Latifa Samji - Importance of Hijab Part 2 English
Sister Latifa Samji giving a series of English lectures in Qum Iran Explaining the importance of the hijab
Sister Latifa Samji giving a series of English lectures in Qum Iran Explaining the importance of the hijab
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Latifa Samji - Importance of Hijab Part 3 English
Sister Latifa Samji giving a series of English lectures in Qum Iran Explaining the importance of the hijab in English
Sister Latifa Samji giving a series of English lectures in Qum Iran Explaining the importance of the hijab in English
37m:52s
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Against Islamophobia - Noreen Fatima - English
A sister with Zainabi spirit. Noreen Fatima speaking against Islamophobia. She is a community activist in London.
A sister with Zainabi spirit. Noreen Fatima speaking against Islamophobia. She is a community activist in London.
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Against the Iraq-Afghanistan Wars - Noreen Fatima - English
A sister with Zainabi spirit! Mashallah. Noreen Fatima is a community activist and vice president of London Metropolitan Universitys student union....
A sister with Zainabi spirit! Mashallah. Noreen Fatima is a community activist and vice president of London Metropolitan Universitys student union. She is addressing the rally in Trafalgar Square at the end of the 100000 strong Stop the War Coalition and CND -- Troops Out Now - No Trident Replacement -- demonstration against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The demonstration was in London on Saturday 24 February 2007.
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Against Islamophobia - Salma Yaqoob - English
Sister Salma Yaqoob is the vice-chair of Respect - the Unity Coalition - and a Birmingham City Councillor. She also is the head of the Birmingham...
Sister Salma Yaqoob is the vice-chair of Respect - the Unity Coalition - and a Birmingham City Councillor. She also is the head of the Birmingham Stop the War Coalition and a spokesperson for Birmingham Central Mosque.
11m:56s
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The reality of Backbiting - Arabic
The reality of Backbiting as described in the Holy Quran. This is an awareness to all those who backbite and do not realise the scale of the sin as...
The reality of Backbiting as described in the Holy Quran. This is an awareness to all those who backbite and do not realise the scale of the sin as well as a reminder.
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I Hit My Sister - Creative Kids - English
Creative Kids is a series of animated short stories written by children. The series is illustrated using scrap-booking techniques. These stories...
Creative Kids is a series of animated short stories written by children. The series is illustrated using scrap-booking techniques. These stories written by Muslim children provide universal lessons.
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An American on Hunger Strike over Gaza in an Israeli Jail - 21Nov08 -...
Afshin Rattansi of PressTv talks Donna Wallach sister of Darlene Wallach captured by Israeli soldiers in Gaza as news comes in of a Scottish...
Afshin Rattansi of PressTv talks Donna Wallach sister of Darlene Wallach captured by Israeli soldiers in Gaza as news comes in of a Scottish solidarity activist transferred to solitary confinement in an Israeli detention center on Friday after he and two others declared a hunger strike.
6m:56s
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5th Calgary Protest-Anti War Activist Sister Collette Lemieux at Rally -...
5th Day of Protest and Rallies in Calgary within 2 weeks in the support of Palestinians and against the Israeli shockingly cruel and inhumane...
5th Day of Protest and Rallies in Calgary within 2 weeks in the support of Palestinians and against the Israeli shockingly cruel and inhumane barbarian actions
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PREPARE FOR THE FINAL UPRISING OF IMAM MAHDI (a.j) - Urdu Msg...
PREPARE FOR THE FINAL UPRISING OF IMAM MAHDI (a.j) - Urdu Msg English. There was Imam Hussain (as) who stood for the protection of...
PREPARE FOR THE FINAL UPRISING OF IMAM MAHDI (a.j) - Urdu Msg English. There was Imam Hussain (as) who stood for the protection of Islam, for the protection of the Values of the Prophet (pbuh). Where are the followers of Imam Hussain (as)? There was Zainab binte Ali (sa), the beloved sister of Imam Hussain (as), who supported Truth even in the most difficult of situations. Where are those followers who will support the movement of Truth without any fear today? There was Abbas ibne Ali (as), the faithful Standard Bearer of Imam Hussain (as). Where are those followers who will take hold of the Banner of Imam Mahdi (atf)? There was Ali Akbar, the beloved son of Imam Hussain (as), whom the Imam (as) sent to the battlefield without any hesitation to fight Evil, and there were Aun and Muhammad, the beloved sons of Zainab binte Ali (sa), whom their mother sent to the battlefield without any hesitation to fight Evil. Where are those fathers and where are those mothers who will send their sons and daughters to aid Imam Mahdi (atf), without any hesitation? And where are those sons and daughters who will go forth in the Way of Allah to protect Islam from its enemies? There is the cry of Hal min Naasirin Yansurna? Where are those followers who will respond to this call? There was the camp of Imam Hussain (as). Where is the camp of Imam Mahdi (atf)? O followers of the oppressed Imam (as), enter the camp of Imam Mahdi (atf).
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Cynthia McKinney in an Israeli jail - English
As if we needed any more proof that the international media deliberately avoids exposing anti-Muslim, anti-Palestinian injustices, its suspect...
As if we needed any more proof that the international media deliberately avoids exposing anti-Muslim, anti-Palestinian injustices, its suspect behavior during recent days has sealed the case.
Even as we were being force-fed minute details of Michael Jackson's colorful life along with endless speculation as to the true parentage of his children, a former U.S. Congresswomen and presidential candidate, Cynthia McKinney, was languishing in an Israeli jail.
Her 'crime' was boarding the Free Gaza Movement's aid vessel The Spirit of Humanity in Cyprus, in an effort to break Israel's cruel siege of Gaza, which even the U.S. President has condemned.
Like several of her sister vessels, The Spirit of Humanity was attacked by the Israeli Navy in international waters before being boarded by Israeli commandos and dragged along with its crew and passengers towards Israel.
Once there, 21 human rights advocates from the U.S., Britain, Ireland, Denmark, Jordan, Palestine and Yemen, including McKinney, Noble Laureate Mairead Maguire, and documentary filmmaker Adam Shapiro, were incarcerated.
Let's be realistic. If just about any other high-profile U.S. politician on any other mission had been detained within a cell block on foreign soil, the incident would have merited headlines.
However, McKinney's abduction went almost unnoticed. Not only was the story relegated to the back pages, if it ran at all, there was a corresponding absence of comment from Congress and the White House.
McKinney is now home after refusing to sign a statement in Hebrew that she was guilty of a violation, but the mainstream media is certainly not clamoring at her door for interviews.
As far as I can tell, her ordeal has mostly been covered by left-wing outlets such as Democracy Now or Middle East networks including Al Jazeera and Press TV.
A number of McKinney's supporters say the reason for the media blackout was the fact that she is a Black American. But, in fact, it's her cause that's the problem rather than her color.
My analysis is based on the lack of media coverage given to the Viva Palestina aid convoy of trucks and ambulances from London to Gaza, led by British Parliamentarian George Galloway.
The Herculean efforts of hundreds of ordinary Britons to deliver much-needed humanitarian supplies to war-torn Gaza earlier this year was a non-event as far as the media was concerned until Galloway was barred from entering Canada as a result.
Unless you're a person who relentlessly digs on the internet, you probably are not aware that during McKinney's ordeal, Galloway, along with Vietnam War veteran Ron Kovic, were meeting up with over 200 Americans in Cairo armed with $2 million (Dh7.35 million) that was raised in the U.S. to buy trucks and medical aid destined for Gaza.
The Egyptian English-language paper Al Ahram Weekly dubs this ""the largest grassroots medical relief effort for Gaza in U.S. history"" but once again, this doesn't merit column inches in either U.S. or European mainstream papers.
In a similar vein, is the way that the horrendous courtroom stabbing of 32-year-old Marwa Al Sherbini was considered inconsequential by the German media until it elicited angry protests in her hometown of Alexandria.
There are so many aspects to this story, which should have been emblazoned across front pages.
First of all it was a blatant race crime, which Germany is normally sensitive about. Second, it begs questions concerning court security.
What were armed officers doing when Marwa was stabbed 18 times and why was her husband shot when he attempted to protect his pregnant wife?
What kind of editors would bin reports of such a horrendous crime carried out in full view of the authorities? What were they thinking?
Purely coincidentally, I was sitting at a table with one of Marwa's uncles in an Alexandria coffee shop when he received a call on his mobile and had to dash off because of a ""family emergency"".
Today, this exceptionally close-knit family is devastated and hurt that the murder of one of their own wasn't initially treated with the weight the crime deserved.
Egyptians are outraged at Germany's disinterest and the inaction of their own foreign office. The numbers who attended her funeral, who gathered outside the German embassy in Cairo and who demonstrated in Cairo and Alexandria speak for themselves.
Because Marwa's dispute with her attacker was based on his objections to her Islamic headscarf, the death of the young pharmacist has become an emblem for the rights of Muslim women at a time when the French President is attempting to ban the burqa. Marwa loved life.
She didn't plan to become a martyr. But in the eyes of Egyptians calling for a mosque and a street in Alexandria to be renamed in her honor, she is a heroine.
If the U.S. and Europe are chronically supine when it comes to Muslim causes, then the governments and media throughout the Arab and Muslim world should embrace them clearly and loudly.
With anti-Muslim hate crimes on the rise, Muslims need a strong united voice on the international stage. Shame on the world's media that appears to be united only in its anti-Muslim bias!
Linda S. Heard is a specialist British writer on Middle East affairs.
(Source: Gulf News
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Iraqi SHIA SUNNI unite to rebuild Al Askariya Shrine - 09Aug09 - English
Al ‘Askarī Mosque or the ‘Askariyya Mosque/Shrine (Arabic: مرقد الامامين علي الهادي والحسن العسكري...
Al ‘Askarī Mosque or the ‘Askariyya Mosque/Shrine (Arabic: مرقد الامامين علي الهادي والحسن العسكري Marqad al-Imāmayn ‘Alī l-Hādī wa l-Ħassan al-‘Askarī) is a Shī‘ah Muslim holy site located in the Iraqi city of Sāmarrā 125 km (78 mi) from Baghdad. It is one of the most important Shī‘ah mosques in the world, built in 944.[1] Its dome was destroyed in a bombing by terrorists in February 2006 and its two remaining minarets were destroyed in another bombing in June 2007, causing widespread anger amongst Muslims. The remaining clock tower was also destroyed in July 2007. The remains of the 10th and 11th Shī‘ah Imāms, ‘Alī al-Hādī ("an-Naqī") and his son Hasan al-‘Askarī, known as: al-‘Askariyyain ("the two ‘Askarīs"), rest at the shrine[2]. Also buried within the Mosque are: Hakimah Khātūn, sister of ‘Alī al-Hādī; and Narjis Khātūn, the mother of Muħammad al-Mahdī[3]. Adjacent to this shrine is another mosque, built over the location where the Twelfth or "Hidden" Imām, Muħammad al-Mahdī first entered the Minor Occultation.
The ‘Askariyya Shrine is also known as the "Tomb or Mausoleum of the Two Imāms", "the Tomb of Imāms ‘Alī al-Hādī and Hasan al-‘Askarī" and "al-Hadhratu l-‘Askariyya".
CLAIMS OF SECTARIAN VIOLENCE ARE ABSURD AS THE TWO MAJOR SECTS OF ISLAM, SHIA & SUNNI HAVE RESPECTED EACH OTHERS HOLY FIGURES FOR A LONG TIME. THESE SORTS OF INCIDENCES STARTED AFTER FOREIGN TROOPS ILLEGALY OCCUPIES IRAQ IN 2002 UNDER THE PRETEXT OF HAVING THE WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION AND THEN LATER THE CRUEL DICTATOR SADDAM. OCCUPYING TROOPS ARE STILL IN IRAQ CAUSING THE DISTRESS AND FEAR AMONG THE GENERAL PUBLIC. NOW SHIAS AND SUNNIS ARE UNITING TO EXPELL THE INVADERS FROM THEIR HOMELAND.
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Iranian Sunni and Shiite clerics visit South Lebanon and Rabab Sadr -...
New documentary titled \"Eyes Wide Open\" covering the journey of Iranian Shiite and Sunni clerics to South Lebanon. In their journey...
New documentary titled \"Eyes Wide Open\" covering the journey of Iranian Shiite and Sunni clerics to South Lebanon. In their journey they meet influential figures and visit various religious locations. A rare meeting between the clerics and Sheik Hassan Nasrallah will also be translated shortly. In this segment, the religious scholars visit the sister of Imam Musa al-Sadr, Rabab Sadr.
Sayyid Musá a?-?adr (1929-disappeared in 1978) (Arabic: ????? ???? ??????, Persian: ???? ???? ???, also transliterated Musa-ye Sader, Moussa Sadr and many other variants), was an Iranian-born Lebanese philosopher and a prominent Shiah religious leader who spent many years of his life in Lebanon as a religious and political leader.
Musá a?-?adr was born in Qom, Iran in 1929 to the prominent Lebanese a?-?adr family of theologians. His father was Ayatollah ?adr ad-Din a?-?adr, originally from Tyre. Grand Ayatollah Mu?ammad Baqir a?-?adr is a distant cousin.
He is said to have
worked tirelessly to improve the lot of his community - to give them a voice, to protect them from the ravages of war and intercommunal strife ...
A?-?adr was widely seen as a moderate, demanding that the Maronite Christians relinquish some of their power but pursuing ecumenism and peaceful relations between the groups. He was a vocal opponent of Israel but also attacked the PLO for endangering Lebanese civilians with their attacks.
In 1974 he founded the Movement of the Disinherited to press for better economic and social conditions for the Shiah. He established a number of schools and medical clinics throughout southern Lebanon, many of which are still in operation today.
In August 1978, al-Sadr and two companions departed for Libya to meet with government officials. The three were never heard of again. It is widely believed that the Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi ordered a?-?adr\'s killing, but the motivation is unknown. Libya has consistently denied responsibility, claiming that a?-?adr and his companions left Libya for Italy. Some others have reported that he remains secretly in jail in Libya. A?-?adr\'s disappearance continues to be a major dispute between Lebanon and Libya. Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri claimed that the Libyan regime, and particularly the Libyan leader, were responsible for the disappearance of Imam Musa Sadr, London-based Asharq Al-Awsat, a Saudi-run pan-Arab daily reported on 27 August 2006.
According to Iranian General Mansour Qadar, the head of Syrian security, Rifaat al-Asad, told the Iranian ambassador to Syria that Gaddafi was planning to kill a?-?adr. On August 27, 2008, Gaddafi was indicted by the government of Lebanon for al-Sadr\'s disappearance. [8]
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[PressTV] Role of Lady Zainab SA and other women in Karbala - Sh Hamza...
A weekly show presented by Tariq Ramadan on the world\\\'s fastest growing religion and the daily challenges faced by its followers especially in...
A weekly show presented by Tariq Ramadan on the world\\\'s fastest growing religion and the daily challenges faced by its followers especially in the West. In this episode the host discusses with prominent scholar Sheikh Hamza Sodagar that what was lady Zaynab\\\'s role in and after the tragedy of Karbala?
23m:55s
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Lauren Booth and Islam - English
A short interview with peace activist and journalist Lauren Booth
A short interview with peace activist and journalist Lauren Booth
4m:25s
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THE GENERALS SON - English
Miko Peled is a peace activist who dares to say in public what others still choose to deny. Born in Jerusalem in 1961 into a well known Zionist...
Miko Peled is a peace activist who dares to say in public what others still choose to deny. Born in Jerusalem in 1961 into a well known Zionist family, his grandfather, Dr. Avraham Katsnelson was a Zionist leader and signer of the Israeli Declaration of Independence. His Father, Matti Peled, was a young officer in the war of 1948 and a general in the war of 1967 when Israel conquered the West Bank, Gaza, Golan Heights and Sinai.
Miko's unlikely opinions reflect his father's legacy. General Peled was a war hero turned peacemaker.
Miko grew up in Jerusalem, a multi-ethnic city, but had to leave Israel before he made his first Palestinian friend, the result of his participation in a dialogue group in California. He was 39.
On September 4, 1997 the beloved Smadar, 13, the daughter of Miko's sister Nurit and her husband Rami Elhanan was killed in a suicide attack.
Peled insists that Israel/Palestine is one state—the separation wall notwithstanding, massive investment in infrastructure, towns and highways that bisect and connect settlements on the West Bank, have destroyed the possibility for a viable Palestinian state. The result, Peled says is that Israelis and Palestinians are governed by the same government but live under different sets of laws.
At the heart of Peled's conclusion lies the realization that Israelis and Palestinians can live in peace as equals in their shared homeland.
28m:24s
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[My Journey to Islam] Khadijah Safari - 27 Sep 2011 - English
The story of challenges and changes faced by Muslim converts in Britain before and after embracing the world's fastest-growing religion. Join them...
The story of challenges and changes faced by Muslim converts in Britain before and after embracing the world's fastest-growing religion. Join them as they share their experience on My Journey to Islam.
In this edition of the show we talk to Khadijah Safari about her journey to Islam.
She talks about her challenges and changes as a Muslim convert in Britain before and after embracing the world's fastest-growing religion.
24m:52s
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Nakba Day marked in Paris - 19 May 2012 - English
64 years ago, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced out of their homes in the face of Jewish and later Israeli troop advances. They...
64 years ago, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced out of their homes in the face of Jewish and later Israeli troop advances. They were displaced from Palestine and lost their land and property. It is still a painful memory for some who recall that day which is known as the catastrophe.
Hadeel Abokhaled’s grandmother was one of them.
She told they had forgotten their sister in the home where they were fleeing out of the home and they couldn’t come back and there are a lot of stories like the families who took the pillow instead of their babies so we hear a lot of stories like this.
She says, almost every Palestinian family living in refugee camps, has a similar story to tell.
Their towns and villages were razed to the ground to make way for Israeli colonies.
In the French capital, this demonstration is a show of strength, a show of support for hundreds of thousand of Palestinians who lost their land, homes and families in 1948.
Six decades on, Palestinian refugees are scattered in camps in the West bank and Gaza Strip, or in neighboring countries like Jordan, Syria, Lebanon or elsewhere.
Palestinians were forced out of their native land, but their love for their land has transcended boundaries and lived on 64 years after occupation passing down from generation to generation.
They are still holding fast to their Palestinian identity and right of return and not a single one of them has forgotten the key to the ancestral home.
Whatever the solution to the plight of the Palestinians, one thing is clear… the scars caused by pain, separation and humiliation will not disappear any time soon.
2m:31s
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