sábado, 13 de junho de 2026
Os kirpan e a legislação portuguesa
A Pakistani cleric, Mufti Abdul Wahab, says that "Muslims will rule over these doors and walls (of Lisbon)."
1º vídeo: "Assalam-o-Alaikum Warahmatullahi Wabarakatuh. How are you? I am in Lisbon and I am going to show you a very historic place. I am going to show you a very historic place. In 48 B.C., Lisbon was a Roman city. In 711, the Muslims took the city. In 1492, Granada fell. In 1147, Lisbon was taken by the Muslims. In 1492, Granada was taken by the Muslims.
In this city, all Islamic monuments and landmarks were destroyed. There are many mosques here, the Muslims here are called Moors. People do not even know that Muslim rule was here for over 500 years. Lisbon was also the capital of Andalusia. It was called Al Andalus Al Gharb. The Romans called it Hispania. The Muslims called it Andalusia. In today's modern era, it is called Spain, Portugal, and Lisbon.
I came
to Granada after looking for a place to stay. My friend Hafizullah
guided me. It took me an hour and a half to find a place to stay. Let
me show you that place. This used to be a mosque. Now it has become a
museum and a restaurant. People dance here at night and drink
alcohol. I asked many local Muslims about this place. They do not
know this place. Let me show you this historic place. This was the
entrance to the mosque. This used to be a mosque. The Sultan built a
small palace for himself. Let me show you the whole place. This used
to be the entrance to the Alhambra Palace. And whoever comes to Lisbon, must come here to visit. You can imagine what my condition is right now. Now imagine that Muslims will rule these gates and walls. And the sound of the Adhan will be heard in the air and in the wind. And God willing, that day will surely come. This was in the past. God willing, Allah will bless us.
May Allah create peace and harmony among Muslims. May peace be with you."
2º vídeo
Now, as I said, I am going to show this to you as well. This was a palace in the past, a mosque. Now it has become a museum and a restaurant. And whoever comes to Lisbon has to come here to visit. You can imagine what my condition must be like right now. Now imagine that Muslims will rule over these doors and walls. And the sound of the Adhan will be heard in the air. And God willing, that day will surely come. That was in the past. God willing, Allah will bless us. May Allah create peace and harmony among Muslims. May peace be upon you.
sexta-feira, 12 de junho de 2026
Two Brothers Of Tunisian Origin With A History Of Violence Harassed A Young Woman At An Italian Festival
Arab-Muslim slave trade: from 6 to 10 million black africans
Mauritania was the last country in the world to legally abolish slavery, having made the measure official in 1981 and criminalizing the practice only in 2007. The global abolition process occurred gradually. Below are the milestones of the last countries and regions to end slavery:
Mauritania: Official abolition occurred in 1981 by presidential decree, but the law that made slavery a punishable crime was only passed in 2007.
Oman: Abolished slavery in 1970.
Saudi Arabia and Yemen: Abolished slavery in 1962.
Ethiopia: Formally prohibited the practice in 1942
The Arab-Muslim slave trade spanned 13 centuries, capturing and transporting an estimated 6 to 10 million black Africans across the Sahara, Red Sea, and Indian Ocean. Unlike the plantation-based Atlantic trade, the Muslim trade primarily used enslaved Africans as domestic servants, concubines, guards, and soldiers.
Enslaved men were heavily used as laborers and military conscripts, while women were predominantly sought after as domestic workers and sex slaves. Castration was a distinct and brutal feature of this trade. The routine castration of enslaved African men was for them to serve as harem guards, resulting in exceptionally high mortality rates.
The survival rate of Black slaves subjected to castration in the trans-Saharan and Indian Ocean slave trades was catastrophically low, with historians estimating that only 10% to 33% survived. The current Black or Afro-Arab population across Arab countries is not tracked via strict racial censuses, but regional estimates place the overall percentage of darker-skinned or Afro-descendant people at roughly 5% to 10% of the Middle Eastern Arab population, though this varies drastically by country.
Castration and Survival Rates: Islamic law technically prohibited the mutilation of humans, so Arab slave traders frequently bypassed this by outsourcing the procedures. Young boys aged 8 to 12 were routinely sent to specialized centers—such as specific Coptic Christian monasteries in Upper Egypt or operations in the Sudan borderlands—before being imported into major cities of the Ottoman, Abbasid, or Umayyad empires as eunuchs.
The Lethality: The complete removal of both the penis and testicles was performed in an era without anesthesia or antibiotics. Bleeding was often stopped using boiling oil or hot sand.
Survival Data: Historical consensus (including data from Ottoman records and African histories) notes a mortality rate of 70% to 90%. This means that for every 10 boys subjected to the procedure, only 1 to 3 survived. This extreme mortality rate artificially inflated the market price of surviving eunuchs tenfold.
Current Black Population in Arab Countries: Unlike the transatlantic slave trade which generated large, visible, and structurally segregated African-American diasporas in the West, the Arab slave trade left a different demographic imprint. This was due to the widespread castration of males, high mortality rates, and a high rate of assimilation, as children born to Arab masters and enslaved women were born free and integrated into the father's lineage. Because modern Arab nations generally record census data based on nationality or religion rather than race, exact figures are hard to compile.
With "Gemini"
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