Tony Adepöju,
Please feel free to wallow in your own dung, but don't think you are free to share the stench with us. We don't want any of it.
Understandably, our eniyan ti o kekoo would much prefer that you do not further corrupt our atmosphere and that's why it's advisable that you keep your putrid critiques to yourself....
''Please feel free to wallow in your own dung, but don't think you are free to share the stench with us. We don't want any of it.
Understandably, our eniyan ti o kekoo would much prefer that you do not further corrupt our atmosphere and that's why it's advisable that you keep your putrid critiques to yourself...''
Cornelius
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju,
Just witness how seriously I take you. If I didn't take you seriously, or if I ignored you completely as if you did not exist, that would be a sign of great disrespect.
True: For me to have a civilised discussion with a gentle or gentle-man like you, I would have to be civilised, and as you know so very well, unfortunately, unlike you, I am not civilised, at least not in the sense in which you suppose yourself to be civilised or are supposed to be civilised, and here I'm thinking of the opening lines of Diop's The Vultures :
“In those days
When civilization kicked us in the face
When holy water slapped our cringing brows...
I am not into Modern Man in Search of a Soul and I am not one of the lost seed of the House of Israel in need of your kind of civilisation. I want you to be famous, so please help me if you can and whenever you can. An Islamic definition of God is He who helps and does not need help. This is slightly in contrast with the general Judaic understandingly which postulates that we have to help God - firstly through circumcision – otherwise we would have all been born already circumcised and we have to serve God, and to help him make this world a better place, not just in terms of mankind's new awareness taking responsibility for climate change as a religious commitment and for “bani Israel” what's known as tikkun olam...
The most important “thing” I want to tell you is that the laws of Lashon Hara also apply to whatever you may have to say about our Muhammad Ibn Abdullah salallahu alaihi wa salaam.
Hopefully, before making pronouncements about him and passing evil judgments on him you already know who and what you are, and even if you don't yet know who you are, at least you know that you are not the seal of prophecy and you should pray that you are not destined for the everlasting hellfire for the sin of vilifying Allah subhanahu wa ta'ala's beloved prophet to mankind.
My advice to you is to start digging deep, where you are standing - in no way am I implying that you should start digging your own grave , I'm only saying that it's up to you to stop playing the role of dilettante ( jackass of everything ( all trades) and master of nothing ( none)
Hopefully, you also understand that there is and must be a world of difference between reading 52 weeks a year for thirty-four years about e.g. Sufism and meeting an actual Sufi Master or becoming one yourself.
Now, as to the demands that you make on me :
“ If you disagree with my views, please present a personal point of view, justified by logic and evidence. Please don't direct me to any links to read. It's also good if you are able to sustain your own views and not rely on Ken for help.”
Are those your commandments to me, and if so why do you think that an unintelligent and uncivilised savage like me should listen to someone like you? Don't you think that you are overestimating yourself, getting too big for your boots? And who told you that I “rely on Ken for help”?
“Justified” by “ logic”? Your kind of logic no doubt. Yours and Immanuel Kant's and I suppose goldilocks, Sir Isaac Newton too, after the apple that Eve gave to Adam fell on his head.. Should I also follow the obtuse inanities or configurations of Sir Franklin Per-Roguey before he gets knighted and then blighted by Her Majesty?
And you tell me all this after - as evidence - supplying us with some al-Jazeera links to read? Al-Jazeera as you source. Where else to get news, since we are not there? Do you find anything wrong with the news and views at Information Clearing House?
About The Taliban and women and Human Rights, you ought to be smart enough to know that we must be on the same side. Of relevance to my “ position” - are the lessons to be learned from this Sabbath's Torah Portion Ki Teitzei (( The woman of Beautiful form ), what you would refer to as “war booty”
Last piece of sober advice of which the unrepentant had better beware is to be found in
Dear Adepoju, if you don't click on that last link, you should only have yourself to blame about where you will be spending eternity. Don't say John didn't warn you...
Elder Cornelius:
You crossed the line and you need to apologize to Mr. Adepoju for your invocation of Revelation 21:8.
In some religious circles, the idea of “second death” is regarded as a mortal curse,an imprecation offered to your worst enemy.
A debate should, no matter what, leads to this. When imprecation is altered, its symbolisms are powerful.
This is not needed.
Matthew 18:21-22
"Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, 'Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother or sister who sins against me? Up to seven times?' Jesus answered, 'I tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times.' "
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Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju,
My short response to you is that I have kept the company of some who know, followed some debates, read some really insightful, detailed, well-articulated books that are critiques of Islam and some well informed critical responses and commentaries on the history that is and has been in the making. For that reason, I'm not all that enthusiastic or interested in getting embroiled in any ignorant. petty, poorly informed, low or high-level hit and run discussions in which you in particular or some other toothless crybaby is representing one side or the other, about anything – global terrorism, witchcraft, Aleister Crowley, Sufism, Kabbalah, Biafra, Boko Haram, Fulani Herdsmen, Ifa priests about whom I know nothing at all, Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Zoroastrianism, Islam ( with you and Robert Spencer on one side against Hans Küng (the author of Islam) and Yasser Al-Habib on the other side.
In the future I will be following the ribaldry and your genocidal discussions about “ Northern Hegemony” , Fulani Herdsmen, your “ terrorist government “ etc., from peeperdom in cyberspace and wishing you the best of luck, that's all.
Some feeling here : The Look of Love
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"you historians here on the list, what do you find in the past?"
We Historians go into the past only via the evidence of the human and natural events and activities that the past yields to us through written, archaeological, oral, and other source evidence. We produce histories, or narratives, based on these sources and these narratives could and would read differently depending on who the historian is, which of the sources they use, misuse, omit, stress, or misread, what questions they ask and when they write, etc. But the character of textual and other sources we historians use is diverse, some with forms, structures and contents that constrain the latitude within which the historian or any user of historical evidence creates their narrative of the past or of the people of the past, of prophets from the past and of God, gods, and goddesses from the past. Some source evidence come in structures, forms, nature, and texture that permit a definitive attribution of some facts to the person, the prophet, the ruler or the thing from the past as opposed to narrativization of evidence done ex post facto by readers, interpreters and others in temporal or spatial contexts that do not cohere with the original.
So, what do historians find in the past? I’ll say, they find evidence of what and who “happened” in the past both in textual form, but also independent of textualization and rendition, and they also find and develop shifting narratives, interpretations, renditions, and perspectives, i.e., the whys & hows, of the what, who and the when from the past which may themselves become primary evidentiary sources for future historians or readers. It seems to me that the historian finds that the author is not dead at his or her core and that whatever new reality the reader creates from the historical evidence, nonetheless, that historical evidence which is the past that we can work with, does have root/s and elements emanating from outside of the contemporary contexts of the readers and interpreters. I see that this revisits the question of the content of form and form of content. But , one thing, I want to believe is that even if they relate the two to each other ever so closely, I dont see historians, even if they are post-modernists, doing away with content however creatively and remaining historian.
Femi J. Kolapo | Department of History | www.uoguelph.ca/history
|
|
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________
A thought for the month:
|
Innovation . . . is potentially infinite because even if it runs out of new things to do, it can always find ways to do the same things more quickly or for less energy. (Matt Ridley, How Innovation Works and Why It Flourishes in Freedom.) |
On Aug 21, 2021, at 4:56 PM, Cornelius Hamelberg <cornelius...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Aug 22, 2021, at 04:01, Harrow, Kenneth <har...@msu.edu> wrote:you historians here on the list, what do you find in the past?ken
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On Aug 22, 2021, at 04:01, Harrow, Kenneth <har...@msu.edu> wrote:
you historians here on the list, what do you find in the past?ken
Many thanks to the
Almighty, for the presence and inputs of Professors Kenneth Harrow,
Moses Ochonu and Femi Kalopo in this thread .With reference to Adepoju, the term “scholarly” with reference to Islam should be
used with caution, with due consideration to the meaning of the distinctive term "Scholar” - and "scholarship" not meaning a dabbler, even a serious one, in mere
fundamentalist word sophistry -. not even that. What can be more
irritating than to listen to someone rediously pontificating when that someone
does not know what he is talking about? Time without number the
mostly facile polemical
thrust at the base and bottom of those irate ( passionate? Hateful ?)
critiques of Islam border on Islamophobia
– and in some cases antisemitism
too ( sporadically, it's all in the archives) and this has to be
called to order as it has been by the aforementioned scholars, with
regard to what overall can be felt as insensitive with regard to the
anti-islam polemics.
The reason is simple , if we agree about religious freedom and respect for one another, I for one am not going to sit here and be silent when anybody - including anybody - takes it upon himself to pollute the air by disparaging the prophet of Islam salallahu alaihi wa salaam. And for the self-preservation of such “critics” even if they think that it's absolutely safe to hang out in cyberspace , we should not forget the existence of the Dark Web where the criminals can put out a contract, put a price on anybody's head....
dark indeed...
Light:
According to beautiful King James translation ( published in 1611 – the state of the English language in those days )
“Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the law of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate day and night.” etc. etc....
Last night the sharp reprimand from our Moderator-in-chief about Adepoju and all of us being warned according to Revelations , the last book of the new testament about the terrible future that awaiteth wanton sinners , necessitated an apology from me, thus redeeming the forum as a safe haven for sinners or as "the seat of the scornful."
How to strike that delicate balance between the scholarly and what boils down to fake news, the falsification of history, and hate speech?
He who feels it knows.
The late Rabbi Jacob Neusner , a must read author of these books including the closely argued “a rabbi talks with Jesus” observed in his afterwords,
“It remains to answer a second question. Why did I write this book? Because I like Christians and respect Christianity and wanted to take seriously the faith of people I value. I cannot imagine a Jew who grew up in a Muslim country writing such a book about Muhammad ( or surviving its publication for very long).”
A great pity. Hopefully, someone will write such a book - “A rabbi talks to Muhammad” which should be a best-seller overnight , except that apart from – depending on the contents of such a book, the inherent dangers of a Rushdie-style fatwa emerging from somewhere or nowhere, sentencing the author and publisher to death ( an extreme form of literary criticism in Rushdie's case) there are some real problems of “ a rabbi talks to Muhammad “. Rabbi Jacob Neusner conducted that conversation with Jesus through the agency of what Jesus is reported to have said in the Gospel According to Matthew - supposedly the most Jewish of the Gospels ( whereas the Gospel according to John is so full of unconcealed hatred for " The Jews”) however in the case of Muhammad ( s.a.w.) – and Islam, there is such a virulent streak of anti -Jew polemic that runs through the Quran ( I have read the Quran fourteen times, and the Torah, with rabbinical commentaries at least twenty four times ) so in a discussion between a rabbi and the Prophet of Islam ( s.a.w.) via what's written in the Quran and what's available in the sahih hadiths of both the Sunni and the Shia, the rabbi would be arguing with the representation of Ishmael , the leader of the opposition – therefore the discrepancy and the inevitable controversy about e.g. Islam's Eid ul Adha - according to which Sheikh Abraham was going to sacrifice his son Ishmael ( and not Isaac as narrated in the AKEDAH which is foundational to Judaism....
I suppose a good starting point for such a discussion ( a rabbi talks to Muhammad) would be the opening statement in that historic debate between the Shia and the Sunni under Shah Nader, verbatim published here in Documents of the Right Word
‘Whatever Hârûn (Aaron) was in relation to Mûsâ (Moses), you are the same with relation to me. The only difference is that no Prophet shall come after me “( On page 10)
So, the question is, what was the relationship between Moses and Aaron? I think that I can answer that question., shortly: It was a profound relationship...
Many thanks to the Almighty, for the presence and inputs of Professors Kenneth Harrow, Moses Ochonu and Femi Kalopo in this thread .With reference to Adepoju, the term “scholarly” with reference to Islam should be used with caution, with due consideration
to the meaning of the distinctive term "Scholar” - and "scholarship" not meaning a dabbler, even a serious one, in mere fundamentalist word sophistry -. not even that. What can be more irritating than to listen to someone rediously pontificating when that
someone does not know what he is talking about? Time without number the mostly facile polemical thrust at the base and bottom of those irate ( passionate? Hateful ?) critiques of Islam border on
Islamophobia – and in some cases
antisemitism too ( sporadically, it's all in the archives) and this has to be called to order as it has been by the aforementioned scholars, with regard to what overall can be felt as insensitive
with regard to the anti-islam polemics.
The reason is simple , if we agree about religious freedom and respect for one another, I for one am not going to sit here and be silent when anybody - including anybody - takes it upon himself to pollute the air by disparaging the prophet of Islam salallahu alaihi wa salaam. And for the self-preservation of such “critics” even if they think that it's absolutely safe to hang out in cyberspace , we should not forget the existence of the Dark Web where the criminals can put out a contract, put a price on anybody's head....
dark indeed...
Light:
According to beautiful King James translation ( published in 1611 – the state of the English language in those days )
“Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the law of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate day and night.” etc. etc....
Last night the sharp reprimand from our Moderator-in-chief about Adepoju and all of us being warned according to Revelations , the last book of the new testament about the terrible future that awaiteth wanton sinners , necessitated an apology from me, thus redeeming the forum as a safe haven for sinners or as "the seat of the scornful."
How to strike that delicate balance between the scholarly and what boils down to fake news, the falsification of history, and hate speech?
He who feels it knows.
The late Rabbi Jacob Neusner , a must read author of these books including the closely argued “a rabbi talks with Jesus” observed in his afterwords,
“It remains to answer a second question. Why did I write this book? Because I like Christians and respect Christianity and wanted to take seriously the faith of people I value. I cannot imagine a Jew who grew up in a Muslim country writing such a book about Muhammad ( or surviving its publication for very long).”
A great pity. Hopefully, someone will write such a book - “A rabbi talks to Muhammad” which should be a best-seller overnight , except that apart from – depending on the contents of such a book, the inherent dangers of a Rushdie-style fatwa emerging from somewhere or nowhere, sentencing the author and publisher to death ( an extreme form of literary criticism in Rushdie's case) there are some real problems of “ a rabbi talks to Muhammad “. Rabbi Jacob Neusner conducted that conversation with Jesus through the agency of what Jesus is reported to have said in the Gospel According to Matthew - supposedly the most Jewish of the Gospels ( whereas the Gospel according to John is so full of unconcealed hatred for " The Jews”) however in the case of Muhammad ( s.a.w.) – and Islam, there is such a virulent streak of anti -Jew polemic that runs through the Quran ( I have read the Quran fourteen times, and the Torah, with rabbinical commentaries at least twenty four times ) so in a discussion between a rabbi and the Prophet of Islam ( s.a.w.) via what's written in the Quran and what's available in the sahih hadiths of both the Sunni and the Shia, the rabbi would be arguing with the representation of Ishmael , the leader of the opposition – therefore the discrepancy and the inevitable controversy about e.g. Islam's Eid ul Adha - according to which Sheikh Abraham was going to sacrifice his son Ishmael ( and not Isaac as narrated in the AKEDAH which is foundational to Judaism....
I suppose a good starting point for such a discussion ( a rabbi talks to Muhammad) would be the opening statement in that historic debate between the Shia and the Sunni under Shah Nader, verbatim published here in Documents of the Right Word
‘Whatever Hârûn (Aaron) was in relation to Mûsâ (Moses), you are the same with relation to me. The only difference is that no Prophet shall come after me “( On page 10)
So, the question is, what was the relationship between Moses and Aaron? I think that I can answer that question., shortly: It was a profound relationship...
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
Lord Agbetuyi,
Of course, I was referring to Aba Abraham ( the first Jew ever) as “Sheikh Abraham to sort of Islamize him as is the wont of Muslims , since Islam says that all the Prophets that we find in the Jewish Scriptures were “Muslims”. You get the drift? Civilised discussion? The Quran says quite categorically that “Abraham was not a Jew”.Didn't Arafat assert that Jesus was a Palestinian ? I can imagine Jesus himself, his disciples, Apostles, and some of his Nigerian pastors saying in unison, “God forbid!”
Here is what t5he Jewish Encyclopedia says about Ishmael the son of Abraham and Hagar
We have actually been here before further down in this link where this and more occurs:
“
Genesis
22 : 1 - 2 :
“And
it happened after these things that God tested Abraham and said
to
him, “Abraham”, and he replied , “ Here I am.”
And
He said, “ Please take your son, your only one, whom you love
–
Isaac
– and go to the land of Moriah ; bring him up there as an
offering
upon one of the mountains which I shall tell you.”
Note:
“Your son” - God did not immediately reveal to Abraham, the
clear
identity of the intended offering. The Talmud records
the
conversation
as follows:
“ God
said, “ Take your son”
“But
I have two sons. Which should I take?”
“Your
only one!”
“But
each of them is the only son of his mother.”
“Whom
you love”, God answered.
“But
I love them both.”
“I
mean Isaac,” God replied.
There
are two reasons why God did not say directly, “ Take
Isaac”.
Firstly,
He wanted to avoid giving a sudden command, lest Abraham be
accused
of complying in a state of disoriented confusion. (This is
also
a reason for having him travel for three days of reflection
before
carrying out the injunction.) Additionally, the slow unfolding
of
the offering's identity was to make the commandment more precious
to
Abraham, by arousing his curiosity and rewarding him for
complying
with
every word of the command.” (Sanhedrin 89b; Rashi)
The
Akeidah (Genesis 22:1-24) is so important that it is recited in
each
morning prayer. It also delineates and accentuates the
everlasting
difference between Yitzhak the son of Abraham's wife Sarah
and
- Ishmael his older brother, the son of Sarah's maidservant
Hagar
who later became Abraham's concubine Hagar and begat Ishmael. In
the
Akeidah, it is suggested that Eliezer and Ishmael are the two
men
that
Abraham leaves behind “with the donkeys” (Genesis 22.4- 5 ) :
“
On
the third day, Abraham looked up and perceived the place from
afar.
And Abraham said to his young men, “ Stay here by yourselves
with
the donkey, while I and the lad will go yonder; we will
prostrate
ourselves and we will return to you.”
“
And
perceived the place from afar “ : Note: “ Abraham saw a
cloud
hovering
over the mountain and recognised it as signifying God's
presence
(Pirkei D'Rabbi Eliezer). He said, “ Isaac , my son, do you
see
what I see?”
“Yes,
“ said Isaac, and Abraham understood that Isaac had the degree
of
spiritual insight that made him worthy to be an offering.
He
then turned to the two attendants and asked, “Do you see what
I
see?”
They did not . Noting this, Abraham put them in the same
category
as his donkey( next verse) and said, in effect, “ The donkey
sees
nothing and you see nothing, therefore stay here with
the
donkey.”
The
differences in the character of Yitzhak and Ishmael - according
to
the Bible - is in essence what separates the lineages of the Jews
on
the one hand descended from Abraham through Yitzhak and Jacob,
Sarah,
Rebekah, Leah and Rachel; - and some of the Arabs descended
through
the common ancestor Abraham , via Ishmael.
Ishmael,
son of Abraham
And
there is the irreconcilable rift between the Torah and the
Quran
which
insists that it was not Sarah's Yitzhak but Ishmael the son of
the
Egyptian maidservant Hagar that was going to be sacrificed -
Ishmael
and not Sarah's Yitzhak - ( although Yitzhak means “ She
laughed”
- when she was told she was going to have a baby - at the
age
of 90 years (when Abraham was 100 years old) and she passed away
at
the point at which she heard the false news that her husband
Abraham
had sacrificed her only son....)
And
that is what the Muslims' Eid al- Adha is all
about.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eid_al-Adha
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On Aug 22, 2021, at 21:33, Oluwatoyin Adepoju <ovde...@gmail.com> wrote:Thanks Yahaya.Which book is that?please, who is John Edward Philips signed at the bottom of your mail?great thankstoyinOn Sun, 22 Aug 2021 at 13:30, Yahaya Danjuma <yahaya....@gmail.com> wrote:On Aug 22, 2021, at 04:01, Harrow, Kenneth <har...@msu.edu> wrote:you historians here on the list, what do you find in the past?kenNothing. The past no longer exists. It cannot be visited, much less can we go there to find things.To know what the past was we can only study the remains of the past in the present, which is the only time we can know.That is why Langlois and Seignobos, when they famously wrote “pas de documents, pas d’histoire”, defined documents as the remains of the past in the present.N.B. that the phrase does not define documents as only written documents, but as any remains of the past in the present, including artifacts and oral traditions.But the past is how the present came to be. To understand the present we must know the past.Anyway, read my book, if you’ll pardon the cliché. There’s more about this there.John Edward Philips