The Artisan
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Mahershala Ali is the first Muslim to get an Oscar. What even is the Ahmadiyya?
Mahershala Ali is the first Muslim to get an Oscar. What even is the Ahmadiyya?
oh, damn. I guess then he should not be considered the first Muslim oscar winner?A group which considers themselves Muslims, but believe there is a prophet after Muhammud (PBUH) & have other distinct beliefs which go against what most Muslims believe. This causes them to be rejected by most Muslim sects(even the more liberal ones) who consider them Non-Muslims as one of the core teachings of Islam is that Muhammud(Pbuh) is the last prophet. This is as simple as I can put it. It's a touchy subject.
oh, damn. I guess then he should not be considered the first Muslim oscar winner?
Mahershala Ali is the first Muslim to get an Oscar. What even is the Ahmadiyya?
i don't really know what to think. i get a similar dilemma when i think about black muslims and 5%ers.It depends on your viewpoint, I don't consider them Muslims due to the large differences in their doctrines. So I wouldn't consider him the first Muslim oscar winner.
The media refers to them as Muslims since they refer to themselves as Muslims.
If anything they have good PR in the west.
oh fuck I forgot about him. although with best original song i think there was a little bit of controversy because that one of the rules about the award is that it has to be a song wrote originally for the movie, but jai ho was written for a different one then handed to slumdogHe's not the first Muslim regardless. A.R. Rahman has won a couple of Oscars.
A group which considers themselves Muslims, but believe there is a prophet after Muhammud (PBUH) & have other distinct beliefs which go against what most Muslims believe. This causes them to be rejected by most Muslim sects(even the more liberal ones) who consider them Non-Muslims as one of the core teachings of Islam is that Muhammud(Pbuh) is the last prophet. This is as simple as I can put it. It's a touchy subject.
He's not the first Muslim regardless. A.R. Rahman has won a couple of Oscars.
I don't think the bit about Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) not being considered the last prophet to them warrants anything like this, considering Shia Muslims? But the way you represent it, that seems the largest thing/the main point. What teachings exactly are so contrary to Sunni teachings? Curious. Doesn't have to be heavily detailed or anything.
i don't really know what to think. i get a similar dilemma when i think about black muslims and 5%ers.
black muslim i think is what the media referred to as members of the nation of islam. 5%ers are a derivative of that where every man is a god, i think
allah=arm leg leg arm head
I don't know much about them, I've heard of the Nation of Islam if that's what you're thinking about but I don't know much about them other than they also hold extreme and non-core islam beliefs, but not on the same level as the ahmedi's.
The Shahada literally states that you believe Muhammud(pbuh) is the last messenger and it's noted numerous times in the Quran afaik, it's a huge thing. He even apparently stated he was better than prophet pbuh and is held as such by his followers. He also apparently slandered the past prophets.
I'm not aware of Shia's believing anything like this?
They view Mirza - their prophet after Muhammud (pbuh) as the messiah i.e. not Isa(Jesus), they believe he is the one who fulfills the role of the second coming of Jesus.
There's also huge contradictions between their beliefs and core islam (what both Sunni and Shia's believe).
There's huge amounts of discussion on them
https://islamqa.info/en/4060
http://islamqa.org/hanafi/askimam/4098
I haven't heard or read most of the things discussed in those two links before but they have sources,are reputable websites/Imams and various website correlate with them.
Also apparently the Wikipedia page is heavily monitored&edited, but also backs alot of it up . I don't like researching the teachings of non-muslims so I haven't done huge amounts of research on the topic, but it is clear to me that their prophet & teachings aren't inline with Islam. I'm not here to bash the Ahmedi's , I believe they should be allowed to practice just like Christians,Jews,Hindus etc should be allowed to practice. This whole post is my opinion based on passive knowledge of them.
This is all second hand info, but I haven't found anything to dispute otherwise.
I don't think I have enough information to strongly argue either way since I believe the persecution they face is overboard.
I didn't mean to say you didn't know what the shahada means, it was more to show how important & a core belief of Islam it is.I know what the Shahada says.
Shia's believe that Prophet Muhammed (pbuh) named Ali as his successor at Ghadir Khumm, from what I'm aware of. I could be incorrect in that they see him as the equivalent to a Prophet, though, but that's where the split between Sunnis and Shias starts. I assumed from there, but it could be something else entirely. Maybe someone else here has better expertise on it. That's what I was referring to, anyway.
What you're saying's entirely different, though. I can see why Ahmadiyya's aren't really accepted, judging by that. I'll have a look through those links, thanks. I'll look into it some more myself when I've got free time.
http://www.gq.com/story/mahershala-ali-interviewWell, Im allergic to dogs and not to cats. Its also a Muslim thing. We cant have dogs in the house.
Either way I think he at least identifies as a Muslim.http://www.gq.com/story/mahershala-ali-interview
Well they certainly shouldn't be persecuted for it. That's just barbaric.Yeah ahmedi's identify as Muslims which is why there's a huge amount of persecution against them.
so Ahmadis believe Christ is the prophet to come after Muhammad?I used to be an Ahmadi before leaving Islam.
To clarify the Ahmadi position on the finality of the prophet.
They believe that the arabic word for final and chief/greatest are the same and interchangable and in the Quran the same word was used actually more to mean chief/greatest as opposed to mean final, so when used as final prophet, it actually meant to say the chief of the prophets or the greatest of the prophets.
As muslims believe in the second coming of christ, obviously coming after Muhammad, it is logical to conclude that Muhammad could not be in fact the final prophet, but it still make sense for him to be the chief or the greatest.
I mean it's all nonsense to me but it always seemed like fairly sound reasoning from a theological standpoint.
Yeah ahmedi's identify as Muslims which is why there's a huge amount of persecution against them.
I used to be an Ahmadi before leaving Islam.
To clarify the Ahmadi position on the finality of the prophet.
They believe that the arabic word for final and chief/greatest are the same and interchangable and in the Quran the same word was used actually more to mean chief/greatest as opposed to mean final, so when used as final prophet, it actually meant to say the chief of the prophets or the greatest of the prophets.
As muslims believe in the second coming of christ, obviously coming after Muhammad, it is logical to conclude that Muhammad could not be in fact the final prophet, but it still make sense for him to be the chief or the greatest.
I mean it's all nonsense to me but it always seemed like fairly sound reasoning from a theological standpoint.
no one has right to do that. Correct them disagree with them but not that.
I used to be an Ahmadi before leaving Islam.
To clarify the Ahmadi position on the finality of the prophet.
They believe that the arabic word for final and chief/greatest are the same and interchangable and in the Quran the same word was used actually more to mean chief/greatest as opposed to mean final, so when used as final prophet, it actually meant to say the chief of the prophets or the greatest of the prophets.
As muslims believe in the second coming of christ, obviously coming after Muhammad, it is logical to conclude that Muhammad could not be in fact the final prophet, but it still make sense for him to be the chief or the greatest.
I mean it's all nonsense to me but it always seemed like fairly sound reasoning from a theological standpoint.
no one has right to do that. Correct them disagree with them but not that.
First Muslim actor then.
And lmao at you guys "I don't consider him a Muslim." If he identifies as one then that's what it is, regardless of how he practices.
First Muslim actor then.
And lmao at you guys "I don't consider him a Muslim." If he identifies as one then that's what it is, regardless of how he practices.
Hi everyone. I'm a fledgling screenwriter/novelist and I'm looking to write a very time sensitive book that seeks to heavily address America's ever growing xenophobia. One aspect of this is the Muslim Community. It's an aspect I'd like to portray accurately and correctly. Trouble is I know very little about the Muslim Community.
So I'm looking for someone up to be interviewed (we can do it through PMs on Neogaf even) to try and help me to broaden my understanding of your culture and portray members of it as realistically and fairly as possible. I'd really like it if the characters I create feel as honest and real and sympathetic as possible.
If no one is interested that's fine, I know my request is asking a lot. Thanks for your time either way =)
Whilst this is great, I'd say take it a step further and visit a local mosque, so an Imam can tell you about these things and you can witness things such as the congregational prayer - obviously book an appointment or let them know you're coming in advance if you do decide to go. Maybe go for the Friday Prayer - Juma which is the most popular congregational prayer outside the special ones such as Eid. You won't get more realistic then that.
Also one thing to note, there's varying levels of interactivity with the Muslim community by Muslims (atleast in the UK) , some don't visit the mosque outside the Friday prayer & other obligatory prayers, some don't go to the Friday prayer at all whilst others go to the mosque to pray 5 times a day. There's also different sects of Islam which pray differently, the most popular is Sunni islam which has sects within itself.
I knwo you're looking for more personal insight, but I thought these things would be of interest to you if you're looking for your adaptation to be relatable.
I totally missed your post before.
The issue isn't about identifying as a Muslim. The issue is if they are actually practicing Islam, when they fail at the shahada, the first step, I can't really see why they should be viewed the same as mainstream Muslims. I mean they have huge differences similar to how Christians and Jews have differences to Islam. That isn't to say they aren't Islamic, they also have a lot in common with us, but the use of Muslim, at least my use of it is someone who follows the core tenants of Islam not a version of it, sunni's, shia's and many other sects have this in common while the ahmediyya do not.
Whether their prayers are accepted or not isn't up to us to decide, that's only Allah can do, similarly we can't say they aren't followers of Islam since that it is a huge sin in itself. My point was " i don't consider" them the same as what we refer to as Muslims since they have huge inherent differences. They don't consider us the same as them either, which is why they apparently have bans on them marrying us. Which again seperates them from normal Muslims. We need to draw the line somewhere, simply considering yourself Muslim isn't enough you need the actions to assert this. Otherwise we have groups such as ISIS also claim to be following Islam but violate so many core principles of Islam that they can't be considered the same as the majority of Muslims. Which is where the debate for if they should be referred to as the Islamic state comes from. Simply claiming to be something isn't enough, as Ashes said.
Again, I haven't done huge research into the issue, but this is my knowledge on the matter.Additionally , when the scholars we look to for rulings and the country of Saudia Arabia don't consider them Muslims I don't see how I can make a more informed decision than them.
Again, I don't have an issue with them praying alongside us or calling themselves Muslim. They are free to do so just as others have said.
What's so funny?
I'm sure he's a better Muslim than I am all things considered; heck, some Christians are better Muslims than I am.
But if a neogaffer called herself a Muslim prophet, I'm not sure, her followers, fit into Islam. Sure she'd make it to Wikipedia, but as much as I understand the religion, her followers'd not be considered Muslim.
Y'all are just very ostracizing. Who the fuck cares, what's the debate? We get great news of a very deserving and talented actor who identifies as Muslim, and you all jump in like "he's not one of us." Get over it. He's not hurting anyone with his beliefs, let alone his group is the one that is heavily persecuted by people who identify with what you consider as a "correct" follower of Islam.
Hi everyone. I'm a fledgling screenwriter/novelist and I'm looking to write a very time sensitive book that seeks to heavily address America's ever growing xenophobia. One aspect of this is the Muslim Community. It's an aspect I'd like to portray accurately and correctly. Trouble is I know very little about the Muslim Community.
So I'm looking for someone up to be interviewed (we can do it through PMs on Neogaf even) to try and help me to broaden my understanding of your culture and portray members of it as realistically and fairly as possible. I'd really like it if the characters I create feel as honest and real and sympathetic as possible.
If no one is interested that's fine, I know my request is asking a lot. Thanks for your time either way =)
Y'all are just very ostracizing. Who the fuck cares, what's the debate? We get great news of a very deserving and talented actor who identifies as Muslim, and you all jump in like "he's not one of us." Get over it. He's not hurting anyone with his beliefs, let alone his group is the one that is heavily persecuted by people who identify with what you consider as a "correct" follower of Islam.
Seems like you're the one projecting being butt hurt about Muslim Identity to be honest.
There is a an interesting debate to be had about what makes a Muslim Muslim. Denying that there is a debate to be had is intellectually dishonest.
The whole ostracization accusation is absurd. We've had Ahmaddiya Muslims in this thread. And I'm not your typical Muslim either. And people put up with me.
Plus the guy you are talking about is an Oscar winner. Who here is seriously going to say no if he wants to break fast with us?
At the end of the day, it is for Allah to judge. But why would I shy away from debate about it?
It's not an interesting debate though, it's literally people questioning the legitimacy of a religious sect.
It is that. Hence why I can understand people finding it interesting.
This goes to the core of Muhammad being the seal of the prophets. I'm not sure why you brush it aside like the fundamental tenets of the religion don't mean a damn thing to you.
Ahmaddiya have a stronger case for being classified non-muslim than boko haram (who I personally think disqualify as a legitimate school of thought). They literally invented a brand new prophet.
None of those points are related to schism except this:
I think this needs more clarification. Who is Mirza Ghulam then?Fabrication 6: Ahmadi Muslims dont accept Muhammad(sa) as the Seal of the Prophets
As I mentioned earlier, Ahmadi Muslims proudly celebrate Prophet Muhammad as KhatamunNabiyyin or the Seal of the Prophets. Rather than delve into a lengthy discourse, Ill make just two points.
First, every year at the Ahmadiyya Muslim Communitys international Jalsa Salana in UK, His Holiness the Khalifa of Islam, Mirza Masroor Ahmad, accepts baiat, i.e. initiation, from every member of the community. It is an annual pledge. Part of this pledge declares in no uncertain terms, I solemnly pledge that I believe Muhammad is Gods Prophet and the Seal of the Prophets. Thus, every adult Ahmadi Muslim has recited this pledge dozens of times, and every person who joins the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community affirms this pledge in writing with his or her signature.
Second, if you still do not believe me, here is an excellent book written by two Ahmadi Muslim scholars titled, With Love to Muhammad, the KhatamunNabiyyin. You can buy the print book or download it absolutely free at the link provided as an e-book. If, after reading the book, you still do not believe me that Ahmadi Muslims consider Muhammad as the Seal of the Prophets, drop me a line and well chat.
Bottom Line: Ahmadi Muslims proudly declare Prophet Muhammad is Khatamun Nabiyyin.
It is that. Hence why I can understand people finding it interesting.
This goes to the core of Muhammad being the seal of the prophets. I'm not sure why you brush it aside like the fundamental tenets of the religion don't mean a damn thing to you.
Ahmaddiya have a stronger case for being classified non-muslim than boko haram (who I personally think disqualify as a legitimate school of thought). They literally invented a brand new prophet.
He's not equating Ahmadiyya to BokoHaram's political actions and their physical violence and terrorism. But rather their aqeedah. So Boko Haram are Sunni Muslims, but are the scum of the earth and need to be purged from existencd. However Ahmadiyya are peaceful and lot of times great human beings and promote peace and harmony, but are not necessarily Muslims.Yikes at comparison with an extremist group. Nice debate.
He's not equating Ahmadiyya to BokoHaram's political actions and their physical violence and terrorism. But rather their aqeedah. So Boko Haram are Sunni Muslims, but are the scum of the earth and need to be purged from existencd. However Ahmadiyya are peaceful and lot of times great human beings and promote peace and harmony, but are not necessarily Muslims.
AFAIK, I dont know much about Ahmadiyyas to comment which way. If they profess faith in Allah and agree that Muhammad SAW is the last and final messenger, then they are Muslims. But each Ahmadiya person gives a different answer in my experience.
I'm pretty sure she understands this and is just taking petty shots at me. And maybe I deserve it too. But I would like to know what we can discuss if we can't talk about what makes a Muslim Muslim.
The problem I had were users explicitly stating that Ahmadis are not considered Muslim.
...This day I have perfected for you your religion and completed My favor upon you and have approved for you Islam as religion. [Quran 5:3]
Allah also says in the Quran that
And Allah doesn't change... He is eternal... no beginning no end.
Everything goes his way and he doesn't negotiate with anyone about decisions...
Allah isn't going to go
"ooops guess I am just going to bring out another Prophet with out any warning and make everyone follow him and cause confusion for you know reasons"
He doesn't make last minute decisions...
You just need to see the story of Adam in the Quran were Allah tells us that humanity was going to go to Earth anyway before he even created Adam... and when Adam did a sin Allah said he slipped , wasn't even a big problem and Allah knew it was going to happen but because we have free will he is testing us to learn from our mistakes.
Allah tells us to follow his commands and he already completed those commands.
There isn't anything in Quran or Hadith that says there will be another Prophet or another book or anything like that. There wasn't any reason for it either.
The Mehdi isn't even a Prophet and you can't just level up from Mehdi to Prophet to Messiah or something like if you are picking up some spring fashion outfits.
That is the debate though. That is the dominant position. That is overwhelmingly the consensus amongst Muslims. It's not my shit as you put it. So I don't know what you think you are calling me out on.
Anyway, I think I am done with you. There's nothing I am learning from our exchange.
yeah I believe he isIt'd have been useful to hear maninthemirror's viewpoint, but he's banned isn't he?
Also, just because it's general consensus doesn't mean that it's right for the community. There are a lot of problems that are accepted amongst Muslims that have caused lots of issues for our brothers and sisters, especially in this generation. If we want to live in what has become increasingly inclusive world, we should not exclude people with discouraging dialogue.
Glad to hear you're doing well! Thanks for posting the video, it's absolutely a good reminder.Asalamo alaykum all.
I hope pray everyone is doing well and in good health. It's been a while since I posted here, but I've been super busy over the past few months (I haven't even finished my first year, but med school is quite intense especially now that we've started Sem 2)!
In the meanwhile, it's certainly been a fantastic experience in university, and joining my uni's ISoc has been one of the best things that's happened to me spiritually, academically and personally, in regards to the amazing amount of brothers I've met, advice I've gained and imaan booster's I've been given. I've even had opportunities to go to talks from popular speakers (I even finally got to see a Nouman Ali Khan lecture in real life in East London Mosque after watching him on a screen for so long!).
Anyhow, I hope everyone is keeping well. I just thought I'd leave a very powerful lecture that I came across, that for myself first and foremost, how easy it is to lose iman in this day and age and how to overcome it, because no ones perfect of course, and sometimes we just need that extra iman booster.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DNC3y9rJI9c