5 Forms of Trial in Life | Silencing Voices of Justice | Maulana Syed...
- This world of test and trial, putting a persons patience to practice under pressure
- Looking at 5 categories of trial as described in the...
- This world of test and trial, putting a persons patience to practice under pressure
- Looking at 5 categories of trial as described in the Qur\'an
- Examining the viewpoint of fear, insecurity, and instability
- The security and stability that comes with freedom of expression in certain societies, in contrast to others where it is suppressed
- The hypocrisy of the West, who promote and encourage freedom of expression, but stay silent while Saudi Arabia arrests people who speak out against government policies
- The example of Salma al-Shehab who was sentenced to six years in prison for tweeting support of a women\'s rights activist. Her sentence was increased to 34 years recently
- Sheikh Saleh al-Talib, a prominent former Imam of Masjidul Haram, was sentenced for 10 years for criticizing the government\'s Entertainment Authority, and their concerts and other events which contradict the nations cultural and religious norms
- Examining the viewpoint of hunger, and loss of wealth
- This occurs due to man-made situations, or natural events
- The extreme humanitarian crisis in Yemen, caused by mankinds warfare and political actions, or the natural phenomenon such as flooding in Pakistan seen this week, displacing millions of people
- They are being tested by their personal situations, and we are being tested on how we step forward to help them
- Examining a line from a dua from the 4th Imam, and applying it to our lives in the above context
Friday Juma Khutba
August 26th, 2022
Donate towards our programs today: https://jaffari.org/donate/
Jaffari Community Centre (JCC Live)
21m:7s
305
Freedom Lovers Confronted Criminal Netanyahu - AIPAC May 2011 - English
Video available upon request: email press [dot] moa [at] gmail [dot] com
The speech of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the...
Video available upon request: email press [dot] moa [at] gmail [dot] com
The speech of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) was interrupted repeatedly by protesters opposed to Israelâs treatment of Palestinians. The activists are from the Move Over AIPAC coalition led by CODEPINK: Women for Peace.
The protesters, 5 in all, rose one by one, unfurled banners, and chanted slogans. In response to Netanyahuâs claim that returning to the 1967 borders would be âindefensible,â activists called out that various aspects of Israelâs policy are indefensible. They were escorted out by security, but not before they made a highly visible protest against the theft of Palestinian land, the siege of Gaza, denial of the rights of Palestinian refugees, silencing dissent, and destruction of homes and schools.
âGrowing up as the son of Holocaust survivor, I learned that it is everyoneâs job to stand up for others when they are persecuted, and I learned what happens when we donât defend humanity. Now, it is my job to stand up in support of Palestinians, saying, âbombing schools is indefensible, bulldozing homes is indefensible, ââ said Jewish American protester Rick Colbath-Hess, 53 from Cambridge, Massachusetts.
âAs a young Jewish person it is important for me to stand up today and tell Netanyahu and AIPAC that their voices do not represent me,â said Ariel Vegosen, 30, from Valley Stream, New York, âI will not allow my faith to be misused as a weapon, covering up the theft of Palestiniansâ homes and livelihoods. Judaism teaches me to stand up when I see oppressionâ discrimination is not a Jewish value and does not make Israel safer. Occupying Palestinian land is indefensible.â
Bruce Taub, 71, from Massachusetts and associated with American Jews for a Just Peace, was another protester. âAs a Jewish man, I come from a people who have been scattered about the world without losing their identity. I will not sit by and allow Palestinian refugees to be denied their rights and peoplehood in a country that would allow me to become a citizen even though I have no ties there. Displacing refugees is indefensible.â said Taub, 71.
Chelsea Byers, 21 year old college student from Arizona who is an intern with CODEPINK, said âI am protesting AIPAC and Netanyahu because I am disappointed and enraged that the US supports human rights violations by Israel. This includes killing, injuring, and locking up nonviolent protesters fighting for the same human rights I am. I am appalled that $3 billion US tax dollars goes to fund the perpetuation of violence instead of building a more sustainable future. Silencing dissent is indefensible.â
âIn a mere three weeks, Israel killed 1400 Gazans, and since the siege on Gaza began , thousands have died from being denied access to health-care, drinkable water, bodily security and humanity,â stated Sasha Gelzin of Washington D.C. âSince Palestinians canât confront Netanyahu and remind him of their daily condition, we are doing that tonight. Starving Gaza is indefensible; dropping white phosphorous bombs is indefensible. â
This action is part of a week-long set of actions protesting the pro-Israel lobby group AIPAC and its unconditional support for Israel. Tomorrow, activists will be in the halls of Congress during PM Netanyahuâs speech. To read more about Move Over AIPAC events, visit the website at www.MoveOverAIPAC.org.
0m:42s
6926
International Rights Activists Express Grave Concern At Crackdown On...
Bahrain triggers human rights uproar
As many as 26 human rights organizations have called on the international community to address Bahrain's...
Bahrain triggers human rights uproar
As many as 26 human rights organizations have called on the international community to address Bahrain's suppression of rights advocates and Shias population, an Egyptian institute says.
"We stress the international community's responsibility for curbing the security campaign aimed at silencing human rights defenders and concealing the grave abuses committed by the authorities against the citizenry, particularly the Shia community," the organizations said in a petition.
The bodies warned about "the authorities' increasing crackdown on the different forms of expression and peaceful association and assembly" and "the government's growing tendency to set the law aside in favor of naked force, detention, the torture and abuse of peaceful opponents," one of the cosignatories, the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS), said in a press release on Wednesday.
They said Manama maintained "a policy of systematic discrimination and marginalization of the Shia majority."
The Shia opposition refuses to recognize the 2002 constitution and has called for a boycott of the upcoming parliamentary elections, set for October 23. The protesting organizations also said that the suppression campaign was meant "to pave the way for wide-ranging election fraud."
Despite their demographic predominance in the kingdom, the Shias have long complained about being discriminated against by the Bahraini government when it comes to obtaining jobs and receiving services.
Earlier in the month, the Manama government revoked the citizenship of leading Shia cleric Ayatollah Sheikh Hussein al-Najati, who represents top Iraqi cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani in Bahrain, as well as the citizenship of his family.
An outspoken critic of the government, Sheikh Abdul Jaleel al-Miqdad, has also been prohibited from leading the Friday Prayers.
The Bahraini government has arrested more than 250 Shias since August, accusing 23 of them of plotting a coup and provoking "violence, rioting and terrorism."
Article Source: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/143715.html
0m:45s
11313