Some modern-day Islamist radicals (and a smattering of Western pundits) describe the Crusades as a great clash of civilizations foreshadowing the troubles of today. They trace the roots of modern Muslim rage to that era and those events. But reports from the Arab side don’t show Muslims of the time thinking this way, at least at the start. No one seemed to cast the wars as an epic struggle between Islam and Christendom—that was the story line the Crusaders saw. Instead of a clash between two civilizations, Muslims saw simply a calamity falling upon . . . civilization. For one thing, when they looked at the Franj, they saw no evidence of civilization. An Arab prince named Usamah ibn Munqidh أُسامة بن منقذ described the Franks as being like “beasts, superior in courage and in fighting ardor, but in nothing else, just as animals are superior in strength and aggression.” The Crusaders so disgusted the Muslims that they came to appreciate the Byzantines by contrast. Once they understood the political and religious motives of the Crusaders, they made a distinction between “al Rum” (Rome—i.e., the Byzantines) and “al-Ifranj.” Instead of “the Crusades,” Muslims called this period of violence the Franj Wars.
— Destiny Disrupted
— Destiny Disrupted
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Some modern-day Islamist radicals (and a smattering of Western pundits) describe the Crusades as a great clash of civilizations foreshadowing the troubles of today. They trace the roots of modern Muslim rage to that era and those events. But reports from the…
إذا خَبَرَ الإنسانُ أُمور الإفرنج، سبّح اللهَ تعالى وقدّسه ورأى بهائم فيهم فضيلة الشجاعة والقتال لا غير، كما في البهائم فضيلةُ القوة والحِمل
— أُسامة بن منقذ، أمير عربي عاصر الحروب الصليبية
— أُسامة بن منقذ، أمير عربي عاصر الحروب الصليبية
وليس عندهم شيءٌ من النخوة والغيرة، يكونُ الرجل منهم يمشي هو وامرأتُه يلقاه رجل آخر يأخذ المرأةَ ويعتزل بها ويتحدث معها، والزوجُ واقفٌ ناحيةً ينتظر فراغها من الحديث، فإذا طوّلت عليه خلّاها مع المتحدث ومضى.
ورأيت واحدًا منهم جاء إلى الأمير معين الدين رحمه الله وهو في الصخرة، فقال تريد تبصر الله صغيرًا؟ قال نعم. فمشى بين أيدينا حتى أرانا صورة مريم والمسيح عليه الصلاة والسلام صغير في حِجرها، فقال هذا الله صغير—تعالى الله عما يقول الكافرون علوًا كبيرًا.
وبعد اكو تحشيش هواي
بس بيه حمامات عامة وخاوليات توكع... فنمتنع عن ذكره إحترامًا للذوق العام
بس بيه حمامات عامة وخاوليات توكع... فنمتنع عن ذكره إحترامًا للذوق العام
Forwarded from Disquiet 🌙
Memes like this are more damaging than funny, The only purpose of it is to ridicule women and feminism
Disquiet 🌙
Memes like this are more damaging than funny, The only purpose of it is to ridicule women and feminism
Feminism's deepest desire is not freedom nor equality, it's envy. Not even envy of men, but envy of affluent men. They want to live the luxurious life of rich men, not to acquire the same rights of typical men, because typical men, like typical women, have little rights if any.
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Feminism's deepest desire is not freedom nor equality, it's envy. Not even envy of men, but envy of affluent men. They want to live the luxurious life of rich men, not to acquire the same rights of typical men, because typical men, like typical women, have…
Which is why feminism first started among women who came from well-off or at least middle-class families, not among peasants or low-paid factory workers... Because the latter were too busy scraping a living than to worry about voting or higher education.
Why is it that the more feminist you are, the worst your sense of humor becomes?
Forwarded from Lab Rats In Lab Coats (Haidar A. Fahad)
Panic disorder
A curious footnote to the Mongol holocaust occurred in 653 AH (1256 CE), when Hulagu was passing through Persia. A Muslim jurist near Alamut complained to the Mongol khan that he had to wear armor under his clothes all the time for fear of the Assassins headquartered nearby. A short time later, two Fedayeen فدائيين (suicidal Assassin agents) disguised as monks tried to kill Hulagu—and failed. The cult that could kill anyone met the army that could kill everyone. Hulagu took time out from his westward drive to storm Alamut آلموت. He then did to the Assassins what the Mongols had done and would do to many others: he destroyed them physically; he destroyed their stronghold; he destroyed their records, libraries, and papers—in that moment, the menace of the Assassins came to an end.
— Destiny Disrupted
— Destiny Disrupted
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A curious footnote to the Mongol holocaust occurred in 653 AH (1256 CE), when Hulagu was passing through Persia. A Muslim jurist near Alamut complained to the Mongol khan that he had to wear armor under his clothes all the time for fear of the Assassins headquartered…
المغول والحشاشين
Feels like a video game crossover
Feels like a video game crossover
Forwarded from Labyrinth (Tuqa Qassim)
"Nowadays people know the price of everything and the value of nothing."
(The Picture of Dorian Gray 📖)
(The Picture of Dorian Gray 📖)
Safavid creativity climaxed in architecture. For example, unlike the monumental Ottoman mosques—those somber mounds of domes bracketed by minarets—the Safavids built airy structures that shimmered with glazed mosaic tiles and seemed almost to float, so that even gigantic mosques looked like they were made of lace and light. And if architecture was the highest art form of Safavid Persia, then city building was its meta-art. The Safavids kept moving their capital (seeking safety from the ever-looming Ottomans) and every time they adopted a new city as their home, they remade it aesthetically. In 1598, after choosing Isfahan as his new capital, Shah Abbas launched a building program that transformed the entire city into a single integrated jewel: by the time he was done, it abounded in public squares, gardens, mosques, mansions, pools, palaces, and public buildings interlaced with handsome boulevards. Awestruck visitors coined the phrase Isfahan Nisfi-Jahan, “Isfahan, half the world” اصفهان نصف جهان (their point being that if you hadn’t seen Isfahan, you’d missed half of all there was to see in the world).
— Destiny Disrupted
— Destiny Disrupted