing exists, except in the minds of those who are desperate to win respectability but yet be Muslims.
The most despicable part is that no matter what, these people would come back with `you are distorting Islam` sh%t.
#56 Posted by AlephNull on October 17, 2003 9:25:20 pm
Fuzair #18
{{But seriously, I do have a problem with the wholesale condemnation of `Islam` as totalitarian thought control. This is the same problem that many socialists had with the depiction of Socialism as totalitarian thought control just because the USSR was a totalitarian thought control society.}}
Well, one might argue that European social democracy, say as practiced in the Scandinavian countries, was/is closer to Marx’s vision than anything east of the Iron Curtain. I brought up the example of Soviet Communism because it shows some very interesting parallels in theory and practice with many versions of Islam. The most salient difference from my point of view is the fact that Communist theocracy had a very well developed hierarchical clergy and attempted to exercise top-down control, whereas Islam seems to be decentralized. But the degree of control of public discourse seems to be comparable.
{{But seriously, I do have a problem with the wholesale condemnation of `Islam` as totalitarian thought control. This is the same problem that many socialists had with the depiction of Socialism as totalitarian thought control just because the USSR was a totalitarian thought control society. I would much prefer it if people attacked Islamists as totalitarian thought control freaks rather than Islam …}}
Claiming that this or that instance of the actual behaviour of those who act invoking Islam is not “real Islam”, is as questionable a ploy as claiming that Soviet Communism wasn’t “real socialism” and that Stalin (or was it Lenin?) betrayed a noble ideal. Communism is a system of thought and belief that, though it claims to be theoretically grounded, is not reducible (AFAIK) to a system of unambiguous axioms. Vagueness and contradiction (or apparent contradiction), differing interpretations of the same text, and divergent prescriptions for theoretically grounded action in consonance with the ‘theory’, are commonly encountered results of any discourse involving this essential vagueness. Looking at the actual behaviour of those who acted invoking Communism is therefore not only appropriate but essential to get a measure of the ideology itself and the way it is likely to play out in the real world.
The same argument holds, at least as strongly, for Islam. It is if anything less amenable to rigorous axiomatization than Communism. So the historical record of those who acted in the name of Islam is the best thing we have to go by to understand the ideology and the way it will in all likelihood be interpreted. And if those who act in the name of Islam typically impose severe restrictions on the free expression of opinion about Islam or hostile to Islam, calling it a system of thought control is fair.
{{But seriously, I do have a problem with the wholesale condemnation of `Islam` as totalitarian thought control. This is the same problem that many socialists had with the depiction of Socialism as totalitarian thought control just because the USSR was a totalitarian thought control society.}}
Well, one might argue that European social democracy, say as practiced in the Scandinavian countries, was/is closer to Marx’s vision than anything east of the Iron Curtain. I brought up the example of Soviet Communism because it shows some very interesting parallels in theory and practice with many versions of Islam. The most salient difference from my point of view is the fact that Communist theocracy had a very well developed hierarchical clergy and attempted to exercise top-down control, whereas Islam seems to be decentralized. But the degree of control of public discourse seems to be comparable.
{{But seriously, I do have a problem with the wholesale condemnation of `Islam` as totalitarian thought control. This is the same problem that many socialists had with the depiction of Socialism as totalitarian thought control just because the USSR was a totalitarian thought control society. I would much prefer it if people attacked Islamists as totalitarian thought control freaks rather than Islam …}}
Claiming that this or that instance of the actual behaviour of those who act invoking Islam is not “real Islam”, is as questionable a ploy as claiming that Soviet Communism wasn’t “real socialism” and that Stalin (or was it Lenin?) betrayed a noble ideal. Communism is a system of thought and belief that, though it claims to be theoretically grounded, is not reducible (AFAIK) to a system of unambiguous axioms. Vagueness and contradiction (or apparent contradiction), differing interpretations of the same text, and divergent prescriptions for theoretically grounded action in consonance with the ‘theory’, are commonly encountered results of any discourse involving this essential vagueness. Looking at the actual behaviour of those who acted invoking Communism is therefore not only appropriate but essential to get a measure of the ideology itself and the way it is likely to play out in the real world.
The same argument holds, at least as strongly, for Islam. It is if anything less amenable to rigorous axiomatization than Communism. So the historical record of those who acted in the name of Islam is the best thing we have to go by to understand the ideology and the way it will in all likelihood be interpreted. And if those who act in the name of Islam typically impose severe restrictions on the free expression of opinion about Islam or hostile to Islam, calling it a system of thought control is fair.
#55 Posted by AlephNull on October 17, 2003 9:25:19 pm
_digit #22
{{[One can follow the dictum of ‘hate sin and not the sinner.’]
That`s an utterly pompous dictum, if not down right patronizing.}}
It was meant to be patronizing and to get under pompous religious believers’ skins. It is taken right out of the Christian fundagolical playbook. It is a favourite catchphrase of earnest evangelicals trying to ‘cure’ people with deviant sexuality. I thought it sounded vaguely New Testament – Pauline, perhaps – but it seems not to have a direct origin in Christian scripture. Be that as it may, the pleasure of using it to patronize religious true believers is one I will not willingly pass up.
{{First, a minor point: having abandoned Islam and religion altogether, Ibn Warraq is nobody`s co-religionist.}}
I prefixed ‘coreligionist’ with the word ‘erstwhile’, which precisely fits Ibn Warraq the apostate. If you don’t know what `erstwhile` means, look it up in the dictionary.
{{.. he declared:
``One hopes that the U.S. government will not now act in such a way that more innocent lives are lost, albeit on the other side of the globe. …”” ….. Islam may not be under attack, but Muslims certainly are...where is his pious concern?… }
You say “Islam may not be under attack, but Muslims certainly are”. Well, in my very unsympathetic opinion, in many cases Muslims as a group are under attack largely because of their own utterly stupid behaviour, their inability to stay out of trouble, their hopeless incomprehension of the way the rest of the world works, their penchant for making unnecessary enemies out of neutrals, etc., all traceable to cultural factors eventually rooted in Islam. Their woes are all too often self-inflicted. If this diagnosis is accurate (an assertion with which you are welcome to disagree), the route to a cure for the woes of Muslims would be to root out the very Islam that causes the clueless backwardness. In which case ‘tough love’ of the Ibn Warraq school is the best way to ensure their future well-being.
{{[One can follow the dictum of ‘hate sin and not the sinner.’]
That`s an utterly pompous dictum, if not down right patronizing.}}
It was meant to be patronizing and to get under pompous religious believers’ skins. It is taken right out of the Christian fundagolical playbook. It is a favourite catchphrase of earnest evangelicals trying to ‘cure’ people with deviant sexuality. I thought it sounded vaguely New Testament – Pauline, perhaps – but it seems not to have a direct origin in Christian scripture. Be that as it may, the pleasure of using it to patronize religious true believers is one I will not willingly pass up.
{{First, a minor point: having abandoned Islam and religion altogether, Ibn Warraq is nobody`s co-religionist.}}
I prefixed ‘coreligionist’ with the word ‘erstwhile’, which precisely fits Ibn Warraq the apostate. If you don’t know what `erstwhile` means, look it up in the dictionary.
{{.. he declared:
``One hopes that the U.S. government will not now act in such a way that more innocent lives are lost, albeit on the other side of the globe. …”” ….. Islam may not be under attack, but Muslims certainly are...where is his pious concern?… }
You say “Islam may not be under attack, but Muslims certainly are”. Well, in my very unsympathetic opinion, in many cases Muslims as a group are under attack largely because of their own utterly stupid behaviour, their inability to stay out of trouble, their hopeless incomprehension of the way the rest of the world works, their penchant for making unnecessary enemies out of neutrals, etc., all traceable to cultural factors eventually rooted in Islam. Their woes are all too often self-inflicted. If this diagnosis is accurate (an assertion with which you are welcome to disagree), the route to a cure for the woes of Muslims would be to root out the very Islam that causes the clueless backwardness. In which case ‘tough love’ of the Ibn Warraq school is the best way to ensure their future well-being.
#54 Posted by fuzair on October 16, 2003 5:54:33 pm
Aaah yes, Solitude. I remember him now. He did have a rather virulent dislike for Islam.
Thanks PM and AlephNull, appreciate it.
Fuzair
Thanks PM and AlephNull, appreciate it.
Fuzair
#53 Posted by _digit on October 16, 2003 3:36:53 pm
In response to AlephNull, who wrote:
[Solitude came across as an extremely passionate man, much younger - late twenties, perhaps - with a more unrestrained polemical style]
LOL, that`s a rather mild assesment of one who wrote, and I quote, ``I think we can put our nuclear arsenal to good use by turning Mecca/ Medina into the next test zone during peak season.``
But, of course, this is no doubt is consistent with your idea of ``loving the sinner``...
#52 Posted by PM on October 16, 2003 11:42:02 am
AlephNull,
You wouldn`t happen to be a new avatar of the erstwhile LC, now would you? You are certainly at least as articulate as he.
You wouldn`t happen to be a new avatar of the erstwhile LC, now would you? You are certainly at least as articulate as he.
#51 Posted by PM on October 16, 2003 9:16:53 am
Fuzair, I think it was temp who claimed that Warraq was of Pakistani origin. to the best of my knowledge, he is of Inidan.
The dude who`d often post inflammatory stuff on Islam (and yes, was quite an expert on Ghazzali) went as `Solitude`. He`s in NYC and in his late 20`s yet. Too young to be Warraq.
The dude who`d often post inflammatory stuff on Islam (and yes, was quite an expert on Ghazzali) went as `Solitude`. He`s in NYC and in his late 20`s yet. Too young to be Warraq.
#50 Posted by AlephNull on October 16, 2003 9:16:53 am
#49 fuzair
{{There was a Chowkie here a few years ago, can`t recall his name, who wrote several articles severely criticising Islam (I remember a very critical article on Ghazali).}}
Solitude, who penned articles as A. Shiraz and as A Shiraz` Evil Twin (for the Ghazali article).
{{Is he Ibn Warraq? Anyone know?}}
I think it`s highly unlikely. Ibn Warrraq is described as being in his late fifties and is quite composed in his written and reported verbal utterances. Solitude came across as an extremely passionate man, much younger - late twenties, perhaps - with a more unrestrained polemical style.
{{There was a Chowkie here a few years ago, can`t recall his name, who wrote several articles severely criticising Islam (I remember a very critical article on Ghazali).}}
Solitude, who penned articles as A. Shiraz and as A Shiraz` Evil Twin (for the Ghazali article).
{{Is he Ibn Warraq? Anyone know?}}
I think it`s highly unlikely. Ibn Warrraq is described as being in his late fifties and is quite composed in his written and reported verbal utterances. Solitude came across as an extremely passionate man, much younger - late twenties, perhaps - with a more unrestrained polemical style.
#49 Posted by fuzair on October 16, 2003 7:34:25 am
Its interesting that a poster here (sorry, can`t recall who) said that ``Ibn Warraq`` is of Pakistani origin. There was a Chowkie here a few years ago, can`t recall his name, who wrote several articles severely criticising Islam (I remember a very critical article on Ghazali). Is he Ibn Warraq? Anyone know?
#48 Posted by PM on October 15, 2003 11:29:43 pm
re. _digit:
``Sure, and the `sinner` is a person responsible for the wrongdoing.``
But not necessarily the sole agent. And within the overlap of joint responsbility, lies the space for empathy, understanding and forgiveness, and the possibility of hating the sin but not the sinner.
``Sure, and the `sinner` is a person responsible for the wrongdoing.``
But not necessarily the sole agent. And within the overlap of joint responsbility, lies the space for empathy, understanding and forgiveness, and the possibility of hating the sin but not the sinner.
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