Saturday, September 23, 2006

ٌٌِRamazan Mubarak!

May Allah (SWT) grant all of the muslimeen wa muslimaat a blessed Ramazan.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Informed Comment

Informed Comment

How exactly is this a conspiracy theory?
The Pope, by his remarks, is lending comfort to those who want to stir hatred between Muslims and Christians. And the Iraq war was called for and supported by many outspoken Zionists. People with the same mindset are also behind the cartoons and are engaged in various schemes to schemes to stir up emnity. They feel that if they can provoke Muslims into violence, they can then point to the violence and say "I told you so." This will make it more likely that their policies vis-a-vis immigration and other issues are followed. This is not a conspiracy; there's nothing secret about it.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

Three years later- Peirce again

I've been reading Peirce's "What Pragmatism Is" and I'm wondering whether Peirce's philosophy leads itself to a kind of practical mysticism whereby the universals of the ideal human being (insan-e-kamel?) and the ideal society become instantiated by a process of "evolution." These trends ultimately converge on a point, which "signifies the real." What bearing could these ideas have on Islam? His writings on belief and doubt seem to be very much in line with Islamic thinking on those topics as does his conviction that pure rationalism and pure empiricism (which lead ultimately to pure skepticism) are dead ends philosophically. His theory of meaning needs further analysis. He doesn't want to do away entirely with metaphysics and seems genuinely to want to accomodate religious language as having genuine meaning (unlike the Positivists) but I must do more research and think some more before I can decide whether his conclusions are compatible with an Islamic Aqeeda.

On a related note, I'm overcome by unusual feeling, equal parts nostalgia and awe, that I've come full circle in the past three years. One of the first posts on this blog was about Peirce's "Neglected Argument for the Existence of God" written in September 2003; three years later I'm writing on Peirce again and will soon, in shaa' Allah, read that essay again.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Prayer Calendar

Allah forgive me, but I noticed an error in the prayer calender in the sidebar. I had Salat ul-Fajr beginning two hours before sunrise; this has now been corrected to approximately an hour and twenty minutes. The timings should now be accurate for Malikis living in the Baltimore area (note: Salat ul'Ishaa' starts when the redness of the dusk disappears; this is different from the Hanafi ruling).

Church Attacks

I am thorougly disgusted with these attacks on Churches within Dar Al-Islam. This is totally gratuitous- these Christians have suffered along side their fellow countrymen against colonial depredations and slanderous attacks on their nations. To attack their Churches is wrong and is against what the Prophet (SAW) taught and is against general understanding of the scholars regarding what is owed people of the Book who live within
Muslim territory: that their persons, property, and places of worship be protected.
Oh Allah have mercy on us and forgive us for not following your law and strengthen us to spread Islam on the basis of our character and example.

24th Anniversary

Today is the 24th anniversary of the Sabra and Shatila massacre. May Allah have mercy on the dead and the survivors and grant victory to the people of Palestine.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Double Standards

The Montreal college shooter is Indian. No one seems to think this is very important; you just have to guess from his name. Why do I have the feeling that if his name was Muhammed or Ali we'd hear a round of condemnations of both Islam and the Muslim commnity?

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

The Story of My Conversion

I came to Islam after a long process of soul searching and philosophical reflection. I had long been an atheist, smugly confident in the ability of science to solve all of life’s problems and to guide humanity into a new age of reason and enlightenment. Coupled with this belief was a belief in social justice which was crucial to my conversion. I set about exploring the world’s religions (even majoring in Religious Studies for a time), examining Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism, and Buddhism. As a manifestation of my search, I became a member of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Annapolis in the spring of 2002. They were a welcoming spiritual home to seekers such as myself. I also attended meetings of the Baltimore Ethical Society, a religious organization deeply concerned with social justice. This concern for justice lead me to investigate and take a stand on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I concluded that, regardless of whatever misdeeds certain factions have committed in their struggle, the Palestinian cause is altogether just and worthy of support. I became involved with a group of students on campus who were engaged in activism on this issue and met a number of people whose friendship I value to this day. As the storm clouds of a war against Iraq began to gather on the horizon my comrades and I organized to prevent it. Alhamdu lillah, we established a strong anti-war presence on campus and attended many protests together. Many of my new friends were Muslim and, as I was engaged in my spiritual quest at this time, many of our discussions concerned religion in general and Islam in particular. Their vision of the deen was nothing like the stereotypes I absorbed from the surrounding culture. While I was raised to abhor racism, my atheism caused me to be extremely suspicious of religious people of any stripe and I was quick to judge nearly every religion by its worst adherents. My friendship with my Muslim comrades broke the chains of suspicion and prejudice which had bound my soul and forced me to confront the realities of my own dogmatism. I was not yet convinced that Islam was the truth, but the path was open for me to consider the evidence objectively and critically. I continued my study of religion and read as much as I could about Islam and the Muslim world. I even took a course on the history of Islam in Africa. I began to recognize Islam as the perfect religion. It combined the pure monotheism of Judaism with the universal appeal of Christianity while outdoing both of these religions on their strongest merits. In addition it combined the historicity of the western religions with the mysticism and eternal quality of the eastern ways of life. Above all, it presented a system of belief which was rational, an ethical structure conducive to the attainment of the highest ideals of human conduct, and an existential relationship with the Creator which answered all of the most deeply felt needs and desires of the human soul. But still I hesitated. When Ramadan came in 2002 I participated in the ‘Fast-a-Thon’ sponsored by the campus Muslim Students Association. The experience of fasting was quite new to me and gave me a chance to reflect on the utter dependence of human beings and other living things on their creator. I almost said the shahada that night, but again I hesitated. I became very ill that winter with a high fever and a throat that felt like it had been shredded by and then laced with glass. I was crying out to God in desperation and I found myself admitting that Islam was the truth, that Muhammad (SAW) was indeed the Messenger of God. I began saying the shahada (or what I recalled of it from my studies) over and over again and, alhamdu lillah, the pain subsided. Even then I would not believe and, after I had recovered, I attributed my actions to fear and delirium. It was the Iraq war which finally forced me to acknowledge my Rabb and to begin to practice the deen that he had established for me. We had worked so hard to prevent this massive, cynical, and blasphemous destruction of human life and had failed. I was utterly despondent, utterly lost, and filled with rage as I watched the bombs tear Baghdad, a center of civilization for thousands of year, apart. I realized how futile so many of our petty human struggles are, how in vain our desires unless there were greater destination than the grave. This inner conviction gave me the strength to acknowledge on a personal, existential level what my rational self had realized some time ago: that Islam was and is the truth, that there is nothing worthy of worship, nothing divine accept Allah (SWT), that he is one without partner, and that Muhammad ibn Abdullah (SAW) is truly his messenger. Soon afterwards I went to the local Islamic Bookstore and made my shahada. The old quest, the quest for the true way of life and for the proper relationship with God, had ended. The new quest, that of living up to the ideals of Islam, had begun.

Sunday, September 10, 2006

The Street Preacher Returns





He said several insulting things about Islam and bragged about how the threat of Muslims killing him would not stop him from spreading the 'Good News,' but didn't want to talk to me. Instead he was busy debating Bible contradictions with
this guy:

Monday, September 04, 2006

Trip to the Renaissance Festival


Posted by Picasa

A shot of the joust. For more pictures look here
.

Sunday, September 03, 2006

House of Yahweh

The 'House of Yahweh' is broadcasting on Anne Arundel Public access claiming that on September 12th of this year a nuclear war will break over a quarter of the earth "around the river Euphrates." They seem to be a hybrid between Christianity and Judaism, believing Hazrat 'Isa [whom they call by Yahoshua] is the Messiah but keeping all 613 commandments of Jewish law. Why do I think that when this so-called prophecy fails to come true, Allah willing, the followers of this group will simply act as if the past seven months of activity had not occured and, when pressed, will give some convenient rationalization in order to justify their continued belief in a false prophet?