What we are seeing here, is entirely too many people in positions of Islamic leadership who have exactly the wrong attitude toward sexual assault. In real life, it is never the victim’s fault. (Wasn’t that the whole point of the slut walk phenomon?) The aggressor must never be excused for violating someone sexually.
And until Islam starts taking the right side of this issue, policing their own, and insisting that their men exercise self-restraint — they are part of the problem.
Not only are women and perfume the problem, according to Islam, but alcohol as well:
Germans need to ban alcohol if they want to prevent further sexual violence and to help North African
migrants integrate into society.
Commenting on the Cologne sex-attack controversy, MuslimStern, which has 20,000 followers on Facebook, said its mission was to ‘highlight the way the media was using the incidents to promote racism against minorities’.
The group complained that the female victims had brought the unwanted attention to themselves by dressing in a manner that North African men were not accustomed to.
The group claimed: ‘You cannot expect to chuck a naked antelope in front of a lion and not expect it to react. It is mind boggling that with so much time spent teaching children about sex at school, they completely forget to pass on this basic biological fact.’
As a consequence of the attacks, they urged the German government to introduce a ban across the country on the consumption of alcohol.
They also must ban this classic game:
Saudi Arabia’s grand mufti has ruled that chess is forbidden in
Islam, saying it encourages gambling and is a waste of time.
Sheikh Abdulaziz al-Sheikh was
answering a question on a television show in which he issues fatwas in response to viewers’ queries on everyday religious matters.
He said chess was “included under gambling” and was “a waste of time and money and a cause for hatred and enmity between players”.
Sheikh justified the ruling by referring to the verse in the Qur’an banning “intoxicants, gambling, idolatry and divination”. It is not clear when the fatwa was delivered.
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