Muhammad Parvez, 57, is to appear in a Brampton court today after being arrested for strangling his 16 year old daughter for wanting to cast off her scarf.
The Prophet's (PBUH) namesake was unhappy with his daughter for wanting to dress in western-style clothing. That is, without a scarf covering her head. At the risk of wading into an endless, he-said-she-said, argument about Quranic texts, it is sad to see believers of Islam conveniently forgetting the words of the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH): "Ask for the verdict of your conscience and discard what pricks it." Or the forgeting of one of the pillars of Islamic jurisprudence, namely, Aql (reason).
In an online article at Islam for Today, Ibrahim B. Syed, has written a lengthy overview of the origins of the purdah/hijab/chador. Syed writes, "In the matter of hijab, the conscience of an honest, sincere Believer alone can be the true judge."
Recall your Quran: “There is no compulsion acceptable in religion. The truth and falsehood had been made distinct from one another.” (al-Baqarah 2:256). "Let him who wants to believe, believe; and let him who wants to deny, deny” (al-Kahf 18:29)
Ostensibly, Muhammad Parvez killed his daughter in order to preserve the honour of his family and protect his religion. Surely, it wasn't to protect God from the act of a young girl not wearing a scarf? Preserving the honour of the family would be the only reason to kill a female of any household. Which makes one wonder, in God's mind, which is more un-Islamic: to discard one's hijab or to kill your own daughter?
I propose, with tongue firmly in cheek, that it is every self respecting Muslims duty to kill every person (man or woman) who they come across who, once told of their proper and Isamic obligations, refuses to adhere by Islamic norms. That's right, Karim, don that knapsack, fill it with whatever weapons you can gather and walk to the nearest mall. Explain the religion of Islam and if your audience does not see the light - Kaboom! In the name of all that is holy - Kaboom! Better that no one should live than they dress inappropriately
Just don't forget that there are two branches of Islam and within those two branches are sub-sects, and those sub-sects further divide down lines of ethnicity. And those ethnicities (let's say Indian) are then known by their particular regional identities (Gujurathis) who are then further divided into smaller groupings (Khojas) and on and on. All these divisions can not all be right at the same time.
There are four main branches of jurisprudence in Sunni Islam -- Maliki, Hanafi, Sha'fi'i, and Hanbali schools. In Shia Islam, I believe there are two. Which side do you fall on? Pick one at random as your own. Now, are the other schools of thinking wrong? Of course, they are. Kaboom!
Pretty soon, you and your very particular brand of Islam will be the only ones standing. Yes. Because you killed every one else off -- they were wrong and you were right. And one Kaboom! led to another.
Unfortunately, after killing everyone else who was not exactly like you, your sons and daughters and your extended family now have no one to marry without the dishonour of incest. Thus, your clan dies off. And you allow the extinction to occur because it is your ultimate show of piety. You have finally shown God that you are indeed a good Muslim.
Congratulations, you provincal, myopic, parochial, moron!
The work goes on, the cause endures, the hope still lives, and the dream shall never die.
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Saturday, December 08, 2007
iMac heaven

All you microsoft/PC types visit the above link cause: It's a thing of beauty, a marvel of engineering, a work of art, a cutie pie and a peach, to boot!
Monday, December 03, 2007
What's This Need to Read?
Hmm. Just picked up another book by Ronald Wright entitled, "A Scientific Romance."
So I'se been thinkin'...What's with the insatiable appetite for reading material? I really can't remember everything I read. And I'm not engaged in any purposeful act of research. Honestly, I have 2-3 books on the go at any given time. I will surf my usual sites and many others besides, hoping to come upon a beautifully written, lengthy article to keep me occupied. Magazine? Sure. Scholarly? Yep. Blog? Sure, why not?
Am I just idly curious or just idle? Is the constant need to read an indication that I am, perhaps, avoiding something in my life? I do know that I would like nothing more than to spend my days sitting in a library getting to know a subject - any subject - thoroughly. Ahh, research and synthesis. Hunting and gathering.
Anyone out there willing to let me spend my days looking up, sussing out, picking up and sniffing out the inner workings of some subject I have never heard about? I am easy and cheap!
So I'se been thinkin'...What's with the insatiable appetite for reading material? I really can't remember everything I read. And I'm not engaged in any purposeful act of research. Honestly, I have 2-3 books on the go at any given time. I will surf my usual sites and many others besides, hoping to come upon a beautifully written, lengthy article to keep me occupied. Magazine? Sure. Scholarly? Yep. Blog? Sure, why not?

Anyone out there willing to let me spend my days looking up, sussing out, picking up and sniffing out the inner workings of some subject I have never heard about? I am easy and cheap!
Sunday, December 02, 2007
Worth Repeating
Excerpt from "A Short History of Progress," by Ronald Wright.
Patriotism may indeed be, as Dr. Johnson said, “the last refuge of a scoundrel,” but it’s also the tyrant’s first resort. People afraid of outsiders are easily manipulated. The warrior caste, supposedly society’s protectors, often become protection racketeers. In times of war or crisis, power is easily stolen from the many by the few on a promise of security. The more elusive or imaginary the foe, the better for manufacturing consent. The inquisition did a roaring trade against the Devil. And the twentieth century’s struggle between capitalism and communism had all the hallmarks of the old religious wars. Was defending either system really worth the risk of blowing up the world?
Now we are losing hard-won freedoms on the pretext of a worldwide “war on terror,” as if terrorism were something new.
Friday, November 30, 2007
What Am I Reading?

His publisher, Anansi Press explains what the book is about thusly:
In A Short History of Progress Ronald Wright argues that our modern predicament is as old as civilization, a 10,000-year experiment we have participated in but seldom controlled. Only by understanding the patterns of triumph and disaster that humanity has repeated around the world since the Stone Age can we recognize the experiment's inherent dangers, and, with luck and wisdom, shape its outcome.
Love the book so far. Ronald Wright writes clearly and eloquently about subject matters and sources of which I don't have the slightest clue. Nevertheless, Philistines like me, can still follow the main strand of his thesis and wonder why I didn't come up with that thought myself.
Thursday, November 29, 2007
What Am I Reading?
I am currently reading "The Foreigner's Gift: The Americans, the Arabs, and the Iraqis in Iraq," by Fouad Ajami.
I last wrote about Ajami on October 11, 2006. Here is that post in its entirety:
That was then. Now: I simply cannot continue reading The Foreigner's Gift. Does he know his subject? Absolutely. Does he write well? No...he writes lyrically. But why is he so blinded by the dust kicked up by the only super power?
Read a review of The Foreigner's Gift here. The review is by R. Stephen Humphreys, a professor of Middle Eastern history and Islamic studies at the University of California. An excerpt from that review follows below:
'Nuff said.
I last wrote about Ajami on October 11, 2006. Here is that post in its entirety:
I first noticed Fouad Ajami during the Iranian Revolution. (Wikipedia also carries an extensive article on Ajami). He was a mainstay on the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather at the time.
Ajami is eloquent, sharp, incisive and learned. His opinion cannot be ignored, but lately I have come to have my doubts about the Lebanese-born American university professor. He is a staunch supporter of the Bush presidency and its hawkish agenda. To get a taste of his lyrical writing style read his tribute to Bernard Lewis in the Wall Street Journal's Opinion Journal.
Now I come upon an article on the Foreign Affairs web-site entitled, "The Falseness of Anti-Americanism." You may have to register to view this article for free or you can go to the"wired new york" web-site for a copy of the same article.
This article highlights for me the ridiculous lengths to which Ajami seems to go to interpret almost all American actions as benign. Is it any wonder that he is the darling of the Bush administration. "Condoleezza Rice has been known to summon him to the White House for advice." "(Wikipedia)"
Like him or not I just can't help reading his stuff. Judge for yourself.
That was then. Now: I simply cannot continue reading The Foreigner's Gift. Does he know his subject? Absolutely. Does he write well? No...he writes lyrically. But why is he so blinded by the dust kicked up by the only super power?
Read a review of The Foreigner's Gift here. The review is by R. Stephen Humphreys, a professor of Middle Eastern history and Islamic studies at the University of California. An excerpt from that review follows below:
Ajami's treatment of anti-Americanism is strikingly dismissive; he sees it as a kind of pathology, the perverse irrationalism of a perverse people who cannot recognize that the foreigner has offered a real gift. Anti-Americanism is a complex phenomenon, but it does not rise out of nothing, and it surely merits a more searching treatment than it receives here.
'Nuff said.
Sunday, November 25, 2007
28 Days Smoke Free!

Hey, wot!
My hat (sorry about the shine) is off to Allan Carr's Easy Way to Stop Smoking!
Ironically, Allan Carr died of lung cancer in November of 2006.
Have I mentioned Allan Carr!!!
Saturday, November 17, 2007
Free Hugs Oshawa
Finally went out to the Oshawa Centre to give out free hugs. The inspiration for the idea came from a video I came across on youtube. As you will see the premise is quite simple: Most people like to get hugs, it makes both people feel good and breaks barriers without forcing the issue. A good feeling ensues and it's fun!
Below are pictures of Chris (a friend from work). Curly haired kid in some of the pics is my son, Seth. I was behind the camera.

Chris and Seth with that guy who wears lipstick.

Chris stepping out at the Oshawa Centre with Seth in the foreground.

Chris begins a hug outside the Oshawa Centre

Chris completes hug still outside the OC.
Chris begins a hug outside the Oshawa Centre
Chris completes hug still outside the OC.
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Thank You...Thank You...Thank You
Finally someone has said what I have been thinking all these years!
I have been validated by Slate's very own, Timothy Noah. Lewis Lampham, Harper's erstwhile editor, is a very intelligent writer -- of this I have no doubt. But he is also a pompous windbag, cursed with a habit of quoting some very, very, long-dead figure in order to make his point about present day society.
Here's an excerpt from Timothy Noah's article where he quotes sentence after lengthy sentence written by Lampham:
What? Come on Lewis, how about writing for the most of us?
I have been validated by Slate's very own, Timothy Noah. Lewis Lampham, Harper's erstwhile editor, is a very intelligent writer -- of this I have no doubt. But he is also a pompous windbag, cursed with a habit of quoting some very, very, long-dead figure in order to make his point about present day society.
Here's an excerpt from Timothy Noah's article where he quotes sentence after lengthy sentence written by Lampham:
The swarm of cameras following Monica Lewinsky on her progress through a Washington airport or a New York restaurant wouldn't have surprised the Roman mob familiar with the expensive claques traipsing after the magnificence of the Emperor Nero, their eager and well-fed sycophancy presumably equivalent to the breathless enthusiasms of Barbara Walters.
What? Come on Lewis, how about writing for the most of us?
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Friday, November 09, 2007
Schmap Philadelphia
Once again, fame has sought me out!
Received an e-mail for Schmap (Philadelphia) wondering if they could use a photograph I had taken of Tarah and the rabbit from Alice in Wonderland having tea together at the Please Touch Museum in Philadelphia.
No royalties involved. Just the narcissistic pleasure of knowing someone out there thinks my pictures and, in the past, some of my blog posts, were worthy of attention.
Here's a screen shot of the page where you will find the Tarah having tea photo.
Received an e-mail for Schmap (Philadelphia) wondering if they could use a photograph I had taken of Tarah and the rabbit from Alice in Wonderland having tea together at the Please Touch Museum in Philadelphia.
No royalties involved. Just the narcissistic pleasure of knowing someone out there thinks my pictures and, in the past, some of my blog posts, were worthy of attention.
Here's a screen shot of the page where you will find the Tarah having tea photo.

Tuesday, November 06, 2007
The Latest On Darfur
Eric Reeves recently wrote what amounts to confirmation of what is already known to most everyone about the genocide in Darfur. The article appeared in The Guardian (on-line). Here is a short excerpt:
Khartoum - which had announced with much fanfare a unilateral ceasefire when talks opened on October 27 - launched the very next day what may be a final solution to its Darfur problem: the United Nations, Human Rights Watch and journalists in the region are all reporting Khartoum’s assaults on camps for displaced persons, including violent relocation of civilians to insecure areas
....
But the real reason for the failure in Sirte is that neither the UN nor the AU is willing to confront Khartoum with meaningful consequences for its serial violation of UN resolutions and its continuing obstruction of humanitarian aid and the deployment of the hybrid UN/AU peace support operation authorized by the security council in July. Nor has Khartoum paid a price for its systematic reneging on the north/south comprehensive peace agreement of January 2005.
Monday, November 05, 2007
Sunday, November 04, 2007
Sunday Out
Gained one hour today due to daylight saving time.
Went to church with the wife and kids and later, to McDonald's for lunch and to let the kids burn some energy off at the Play Place. We then went to Ajax and then Pickering Mall looking for a snow suit for young Tarah. While at the mall, we took a rest on a bench in front of the Laura Secord store. Pralines and Cream....yum, yum!
Later still, drove by my parent's place to drop some stuff off and to pick some stuff up. Apparently, all this driving around did not count as a "real drive" for Seth. His idea of going for a drive involves going to a busy location far from home...like downtown, or The Danforth or Queen Street West.
We ended up at the Beach and had some Swiss Chalet, before finally driving back home. At home, the kiddies had their bath and Marsh got on the phone and here I am on the computer trying my best to write and pay just enough attention to Tarah to keep her entertained.
So, McDonald's, Laura Secord, Sears and The Bay, Swiss Chalet, Danforth and the Beach. Wow! Can you say Canadian? How about Toronto? All in all, a great day.
Went to church with the wife and kids and later, to McDonald's for lunch and to let the kids burn some energy off at the Play Place. We then went to Ajax and then Pickering Mall looking for a snow suit for young Tarah. While at the mall, we took a rest on a bench in front of the Laura Secord store. Pralines and Cream....yum, yum!
Later still, drove by my parent's place to drop some stuff off and to pick some stuff up. Apparently, all this driving around did not count as a "real drive" for Seth. His idea of going for a drive involves going to a busy location far from home...like downtown, or The Danforth or Queen Street West.
We ended up at the Beach and had some Swiss Chalet, before finally driving back home. At home, the kiddies had their bath and Marsh got on the phone and here I am on the computer trying my best to write and pay just enough attention to Tarah to keep her entertained.
So, McDonald's, Laura Secord, Sears and The Bay, Swiss Chalet, Danforth and the Beach. Wow! Can you say Canadian? How about Toronto? All in all, a great day.
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