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Zulqi'dah 24, 1433/October 11, 2012 # 45
A critical look at the claim that Pak Taliban shot the Paki 
girl. 
Please scroll. 
Looks like an inside job.
Hadith transforms our lives.
Men, Women Children are Integral Parts of Masjid Community
by Kaukab Siddique
"Unus bin Malik narrates: Once the Messenger of Allah, pbuh, 
recited very briefly from the Qur'an in the fajr prayer. He 
was asked : O messenger of Allah, why such a brief 
recitation? He replied: I heard a baby crying and I thought 
that his mother is praying with us and I thought it better 
to let the mother take care of the child as quickly as 
possible." [Musnad of Ahmad ibn Hanbal. Section 3, hadith 
257.]
"When I start praying, I want to pray for a long time, but 
then I hear a child crying and I make the prayer brief so 
that the mother may not worry too much owing to the crying 
of the child." [Prophet Muhammad, pbuh., Sahih al-Bukhari, 
kitab al-Adhan and Sahih Muslim, kitabus Salat.]
"The sahaba narrate that once during Zuhr prayers, the 
messenger of Allah, pbuh, stayed in prostration [sajda] 
while leading prayers, for so long that we thought something 
had happened or he had suddenly received revelation [wahy]. 
. After prayers people asked him why one sajda was so long? 
Had something happened or revelation had come. He replied 
that it was nothing but that my grandson sat on my back  and 
I did not want to get up quickly and ruin the fun he was 
having." [Sunan of Nasa'i: 1/134] 
These authentic hadith remind us that our community is meant 
to be united, well-integrated community. Men, women and 
children belong together in the masjid, with the rules and 
discipline of Islam.
The mother is there and the Imam cares for her and for her 
worries and cares. The little children are there and are 
treated with love and patience. Very small children don't 
know what's going on and will play horsy by climbing on your 
back when you go into prostration [sajda].
The holiest mosque with prayers led by the holiest imam does 
not neglect basic human needs like the crying of a baby. 
Just look at the children of our ummah, globally. How they 
cry for food, for love, for patience, and we keep praying as 
if does not concern us. Humanity must be at the center of 
our vision otherwise our prayers become conventional forms 
without meaning.
Of course, as children grow, we must teach them about the 
rules of prayer and respect for the mosque.
The Malalal Yousafzai Shooting Story Reeks of a Pakistani 
Army Press Release
by Nadrat Siddique on Thursday, October 11, 2012 at 2:23pm 
·
Nearly all U.S. corporate media are regurgitating virtually 
the same set of "facts" on the shooting of Pakistani 14-year 
old Malalal Yousafzai.
Although the event is not far in the past, there are many 
disparities in the story, which shed doubt on its 
authenticity: One corporate media report mentions the gunmen 
as being masked. Another says they were bearded. It is 
unclear how facial hair would be evident on a masked 
individual.
According to an October 10 BBC report, "One report, citing 
local sources, says a bearded gunman stopped a car full of 
schoolgirls, and asked for Malala Yousafzai by name, before 
opening fire. But a police official also told BBC Urdu that 
unidentified gunmen opened fire on the schoolgirls as they 
were about to board a van or bus."
Also worth noting is the vice-like embrace in which Paki 
government officials have embraced this particular girl--or 
more importantly her story, a story which serves to 
discredit their opposition. Prime Minister Raja Pervez 
Ashraf said: "We have to fight the mindset that is involved 
in this. We have to condemn it... Malala is like my 
daughter, and yours too. If that mindset prevails, then 
whose daughter would be safe?" No Paki official offered 
similar support to the Jamia Hafsa women when their Islamic 
university was being attacked by Pakistani troops in 2007.
Even more oddly, the chief of the Pakistan army, General 
Ashfaq Kayani, has taken great personal interest in the 
girl. According to the October 10 Guardian, the "powerful 
military chief has put himself at the centre of a national 
outrage over the attempted murder" of Malalal. He went to 
the extent of visiting her personally in the hospital. One 
wonders what army chief has time or wherewithal to do that. 
In a statement viewed as highly cynical by those aware of 
the Pakistan army's multifarious human rights abuses, he 
said "The cowards who attacked Malala and her fellow 
students, have shown time and again how little regard they 
have for human life and how low they can fall in their cruel 
ambition to impose their twisted ideology." (Reuters, 
October 10)
Over and over, the U.S.-funded Pakistani military has been 
discredited for their extreme barbarism and complete 
disregard for human rights and the Geneva Conventions. They 
are viewed as collaborators with the U.S. and NATO by vast 
segments of the Pakistani population.
In October 2010, the Pakistan military are said to have shot 
250 Taliban prisoners. To shoot a girl such as Malala 
Yousafzai would not be beyond such a force.
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/01/new-video-appear-to-show-abuse-of-prisoners-by-pakistani-soldiers/
They have also collaborated with the U.S. in the killing of 
hundreds of civilians. Waziristan native Noor Beharam, who 
has repeatedly risked his life documenting the deaths of 
women and children, believes that 670 women have been killed 
by drone strikes. He has taken photos of more than 100 
children, their bodies often unrecognizable as human after 
the strikes
http://www.alternet.org/world/murder-skies-us-creating-new-eemies-where-there-were-none
The Pakistan military showed its prowess in media 
manipulation and propaganda dissemination in the course of 
the 2007 Lal Masjid siege, when they banned all media from 
the besieged area.
This writer would not put it beyond the Pakistan army to 
have sent one of their own to shoot Malalal themselves. It 
would be a perfect red herring against the increasingly 
organized opposition to their human rights abuses and  to 
the U.S. drone strikes in which they are complicit.
Ehsanullah Ehsan, Taliban spokesman, ostensibly claimed 
responsibility for the attack on behalf of the group. Anyone 
could call the Pakistani media, claim to be Ehsan, and 
assume responsibility on behalf of his organization in order 
to discredit it.
It is also possible that the action is the work of one or 
two misguided individuals. They may have conducted the 
action without the advance knowledge of the leadership. The 
TPP is a very large organization, with broad public support 
among the people of the frontier, and particularly of Swat, 
where the Pak army has terrorized the population over an 
extended period of time. Once the deed was done, they may 
have unthinkingly accepted their organization's role in it. 
But was the action sanctioned by the top leadership, and 
approved in advance of the fact? Where are the interviews 
with the Taliban leadership to ascertain this fact? The 
corporate media, in keeping with their role as war time 
propagandists have conducted no such interviews.
Imagine if a shooting was conducted by a Jewish or White 
Supremacist gunman. It is extremely unlikely that any and 
the organizations affiliated with him would be immediately 
condemned. In this case, however, that is exactly what has 
happened. And the TPP, which seems notoriously lacking in 
its communication with the media, have allowed an entire 
segment of the opposition to be linked with a single heinous 
act, and therefore discredited.
Interestingly, only the VOA report of October 10 does not 
credit the Taliban with the girl's shooting.  The VOA is 
highly regarded as the overt U.S. government propaganda 
organ by independent news analysists and thinkers.
The contradictions in detail of the attackers; the fact that 
Hillary Clinton and the U.S. Department of State; the 
President of Pakistan; the Prime Minister of Pakistan; and 
the Pakistan Army Chief all went out of their way to condemn 
the attack when they have yet to do so in a  single one of 
the killings of women and children by U.S. drones or by 
their Pak army lackeys; and the absence of any detailed 
interview with the Taliban are all very suspect to an 
analytical mind. Regardless of who accepted responsibility 
afterwards, might the shooting be a Pakistan 
army/intelligence action? I would not be at all surprised if 
the "details" picked up by all the major media organs 
stemmed from a Pakistan army press release. The specter of a 
young girl being murdered by a force endemic to a country 
and fighting a foreign occupier is perfect wartime 
propaganda to deflect the war crimes of the occupier.
Perspective: Muslims don't understand International Media 
14-Year old Pakistani Girl's Tragedy: Used by Superpowers to 
defeat Taliban & by-pass anti-Blasphemy Movement. & Drone 
Attacks [Three strikes!]
by Kaukab Siddique
Hardly had the news made it out of Pakistan that Malala 
Yousufzai had been shot, it was on the front page of the New 
York Times online edition. Then New York Times veteran Islam 
hater Nicholas Kristoff picked it up. {Oct. 10].
Secular Pakistanis are so impressed by the NY Times, that 
they never paused to think: Isn't the NY Times the flagship 
of left wing Zionism? Has it EVER in the last 20 years 
published anything favorable to Islamic resistance on its 
front page? The answer is: NEVER!
Here are the facts about Malala:
- 
She has been writing a blog for the BBC against the 
Taliban for the last three years.
 - 
She has worked hand-in-glove with western agencies such 
as UNICEF which are being used by Paki military to 
westernize Swat and other Islamic territories.
 
- 
She was so effective in anti-Taliban propaganda that 
Obama's hard core Zionist representative Holbrooke 
paid her a personal visit before his sudden death.
 
- 
The Pakistani government, which has committed genocide in 
Frontier areas, gave her national level awards.
 
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from Bill Johnson
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iPetitions.com/petition/movetheimam/?utm_medium=eail&utm_source=system&utm_campaign=Send%2Bto%2BFriend
I really think this is an important cause, and I'd like to 
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An American  Muslim Addresses the Suffering and Poverty of 
the Masses of People
The US elections and the unemployed
by Jamil Abdur Rahman
National Muslim Council for Justice ( NMCJ )
8 October 2012
The controversy that has broken out over the US Labor 
Department's report Friday on jobs and unemployment only 
testifies to the unbridgeable gulf between the corporate 
ruling elite, including both the Democratic and Republican 
parties, and the working people who comprise the vast 
majority of the population.
The official figures showed a net gain of 114,000 jobs 
during the month of September, a number that closely tracked 
previous estimates, combined with a greater than expected 
drop in the unemployment rate, from 8.1 percent to 7.8 
percent. More than 40 percent of the unemployed, nearly five 
million workers, have been jobless for more than six 
months.
The Obama administration and the Democratic Party 
immediately hailed the decline in the unemployment rate, 
which fell below 8 percent for the first time since Obama 
entered the White House. They viewed the report as a welcome 
change of subject from the president's dismal performance in 
Wednesday night's presidential debate.
Republican Party and right-wing media pundits denounced the 
report, particularly the unemployment rate, as the product 
of a conspiracy by pro-Obama government officials to provide 
a favorable jobless figure one month before the November 6 
presidential election.
There is a seeming contradiction between the extremely 
modest job gains reported by the survey of employers—only 
114,000 net new jobs—and the survey of households that found 
an increase of more than 800,000. However, the two figures 
are generated by separat e surveys, with the household 
survey itself notoriously volatile, and they frequently show 
conflicting results.
Moreover, the household survey found the bulk of the 
increase, nearly 600,000 jobs, came in part-time employment, 
and much of this seems related to a change in the seasonal 
pattern of college students reducing work hours when they go 
back to school. August showed an unexpectedly large decline 
in employment among those aged 20 to 24, 530,000 compared to 
an historical average of 98,000. September's large increase 
may simply reflect a reversal to that abnormal decline.
What is most remarkable about the controversy is how low the 
bar has been set to mark economic "progress." Democrats 
rejoice and Republicans cry foul over an unemployment report 
that would in any other presidential year have been regarded 
as catastrophic. No president since Franklin Roosevelt in 
the Great Depression has been reelected with an unemployment 
rate as high as 7.3 percent.
The two big business parties view the unemployment figures 
purely from the standpoint of gaining an edge in the mutual 
mudslinging of the final month of a presidential election 
campaign. Neither party has the slightest concern for the 
actual conditions of life of the 12.1 million officially out 
of work, the 23 million who are either unemployed or working 
only part-time when they need full-time jobs, or the tens of 
millions more living in poverty and increasing 
desperation.
Obama and the Democrats have proposed nothing to put the 
unemployed back to work, let alone create jobs that pay 
anything above poverty-level wages. The "stimulus" package 
adopted in 2009, when the Democrats controlled both houses 
of Congress, was deliberately crafted to attract Republican 
support, focusing on tax cuts for business and excluding any 
direct job creation by the federal government.
From the time Obama entered the White House, his major 
concern was to bail out the Wall Street banks and the auto 
companies at the expense of the working class.
The Republicans, who traditionally set the agenda and 
boundary lines of big business politics, have been even more 
vehement in opposition to any measures to alleviate poverty, 
unemployment and social misery, proposing budgets that would 
virtually wipe out domestic social spending, ending food 
stamps and Medicaid as entitlements and transferring them to 
the states with strictly limited funding.
Romney, in a moment of genuine candor, revealed the real 
attitude of both presidential candidates towards working 
people when he dismissed the "47 percent" who believe they 
are entitled to decent hous ing, food and social services. 
"I can't worry about them," he said. This 47 percent 
includes all the unemployed whom the Republican candidate 
pretends to sympathize with in his campaign speeches.
The National Muslim Council for Justice ( NMCJ ) demands an 
emergency public works program to provide employment for 
all, rebuilding schools, hospitals, public housing, roads, 
mass transportation and other social infrastructure. We 
demand paid job training and employment for all laid-off 
workers and for the new generation of young people now 
entering the workforce. We call for the mobilization of the 
working class in direct struggle against mass layoffs and 
workplace shutdowns, particularly under conditions where a 
new downturn in the economy is looming.
The fight for jobs is bound up with a broader struggle to 
develop a mass political movement of American Muslims and 
working class based on a Islamic program.
NMCJ is an advocacy organization. Its mission is to enhance 
the understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, empower 
American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice 
and mutual understanding. www.nmcj.org
I am for truth, no matter who tells it. I am for justice, no 
matter who it is for or against. ( El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz 
)
2012-10-12 Fri 17:12:35 cdt
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