Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I didnt want to dig this post up, but had failed to see your response and now am responding.Muslim is someone who believes in one God Allah (swt) and Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) as his messenger.
Please do tell me, how does Gandhi fits this definition?
And do not use PBUH in front of Omar (radhi Allahu anhu)
Peace be upon him is a phrase that practicing Muslims often say after saying (or hearing) the name of a prophet of Islam.
* (Arabic: عليه السلام ʿAlayhis salaam - A.S.) "Peace be upon him": This expression follows after naming any prophet (other than Prophet Muhammed), or one of the noble Angels (i.e. Jibreel, Mikaeel, etc.)
* (Arabic: صلى الله عليه وسلم ṣall Allahu ʿalayhi wa sallam - S.A.W.) "May Allah bless him and grant him peace." : This expression follows specifically after saying the name of the last Prophet of Islam, Prophet Muhammed. Note that Muslims do not use this expression for any other prophet.
In Arabic these salutations are called salawāt, and are abbreviated with SAW (in accordance with the Arabic words sallallahou alayhi wasallam) or PBUH (according to English).
Omar (radhi Allahu anhu) was sahaba.
When mentioning sahaba (the companions of Muhammad), radhi Allahu anhu (for males) and radhi Allahu anha (for females) are used .
I just used PBUH in the literal english sense, did not take the arabic SAW into consideration. I just wanted a short salutation so i put it in. If it is a Mistake, Hope Allah forgives me.I didnt want to dig this post up, but had failed to see your response and now am responding.
"A Muslims does not eat pork, nor Drink Wine"
I rest My case!
Gandhi would have taken it as an insult(I should have used a better word). Jinnah must have known this.When Jinnah was asked for his comments on Gandhi after the latters assassination, he is reported to have called him a great Hindu leader.
Gandhi never called for aban on conversions. He only preached that religion is only matter of belief and everyone should have a right to choose his religion. But he also preached against conversion as it is a sign of weakness. In his view religion is such an unimportant view that you need not change your religion to believe in another religion.Gandhi, for example, would have favored a ban on conversions.
He suspected that conversions sometimes changed peoples allegiance to ones nation, and he held the whole idea of converting anybody as abhorrent. I believe that there is no such thing as conversion from one faith to another in the accepted sense of the word, he wrote in 1935.
basically he was against hindus converting to Islam, he saw Islam as a threat and thats why jinnah left congress, and jinnah even rejected the bribe of being a first PM of India if he lets go of an Idea of Pakistan
*WTF = what the fissh12. The constitution should embody adequate safeguards for the protection of Muslim culture[no problem] and for the protection and promotion of Muslim education[wtf], language[no problem], religion[no problem], personal laws[WTF] and Muslim charitable institution and for their due share in the grants-in-aid given by the state and by local self-governing bodies[no problem].
13. No cabinet, either central or provincial, should be formed without there being a proportion of at least one-third Muslim ministers[WTF].
Gandhi is mistakenly revered as a pacifist.
He squeezed Hindu ideals into the independence movement. With him at the helm it felt as if the independence movement was a Hindu movement rather than an Indian movement.
His radical marches, his talk of ahimsa and yet agitation and the bringing in of Hindu symbolism were the catalyst for splitting the movement into Hindu and Muslim. Jinnah kept demanding just one thing out Gandhi, do not bring religion into the movement. Gandhi refused, Jinnah quit the congress and left the country altogether. He had to later be pulled back into politics by Allama Iqbal.
A more apt comparison is probably between Nehru and Jinnah. They have more in common than Gandhi and Jinnah.
you mean both of them at the same time.... before 1947
i know that you mean that he was with lady edwina mountbatten .... right. but why would Lord Mountbatten like that somebody was sleeping with his wife so much, that he would favour him.. beats me
i never knew that Gandhi and Jinnah went to college together... they both did it from London, probably from the same place, but nor together
Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah fell in love and married only one women, who converted to Islam and later died of cancer. He had no affairs with anyone, except for that one woman who he married.
Nehru, however, was too busy in the sack:
'Nehru, Edwina were in love' - India - The Times of India
Gay tendencies of Nehru:
HVK Archives: Nehru may have had gay tendencies, reveals biographer
Lord Mountbatten was gay also:
BBC ON THIS DAY | 27 | 1979: IRA bomb kills Lord Mountbatten
Nehrus' and Mountbattens' relationship was going on well before the partition of 1947.
Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah cared for the Muslims of British India and he didnt get Pakistan through any kind of weird relationship with Mountbattens that Nehru had, he even rejected Lord Mountbatten's request for being Governor General of Pakistan, and Quaid-e-Azam knew he was dieing, he didnt make Pakistan for himself. He was a selfless, intelligent man.
When I meant Nehru and Jinnah had more in common, I meant in the sense that they both were political leaders of the respective nations. I'd leave their personal lives to themselves.
Gandhi might be comparable to Allama Iqbal in the sense of their activities - ideological leaders . Others who were in the same position include Martin Luther King, Benjamin Franklin, Joan of Arc etc.