Saturday, January 28, 2012

Salafis, Shiites,Saudi Arabia, Iran, and the Battle for Syria

The New York Times today, with a magnificent and disturbing set of photographs, reports on the rapid deterioration of sanity in Syria.











The crowd beating a suspected government agent.



The Times notes

In interviews last week, some residents of Homs, including several Christians and Alewives, expressed fears that hard-line Sunnis known as Salafis were forming armed groups and stoking violence.



My concern is that the Saudis are financing armed, jihadist rebellion in Syria, in opposition the interests of the majority of those who hope for a peaceful, nonsectarian transition of government.. The Times article notes

One prominent leftist activist in Homs, heeding the concerns, said he was pressing his fellow activists to renounce the armed movement and stick to peaceful protests.

If Wikipedia has it right,

Salafis often appeals to younger Muslims as a way to differentiate themselves from the beliefs of parents and grandparents because it is seen as a way to get weapons and militant training. 
A majority of Salafi scholars stand firmly with the present-day manifestations of jihad, particularly as it relates to terrorism and the killing of civilians and innocents. They hold their opinion against as:
"No individual has the right to take the law into his own hands on any account. Even the closest of Prophet Muhammad's companions never killed a single of his opponents even when invectives were hurled at him day and night in the first thirteen years of his Da'wah at Makkah. Nor did they kill anyone in retaliation when he was pelted with stones at Ta'if."
In recent years, Salafis have come to be associated with the jihad of Al-Qaeda and related groups that advocate the killing of civilians, which are opposed by most other Muslim groups and governments, including the Saudi government. Debate continues today over the appropriate methods of reform, ranging from violent "Qutubi jihadism" to lesser politicized proselytizing. 
Salafism differs from the earlier contemporary Islamic revival movements of the 1970s and 1980s commonly referred to as Islamism, in that (at least many) Salafis reject not only Western ideologies such as Socialism and Capitalism, but also common Western concepts like economics, constitutions, political parties and revolution. 
Salafis promote that the Sharia (Islamic law) takes precedence over civil or state law.
Egyptian scholar Tawfik Hamid says that Salafist Muslim fundamentalists believe that Saudi Arabia's petroleum-based wealth is a divine gift, and that Saudi influence is sanctioned by God. Thus this extreme brand of Sunni Islam that spread from the Saudi Arabia to the rest of the Islamic world is regarded not merely as one interpretation of the religion but the only genuine interpretation. The expansion of violent and regressive Islam, he continues, began in the late 1970s, and can be traced precisely to the growing financial clout of Saudi Arabia. He says "is puritanical, extreme and does, yes, mean that women can be beaten, apostates killed and Jews called pigs and monkeys."
It is, in the Sunni mind, the Shiites, mostly concentrated in Iran, who are the Apostates who should be killed.  Nasr, The Shia  Revival.  Iran is surrounded by a great sea of Sunni.



Mr. Assad, the dictator  of Syria, is an Alawite.  Many Muslims do not think of Alawites as Muslim., the the religion has a number of Christian celebrations; Easter, for example.  And though a majority of the Syrian population is Sunni, the population is mixed.  There are other important groups -- Christian, Druze, Kurdish, and others.


I fear that the Saudis, with their trillions of dollars and their evangelical, fundamentalist religion which they impose on all they can control, in their paranoia, wish to see Syria turn into a fundamentalist Salafi state because they fear and despise Shiites, Jews, and liberated women; and the Iranians wish to see Syria in Alawite hands and aligned with them, to protect it from the overwhelming mass of surrounding Sunni.

Iraq hangs in the balance.

Thee is a lot at stake.



Here are some images of Salafi, at work and play (their kind of play).



A mural for Somali Salafi

Salafi at the beach


An Egyptian Salafi goalie

Just kidding. Just kidding.




Tank-top Salafi in Lebanon, preparing for Syria




Teaching young Salafi to be, er, Men



A Salafi, er, Man


Respected women's fashions







Disrespected women's fashions

Miss Saudi Arabia








Friday, January 20, 2012

Chirtal

You may have forgotten about Chitral, neighbor to China, the Nuristani in Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and, now, a part of Pakistan, but I haven't forgotten that beautiful land and brave people which our wars and others have affected.

Lift goes on.  Dawn, perhaps Pakistan's leading English language newspaper, reports that Chitrali youth

In benighted Muslim countries --  which Chiral nominally is -- 
and in The Castro,
it is normal for men to 
dance with men.

have invented a machine for predicting the advent of an avalanche, so important in a land surrounded by snowy mountains.  Excellent!  Bravo!  Celebrate!

Here are some other images from Chitral to refresh your memory if you have forgotten, from he fine Nooru's Blog, . . .



Polo is the favored sport


. . . . which has this to say about Chitral's history:

The valley has seen invasions of the horse ridden Greeks, the Persians , the British, and sturdy Afghans and many other hordes of attackers including the Muslims. Having seen and experienced many invaders, the  Chitralvadis  through their spirit  never allowed the other dynasty to fully sway over their affairs, which is why the loam of this area has engrossed the aroma of different civilizations and the culture of various bordering nations but retained its distinct identity.
The people of Chitral
show traces of Persian and Turkish ancestry. They are known for their peaceful, uncomplicated character and unique cultural.  It’s the place of simple trustworthy people whose friendship remains with visitor for a long time. They  have no greed ,they respect their guests and despise cheating anyone. 
Well, perhaps gentleness is a little too stressed, given they have never been conquered for long, after 3,000 years of trying by some very formidable foes.  Or perhaps gentleness is a virtue we should all cultivate, for our own protection.  Don't suppose that idea would meet with great acceptance in Republican primaries.

For a gratuitous Degas painting of nude guys,

Friday, January 13, 2012

South Yemen Freedom

The armored vehicles used to kill southern separatists described in the news article below were supplied by the Unites States government.  Not good.


    2012-01-14 00:31:07     Xinhua       Web Editor: Yihang
At least three protesters were killed and 19 others injured on Friday when Yemeni security forces dispersed hundreds of separatist demonstrators in the southern port city of Aden, witnesses said.
Security forces backed by armored vehicles opened live ammunition in an attempt to disperse the protest by southern youth activists demanding a secession of southern regions, killing at least three separatist protesters and injuring 19 others in Khor Maksar district in Aden, a witness and local residents told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.
"The security soldiers first used tear gas and then opened heavy fire, trying to raid the al-Oroud Square where hundreds of protesters gathered to demand secession from the north and the right of self-determination," said the witness.
Here are some of the southern protesters:


Here are my favorites, chewing qat under a graffiti of  a south Yemen flag:



The Southern cause is just. Our support of the dictator's tribe and family is not in our interest.  It is in the interest of the dreadful Saudis. May we soon fall away from the Saudis!