Orang2 Islam ceritanya demo anti terorisme. Berapa yg nongol? Cuma 20 (DUA
PULUH) ekor.

Bandingkan dgn kalo ada demo yg ngedukung terorisme, kekerasan dll, yg
nongol itu bisa sampe ratusan ribu ekor.

Demo "anti teorrisme" itu jg ga lbh dr kibulan yg ditujukan ke kafir
laknatuloh, bukannya demo ke pelaku terorismenya.

Jadi yg lg demo itu sebetulnya sedang berjihad ngibul di jalan auloh mau
nipu kafir spy kafirnya gampang disembelih oleh pejihad tukang bantai di
jalan auloh.


August 19, 2013
Boston: 20 Muslims rally against
terrorism<http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/08/boston-20-muslims-rally-against-terrorism.html>

[image: Muslim01.jpg] <http://www.jihadwatch.org/images/Muslim01.jpg>One
common false claim is that I "demonize all Muslims" in my critique of jihad
and Islamic supremacism. In reality, I point out that Islamic supremacists
claim to represent the authentic interpretation of the Qur'an and Islam,
that they make recruits among peaceful Muslims with this claim, that most
reputedly "moderate" organizations in the U.S. are tied to the Muslim
Brotherhood (as has been abundantly established by the Justice Department),
and that genuinely peaceful and non-supremacist Muslims have not
effectively countered the Islamic supremacist appeal among Muslims.

All these facts are established anew by the tiny turnout at the small
number of Muslim anti-terror demonstrations that have taken place. This
rally drew 20 people. Last
June<http://www.jihadwatch.org/cgi-sys/cgiwrap/br0nc0s/managed-mt/mt-srch.cgi?search=%22Free+Muslims%22&IncludeBlogs=1&limit=20>,
a Muslim anti-terror rally drew 24 people. Several years ago a group called
the Free Muslims Coalition held what it called a "Free Muslims March
Against Terror," intending to "send a message to the terrorists and
extremists that their days are numbered ... and to send a message to the
people of the Middle East, the Muslim world and all people who seek
freedom, democracy and peaceful coexistence that we support them." In the
run-up to the event it got enthusiastic national and international
publicity, but it ended up drawing about twenty-five people. And that is
about as many as this demo in Toronto drew. Now the group appears to be
defunct; its website <http://www.freemuslims.org/> hasn't been updated
since December 2011.

Contrast those three to the thousands upon thousands who we have seen rally
against cartoons of Muhammad, remarks by the Pope that they considered
offensive to Islam, and the like, and it starts to look as if the "tiny
minority of extremists" we hear so much about are not the terrorists, but
those who reject terrorism.

Look also at the signs in the photo above. The sign reading "To save one/to
save humanity - To kill one/to kill humanity" is a reference to Qur'an
5:32: "We decreed upon the Children of Israel that whoever kills a soul
unless for a soul or for *corruption* in the land - it is as if he had
slain mankind entirely. And whoever saves one - it is as if he had saved
mankind entirely." Note the exception: "unless for a soul or for corruption
in the land." This is explained further in the immediately succeeding
verse, 5:33: "Indeed, the penalty for those who wage war against Allah and
His Messenger and strive upon earth to cause *corruption* is none but that
they be killed or crucified or that their hands and feet be cut off from
opposite sides or that they be exiled from the land. That is for them a
disgrace in this world; and for them in the Hereafter is a great
punishment."

So while taking a life may be tantamount to killing all humanity, if one is
spreading "corruption in the land" then one should be "killed or crucified
or that their hands and feet be cut off from opposite sides or that they be
exiled from the land." And that is exactly the charge that Islamic
jihadists often make to justify their violence against unbelievers: that
their victims were spreading "corruption."

Also, why do we only see rallies like this in the West, and never in Saudi
Arabia, or Pakistan, or Iran, or other Islamic states?

"Young Muslims try to show others Islam urges peace," by Gal Tziperman
Lotan for the Boston
Globe<http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2013/08/18/young-muslims-gather-boston-common-promote-peace/EfHNyM5QpeqmqtDgSEAEhI/story.html>,
August 19:

A group of Muslim youths held a peace rally Sunday on Boston Common to ask
people to seek a better understanding of the peaceful aspects of their
religion and culture.

A group of Muslim youths held a peace rally Sunday on Boston Common to ask
people to seek a better understanding of the peaceful aspects of their
religion and culture.

About 25 young Muslims rallied in the Boston Common Sunday afternoon in an
effort to protect their religion from what they said are misperceptions
stemming from violent acts others have committed in the name of Islam.

“We’re just saying what Islam is and what Islam is not,” said Hanad Duale,
one of six Muslims who organized the rally. “We’re trying to educate the
public, that probably doesn’t know more that what they’ve heard from media
and from propaganda.”

The rally was organized by four women and two men who wanted to respond to
what they felt were attacks on their culture and religion after the Boston
Marathon bombings, in which two Muslim brothers allegedly killed three
people and injured more than 260 in April, and the killing in May of a
British soldier, Lee Rigby, allegedly by two Muslim men, in London.

Duale said he and his friends gathered about $350 for a permit and audio
equipment themselves, then spread the word to other friends and
acquaintances.

During the rally, one man held up a copy of the Koran, the Muslim holy
book. Others held signs with sayings such as, “Muslims for Peace, Muslims
for Love,” and “Judge Others Not By Their Faith But By The Content Of Their
Character.”

Najma Abdullahi, 24, a scientific recruiter who lives in Waltham, said she
came to support her sister Naima Abdullahi, one of the organizers.

“It’s like a crash course for people who walk by, people who wouldn’t
normally associate themselves with this [Islam],” said Najma Abdullahi,
wearing a blue hijab, or headscarf, and bright yellow pants. “At this point
in time, I feel like everyone has their own understanding or stereotype and
whatnot. Maybe they can break those down or listen.”

Abdullahi said she doubted those with strong feelings against Islam would
see the rally and change their minds, but hoped people could learn more
about her religion.

As Najma Abdullahi stood in a line with about 20 other people, holding a
sign that said “Islam Teaches Me Peace,” Naima Abdullihi, 23, of Cambridge,
spoke about some of her favorite Koran verses that promote peacefulness....

  Posted by Robert <http://www.jihadwatch.org/> on August 19, 2013 10:03 AM


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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