[FairfieldLife] Look at what else this paper publishes (was Re: Arab News Publishes...)

2008-10-04 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Dick Mays [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 The Middle East's Leading English Language Daily
 Saturday 4 October 2008 (04 Shawwal 1429)
 
 An Overlooked, Proven Solution to Terrorism
 David R. Leffler


Looks as if the ME has finally found a home,
somewhere readers will take it seriously and
understand that it's hard science...just as 
real and as supported by science as, say, the 
evil eye. From the same issue of UK-based 
ArabNews.com:


Effects of evil eye exaggerated, says psychiatrist Laura Bashraheel
 
JEDDAH: The evil eye is something that people in the Kingdom — like
those of other cultures and religions — generally believe in. However,
many people exaggerate its effects and often develop a psyche to
continuously attribute their unhappiness and illnesses to the concept.

The evil eye, which is known in Arabic as Ain, comes into effect
when someone is jealous of another person. As a result, the person
affected will feel an adverse effect, such as some sort of material harm.

The Prophet (peace be upon him) indicated that the influence of the
evil eye is a fact. Saying Masha Allah (as God wills) when someone
sees something appealing is a way of protecting others from the evil
eye. It is customary to say Masha Allah, or invoke God's blessings on
the object or person that is being admired. Reciting certain verses
from the Qur'an is used to protect one's self from the evil eye.

In certain cultures, people burn incense sticks, hang the evil eye
symbol in their homes, burn garlic peels and carry out wiping rituals.
However, Islam considers such actions baseless. Prayers and a clean
forgiving heart are what Islam preaches. The Islamic faith teaches
believers to look toward those who are above them when considering
righteousness and piety, and look toward those below them when
considering their material physical wellbeing.

However, some people go to the extreme by believing that the evil eye
is behind every difficulty that comes to them. Some wealthy people
refrain from spending because they are afraid the evil eye might
adversely affect them.

One mother of three, who asked her name not be published, is convinced
that the evil eye will harm her family if they spend too much money or
show off their opulence.

Her son, who used to own a Porsche while studying in Canada, believed
that the evil eye caused him to crash his car. When he first brought
the car to Canada from Jeddah, his mother put black seeds into it to
protect it. (Black seeds are said to be useful for healing and curing
especially if blessed with verses from the Qur'an.)

The woman's son attributed the crash to the removal of the black seeds
when he got the car cleaned.

Maha Ibrahim, a 28-year-old university graduate, said that she and her
friends once befriended a woman.

My friends and I started to hang out with this woman. The first time
she joined us was at my friend's house. When she first walked into the
house, she noticed my friend's new eyeglasses and commented on how
nice they were. After a while, she accidentally broke them by sitting
on them, said Ibrahim.

Ibrahim said the woman came to visit her after she gave birth to her
first child. The woman commented on how she was breast-feeding her
baby. Sometime later, her breasts became affected with a strange type
of eczema.

On another occasion we were all at my friend's house and the woman
commented how beautiful the house and carpets were. At that time a
charcoal from a hubble-bubble fell onto the carpet. The resulting burn
looked like an eye, she said. This was when we decided not to
contact her again.

Dr. Saad Al-Khateeb, a senior consultant psychiatrist at the Jeddah
Psychiatric Hospital, said that although Islam recognizes the effects
of evil eye as a fact, some people overly attribute all sickness to
the concept.

As a psychiatrist and a Muslim I do believe in the evil eye but some
people go to extremes, said Al-Khateeb.

If someone is affected with the evil eye and then falls in the street
and breaks his leg, should he go to a doctor or a religious man? The
result of the evil eye needs to be cured medically, he added.

Al-Khateeb said psychologists do not study the evil eye. If someone
was affected with it then he or she should see a specialist, for
example a religious man who cures using the Qur'an and not a magician
who uses black magic. As psychiatrists we try to cure the illness ...
we try to convince the patient that he or she needs help, he added.

Al-Khateeb pointed out that some people attribute certain chronic
psychological illnesses whose causes are unclear to the evil eye. I
also believe that the media plays a role in making people believe that
evil eye is behind everything, such as a soap about black magic and
the evil eye aired on MBC in Ramadan. If someone is a believer he or
she would never be affected, he added.





Re: [FairfieldLife] Look at what else this paper publishes (was Re: Arab News Publishes...)

2008-10-04 Thread Peter
Ha Ha! Classic!


--- On Sat, 10/4/08, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 From: TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Look at what else this paper publishes (was Re: Arab 
 News Publishes...)
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Saturday, October 4, 2008, 10:44 AM
 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Dick Mays
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  The Middle East's Leading English Language Daily
  Saturday 4 October 2008 (04 Shawwal 1429)
  
  An Overlooked, Proven Solution to Terrorism
  David R. Leffler
 
 
 Looks as if the ME has finally found a home,
 somewhere readers will take it seriously and
 understand that it's hard science...just as 
 real and as supported by science as, say, the 
 evil eye. From the same issue of UK-based 
 ArabNews.com:
 
 
 Effects of evil eye exaggerated, says psychiatrist Laura
 Bashraheel
  
 JEDDAH: The evil eye is something that people in the
 Kingdom — like
 those of other cultures and religions — generally believe
 in. However,
 many people exaggerate its effects and often develop a
 psyche to
 continuously attribute their unhappiness and illnesses to
 the concept.
 
 The evil eye, which is known in Arabic as Ain,
 comes into effect
 when someone is jealous of another person. As a result, the
 person
 affected will feel an adverse effect, such as some sort of
 material harm.
 
 The Prophet (peace be upon him) indicated that the
 influence of the
 evil eye is a fact. Saying Masha Allah (as God wills) when
 someone
 sees something appealing is a way of protecting others from
 the evil
 eye. It is customary to say Masha Allah, or invoke
 God's blessings on
 the object or person that is being admired. Reciting
 certain verses
 from the Qur'an is used to protect one's self from
 the evil eye.
 
 In certain cultures, people burn incense sticks, hang the
 evil eye
 symbol in their homes, burn garlic peels and carry out
 wiping rituals.
 However, Islam considers such actions baseless. Prayers and
 a clean
 forgiving heart are what Islam preaches. The Islamic faith
 teaches
 believers to look toward those who are above them when
 considering
 righteousness and piety, and look toward those below them
 when
 considering their material physical wellbeing.
 
 However, some people go to the extreme by believing that
 the evil eye
 is behind every difficulty that comes to them. Some wealthy
 people
 refrain from spending because they are afraid the evil eye
 might
 adversely affect them.
 
 One mother of three, who asked her name not be published,
 is convinced
 that the evil eye will harm her family if they spend too
 much money or
 show off their opulence.
 
 Her son, who used to own a Porsche while studying in
 Canada, believed
 that the evil eye caused him to crash his car. When he
 first brought
 the car to Canada from Jeddah, his mother put black seeds
 into it to
 protect it. (Black seeds are said to be useful for healing
 and curing
 especially if blessed with verses from the Qur'an.)
 
 The woman's son attributed the crash to the removal of
 the black seeds
 when he got the car cleaned.
 
 Maha Ibrahim, a 28-year-old university graduate, said that
 she and her
 friends once befriended a woman.
 
 My friends and I started to hang out with this woman.
 The first time
 she joined us was at my friend's house. When she first
 walked into the
 house, she noticed my friend's new eyeglasses and
 commented on how
 nice they were. After a while, she accidentally broke them
 by sitting
 on them, said Ibrahim.
 
 Ibrahim said the woman came to visit her after she gave
 birth to her
 first child. The woman commented on how she was
 breast-feeding her
 baby. Sometime later, her breasts became affected with a
 strange type
 of eczema.
 
 On another occasion we were all at my friend's
 house and the woman
 commented how beautiful the house and carpets were. At that
 time a
 charcoal from a hubble-bubble fell onto the carpet. The
 resulting burn
 looked like an eye, she said. This was when we
 decided not to
 contact her again.
 
 Dr. Saad Al-Khateeb, a senior consultant psychiatrist at
 the Jeddah
 Psychiatric Hospital, said that although Islam recognizes
 the effects
 of evil eye as a fact, some people overly attribute all
 sickness to
 the concept.
 
 As a psychiatrist and a Muslim I do believe in the
 evil eye but some
 people go to extremes, said Al-Khateeb.
 
 If someone is affected with the evil eye and then
 falls in the street
 and breaks his leg, should he go to a doctor or a religious
 man? The
 result of the evil eye needs to be cured medically,
 he added.
 
 Al-Khateeb said psychologists do not study the evil eye.
 If someone
 was affected with it then he or she should see a
 specialist, for
 example a religious man who cures using the Qur'an and
 not a magician
 who uses black magic. As psychiatrists we try to cure the
 illness ...
 we try to convince the patient that he or she needs
 help, he added.
 
 Al-Khateeb pointed out that some people attribute

[FairfieldLife] Look at what else this paper publishes (was Re: Arab News Publishes...)

2008-10-04 Thread bob_brigante


 Ha Ha! Classic!
 
 

***

I'm sure everybody is aware that ignorance is not solely held by 
towelheads:

How does the U.S. compare with other countries in terms of belief in 
evolution? Not so hot. A study of attitudes in 34 countries published 
in Science in 2006 shows that the United States ranks last in popular 
acceptance of evolution except for Turkey. Almost 40 percent of 
Americans in this study flatly rejected evolution...

http://tinyurl.com/3kvoo3