Saturday, March 25, 2006

Put him to death!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Increasing international pressure over the case of Christian convert
Abdul Rahman is

forcing the Afghan government to play a careful balancing
act between its Western

allies and religious conservatives at home.

Under the interpretation of Islamic Sharia law on which Afghanistan's constitution is based, Mr Rahman faces the death penalty unless he reconverts to Islam.

"The Prophet Muhammad has said several times that those
who convert from
Islam should be

killed if they refuse to come back," says Ansarullah Mawlafizada, the trial judge.

"Islam is a religion of peace, tolerance, kindness and integrity. That is why we have told him if he regrets what he did, then we will forgive him," he told the BBC News website.

'Deserves it'

The judge's comments are one indication of why President Hamid Karzai, who already has a reputation for being pro-Western, faces some difficult choices.

The president has yet to comment publicly on the trial but statements put out by his office point out that, while the government respects human rights and personal freedom, the country has an independent judicial system.

In practice, it is even more complicated.

The Afghan judiciary is dominated by religious conservatives, many with strong religious ties or backgrounds.

Many feel it will be difficult for the president and the government to confront the judiciary.

But the bigger problem confronting the president is that an overwhelming number of ordinary Afghans appear to believe Mr Rahman has erred and deserves to be executed.

At Friday prayers in mosques across the Afghan capital, the case of Abdul Rahman and the consequent international outcry is the hot topic of discussion and the centrepiece of sermons.

"We will not let anyone interfere with our religious practices," declared cleric Inayatullah at Kabul's Pulakasthy mosque, one of the city's largest.

"What Rahman has done is wrong and he must be punished."

Public mood

The issue has not reached the stage of street protests, as was the case recently during demonstrations against the publication in the West of cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad.

But there is little doubt that feelings run deep and can easily be inflamed.

"What is wrong with Islam that he should want to convert?" asks an agitated Abdul Zahid Payman.

"The courts should punish him and he should be put to death."

Few were willing to listen to the growing condemnation in the West.

"According to Islamic law he should be sentenced to death because God has clearly stated that Christianity is forbidden in our land," says Mohammed Qadir, another worshipper.

US President George Bush says he is "deeply troubled" by the case.

That cuts no ice with Mr Qadir.

"Who is America to tell us what to do? If Karzai listens to them there will be jihad (holy war)."

Western backers of the Afghan government are pressing to create a country that is a moderate and progressive democracy, able to turn its back on its Taleban past.

But analysts say they often forget that Afghanistan is a deeply conservative country rooted in tribal traditions.

"This is a Muslim country. The state is Muslim, people are Muslim 99%," says Judge Ansarullah.

"This is a very sensitive issue."

Afghanistan's constitution, written in 2004, enshrines the country as an Islamic state under which no law can contravene Islam.

But it also protects personal freedom and respects international human rights conventions.

"It is a deliberately ambiguous document which tries to paper over the cracks and contradictions of Afghanistan," says one Afghan law professor privately.

"But now the contradictions have risen to the surface."

Read this on BBC

Sunday, March 19, 2006

CRASH

I just finished watching “CRASH”, and I am not at all surprised why the movie was nominated for n number of Oscars. It is the bestest movie ever made, and yes that seems like a very bold declaration, but there is no other way of categorizing it.

Crash was supposed to be a drama, describing racial discrimination in the great United states of America, whites exploiting the blacks, and blacks exploiting the white. It brought out a lot of issue’s like how there is this general prejudice against black men, that they are up to no good, stemming from the well known fact that statistically speaking many of these small time criminals are black. And how due to this the dark skinned community goes through trial each and every day, and I can imagine how it must kill them, to know, that they are not trusted!!!
But personally I think, the movie isn’t just about that. It has explained something called “Circle of life” in the perfect way possible. Whatever you give out to others, will eventually come back to you. And this is so true, that sometimes it seems so unfair. I am sure, all of this might seem like mindless rumbling, but I urge each one of you to go watch the movie, because it makes you think, about all the things you take for granted. It also re affirms your faith in the human kind. We are all very nice people. We all feel happy, when we do something good, even if it is something very small, And you aren’t really looking for appreciation, you just feel good about yourself after an act like that. It might be something really small as giving your seat to an old woman in a crowded bus.

I know I am not doing justice to the movie, by this small write up, but I really really want every one to experience the phenomenon called “Crash”. Please do go watch it.

I felt the song from “Lion king”, sung by Elton John came very much closer to what I was trying to say,

From the day we arrive on the planet
And blinking, step into the sun
There's more to be seen than can ever be seen
More to do than can ever be done

Some say eat or be eaten
Some say live and let live
But all are agreed as they join the stampede
You should never take more than you give
In the Circle of Life
It's the wheel of fortune
It's the leap of faith
It's the band of hope
Till we find our place
On the path unwinding
In the Circle, the Circle of Life

Some of us fall by the wayside
And some of us soar to the stars
And some of us sail through our troubles
And some have to live with the scars

There's far too much to take in here
More to find than can ever be found
But the sun rolling high
Through the sapphire sky
Keeps the great and small on the endless round

On the path unwinding
In the Circle, the Circle of Life.