Dear Sunnis, Shiites stop bickering, women’s virginity still a must

In a sad showcase of a widening gap, ardent Sunni and Shiite Muslims continue to bicker who is the most virtuous and honorable when they criticize each sect’s offshoot and obscure forms of marriages — not widely practiced by mainstream Muslims.

Sunni Muslims loathe and deplore some Shiite Muslims for practicing Mut’a or pleasure marriages, that is when a man and woman can marry for as short as one hour. They believe it is “legalized prostitution” and finds no ground in Islamic principles, which stipulate the intent of marrying a person should be out of a perpetual nature and that the two should be tied as further in time as possible.

Shiite Muslims, who criticize many other forms of oddball cases of marriages practiced by some Sunni Muslims such as Misyar, where a man can marry a woman by not having to live with her or spend money on her but can walk to her place to consummate the essence of this marriage – a sanctioned sexual relationship between two people.

For Shiite Muslims, they feel why fingers are pointed at them, when they Sunnis have type of marriages that feed their sexual appetites.

But that’s not what majorly irks the Shiite Muslims, who suffer by the hand of Sunni hardline takfirist, who see Shiite Muslims as apostates.

What Shiite Muslims loathe and despise is the so called Jihad Al-Nikah — where a woman offers her body to ISIS militants fighting in Iraq and Syria.

In 2013, Tunisia’s Interior Minister Lutfi bin Jidu said Tunisian women who left to Syrian for Jihad Al-Nikah returned home from Syria pregnant.

Despite Jidu’s statement, controversy over the existence of such marriage continues till our current day.

This August, social media saw a big storm following a statement by Nawfal Al-Akoub, mayor of Iraq’s second largest city Mosul, which is still occupied by ISIS militants since 2014.

Akoub inflamed the wrath of many Iraqis especially Sunni Muslims when he talked about stateless children born out of Jihad Al-Nikah from Iraqi women and ISIS militants in Mosul. He talked about it as a social dilemma post-liberation of Mosul from ISIS goons.

The storm against Akoub twirled and twirled and almost knocked him out of his positon but for many especially people of Mosul, his credibility is gone for shaming and disgracing the honor of Mosul women.

Many Sunnis, who loathed Akoub, see Jihad Al-Nikah, as a propaganda tool initially proliferated by the Syrian regime to discredit Syrian rebels, who are mostly Sunni Arabs, as well as Sunnis in Iraq.

Many other Sunnis do not even see Jihad Al-Nikah as an acceptable form of marriage in Islam.

With the Akoub storm quieted down, another hurricane erupted.

On Sunday, the London-based Asharq Al-Awast – which reflects more of a Sunni perspective – published a highly controversial article claiming that a World Health Organization (WHO) official is waring Iraq of “unplanned pregnancies” in the holy city of Karbala during Arba’een mourning rituals, subtly highlighting that Muta’a marriages were a regular occurrence.

Arba’een commemorates the 40 days after the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, the grandson of Prophet Mohammed.

The article did create a whirlwind reaction: Asharq Al-Awsat editor in Iraq resigned, WHO attacked the newspaper saying its action was “completely erroneous and unethical,” and angry Iraqis rejected the daily’s apology!

A Baghdad court has also issued arrest warrants for the papers’ two correspondents over a false news report accusing Iranian pilgrims of sexually harassing Iraqi women.

NOW PLEASE LISTEN

At the end of the day, these type of marriages do not take place with regular Muslims girls be it Shiites or Sunnis as both hail from cultures that top and place virginity or purity as a number one criteria especially in IRAQ.

These women also come from cultures that punish them if they dare to lose this fine hymen prior a traditional marriage through a horrendous practice that still continues in the

– which by the way we can all wholeheartedly prove – called honor killing.

Anger coming from both Sunni and Shiite Muslims show that both have the same values in spite of their differences. Both want their women pure and virgin, and both want to keep whatever obscure type of marriages exclusive for men practiced with women – who can manage to trespass the red line and lose their hymen.

If religion is man-made, then these type of marriages are EXCLUSIVELY for men’s pleasure. Leave women – Shiite or Sunni – out please — and if the international community was MAN ENOUGH – then they would bring all YAZIDI girls back!

Source: https://nomoregibberish.wordpress.com/2016/11/23/dear-sunnis-shiites-stop-bickering-womens-virginity-still-a-must/ 

Ja’fari law takes the Iraqi government’s violation of women’s rights to a new level | Haifa Zangana

Iraq may not have many things to be proud for lately but at least the current personal status law, No 188, was issued in 1959 and is considered to be the most protective of women’s rights in the Arab countries. It stipulates the following: the legal age of marriage for both men and women is 18; polygamy is prohibited and taking a second wife is extremely restricted; a Muslim male is allowed to marry a non-Muslim female without conditions or restrictions; and a woman can disobey her husband if he behaves tyrannically and harms her by failing to provide adequate housing or care should she fall ill. But that is not getting well with the pathetic government we have, the new proposed Ja’fari law takes will make Iraq move backward with a new level. Marriage at age nine, legalizing marital rape – this bill breaches UN conventions and is degrading for Iraqi men and women alike.

Ja’fari law takes the Iraqi government’s violation of women’s rights to a new level | Haifa Zangana

Iraq: back to the future | Editorial

Is Nouri al-Maliki becoming Iraq’s next dictator and, if he is, does anyone in Washington care? The second half of the question is easy to answer. The Pentagon wanted to keep 8,000 troops in Iraq after withdrawal. But Maliki made it clear there would be no US troops after the agreement expired on 31 December 2011. The state department also planned for an embassy up to 16,000 strong, and a CIA station 700 strong, but the Iraqi strongman made short shrift of a sizeable US civilian presence, by insisting that his office take direct responsibility for approving every US diplomatic visa. Washington could use the soft power of military supply contracts, but is unwilling to do that. Maliki is allowing Iranian overflights to resupply Assad’s embattled regime in Syria. Washington still does not want to know.

Iraq: back to the future | Editorial

When Baghdad was centre of the scientific world

The Bab al-Sharji district in the centre of Baghdad derives its name, which means east gate, from the medieval fortifications of the city. These walls were probably built around the first half of the 10th century. During the brief British stay at the end of the first world war, its gatehouse was used as a garrison church. Nothing of those medieval walls, or the east gate, remains today; I remember Bab al-Sharji as a sprawling, noisy and bustling square, with its food stalls and secondhand record shops scattered around the busy bus depot and taxi ranks. But its name is a reminder of the expansion and transformation of this proud city over the years since its foundation in AD762 as the new seat of power of the mighty Abbasid empire. Indeed, no other city on Earth has had to put up with the levels of death and destruction that Baghdad has endured over the centuries. And yet, as the capital of one of the world’s great empires, this was the richest, proudest, most supercilious city on the planet for half a millennium.

When Baghdad was centre of the scientific world

‘Subversive’ Iran accused of undermining Iraq and causing deaths

Iraq has endured years of subversive attacks by its hardline neighbour, Iran, that have undermined its western-backed government and been “directly responsible for the deaths of many Iraqis”, according to Britain’s departing ambassador.The stark assessment was made by Christopher Prentice at the end of a seven-year stretch as one of the government’s most-senior regional advisers, during both the lead-up to the 2003 invasion and the fraught occupation. Prentice said the departure of British forces in April had been “liberating” for Britain, because it was no longer regarded as an occupier

‘Subversive’ Iran accused of undermining Iraq and causing deaths

Iraq War Ancient Artifacts of Mesopotamia

When the Gulf War ended, looters smuggled thousands of artifacts out of Iraq. Many other priceless monuments from thousands of years old civilizations were left lying around to be destroyed carelessly and casually. With the new U.S. – Iraq war, the specter looms of smart bombs hitting thousands upon thousands of archaeological treasure troves. 

Iraq War Ancient Artifacts of Mesopotamia

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