Sister Amina on Islam: August 2010

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Movie Review: Arranged

Bismillah ir-rahman ir-rahim
Assalaam Alaikum

This movie is called Arranged, it is a wonderful movie about the friendship between a Muslim woman (Nasira) and an Orthodox Jewish woman (Rochel). My husband and I liked it so much, when we first saw it, we watched it twice in one week!
Arranged takes place in New York City. It has three main settings: Rochel's world, Nasira's world, and the world they share: a Brooklyn public elementary school, where they meet and become friends. Both women are first-year teachers at the aforementioned school and the movie opens with their being trained to handle the variety of different cultures that their students will come from. The first sign of tension comes from the principal of the school asking teachers to share something "juicy" about themselves to the other teachers in the group. While one woman has something decidedly juicy to say, neither Nasira nor Rochel does.
Outside of the school, both women are going through the process of trying to find a husband. Rochel has a very strict and traditional way in which she can find one, while Nasira is introduced to different men by her family. While Rochel goes through a myriad of different men (each one highly defective in their own hilarious way), Nasira has one bad experience with a friend of her father's who is twenty years older than she and chews with his mouth open.

I don't know about any other sisters out there, but bad table manners would be enough for me to send any suitor packing.

Anyhow, at school Rochel is an assistant to a special needs student who participates in Nasira's grade four class. One day, class is interrupted by some students who were saying to each other that Nasira and Rochel could never be friends because of their different religions ("But I heard the Muslims wanted to push Israel back into the ocean."). They are confronted by the principal about the event, who then goes off on a tirade about how they are beautiful girls, if only they would come out of the dark ages and dress like modern women!

As the movie goes on, tensions within Rochel's family rise (considering her incompatibility with all her suitors), and tensions between the principal and the two women rise as well, while all this time the unlikely friendship between Rochel and Nasira grows. Masha'Allah, it is a wonderful movie that portrays a loving Muslim family very well. And for Muslims who don't know a lot about Jews, the executive producer was Orthodox Jewish, so the portrayal of Rochel's family is probably very accurate as well.

This is a good film to open your eyes to your
neighbours and consider what they are really like, rather than what All Jews are like or All Muslims. Everyone is different. This film is a beautiful example of it. I have posted the trailer below, but it really doesn't do the movie justice. If you go to YouTube and type in "Arranged the movie" into the search thing, you can watch the entire thing, but frankly, I suggest you go out and buy it. It is a wonderful movie!

Enjoy the trailer, but please watch the whole thing!

Monday, August 16, 2010

Miracles of Allah - I

Bismillah ir-rahman ir-rahim
Assalaam alaikum

I have decided to do several series in this blog. One will be what this is: Miracles of Allah, which will be video clips, photos, art, etc all that show just how amazing Allah (SWT) is. If you have any ideas for this, let me know.


Other series will include book and movie reviews, as well as whatever else I come up with over time. For movie and book reviews, whenever I see a movie/read a book (besides Qur'an and Hadith) that is either: (a) about Muslims and portrays the characters as practicing Muslims, or (b) reflects Muslim morals and ideals, or (c) is just plain about Islam, I'll do a post about it. With reviews, anyone--yes, ANYONE who reads this blog can submit a review to me (my email is leah.webb@uleth.ca). If I like it, I'll proofread it and post it (giving the author credit, of course).

But for today, I am doing a "Miracles of Allah" entry.


Subhanallah, it is a miracle. Enjoy!

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

The Problem with Pork

Bismillah ir-rahman ir-raheem

Assalaam alaikum!

So, first of all, Ramadan Mubarak!! For those who are following the Makkah sighting of the moon, today is the first day of Ramadan, alhamdulillah!! This is the best time of year because it is during this month only that Shaytan is chained up and he can not make his waswasas (whispers) in our ears. Insha'Allah, I would love to do a post about Ramadan sometime this month, but I am, for now, going to transfer an entry from my old blog, insha'Allah.

A long time ago when I first started this blog I got a question on Facebook from someone curious about pork/pigs in Islam:"I heard something about if you come into contact with pig, you're not allowed into heaven? [R]umor or fact?" (Natalia)
Thank you for your question, Natalia. I have spent a fair amount of time researching your question and I can pretty much definitively answer: it is a rumour.
I have heard this rumour before, though, when I was reading the diary of a woman from Saudi Arabia. My guess is that it is a cultural thing (as many things are, unfortunately). It is customary to wash oneself after having come into contact with swine (especially before prayer--I'll talk about cleanliness another time), but nowhere in Hadith or the Qur'an (or the Bible, for that matter) could I find anything remotely hinting towards eternal damnation for simply touching a pig.

However, as with Mosaic Law, the flesh of swine is forbidden in Islam. Many Christians seem to think that in Mark 7:18-19, Jesus (AS) made all food lawful: "'Are you so dull?' he asked. 'Don't you see that nothing that enters a man from the outside can make him unclean? For it doesn't go into his heart but into his stomach, and then out of his body.'" (Mark 7:18-19 NIV).
To be fair, I can see why the Christian would believe this. That does seem to be what he (AS) is saying. Of course, in Islam we believe otherwise because we believe Jesus (AS) was a prophet to the Jews and he (AS) therefore MUST have adhered to Mosaic Law (ie: the Law of Moses (AS)). In fact, it is actually now kind of in vogue for Christians to keep... not kosher, per se, but kosher-ish. Google "What Would Jesus Eat?" and you will see--it's a health book of some sort, and there's also a "What Would Jesus Eat" cookbook. Very cool.

What do Muslims think that Jesus (AS) was saying in Mark 7:18-19? Well, I'm not sure, though I do have a few unprofessional opinions. One possibility is that Jesus (AS) didn't even ever say such a thing, or that the original meaning of what he (AS) said has been long lost. With so many versions of the Bible, and with the number of times it has been translated, translated again, again, again, and... once more, there's no telling what the original text said. If you don't believe me, go to biblegateway.com and look up 1 Corinthians 13:4-7 (famous for weddings, right?) once in the King James version and once in the New International Version. It's craziness.

Another possibility would be that Jesus (AS) was simply saying that there are more important things that worrying about what you eat. The Qur'an affirms that! There are many times the Qur'an forbids the consumption of pork (Surat-ul-baqara, ayat 173; Surat-ul-maa'idah, ayat 3; and Surat-ul-an'aam, ayat 145--possibly more), however in an emergency (eg: no other food available), it is permissible to eat food that is normally forbidden (Surat-un-nahl, ayat 115 among others).   

More compelling to many Christians, however, might be Jesus' (AS) quote from the Bible found in Matthew: "Think not that I am come to destroy the Law, or the Prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill." (Matthew 5:17). To me, that says that Jesus' (AS) "dying on the cross" (another topic to be addressed in a later blog, insha'Allah) did not all of a sudden excuse his (AS) followers from following Mosaic Laws. Well, well. 

There are also health issues with pork. You see, during my university's Islam Awareness Week (a huge success, by the way, masha'Allah), one young man can up to me and told me that he liked everything about Islam and it sounded like a very good religion to him (yay!), but he thought the rules about not eating pork were archaic. At the time I was under pressure, so I could only stutter out that we do not eat pork because the Qur'an forbids it (which is very true). 

I did get the opportunity to tell him a little something else a few days later. You see, my father-in-law spent 20 years of his life as a butcher, so he knows what he's talking about. He said the way swine would have been slaughtered back in the day is actually more sanitary than how it is done now (halal slaughtering will also be addressed in a future entry, FYI, insha'Allah). In a slaughtering plant, there is a high risk of contamination with all the different animals coming in all the time... some of them diseased. However, in slaughtering an animal outside (as it would have been done) there is sufficient room to ensure that meat from separate animals does not mixed. If one diseased swine is slaughtered, then few people will become ill, instead of thousands.

Well. I have news for you, mister likes-to-eat-bacon guy: I've been doing some research. The Ontario Ministry of Agriculture tells us that swine are a significant if not primary factor in giving us meek humans Human Yersinosis. What is this disease? Well, according to the medical dictionary at thefreedictionary.com, "
Yersinia [the bacteria causing human yersinosis] produces several different types of disease. The most common form is a short-lived inflammation of the intestine known as enterocolitis. Most often the very end of the small intestine is involved, an area known as the terminal ileum. The result is gastroenteritis, with cramping abdominal pain, fever, and diarrhea. Diarrhea generally continues for two weeks or so, but can go on for many months. Up to 40% of patients also experience nausea and vomiting; and in one-third, inflammation of the intestine leads to bleeding." Intestinal bleeding. Gross. According to the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture 40% of swine tested in 80 different farms tested positive for this disease.

Trichinosis is the other oft-cited health concern with pork. It isn't overly common, but it comes from eating pork infected with the larvae of a certain species of roundworm. Yuck yuck yuck. Yuck yuck. Medicinenet.com says that 90-95% of people infected with trichinosis have mild or no symptoms... this doesn't really comfort me all that much because if 90% of people have no symptoms then that is waaaay more pork with roundworms in it than I'd like to even think about. Then when there are complications with the disease, it can cause such things as anxiety; lung bleeding; dyspepsia; and in 10-14% of reported cases, the worms enter the nervous system, which can be fatal. It has been estimated that one in six consumers of pork in the US and Canada have been infected with trichinosis.

That means ringworms... in your body...

So! Does this mean we should go out and kill all pigs and burn them??????

No. The Qur'an teaches us that we must be kind to animals, and it would not be very kind to kill an animal that is not attacking us (actively) and is not being consumed.

Pigs do have their uses. Oh yes. I said it. For example, in Israel (yes, Israel--Jews don't eat pork either!) swine are used to sniff for bombs (I saw this story on BBC--look on their archives). Apparently, they're easier to train than dogs. Also, I was talking to a friend today who said that swine used to be used in his school to sniff for drugs... and apparently they found a bunch behind a drinking fountain.

If pigs were nothing but bad, Allah subhanah wa ta'ala would not have put them on this earth. We should not eat them, but they have other uses. Please be kind to pigs--you won't go to hell for it.
 

Sunday, August 8, 2010

(Re-)Introduction

Bismillah ir-rahman ir-raheem

Assalaam alaikum!

Alhamdulillah! After a year of absence, during which time quite a lot happened, I have decided to re-open my blog. However, due to a few slightly embarrassing circumstances, I am not able to access my old blog and I have to restart. Insha'Allah, this one will be even better!

So, I am going to be re-posting some of my old articles with new information and I'll start with an introduction.

My name is Leah "Amina" Webb. I was given the name Amina by a tearful Afghani woman after I reverted to Islam not long ago. Most people know me by my legal name, Leah, but for a blog about Islam I am going to stick to my Islamic name. For my first post I am just going to do a small intro. Hi. I'm Amina.

I was born in Michigan (USA) back in the '80s (1989 still counts) to some very loving parents. I did not grow up with religion, though I think I had some vague concept of God just from existing around religious people (or maybe it's because my grandma used to say "Oh God" all the time - I love you, Grandma!). Anyhow, my childhood isn't all that important. I mean, it is important, but it isn't relevant to what I am talking about. The important stuff starts about a little over two years ago when my boyfriend at the time called and said he had succeeded in getting us an apartment in Lethbridge (Alberta, Canada). This was good news because I was going to university there.

Now, I had met this boyfriend of mine while in France on exchange during my grade 11 year, which was when I lived my teenage years, having been pretty much angelic before then (sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll weren't really my cup of tea). Yes, I did some (many) things that I'm ashamed of, but ultimately I have no regrets. It was all part of the path that led me to Allah, and for that I am grateful.

So, in August of 2008 I moved in with said boyfriend and all was good in life. Come November or so, however, due to a petty little memoir (of a non-Muslim) we were reading, we started talking to some Muslims in the community. First Ahmed, then the Khan family. Before we knew it, we were hooked. Islam was the answer. Though at first we had planned to revert to Islam and get married in July, our friend convinced us that it was better to do sooner rather than later and all of a sudden I was standing in front of a small masjid full of people taking shahadah and becoming a Muslim and not soon after I was married. This is the short version.

People always want to know why I reverted, and I can never give a good answer. Mostly I tell them about the memoir that my husband and I read and how that led to us talking to Muslims around Lethbridge, etc etc etc. But how satisfying is that? Pretty much not at all. I mean, drinking is fun, right? Sex is fun! Who would want to cover herself up all the time just because some silly 1500-year-old book alludes to such a thing? Why would anyone choose a restrictive religion over the easy and free life of an agnostic?

Because.
Insha'Allah (God willing), in my further posts I will be able to clear up these questions and explain to any reader who happens upon this site a little bit about Islam. If you have any questions you want answered or if there are any topics you want discussed, please let me know. But remember, I am only a woman. I am not God, therefore I am vulnerable to error. Sometimes, I just don't know things. But insha'Allah, if you are patient we can make this a really interesting blog. Please, tell your friends (Muslims and non-Muslims alike) about this site.

JazakAllah Khair

Amina
 

ps: Also, please note that insha'Allah, there will be a monthly poll. If you scroll almost alllllll the way to the bottom you will find it. JazakAllah.