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#1 |
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Administrator
Join Date: 08.03.2005
Posts: 3,156
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Salafist men wear beards, hand out copies of the Koran and cause headaches for Germany's domestic intelligence agency. But how do the women feel? SPIEGEL spends a weekend with two veiled women and learns about their vision of a perfect world.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/...-a-858382.html |
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#2 |
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Join Date: 13.02.2012
Posts: 59
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Thanks for giving insight. Once again I am confident my comments will not be approved because I want to expose the discrimination Spiegel shows when depicting various colour of religion Islam. Since Salafist Islamic Interpretation brings bad stigma to this great religion so Spiegel finds it fit to print such articles as to influence the minds of its readers about negative aspects of Islam. Thousands German covert to other factions of Islam also which portray moderate and real face of Islam. Why Spiegel does not strive to print such stories. Any way Wat ever the Salafist believe it has nothing to do with the real teachings of Islam and strongly rejected.
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#3 |
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Benutzer
Join Date: 30.05.2006
Posts: 1,524
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At least we know that both are happy. Women like Alice Schwarzer have not liked to read the article, of course, because it entirely refutes their opinion that women are forced to wear a niqab etc.. Germans should calm down. Their life is not quite different from the one of a Swabian housewife.
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#4 |
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Join Date: 13.02.2012
Posts: 59
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BTraven. Hammered the nail well. Thanks showing the mirror to Germans.
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#5 |
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Join Date: 26.07.2012
Posts: 3
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So long as one does not embrace violence, I have no objection to anyone's beliefs, however I consider religion to be a private affair between the follower, and his or her belief. Personally, I object to anyone trying to convert another person by solicitation; whether handing out literature, preaching on a street corner, trying to modify legislation, or demanding rights beyond those of any citizen. A person certainly has a right to practice his or her belief, but if it impinges in any way upon the society, whether through tax deductions, demands for special educational facilities, or in any special social considerations my sense is it impinges on all of us, and those who practice religion should have the same consideration for those of us who do not. The fact is, I consider politicians to be cut from the same cloth.
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