@MickMilee Religion is a code to dominate others. Erase cultures and put them under fear. I'm not interested in any heaven and no one should prove any silly truth to me by pointing to a book. Let your God come and campaign to me
@onrage217@PaulAsim20830 Same arm of your religion you call terrorists are the one making demands for Sharia on your behalf which you're clamoring to be practiced in Yoruba land. O ma sofo tiran tiran
To all Christians: Just draft your own Christian laws and submit a bill to the Senate for approval, because Sharia law is here to stay in Nigeria. Practice your Christian laws and allow Muslims to focus on their religion peacefully.
What happened to the Muslim children who were denied access to school and even driven away for wearing the hijab? Did you help them fight the oppressors??
This your agenda won't work oo, Yoruba Muslims eyes don wide now, they don already knw their real enemies.
What happened to the Muslim children who were denied access to school and even driven away for wearing the hijab? Did you help them fight the oppressors??
This your agenda won't work oo, Yoruba Muslims eyes don wide now, they don already knw their real enemies.
I understand why many people are concerned when they hear โSharia law,โ especially when the examples that often come to mind are places like Afghanistan or Iran. However, I think itโs important to separate the actions of governments and individuals from the actual teachings of Islam.
Many of the restrictions people point to, such as preventing women from pursuing education or careers, are not principles that Islam introduced.
Islam did not forbid women from seeking knowledge or having a career. Seeking knowledge is encouraged for both men and women in Islam. One of the greatest examples is Aisha (RA), the wife of the Prophet Muhammad (SAW), who was a renowned scholar and a source of knowledge for countless Muslims after the Prophetโs passing. That fact alone should challenge the claim that Islam seeks to keep women uneducated or uninvolved in society.
Likewise, when people point to the failures of some Northern states and conclude that Sharia itself is the problem, they ignore the reality that selective justice and corruption are failures of human beings, not proof that the principles themselves are flawed. A system cannot be fairly judged by people who refuse to apply it consistently.
By that same logic, no ideology, religion, or legal system would survive scrutiny because every one of them has been abused somewhere by those in power.
It is perfectly reasonable to disagree with the implementation of Sharia or to have concerns about it. What is not reasonable is to reduce an entire legal and moral framework to the actions of extremists or governments that many Muslims themselves criticize.
At the very least, we should be discussing what Sharia actually teaches, not what its loudest and most controversial examples have done.