Saturday, October 14, 2006

Perils in thought if you are muslim

Muslim leader fears backlash over Liberal views

hannah_shahid.jpg
The new president of the Muslim Canadian Congress (MCC) says she is feeling the wrath of Islamic fundamentalists because of her stance on such issues as terrorism, homosexuality and religious law.

Now, Mississauga's Farzana Hassan Shahid is calling on Queen's Park to intervene. She wants Ontario Attorney General Michael Bryant to incorporate the kind of threats made by various radical groups against her and other members of the MCC into the framework of existing hate crime laws.

"There is an underlying fear all the time...that uneasy feeling is part of my daily life," Hassan Shahid told The News. "I have been declared an apostate (a person who forsakes their religion) twice, for opposing the Sharia (a form of Islamic law). We have asked Michael Bryant to include or acknowledge accusation of blasphemy and apostasy into the existing hate laws so the public and legal frame work is sensitized to this issue."

Hassan Shahid said she and other members of her organization receive threatening e-mails and are subjected to other acts of hatred from radical Muslim groups. One strongly worded hate-mail accused her of being the, "younger sister of Satan."

Freedom of thought = apostasy?
Is that all there is to be while these freaks are about?


No doubt there are those who would say that pointing out that freedom of thought is apostasy is to increase the power of radical Islam by enraging the salafist and khomeinist freaks...to me that would be like saying to expose David Duke is to spread the influence of the KKK.

Continue reading "Perils in thought if you are muslim" »

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Would someone please flag this as apropos my remarks to "Thinking Brother" about Islam "liberating" women and pass it along to the little geek, since I'm no longer interested in debating him. This is one of the main reasons we are not hearing from more "moderate" Muslims. And before TB can make any of his gonzo equivalencies, I wonder how many Christians in North America have to call for police protection when they have a doctrinal disagreement with other members of their congregations. (I haven't heard of any, and I do think CNN and the rest of the MSN would jump on that one.) As things stand, it sounds to me like it's the moderates who are being marginalized by their increasingly radicalized mosques.