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Author: Sephiroth

Why Islam is False?

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Post time 3-5-2016 12:25 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Allah bagi hak kepada kami,malaysia negara islam,ko berambuslah.anjing di timbunan sampah
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 Author| Post time 6-5-2016 01:16 PM | Show all posts
For further discussion, let's take a look at how many wives the Puppet ... ahem ... Prophet Muhammad had. The list of his concubines, sex slaves, contract marriages and those who had proposed will also be added here in later times. After all, I had easier time studying the Theory of Relativity than I did researching how many holes Muhammad had parked his d!ck in.

  
1
  
Married
July 595.
She was a wealthy  merchant from Mecca who employed the 24-year-old Muhammad and then proposed  marriage. She was the mother of six of his children and a key character in  the earliest development of Islam. She was Muhammad's only wife as long as  she lived. She died in April 620.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[4]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[5]
  
·          Al-Tabari[6]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[7]
2
Sawda bint Zam'a
Married, though with  limited rights.
May 620.
She was a tanner who  had been an early convert to Islam. Muhammad married her at a time when he  was unpopular and bankrupt. He considered divorcing her when, as the oldest  and plainest of his wives (described as "fat and very slow"), she  no longer attracted him, but she persuaded him to keep her in the house in  exchange for never sleeping with her again (she gave up her turn to Aisha).
·          Bukhari[8]
  
·          Ibn  Ishaq[9]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[10]
  
·          Al-Tabari[11]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[12]
3
Aisha bint Abi Bakr
Married
Contracted May 620 but  first consummated in April or May 623.
She was the daughter  of Muhammad's best friend and head evangelist Abu Bakr. Muhammad selected the  six-year-old Aisha in preference to her teenaged sister, and she remained his  favourite wife. She contributed a major body of information to Islamic law  and history. The paedophilic aspect of this relationship has  institutionalised such marriages within Islam.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[13]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[14]
  
·          Al-Tabari[15]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[16]
4
Hafsa bint Umar
Married
January or February  625.
She was the daughter  of Muhammad's wealthy friend Umar. Hafsa was the custodian of the  autograph-text of the Qur'an, which was actually somewhat different from the  standard Qur'an of today.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[17]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[18]
  
·          Al-Tabari[19]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[20]
5
Zaynab bint Khuzayma
Married
February or March 625.
She was a middle-class  widow known as "Mother of the Poor" because of her commitment to  charity work. She died in October 625.
·          Ibn  Hisham[21]
  
·          Al-Tabari[22]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[23]
6
Hind (Umm Salama) bint  Abi Umayya
Married
April 626.
An attractive widow  with four young children, Hind had been rejected by her aristocratic family  in Mecca because they were so hostile to Islam. Her tact and practical wisdom  sometimes mitigated Muhammad's cruelties. She was a notable teacher of  Islamic law and a partisan of Ali.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[24]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[25]
  
·          Al-Tabari[26]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[27]
7
Zaynab bint Jahsh
Married
March 627.
An early convert to  Islam, Zaynab was the wife of Muhammad's adopted son Zayd ibn Harithah. She  was also the Prophet's biological cousin. When Muhammad became infatuated  with Zaynab, Zayd was pressured into a divorce. To justify marrying her,  Muhammad announced new revelations that (1) an adopted son did not count as a  real son, so Zaynab was not his daughter-in-law, and (2) as a prophet, he was  allowed more than the standard four wives. Zaynab excelled at leather-crafts.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[28]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[29]
  
·          Al-Tabari[30]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[31]
8
Rayhana bint Zayd ibn  Amr
Sexual slavery
May 627.
Her first husband was  one of the 600-900 Qurayza men whom Muhammad beheaded in April 627. He  enslaved all the women and selected Rayhana for himself because she was the  most beautiful. When she refused to marry him, he kept her as a concubine  instead. She died shortly before Muhammad in 632.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[32]
  
·          Al-Tabari[33]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[34]
9
Juwayriyah bint  Al-Harith
Married
January 628.
The daughter of an  Arab chief, she was taken prisoner when Muhammad attacked her tribe. Muhammad  did not make a habit of marrying his war-captives, but Aisha claimed that  Juwayriyah was so beautiful that men always fell in love with her at first  sight.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[35]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[36]
  
·          Al-Tabari[37]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[38]
10
Ramlah (Umm Habiba)  bint Abi Sufyan
Married
July 628 (following a  proxy wedding earlier in the year)
She was a daughter of  Abu Sufyan, the Meccan chief who led the resistance against Muhammad, but she  had been a teenaged convert to Islam. This marriage offset some of Muhammad's  political humiliation in the Treaty of Hudaybiya by demonstrating that he  could command the loyalty of his adversary's own daughter. Ramlah was devoted  to Muhammad and quick to pick quarrels with people who were not.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[39]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[40]
  
·          Al-Tabari[41]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[42]
11
Married
July 628.
She was the beautiful  daughter of a Jewish chief, Huyayy ibn Akhtab. Muhammad married her on the  day he defeated the last Jewish tribe in Arabia, only hours after he had  supervised the slaying of Kinana her second husband. His earlier victims had  included her father, brother, first husband, three uncles and several  cousins. This marriage was of no benefit to Safiyah's defeated tribe, who  were banished from Arabia a few years later; its real political significance  was that Safiyah's presence in Muhammad's household was an open demonstration  that he had defeated the Jews.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[43]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[44]
  
·          Al-Tabari[45]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[46]
12
Maymunah bint  Al-Harith
Married
February 629.
She was a middle-class  widow from Mecca who proposed marriage to Muhammad. A placid woman who kept a  very tidy house, Maymunah was completely obsessed with rules and rituals.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[47]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[48]
  
·          Al-Tabari[49]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[50]
13
Sexual slavery
c. June 629.
She was one of several  slaves whom the Governor of Egypt sent as a present to Muhammad. He kept her  as a concubine despite the objections of his official wives, who feared her  beauty. Mariyah bore Muhammad a son, Ibrahim.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[51]
  
·          Al-Tabari[52]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[53]
14
Mulayka bint Kaab
Divorced
January 630.
Her family resisted  the Muslim invasion of Mecca. Needing to appease the conqueror, they gave him  the beautiful Mulayka as a bride. When she realised that Muhammad's army had  killed her father, she demanded a divorce, which he granted her. She died a  few weeks later.
·          Al-Tabari[54]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[55]
15
Fatima al-Aliya bint  Zabyan al-Dahhak
Divorced
February or March 630.
She was the daughter  of a minor chief who had converted to Islam. Muhammad divorced her after only  a few weeks "because she peeked at men in the mosque courtyard."  Fatima had to work for the rest of her life as a dung-collector, and she  outlived all Muhammad's widows.
·          Al-Tabari[56]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[57]
16
Asma bint Al-Numan
Divorced
June or July 630.
She was a princess  from Yemen whose family hoped the marriage alliance would ward off a military  invasion from Medina. But Muhammad divorced her before consummation after  Aisha tricked her into reciting the divorce formula. Asma later married a  brother of Umm Salama.
·          Ibn  Hisham[58]
  
·          Al-Tabari[59]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[60]
17
Al-Jariya
Sexual slavery
After 627.
She was a domestic  slave belonging to Zaynab bint Jahsh, who made Muhammad a present of her. She  seems to have been an "unofficial" concubine who did not have a  regular turn on his roster.
·          Ibn  al-Qayyim[61]
18
Amra bint Yazid
Divorced
c. 631.
She was a Bedouin of  no political importance. Muhammad divorced her before consummation when he  saw she had symptoms of leprosy.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[62]
  
·          Ibn  Hisham[63]
  
·          Al-Tabari[64]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[65]
19
Tukana al-Quraziya
Sexual slavery
Unknown, but probably  in the last months of Muhammad's life.
She was a member of  the defeated Qurayza tribe whom Muhammad selected as one of his personal  slaves. She appears to have been another "unofficial" concubine  without a regular turn on the roster. After Muhammad's death, she married  Abbas.
·          Majlisi[66]
  
·          Ibn  al-Qayyim.[67]

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 Author| Post time 6-5-2016 01:31 PM | Show all posts
2nd Part - Muhammad's Engagement and Broken Marriage Contracts.

BTW - Any Muslims who said that Contract Marriages is not part of Islam, please take notice your Prophet had many such contracts (even with women he had never met) during his life time.


  
Ghaziya (Umm Sharik)  bint Jabir
  
Early 627.
She was a poor widow  with dependent children. She sent Muhammad a proposal of marriage, and he  agreed to the contract. However, when he met her in person, he saw that,  although attractive, she was "old", and he divorced her  immediately. She never remarried.
Khawla bint Hudhayl
Probably mid- or late-627.
She was a princess  from the powerful Christian Taghlib tribe in northern Arabia. Her uncle  arranged the marriage, which was expected to be politically advantageous on  both sides. Muhammad signed the contract, but Khawla died on her journey to  Medina, before they met in person.
Sharaf bint Khalifa
Probably mid- or  late-627.
She was an aunt of  Khawla bint Hudhayl (above). After Khawla's death, the family tried to  substitute Sharaf. In one tradition, Sharaf also died before consummation. In  another tradition, Muhammad changed his mind and broke off the contract.
Layla bint al-Khutaym
After 627.
One of the first  converts in Medina, Layla asked Muhammad to marry her so that her clan, the  Zafar, would be the most closely allied to the Prophet. He agreed. However,  Layla's family warned her that she was too "jealous and  whip-tongued" to adapt well to polygamy, which would cause political  problems for the whole community. Under this pressure, Layla broke off the  engagement.
Umm Habib bint  Al-Abbas
After March 630.
She was Muhammad's  cousin. He saw her as a baby crawling around and remarked, "If I am  alive when she grows up, I will marry her." He changed his mind when he  found out that her father had been his foster-brother and died soon  afterwards.
Sana al-Nashat bint  Rifaa (Asma) ibn As-Salt
c. April 630.
She was the daughter  of a Muslim warrior who hoped to advance his career by becoming Muhammad's  father-in-law. Muhammad signed the contract, but Sana died before the  marriage could be consummated.
Umra bint Rifaa
c. May 630.
She was the sister of  Sana (above). After Sana died, their father tried to interest Muhammad in  Umra. At first he agreed, but he later changed his mind, ostensibly because  Rifaa boasted that Umra "has never known a day's illness in her  life."
Bint Jundub ibn Damra  of Janda’a
Unknown.
Nothing is known about  this woman except that Muhammad contracted marriage with her but divorced her  before consummation.
Jamra bint Al-Harith
c. 631
She proposed marriage  to Muhammad, and he accepted. Her father informed him that she suffered from  a serious disease, whereupon Muhammad broke off the engagement. According to  the Muslim chroniclers, her father arrived home only to find that she really  had been afflicted with leprosy.
Al-Shanba’ bint Amr
January 632.
She was from a Bedouin  tribe who appeared friendly to Muhammad but who had also been friends of  the Qurayza tribe.  Al-Shanba’ insulted Muhammad on the first day by implying that he was not a  true prophet, and he divorced her immediately.
Qutayla (Habla) bint  Qays
May 632.
She was a cousin of  Asma bint Al-Numan, and the Yemenites sent her to Muhammad as a substitute  bride. He signed the marriage contract but he died before Qutayla arrived in  Medina. As soon as she heard that he was dead, she apostated from Islam. Soon  afterwards she married an Arab chief who was a leader in the Apostasy Wars.

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 Author| Post time 6-5-2016 01:43 PM | Show all posts
Edited by Sephiroth at 6-5-2016 01:47 PM

The weddings which Muhammad claimed had happened in Heaven (when he was still alive) :

  
Mary, mother of Jesus
  
The Afterlife.
Muhammad said that  Allah had wedded him in Heaven to the Virgin Mary, who was one of the four  perfect women. The Qur'an refers several times to Mary, praising her chastity  and affirming the virgin birth of Jesus. Muhammad said she lived in a  beautiful jewelled palace in Paradise next to Khadijah's.
·          Qur'an[88]
  
·          Bukhari[89]
  
·          Muslim[90]
  
·          Majlisi[91]
Queen Asiya of Egypt
The Afterlife.
Muhammad said that  Allah had wedded him in Heaven to Queen Asiya, who was one of the four  perfect women. The Qur'an tells how Asiya rescued the infant Moses from the  evil Pharaoh, and how Pharaoh later tortured his wife to death for her  monotheism. Muhammad said that Asiya's palace in Heaven was on the other side  of Khadijah's.
·          Qur'an[92]
  
·          Muslim[93]
  
·          Ibn  Kathir[94]
  
·          Majlisi[95]
Kulthum bint Amram
The Afterlife.
Muhammad originally  believed that Maryam the sister of Moses and Maryam the mother of Jesus were  one and the same. When he realised his mistake, he apparently over-corrected  by deciding that Moses' sister was not even named Maryam. He renamed her  Kulthum ("Chubby Cheeks") and said that Allah had wedded her to him  in Heaven. He did not say that she was a perfect woman or that she lived next  to Khadijah.
·          Qur'an[96]
  
·          Muslim[97]
  
·          Majlisi[98]


Yes, folks, according to Al Hadith, Siti Khadijah claimed that Muhammad claimed that he was wedded to - not one ancient female person from the Bible but THREE - the Queen of the Pharoah who saved Moses, Jesus's Mother (Virgin Mary) and Moses's sister (whom he called Chubby Cheeks - Don't ask me which cheeks he was referring too, OK. ).

I was pretty surprised with this so I have went check online whether this was true or not, and found the following information :-

The claim that Allah is going to marry Muhammad to Virgin Mary in Heaven does not occur in the Qur'an, but is implied through a parallelism in Surah 66. Now let's look at the hadiths:

"The Messenger of God ... said, ‘God MARRIED ME IN PARADISE TO MARY THE DAUGHTER OF 'IMRAN and to the wife of Pharaoh and the sister of Moses.’ (Tabarani)" (Ibn Kathir, Qisas al-Anbiya [Cairo: Dar al-Kutub, 1968/1388], p. 381- as cited in Aliah Schleifer's Mary The Blessed Virgin of Islam [Fons Vitae; ISBN: 1887752021; July 1, 1998], p. 64)

... According to the Cambridge Tafsir, the word thayyebat (widows or divorcees) refers to Pharaoh's wife Asiya, and the word virgins (abkar) refers to Jesus' mother Mary, both of whom are waiting to be married to the Prophet Mohammad in heaven. (Dashti, 23 Years: A Study of the Prophetic Career of Mohammad [Mazda Publishers, Costa Mesa, CA 1994], p. 138)

When Khadijah expressed surprise at the news that Muhammad already had deceased wives, he explained that Allah had wedded him in Paradise to Queen Asiya, to “Kulthum the sister of Moses” and to the Virgin Mary. The theme of having four wives appears to have been on his mind even in his last moments with Khadijah. She responded with the conventional congratulation to a newlywed: “May the union be blessed.” ( Majlisi, Hayat al-Qulub 2:26)

An Islamic website even claims with the help of a tafsir that Mary remained virgin forever so that she could be Muhammad's wife in Paradise:

“[Maryam’s abstinence] was like a great fortress, impenetrable to the enemy.  And she continued with her virginity until her death, and her marriage will take place in Heaven, as a reward to her, to the Best of Allah’s Servants, [our liegelord] Muhammad (Allah’s peace and blessings be upon him), the Seal of the Prophets and the Imam of the Messengers.”  [Tafsir, Ibrahim al-Baqa’i]  

http://seekersguidance.org/ans-b ... -isa-being-married/

Now I think about it, didn't the Bible said that Virgin Mary had married a man named Joshue and that they had a son named Aaron (or was it James, can't remember). Whatever happened to Virgin Mary's husband according to Muhammad, I wonder?
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 Author| Post time 6-5-2016 01:49 PM | Show all posts
Not over yet. Last piece of information - marriages and contracts which Muhammad rejected :-

  
Fakhita (Umm Hani)  bint Abi Talib
  
before 595;
  
January 630;
  
c. 631
Muhammad proposed to  his cousin Fakhita, but her father married her off to a wealthy Makhzumite  poet.
  
Nearly forty years later, after Muhammad conquered Mecca,  Fakhita's husband fled rather than convert to Islam, causing an automatic  divorce. Muhammad proposed to Fakhita again, but she refused, saying she  could not be equally fair to a new husband and her young children.
  
Later still, Fakhita came to Muhammad, saying her children had  grown up and she was finally ready to marry him; but he said she was too  late.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[99]
  
·          Al-Tabari[100]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[101]
“As Many Wives as You  Want”
c.618-619.
The chiefs of Mecca  offered Muhammad "as many wives as you want in marriage," together  with wealth, political power and the services of a competent exorcist, if  only he would stop insulting their gods. Muhammad refused this offer, which  was made while Khadijah was still alive.
·          Al-Tabari[102]
Habiba bint Sahl
c. 623.
Habiba was a prominent  member of the Najjar clan in Medina. When the chief died with no obvious  heir, Muhammad proposed to Habiba. His companions warned him that the women  of Medina were not used to polygamy and that the men were very jealous for  the happiness of their daughters; if this marriage turned out badly, key  citizens might withdraw their support from Islam. Muhammad retracted his  proposal, but the Najjar clan made him their chief anyway.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[103]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[104]
  
·          Abu  Dawud[105]
  
·          Muwatta[106]
Al-Ansariya
After 625.
This unnamed woman  proposed to Muhammad in Hafsa's presence. Hafsa decried the shame of a woman  who would throw herself at a man, but Muhammad retorted, "She is better  than you because she wanted me while you only find fault." He refused  the proposal, but promised the woman a reward in Paradise for asking.
  
In fact several ansar women are said to have  proposed to Muhammad; while this example is anonymous, it clearly refers to a  woman who is distinct from Layla bint Khutaym.
·          Majlisi[107]
Khawla bint Hakim
After 627.
This is the same  Khawla bint Hakim who arranged Muhammad's marriages to Aisha and Sawda. Her  first husband was Hafsa's uncle, and their elder son fought at Badr. After  being widowed, Khawla asked Muhammad to marry her, but he refused without  giving a reason. However, he found her a new husband the same day.
·          Ibn  Ishaq[108]
  
·          Bukhari[109]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[110]
  
·          Ibn  Kathir[111]
Dubaa bint Amir
After 627.
Dubaa was a wealthy  noblewoman to whom Muhammad sent a marriage proposal when he heard about her  beautiful long hair that filled a whole room when she sat down. But by the  time she accepted him, he had been advised that she was “elderly” (her  grown-up son had been born from her third marriage) so he retracted his  proposal before he had even met her.
·          Al-Tabari[112]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[113]
Izza bint Abi Sufyan
After July 628.
She was the sister of  Muhammad’s wife Ramlah. Ramlah proposed Izza as a bride, "since, as I  cannot be your only wife, I would like to share my good fortune with my  sister." But Muhammad said he could not marry two sisters concurrently.
·          Muslim[114]
Durrah bint Abi Salama
After July 628.
She was the daughter  of Muhammad's wife Hind. Another wife, Ramlah, noticed that Muhammad admired  Durrah and asked if he intended to marry her. He replied that he could not  marry his stepdaughter; and besides, her father had been his foster-brother.  On the day Muhammad died, Durrah was only six years old.
·          Muslim[115]
Umama bint Hamza
After March 630.
She was Muhammad's  cousin and said to be the prettiest girl in the family. Ali proposed her as a  bride while she was still a child, but Muhammad said that he could not marry  her because her father had been his foster-brother. She later married his  stepson, Salama ibn Abi Salama.
·          Ibn  Sa'd[116]
Safiyah bint Bashshama
September 630.
She was a war-captive  from Mesopotamia. Muhammad asked her to marry him, but when she said she  wanted to return to her husband, he allowed her family to ransom her. It is  said that her family cursed her for placing her personal happiness above the  political needs of the tribe.
·          Al-Tabari[117]
  
·          Ibn  Sa'd[118]

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 Author| Post time 11-5-2016 11:00 AM | Show all posts
Edited by Sephiroth at 11-5-2016 11:02 AM

The Influence of Siti Khadijah on Islam

Some interesting facts can be derived from examining Muhammad's marital life.

For example, from what we can see, it is obvious that Siti Khadijah had a controlling effect on Muhammad during his earlier life as a married man. He was around 24 (or 25 according to some source) and she was twenty years older than he was. From this example, we can say that Muhammad was inexperience man when comes to marriage and life as a family man, when compared to her who already a widow at the time of marriage and has an accomplished business among Quraisy men (a feat which was not easy for a woman even in those days).

This is also indicated that perhaps the idea of him being a prophet was not his own. She could likely to reject believing in the same idols as Quraisy around her did, and from historical data, we knew that when Muhammad were beseiged by his strange experience, it was Siti Khadijah who brought him to see a Jewish person who dwell in mysticism to explain his experience and he had (somehow) pointed out that Muhammad was a prophet. Perhaps the idea of him being a prophet was nothing more than a suggestion planted into Muhammad's mind by these people. After all, NO ONE in the Taurat or the Bible had similar experience like Muhammad (shaking in fear) and labelled as a prophet.

It is also possible that early form of Islam (the peaceful kind) was due to Siti Khadijah's influence over Muhammad. She was an accomplish businesswoman with many connections and therefore, she could (along with Muhammad's grandfather - Mutalib) was able to protect Muhammad when he started to spread Islam and brought the dislike of Quraisy society over his rejection of Idol worshipping.

However, it is possible that they had a limited level of influence and therefore, if Muhammad were to preach violence, it is possible that they could not be able to protect him anymore. This was true later in life when Siti Khadijah had died and Muhammad found himself surrounded by hostile Quraisy who could have killed him unless he moved to Madinah. So if this is to be true, then the so-called Peaceful Islamic teaching which Muslims worldwide trying to sell to non-Muslims were not Muhammad's own teaching but due to influence of Siti Khadijah. Muhammad's true Islamic teaching began in Madinah.
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Post time 13-5-2016 09:53 AM | Show all posts
I dont see any Islam word on this board title. So this thread have to move to the suitable board...

Sorry..
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Post time 13-5-2016 12:01 PM | Show all posts
Roger Cik Boss
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Post time 13-5-2016 12:50 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Clearly such like a sunshine, it's Syiah database about prophet Muhammad historical marrige craft by Jew.

100% can be reject without prejudice.

So sorry Sephirot, your information base on mind thinking only.
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Post time 13-5-2016 01:03 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Sephiroth replied at 29-4-2016 02:35 PM
Third reasons - Is Islam relevant today?
Answer :- HELL NO.


Are you blind?
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Post time 13-5-2016 01:07 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Sephiroth replied at 30-4-2016 05:02 PM
Jaga kepala hotak kamu. Kamu nak orang2 bukan Islam diam diri dan tidak menpersoalkan ciri2 agama  ...

Kamu masih lagi dibuai mimpi.
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Post time 13-5-2016 01:25 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Ilmu "bayang" tidaklah sama dgn ilmu "hakikat" walaupun kelihatan sama, akan tetapi berbeza.
Jika mahu mengetahui kebenaran, maka lihatlah apa yg "Allah dan Rasul" katakan dan bukan pula apa yg manusia katakan.

Perception doesn't mean perfection. It's all about something that "someone" that want you to see or "someone" that give choice for you to see.

There is diff. between it.
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Post time 14-5-2016 02:07 AM | Show all posts
apakah agama TT bukan yg palsu jua?   

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