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UnbreakableMJ

Last seen: 2 days ago

Muhammad 'MJ' Jassim is a guy from Manama, Bahrain

I am a human being, submitter to will of God (The Almighty Creator), unique, humanitarian, humble, free, unplugged, ethical, INTP-type of personality, patient, high-principled,"realistic perfectionist", take responsibility of my intentions & actions, and believe most people's intentions are generally good. I value human life ever so greatly, and promote dialog between religions & civilizations. Free-thinker & activist for justice, human rights, and freedoms, including software-freedom. I am a student of knowledge, more specifically student of Islam & Comparative Religion, Epistemology, Philosophy, Logic & Mathematics. All-in-all, in one word: Muslim

  • Islam Times - Hijab Banned in Tunisian Universities

    Rated Oct 31 1 review islam, human rights islamtimes.org

    Hijab Banned in Tunisian Universities


    Tunisâ€s Education Department made all new students enrolling as freshman to adhere to this law â€" forcing them to choose between attending college or wearing the hijab. Female students are forced to sign a document stating that they will not wear the hijab and male students are forced to sign stating that they will not grow a beard.

    This document also forbade wearing any form of cultural dress. It emphasized that students must enter the campus clean shaved and without hijabs. The document warns: â€oeAnyone who disobeys this document will be expelled and, if needed, will be criminally charged.”

    Students are also prohibited from any sort of political activity.
    Islam Times - Hijab Banned in Tunisian Universities
  • What Muslims Want Dispatches Channel_4_2006-08-07
  • Sacred Learning - Traditional Islamic Learning
  • HarunYahya.Tv - ONLY LOVE CAN DEFEAT TERRORISM

    Rated Sep 11 1 review islam, religion, terrorism harunyahya.tv

    Only Love Can Defeat Terrorism


    To all men and women who offer understanding, with loving hearts, and open minds. To those who are so far yet so near and willing to listen. As a human being hereby asking you to do watch these two films. For together they take an hour of your time, and it means the world to such persons as myself. Peace. ~Muhammad
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    The first: Only Love Can Defeat Terrorism

    based on the book of Harun Yahya by the same title.
    (higher quality video download link)
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    The second: Solution: the Values of Qur'an

    based on the book of Harun Yahya by the same title.
    (higher quality video download link)
    HarunYahya.Tv - ONLY LOVE CAN DEFEAT  TERRORISM
  • Allah Made Me Funny
  • Is Terrorism a Muslim Monopoly - Full | PeaceTV | Veoh
  • Islam Times - Quarks and the Koran

    Rated Jul 24 2 reviews islam, science islamtimes.org

    Quarks and the Qur'an


    From the page: Mohammad Ali Shomali's clerical robes are immaculate, his manner urbane. Fluent in English, with a Ph.D. from Britain's Manchester University, he spends his days in the holy city of Qum studying advanced stem-cell research and the mapping of the genome. Shomali, at 44, is clearly not your run-of-the-mill mullah, even if he insists that he is. "We live in a religious country with a religious government," says the turbaned Shia cleric, "so we have to know what our religion tells us about modern issues." Along with hundreds of other mullahs in Qum, Shomali is at work trying to define an Islamic context for advanced scientific work from nanos to, yes, nuclear technology.

    Those who suspect Iran of clandestine weapons programs might imagine all sorts of disturbing scenarios conjured by the intense interest these mullahs take in science. Doomsday scenarios about Islamic zealots with apocalyptic weapons are an easy sell on American talk radio. But Shomali looks a little puzzled by such propositions. "We want to be at the forefront of scientific and technological advancements in the world, and that includes nuclear technology," he says. But he insists that the ethical constraints imposed by religion are vital, too. "When our Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei says that building, possessing and using nuclear weapons is forbidden," Shomali explains, "you have to be sure that we are not going to do that. Otherwise our Supreme Leader would lose his credibility and we would no longer trust him as a leader."

    Shomali's own specialty is bioethics and environmental ethics. He is also the head of the religious department in the Imam Khomeini Education and Research Institute, which is housed in a large building made with the same yellow bricks that are used to build religious schools in Qum. Verses from the Qur'an written on turquoise tiles adorn the façade. Yet nothing about the place or its history is quite what an outsider would expect. Its founder in 1991 and still its guiding light is the archconservative Ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi [known for espousing complete isolation from Western influences and a return to the more unyielding days of the 1979 Islamic Revolution]. Whole treatises have been written in the West about Yazdi as the mystical mentor of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, perhaps even the inspiration for an apocalyptic vision tied to the second coming of the lost imam. Yet the institute's primary concerns are not about how the world will end so much as how the Islamic regime can adapt the fast-moving scientific and technological developments of the 21st century to its own needs.

    Before the revolution that overthrew them, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi and his father before him had seen themselves as great modernizers. They treated the religiously devout as retrograde and called the Shia clerics by the pejorative name aakhoonds: flea-infested zealots whose idea of high technology was the abacus. In those days, about 200,000 people lived in Qum. There was only one major seminary here, plus a few small religious schools. Millions of Iranian pilgrims came every year to visit the shrine of Masouma, the sister of the Shia saint Imam Reza, but they rarely lingered. Qum was a dusty, crumbling town that seemed decades, if not centuries, behind the fast-growing, fast-paced capital, Tehran. (continued below..)
    Islam Times - Quarks and the Koran
  • Islam Times - Covered life gives new perspective
  • Islam Times

    Rated May 18 2009 1 review islam, news, middle east islamtimes.org

    Islam Times
  • Yusuf Islam Unites Muslims, West - IslamOnline.net - News

    Rated May 18 2009 1 review islam, music islamonline.net



    From the page: "Renowned British Muslim singer Yusuf Islam sees his music and songs can be a bridge between the Muslims world and the West.

    "I think I've been given a position and place in this world which is quite unique," Islam told CNN on Monday, May 18.

    "The fact that I'm a Westerner by birth and I'm a Muslim at the same time -- and living in this time where there seems to be such a gravitational split in polarities -- there need to be bridges.

    "I think music is one of the best ways to bridge all those gaps."

    Islam, formerly known as Cat Stevens, performed his first concert in Los Angeles last week, his first in the United States in 33 years.

    Playing new and old songs for over an hour, the 60-year-old musician has delighted a star-studded audience.

    "You don't understand," teary-eyed US singer and songwriter Michelle Branch said.

    "I learned how to play guitar with the Cat Stevens songbook!"

    Yusuf Islam reverted to Islam in 1977 and has since become a leading voice in Britain's two million Muslims.

    His UN-registered charity, Small Kindness, provides humanitarian relief, through direct aid as well as social and educational programs, to orphans and families in Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq and other regions of the world.

    In 2003, Islam was awarded the "World Social Award" for his humanitarian relief work.

    In November 2004, he was honored with the "Man for Peace" award by a committee of Nobel peace laureates.

    Islam lamented that the Islamic faith is tarnished in Western media.

    "I used to be prejudiced -- as prejudiced as anyone about Islam," he said.

    The prominent singer recalled the moment when he decided to revert to Islam at the height of his fame.

    " I was given the opportunity of reading the actual source, the Qur'an itself, without anybody forcing me or looking over my shoulder and saying, "What do you think?" It was just me in my space.

    "The more I read the Qur'an, the more I realized that it was like an incredible matrix of connection with Christianity and Judaism," he said.

    "I mean Jesus, Moses, the religion of Abraham in this book! And I said, "Wow, how come I didn't know this before?" It was kind of like a secret.

    "So that was kind of my discovery, and a lot of people, I don't think, have gone through that process because they've seen Islam as a headline -- and you never learn anything about a headline. Because headlines, you know -- people make things up, to be honest."

    Under the former Bush administration, Islam was denied access to the US and his name was put on a no-fly list.

    "I felt chosen! I felt suddenly, I was given a halo. "This guy stands for peace, and they won't let him in.

    "It was really kind of a joke, in a way, because the person I am and the kind of things they were kind of insinuating by putting me on this list with other people who were very dangerous."

    But the situation took a new turn under the US administration of Barack Obama.

    "I'm here now (in the United States), so things are kind of working themselves out. But there's a new administration, a new president, and it's a great new day.""
    Yusuf Islam Unites Muslims, West - IslamOnline.net - News