If you haven't heard already, Sheikh Hamza Yusuf has confessed that originally, in traditional Islam, women are allowed to lead men in prayer.When I wrote a paper on female prayer, because this was an issue a few years ago, years ago when I was a student in Mauritania, I remembered in a book that Ibn …
I get the best commenters.
sophia said...This post reminds me that reading can be a political act. It's also an act that has ethical and moral implications.I'm wary of readers who can't think for themselves-- who need a scholar to tell them how to read, what to read, and what to think about either. Such an approach to reading a …
Eid Mubarak
Speaking of love, there is an overused saying that insists, "Love is blind." And to this I've consistently inwardly protested.While research indicates that the saying is more than figurative (suggesting that critical thought areas in the brain are suppressed when we're "feeling love") I've always believed--always knew--that if "love is blind" it is not because …
Oh, Love.
They treat men's oppressionAs if it were the Wrathof God!--Qur'an 29:10the fatal feminist © Nahida S. N.
Disregarded Verses: Deciding What is Halaal and Haraam
Lately, I have been reading scholars replying to the written concerns of practicing Muslims, and found that so many of these scholars violate the undeniable orders dictated in the Qur'an by forbidding that which God has not forbidden. And they do this through the use of hadith. As an example of these violations, I've already …
Continue reading Disregarded Verses: Deciding What is Halaal and Haraam
"When I Was a Boy"–Dar Williams
When I Was a BoyI won't forget when Peter Pan came to my house, took my handI said I was a boy; I'm glad he didn't check.I learned to fly, I learned to fightI lived a whole life in one nightWe saved each other's lives out on the pirate's deck.And I remember that night when …
Islamic History and the Women You Never Hear About: Female Warriors
Muslim women participated fully in war during the early periods of Islam while the Prophet was alive. Some of them healed the wounded, some devised strategies, others were warriors, and others--still--recited war poetry to inspire the troops, (their weapons were words!) and a vast majority attended to all of the above. These stories are hardly …
Continue reading Islamic History and the Women You Never Hear About: Female Warriors