Added: 2 years ago
From: truecall2
Views: 2,431
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (15)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • muslims are always crazy and hsve nothing in their hearts

  • How sad that words, only words can cause one foolish MAN to call for the death of another man. If Ala is such a week god that words will bring him down, then what kind of god is he? My God, the Father of all of us and his son Jesus Christ can handle the ridicule and still forgive, how sad that the Muslim god is not strong enough and is harmed by a simple mans words.

  • Mein Kampf is so boring!

    We can read it in a bookstore (or in a library, if in Austria, China, Mexico or the Netherlands).

    It is mainly about money and political meetings.

    Stephan Zweig's The World of Yesterday is about the same, but expertly written.

    Rushdie's Satanic Verses is a sad book about child abuse... it tells the story of an unhappy Indian boy, despised in a Hindu community, who is then accepted by a kind Muslim family and starts making friends in the Muslim community.

  • @LiberdadeHedonista

    WTF??

    Have you even read the satanic verses?

    That is not at all what it is about. It is about immigration and the mental turmoil that it causes, and it is also about loss of faith.

  • You are perhaps referring to the other little boy in the novel, the one from a Muslim family, who gets victimized in an English school. That is also a sad story.

  • @LiberdadeHedonista

    Which of the two are you claiming goes through this ordeal in the book.

    Are you talking about Saladin, and his acception into the sufyan household when he started to look like a goat?

  • Saladin was unhappy in the English boarding school, and there was another boy, Osman, an "untouchable", who lived in the desert, together with his loving pet bullock, and was not allowed near wells of clean water.

    Rushdie always makes me weep with those stories about unfortunate children.

  • @LiberdadeHedonista

    Oh.... you mean Osman the clown, in the chapter where they are told to go to mecca by Ayesha, who claims to be speaking on behalf of gibreel.

    I didnt think Osman was a child but the story of him being untouchable(that is, before he "converted" to islam to escape such opression). That story was a little sad alright.

    He is a great author though isnt he?

  • Rushdie surely is a genius --- but, in his stories, Muslims are always the heroes or the victims: even if they do something bad, it has a justification.

    I would expect Muslims to like Rushdie, since they are the good characters in his books, and Hindus to dislike him, since they are often the bad blokes.

    And yet, it is the contrary!

    Can it be that, in India, people prefer to be the story villains, so Muslims envy Hindus for getting that role in Sir Salman's novels?

  • @LiberdadeHedonista

    Good point - but I suspect that the reason for the reaction that rushdie got was that the majority of muslim extremists didnt understand what the book was about.

    Well, that and the innuendo that he created about Muhommad(Mahound) and his wives, who, were immitated by prostitutes in "the curtain". To me it is all in good fun though - especially when you look at the fatuous claims that Islam makes for itself. They shouldnt expect to be immune for criticism.

  • Book The Satanic Verses, which affect the Salman Rushdie of the Great Prophet Muhammad Al-I consider freedom of expression and the West is still sold in markets, but the book Mein Kampf Hitler not been regarded as freedom of expression, which is forbidden and banned from sale in the markets !!!

  • @love187punk

    Not so.

    Mein Kampf is for sale in my local easons. Get your facts right.

  • restricted

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more