[Canada Quds Day 2014] Toronto Holds Largest Al-Quds Day Rally In North...
Over 20,000 Canadians belonging to 70 different Mosques, Churches, Synagogues and anti-war, civil and human rights organizations came together for...
Over 20,000 Canadians belonging to 70 different Mosques, Churches, Synagogues and anti-war, civil and human rights organizations came together for the historic rally held in Queen\\\'s park Toronto on July 26, 2014. The largest Al-Quds rally in the history of Toronto and North America included a significant number of Jewish organizations including \\\"Not in our Name\\\", \\\"Neturei Karta\\\", \\\"Jews against Occupation\\\" and \\\"Independent Jewish Voices\\\" as well as men, women and children from all faiths and walks of life.
The speakers and participants of the rally came to express their solidarity with the brutally oppressed people of occupied Palestine and to protest against the terrorist state of israel, whose Zionist settlers believe that they have a right to imprison, expel and massacre men, women and children to expand the illegal settlements and the occupation of the indigenous Palestinians.
The children of Toronto released balloons with the names of the children in Gaza who have been massacred in the recent indiscriminate onslaught against the civilian population. Many in the crowd broke down in tears when a young Muslim girl read the names of some of the hundreds of children that have been found buried under the rubble of their schools and houses. The speakers and participants strongly denounced the support of Stephen Harper\\\'s government for the war crimes committed by the state of israel. They condemned the one-sided and unfair approach that does not represent the Canadian values or the opinion of the majority of the populace and vowed to change the political representatives that pander to the Zionist lobbyists.
The Al-Quds day rallies were held in over 800 cities in 45 countries and were attended by tens of millions of individuals who are committed to giving a voice to the voiceless population of the occupied Palestine. Every year, the support for Palestine grows and the apartheid state of israel is more isolated and exposed today than ever before. It is only a matter of time before it is forced to end the illegal occupation of Palestine.
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Kids Cartoon - TAYO - Speeding is Dangerous - English
While driving riverside with Tayo, Speedy and Shine decide to have a race after bickering about who\'s the faster of the two. Their race is stopped...
While driving riverside with Tayo, Speedy and Shine decide to have a race after bickering about who\'s the faster of the two. Their race is stopped by Rookie and Pat as they scold Speedy and Shine for driving dangerously over the speed limit. Next, the two decide to race against the high speed train when Met tells them that the train is the fastest vehicle in the world. Shine lets his ambition get the better of him and undergoes illegal engine remodeling to improve his chances of winning. However, his engine breaks down and puts him in danger. Speedy asks Pat and Rookie for help and risks incurring their wrath. In the end, Speedy and Shine promise the police that they will not take part in dangerous races anymore.
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Inner Revolutions | Pray But Keep Rowing the Boat - English
Aisha El-Mekki’s mother didn’t believe in ‘sparing the rod’. She also had a deep respect for teachers, nuns and other authority figures; a...
Aisha El-Mekki’s mother didn’t believe in ‘sparing the rod’. She also had a deep respect for teachers, nuns and other authority figures; a respect that never trickled down to her youngest daughter. Discipline was real in the El-Mekki household, so from an early age she and her older sister formed an alliance. They promised not to tell on each other. Sometimes El-Mekki even took a beating for her sister. When she was in first grade, the two were sent away to a private, all-white boarding school. In third grade, El-Mekki was expelled.
“As a child, if I got backed into a wall, I would refuse to do whatever you wanted me to do because you were trying to force me.”
Upon returning to her home in Philadelphia, El-Mekki’s mother – who worked until five everyday – enrolled her daughter in the neighborhood school. It was around this time that El-Mekki met her best friend, Shakora. The two began spending afternoons together, deepening their friendship and getting into trouble.
“One time I was on a bus. It was a Friday afternoon. The bus driver said my pass had expired; that I had to get a transfer…so he gave me a transfer while waiting for the next bus and the next bus was late. We waited for a while. There was a crowd of people by the time the bus came. [The next bus driver] said that my pass had expired and that I needed to get off the bus. Well I didn’t have any more money, so I said, ‘I paid my fare and I will ride.’ This man decided that he was going to send a message. So he stopped a police car and told them that I refused to pay. The police emptied the bus and told the driver to drive to the police station with just me on it….so he drives this empty bus to the police station and they arrested me. And this just infuriated me. My mother had to be called and of course she was just livid….she had to end up getting a lawyer, and had to go court, miss time from work…and eventually it was resolved but I mean they charged me. I had a record. It was ridiculous. That was my first incident with what I consider police brutality…and how they can escalate a situation unnecessarily.”
Three years later, El Mekki graduated from an all-girls Catholic high school. It was at this point that she began to question the Trinity. She didn’t want to leave the church; she believed she would go to hell if she did. Still, the questions remained. So she kept her eyes open. After college, El-Mekki decided she wanted to become a social worker. She learned about a group called the Black Panther Party that was organizing programs for the needy.
“When I heard about these people feeding children – and I worked on the midnight shift – I said, ‘you know what? I’m gonna go up there’. And there were tables and tables of children being fed cereal and toast, and I was really amazed. People were doing this out of the bottom of their hearts. They weren’t getting paid for it. But they wanted to make sure the children were getting a decent breakfast.”
El-Mekki joined the group. At the same time, her religious search continued.
“I had an aunt that was Muslim. I used to visit her. She was not aggressive, she was not pushy, she was not trying to convert me. Anytime I had a question, she would answer. Her husband was very nice. And I liked the way her family was so calm. It was so peaceful. And so I would go visit her often. During that time I was in the Black Panther Party, and she didn’t disapprove. Everybody else in my family said, ‘Here she goes again, doing something off the beaten path.’ But not aunt Mariam. One time when we knew that there was going to be a police raid, and we were trying to get the children out because I didn’t want the children to be there. And she just told me to bring them to her house. You know? And I just admired her. I just said wow, if her religion supports revolutionary acts like that, then I want to hear more about it. So she would always be listening to Shaheed Malcolm’s albums. She owned every word he ever said. And she’d often have his records on when I’d go over there. And she gave me his book to read because I was always asking questions about him. And that was like the answer to my prayer. You know? The part where he said that our religion doesn’t teach us to be aggressive, but if you lay a hand on me, then I can send you to the cemetery. And I said, ‘I can do that. That is the religion that I need.’ You know, that allows me to defend myself. That doesn’t encourage me to just constantly turn the other cheek. Nobody else is turning the other cheek. They’re turning the other side of their hand. And so i decided you know what, that’s when I decided Islam was for me because it allowed me to be religious and at the same time, be revolutionary.”
innerrevolutions.net
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Inner Revolutions | Everything Rose in Respect - English
Inner Revolutions | Muslim Americans and the Legacy of Imam Khomeini (r)
Safiyyah Abdullah was born in Chicago, Illinois, the oldest of...
Inner Revolutions | Muslim Americans and the Legacy of Imam Khomeini (r)
Safiyyah Abdullah was born in Chicago, Illinois, the oldest of three siblings. When she was 14, she flipped on the 6 o’clock evening news and saw something that would change her life forever.
“One of the American Indian Movement leaders – I think it was Russell Means – got off the airplane in Spain, put a spear in the tarmac at the airport, and said, ‘I claim this land in the name of the Lakota people’. That was an opening of awareness into reality for me. I was basically looking for the truth, and that was my first realization of the truth; that everything we’re raised on in this country is based on falsehood. That one moment caused me to start evaluating what I had been taught about our country, our culture, our society, our history. It led me down the path of evaluating religions, as well. After I was about 16 or 17, I started studying various religions and ideologies, looking for the truth. And that’s when I came upon Islam.”
innerrevolutions.net
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Cocoa Fudge Cake Recipe - Milk Soaked Wet Cake - Turkish Cooking - English
Here we are with a different cake recipe. You will learn how to make Turkish style milk soaked cake. It will turn out completely different than you...
Here we are with a different cake recipe. You will learn how to make Turkish style milk soaked cake. It will turn out completely different than you thought, deliciousness! This wet cake is fudgy, rich and also intense. It takes a little patience, but trust me, this cocoa cake so worth it!
Transfer eggs and sugar into a bowl When eggs become foamy, add Vegetable oil, Milk, Vanilla powder Sift the flour,cocoa and baking powder Transfer the batter from the bowl to the oiled baking tray Bake for 25 minutes on 180C (360F) pre heated oven Tooth pick should comes out clean then transfer flour, sugar and starch into a sauce pan for the cream. Stir gradually by adding milk Turn the heat on When starts boiling, add in the vanilla powder and turn off the heat let it cool down Pour the room temperature milk onto warm cake Use an immersion blender to make the cream completely smooth Pour the cream onto cake soaked the milk Dust cocoa powder on the cake
Piano Cake Ingredients:
For the cake batter:
2 eggs
1 cup sugar
1 cup flour
Half a glass of milk (for the batter)
Half cup oil
1tbsp baking powder
1tbsp vanilla
3 tablespoons cocoa (for dough)
1 cup milk (200ml) (for the top)
2 tablespoons cocoa (for the top)
Ingredients for Piano Cake Icing:
Milk 600ml (3 cups)
3 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoon of starch
3 tablespoons sugar
200ml heavy cream
1tbsp vanilla
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[18 July 2015] Eid ul Fitr Sermon - Supreme Leader Sayed Ali Khamenei -...
Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei says despite the conclusion of nuclear talks between Tehran and the P5+1 group of...
Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei says despite the conclusion of nuclear talks between Tehran and the P5+1 group of countries, Iran’s overall policy towards the United States will not change.
Ayatollah Khamenei said that Iran will have no negotiations with the US on global, regional or bilateral issues. Addressing the worshippers after the Eid al-Fitr prayers in Tehran, the Leader said that Iran will never bow down to the excessive demands of its enemies. He also gave assurances that Iran won\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'t stop supporting the Palestinian, Yemeni and Bahraini nations as well as the Syrian and Iraqi governments and people in their fight against terrorist groups.
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