Saturday, September 6, 2014

Chief imam at Kashgar mosque stabbed to death as violence surges in Xinjiang

Death of Jume Tahir, deputy president of the Xinjiang Islamic Association, described by some as an assassination 31 July 2014

Chief imam at Kashgar mosque stabbed to death as violence surges in Xinjiang
Kashgar, China: soldiers stand guard outside the Id Kah mosque. Photograph: Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
A high-profile Xinjiang imam who had staunchly supported the Communist party was stabbed to death on Wednesday, it has emerged,explaining the shutdown that saw roads closed and internet access and text messaging shut off in Kashgar.
The death of Jume Tahir, chief imam at the city's main mosque and a former deputy to the official National People's Congress (NPC), comes amid an upsurge in violence in the north-western region. It was described by some as an assassination.
Dozens died in violence in townships near Kashgar on Monday, the day before Eid, with police blaming a terrorist attack while Uighur exiles accused police of shooting people protesting against a "heavy-handed Ramadan crackdown … and extrajudicial use of lethal force". Authorities in Xinjiang had ordered civil servants, students and others not to fast.
While officials blame separatists and religious extremists for instigating violence in their bid for an independent Xinjiang, others say the underlying cause of tensions are Muslim Uighur resentment at cultural and religious controls, Han Chinese migration and economic inequity.
Tahir was deputy president of the Xinjiang Islamic Association. On Thursday a spokesman confirmed his death but said he could not add any further details. At the Kashgar Islamic Association, a man said he could not discuss the case and had no authority to disclose information.
No official comment has been made on Tahir's killing and calls to police and propaganda officials rang unanswered.
Radio Free Asia quoted the director of a neighbourhood stability committee in Kashgar as saying: "He was a patriotic religious person, he lost his life in an assassination … Right now, we are busy making arrangements for his funeral."
On Wednesday, a western tourist told Reuters he had seen a bloodied body outside the Id Kah mosque and two men with knives running away.
Internet access in Kashgar was restored late on Wednesday and roads reopened.
The Id Kah mosque, almost six centuries old, is thought to be the largest in China, with room for thousands of worshippers.
Tahir was frequently quoted by state media praising the party and condemning separatists. In 2010 he told a meeting at the annual session of the NPC: "Some hostile forces in and outside China have made use of religion to carry out penetration, sabotage and secessionist activities in Xinjiang, and they also sowed discord between religious people and non-religious people. So we must keep vigilance."
Last year, Uighur imam Abdurehim Damaolla was stabbed to death outside his home in Turpan after condemning Uighurs who had become involved in a violent clash as terrorists, and helping police arrest 
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/31/china-jume-tahir-imam-kashgar-xinjiang-mosque-stabbed-death-violence

Mawlaya | اغنية مولاى - انشاد فرقة المدرسة الدينية الالبانية



Zikr (Allah Rakha Rahman) - National Taiwan University Chorus



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tDSealqkIaY

سورة الواقعة مكررة 14 مرة



Wednesday, September 3, 2014

UMN Choir Islamic Nasheed Choral


Changes of Islam practices in Society and Reformation is necessary

  •  The extreme and unreasonable segregation of Muslim men and women must stop.

  •  Women should assume an important role in mosques and given greater participation.

  • Muslim women should be Qarii reciter of Quraan the same as men.

  •  Muslim women should be Khateeb in Jum3s Friday prayers.

  • Introduction of all musical instruments and taraneem in Islam with full participation of men and women standing side by side in chorus.

| MUST WATCH Dr Zakir Naik Ask and Challenge, Know more About Islam


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Monday, September 1, 2014

The persecution of Muslims in Staunchly Christian Orthodox Bulgaria the Mufti Ahmet Aptullov


With around 250 cases of systematic attacks on Muslims and Muslim places of worship since the end of the country's communist regime 25 years ago, the Mufti Ahmet Aptullov said there had been 12 attacks since 2012.



The most recent attack was said to be on the historical Karaja Pasha Mosque led by a far-right group called Nevrakop just six weeks ago.

A cross was placed on the minaret of the mosque by Christian extremist groups, who also spray painted crosses on the mosque walls. The groups have called for all mosques in Bulgaria to be closed down.

Muslims are no foreigners to Bulgaria, with a population of around 1.5 million out of an overall population of 7.5 million people.

Most Bulgarian Muslims are ethnic Turks who settled in the region centuries ago during the Ottoman era.