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To: Thomas M. who wrote (119151)8/17/2009 10:15:16 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 132070
 
Hey tommy
I found a wife for you
she`s beautiful-S-

Girl wins beauty contest with burqa on

AFP


Saudi beauty queen Aya Ali al-Mulla trounced 274 rivals to win a crown, jewellery, cash and a trip to Malaysia, and all without showing her face.

With her face and body completely covered by the black head-to-toe burqa mandatory in the conservative Muslim kingdom, 18-year-old Mulla was named “Miss Moral Beauty” on Friday.

There was none of the swimsuit and evening gown competitions and heavy media coverage of beauty pageants elsewhere when the contest was decided in the eastern city of Safwa. Instead, the winner and the two runner-up princesses had to undergo a three-month test of their dutifulness to their parents and family, and their service to society.

This included a battery of personal, cultural, social and psychological tests.
Miss Moral Beauty, which was inaugurated last year, is Saudi Arabia’s first pageant for women. The only pageants being held earlier were for goats, sheep, camels and other animals, aimed at encouraging livestock breeding.

Mulla and other contestants spent nearly 10 weeks attending classes and being quizzed on themes including ‘Discovering your inner strength,’ ‘The making of leaders’ and ‘Mom, paradise is at your feet’ — a saying attributed to Prophet Muhammad to underline that respect for parents is among the faith’s most important tenets.

The contestants also spent a day at a country house with their mothers, where they were observed by female judges and graded on how they interacted with them. It was unclear exactly what Mulla did to pip her rivals in the huge field, but Saudi newspaper Al-Watan reported that the high school graduate had good grades and hopes to go into medicine.

She raked in a 5,000-riyal ($1,333) prize, a pearl necklace, diamond watch, diamond necklace, and a free ticket to Malaysia with her win.

Beauty contests focused on physical beauty are non-existent in segregated Saudi Arabia, where women can not mix with unrelated men, and must appear in public completely covered — even in photographs. “The real winner in this competition is the society. The winners represent the culture of the society and its high Islamic morals,” one of the organisers told Al-Watan.

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To: Thomas M. who wrote (119151)8/17/2009 10:22:06 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 132070
 
Hey tommy
I found a wife for you
she`s beautiful-S-

How come you do not live in this society. The winners represent the culture of the society and its high Islamic morals,” one of the organisers told Al-Watan.

High Islamic Morals? hahahahahahahahaha
got kitchen fires?
When are you going to join the human race?

Girl wins beauty contest with burqa on

AFP


Saudi beauty queen Aya Ali al-Mulla trounced 274 rivals to win a crown, jewellery, cash and a trip to Malaysia, and all without showing her face.

With her face and body completely covered by the black head-to-toe burqa mandatory in the conservative Muslim kingdom, 18-year-old Mulla was named “Miss Moral Beauty” on Friday.

There was none of the swimsuit and evening gown competitions and heavy media coverage of beauty pageants elsewhere when the contest was decided in the eastern city of Safwa. Instead, the winner and the two runner-up princesses had to undergo a three-month test of their dutifulness to their parents and family, and their service to society.

This included a battery of personal, cultural, social and psychological tests.
Miss Moral Beauty, which was inaugurated last year, is Saudi Arabia’s first pageant for women. The only pageants being held earlier were for goats, sheep, camels and other animals, aimed at encouraging livestock breeding.

Mulla and other contestants spent nearly 10 weeks attending classes and being quizzed on themes including ‘Discovering your inner strength,’ ‘The making of leaders’ and ‘Mom, paradise is at your feet’ — a saying attributed to Prophet Muhammad to underline that respect for parents is among the faith’s most important tenets.

The contestants also spent a day at a country house with their mothers, where they were observed by female judges and graded on how they interacted with them. It was unclear exactly what Mulla did to pip her rivals in the huge field, but Saudi newspaper Al-Watan reported that the high school graduate had good grades and hopes to go into medicine.

She raked in a 5,000-riyal ($1,333) prize, a pearl necklace, diamond watch, diamond necklace, and a free ticket to Malaysia with her win.

Beauty contests focused on physical beauty are non-existent in segregated Saudi Arabia, where women can not mix with unrelated men, and must appear in public completely covered — even in photographs. “The real winner in this competition is the society. The winners represent the culture of the society and its high Islamic morals,” one of the organisers told Al-Watan.

About us | Contact us | Advertise with us | Subscription | Reprint rights
© 2005-2009 Diligent Media Corporation Ltd. All rights reserved.

=======================



To: Thomas M. who wrote (119151)8/17/2009 10:22:36 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 132070
 
How come you do not puke at this:
Treatment of Women in Islamic and Hindu Culture
Treatment of Women in Islamic and Hindu Culture
From the beginning of time, women have been looked down upon as inferior to men. Societies have long since been patriarchal, with only men holding positions of authority. Women were excluded from public life and were left to be in charge of home and children. Even in America today, women fight many social issues traceable to the biblical idea of the "evil woman" who introuduced original sin to the world. Far more contoversial, however, is the issue of women in Islamic and Hindu cultures. While it is generally agreed that the rights granted to women in the Koran and by the prophet Mohammed were a vast improvement in comparison to the situation of women in Arabia prior to the introduction of Islam, Mohammed's death marked a gradual deterioration of the condition of women, as it began to revert back to pre-Islamic ways. Hindu women, on the other hand, are gradually becoming equal in society and have played influential roles in shaping the country. Nevertheless, one should not forget what the women in India have endured for thousands of years. And while poor treatment in Islamic cultures can be attributed to radical regional customs which are easily debunked by the words of the Kora


A woman was also forced to believe that until she gave birth to a child, she was not a complete woman. Due to unsanitary practices, either the newborn child or the mother would often die. Nevertheless, it was nomral for women to bear up to 10 children despite these dangerous conditions.

Unmarried girls lived extremely sheltered lives, in which any sort of freedom was restricted in order to protect the interests of the family. For example, a Hindu girl's most valuable possession is her chastity, so to protect marriage prospects for their daughters, fathers carefully monitored their unmarried daughter's behavior in order to limit their interactions with unrelated men. This obsession with keeping females in close proximity to their family has given rise to the common Indian practice of incest in various incantations.These methods also resulted in the girls being barred from attending school, leaving women illiterate for the majority of India's history. Child marriages were also commonplace among the Hindu in an effort to rid the family of their "burden," and girls were sometimes married off as young as eight years old, always to men more than twice their age. Other wedding customs left little room for female happiness as well. For example, ancient customs stated that girls were forbidden to know their husbands prior to their wedding day, thus marriages were arranged by the parents of the prospective partners.

When women in India married, it was customary for their families to give a dowry to the girl's husband and his family. Often when the dowry was not paid or the desired amount was not met, the bride would be set on fire by the groom's family. To this day, this practice illegally continues, as each day a number of women die in what is written off as acidental "kitchen fires."

Some topics in this essay:
Furthermore Islam, Koran Hindu, Muslims Somalia, Islam Mohammed's, Muslim Arabia, Hindu Culture, Arabia Islam, Islamic Hindu, Sri Lanka, India Indeed, hindu culture, treatment women, teachings islam, hindu women, women islamic hindu, islamic religion, practice female, accordance koran, hindu cultures, women arabia, women india,

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Approximate Word count = 1848
Approximate Pages = 7 (250 words per page double spaced)


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To: Thomas M. who wrote (119151)9/6/2009 11:09:41 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 132070
 
Tommy
Have you sold off your elementary school daughters yet?
Here is your chance!!!
Nice muslim civilization you champion.
According to this article raping babies is a muslim cultural thing!

As school year opens, France on alert to spot forced marriages
By Sophie Hardach
Reuters / September 6, 2009
PARIS - As girls and young women prepare to start the new school year in France, activists are sounding the alarm over those who are missing - teenagers sent abroad over the holidays and forced into marriage.


Most victims are of Asian, African, or Middle Eastern descent and belong to France’s Muslim community, the largest in Europe. While countries such as Britain have set up special units that track down victims at home and overseas, activists say France is only now waking up to the problem.

“For a long time this used to be considered a cultural thing,’’ said Fatima Lalem, who is in charge of gender equality at Paris City Hall. “Something that happens, but that people don’t look at too closely.’’ Over the past year, France has begun to tackle the problem more aggressively. Last November, Paris City Hall published a guide advising officials on detecting forced marriages.

But former victims and activists, many of them second- or third-generation immigrants working in France’s multicultural suburbs, said such moves were unlikely to help women married off abroad, or scared into silence.

Zeliha Alkis, who works for Elele, a nonprofit organization that mainly helps women of Turkish origin, cites the example of a young woman of Turkish descent who was married to a Turkish man at a Paris town hall this summer. On her wedding night, she was locked in a room, and when she protested, her grandmother tied her up so the marriage could be consummated.

In many other cases, the women are married in the family’s country of origin. Reasons include the family wanting to ensure the woman marries a candidate deemed suitable, settling a debt, and procuring a visa for the groom. Unlike arranged marriage, which can be consensual, these weddings are performed against the women’s will.

“Early June to late September is our busiest period, after the wedding was celebrated over there, and then the young woman calls us and says, what do I do now, I don’t want that husband,’’ said Alkis.

No one knows exactly how many French women are forced into such unions. A report on women’s rights by France’s high council for integration in 2003 put the number of girls and women at risk of being forced into marriage at 70,000, based on research by grassroots organizations.

© Copyright 2009 Globe Newspaper Company.
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