Apa ada seekor muslim di milis ini yg berani buka mulut atas ocehan si
Salafi tsb? Gua rasa, ga ada, krn para binatang tsb sibuk kaing2 kayak
anjing kejepit buntut, atau saling jilat pantat dgn sesama.

Tp, hehehe.... orang2 Shia jg akan melakukan hal yg sama ke orang
Sunni kalo ada kesempatan.

Islam itu emang agama yg benar, hehehe... (Si Teddy pasti mikir gua lg
muji2 Islam)


http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=418944

 Date: 2013/05/14 - 09:01       source: Bikyanews               print

Egyptian Salafist: "Shia Are More Dangerous Than Naked Women"

A statement from a member of Parliament of the ultra-conservative
Salafist Nour Party has argued that Shia are “more dangerous than
naked women” in comments that have brought on an onslaught of sardonic
comments as well as anger from Egypt’s activist community, who have
urged the government to make it clear that discrimination will not be
tolerated.


(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - A statement from a member of Parliament of
the ultra-conservative Salafist Nour Party has argued that Shia are
“more dangerous than naked women” in comments that have brought on an
onslaught of sardonic comments as well as anger from Egypt’s activist
community, who have urged the government to make it clear that
discrimination will not be tolerated.

According to a report in al-Ahram – a government-run daily newspaper -
members of the committee called on Tourism Minister Hesham Zaazou to
discuss the issue in the council, the country’s upper house of
parliament which is holding legislative powers until a house of
representatives is elected.

The committee, headed by Fathy Shehab El-Din of the Freedom and
Justice Party (FJP), reportedly had an argument on the effects Iranian
tourists could have on Egypt.

“The Shias are more dangerous than naked [women],” MP Tharwat Attallah
of the Salafist Nour Party said during the meeting.

“They are a danger to Egypt’s national security; Egyptians could be
deceived into [converting to] Shiism, giving it a chance to spread in
Egypt,” he added.

Activist Nora Osman said that “this fear of the Shia is ridiculous in
this country. We’ve had them traveling here for decades and there was
no problem, but now with the rise of the conservatives, it has become
one. Doesn’t make sense to me.”

Egypt’s minority Shia Muslim population has long struggled for
acceptance in the majority Sunni country. It is not looking to get
better for the group, however, with the country’s Grand Mufti warning
of the spread of Shiism.

“Propagation of Shiism means spreading rifts and divisions,” said
Sheikh Ali Goma’a, Egypt’s former state-appointed Grand Mufti two
years ago.

“We advise the wise people among the Shiites against the misplaced
propagation of Shiism, which will cause instability and threaten
social security,” Goma’a said at a lecture during a week-long forum
hosted by the Islamic Research Center, an influential arm of the Sunni
world’s most prestigious institution al-Azhar.

In 2012, Shia activists were detained by Egyptian officials in what
was seen as another attempt to push the group outside the norms in
Egypt. With the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood to the top of the
government, Shia in Egypt continue to face hardships in practicing
their faith.

The February detentions came less than one month after Egypt’s
security closed the Hussein Mosque, arguing that the Sunni majority in
Egypt would become enraged over seeing Ashura celebrations in Cairo.
The celebrations mark the killing of the Prophet Mohamed’s grandson
Imam Hussein.

“It is not new for us Shia in Egypt,” said Ali, 34.

“This is my country, but I feel there is so much pressure on me to be
someone I am not and to believe in things that are not my own,” he
said.

The reason is simple: he is Shiite. In Egypt, a predominantly Sunni
Muslim country, the minority Shia have been arrested and forced into
silence.

In 2011, Egyptian police arrested at least four Shia Muslims,
including a visiting Australian citizen. They were charged with
insulting and denying tenets of religion, judicial sources were
reported saying.

Security officials reported that the Shia men were part of a group of
24 that were rounded up last week in Cairo. According to the police,
most have been released, but it is still unclear how many remain
behind bars.

“This is the struggle we face on a daily basis and have been forced to
live in silence and fear of what the police would do if they found out
we were Shia,” Ali continued.

The Australian man’s family alerted the Australian authorities after
Safaa al-Awadi, 44, did not return to Perth when scheduled.

He was freed one month later after facing charges of blasphemy.

Seven other Shiites have been in detention since mid-2009 and charged
with “forming a group trying to spread Shi’ite ideology that harms the
Islamic religion.”

In 2010, Egypt’s Minister of Religious Endowments, Mahmoud Hamdy
Zaqzouq, said in statements during a meeting with the Grand Mufti of
Mount Lebanon, Sheikh Mohamed Ali Jouzo, that Egypt has “no mosques
belonging to any religious or sectarian schools.” He added that there
are no Shia Mosques in Egypt.

The minister stressed that all mosques and religious institutions that
number some 104,000 are subject to full supervision of the Ministry of
Religious Endowments.

Followers of Shia doctrine believe the Prophet Mohamed should have
been succeeded by his cousin Ali rather than his companion Abu Bakr,
who is considered the first Imam. Ali was the fourth in traditional
Sunni belief.

Making matters difficult in Egypt is that Sunnis believe any
suggestion that Abu Bakr was not the rightful successor is akin to
blasphemy.

“We live under these conditions every day and most of the time I keep
my mouth shut, but for our government to insist that we don’t exist is
insulting and wrong,” added Ali.


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