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Sydney: Christmas fatwa 'taken out of context' | |
2012-12-23 | |
Australia's biggest mosque has removed a controversial post from its Facebook page that called for a fatwa against Christmas.
Sheik Yahya Safi is said to have told his followers to avoid participating in anything to do with Christmas. The Facebook message posted on Saturday said Christmas Day was one of the "falsehoods that a Muslim should avoid ... and therefore, a Muslim is neither allowed to celebrate the Christmas Day nor is he allowed to congratulate them". The fatwa quotes Imam Ibn Al-Qayyim who said that congratulating infidels for their beliefs was forbidden. "Muslim who says this does not become a disbeliever himself, he at least commits a sin as this is the same as congratulating him for his belief in the trinity, which is a greater sin and much more disliked by Almighty Allaah than congratulating him for drinking alcohol or killing a soul or committing fornication or adultery". The Lebanese Muslim Association (LMA), which manages the mosque said the comments had been taken out of context. The LMA said a junior staff member copied and pasted the text from the internet without seeking approval. To show the LMA was not anti-Christian the group arranged for the words 'Merry Xmas' to be written in the sky above the mosque this afternoon. | |
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Extremists among Muslim rioters at Sydney protest | |
2012-09-17 | |
Al-Qaeda sympathisers were among those involved in violent weekend protests in Sydney, which saw Muslim men engage in a series of clashes with security forces. Several of the hundreds of protesters who marched on the city's US consulate were carrying the black flags adopted by the proscribed terror organisation and its splinter groups, including the Islamic State of Iraq. Many others wore headbands which said: "We are your soldiers, O Mohammed." Muslim leaders denounced the violence yesterday, saying the protest had been "hijacked" by a group which called itself the "Sixth Pillar". One of the six men arrested on Saturday, 29-year-old champion boxer Ahmed Elomar, appeared in court yesterday wearing a T-shirt with the words "Sixth Pillar". Some sources suggested the group were associated with controversial Sydney sheik Feiz Mohammed. The president of the Lebanese Muslim Association, Samier Dandan, said they were not part of any of the Australia's established Islamic organisations. He said, "Where and how they operate we still don't know." Six people have been charged in relation to the violence, in which four people were hospitalized, while police have created a strike force to analyze footage of the demonstration in order to track down others involved. NSW Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione said, "This is a no-nonsense engagement. If you want to act like you are extremist criminals, we will treat you like you're extremist criminals. I can guarantee those extremists who caused these problems, they will be joining those already charged. If you were sensible, you would come forward now and speak with police." A second police operation will monitor the aftermath of the protest, including social media websites thought to have been used to orchestrate Saturday's violence. There are fears a second peaceful protest against the video planned for next weekend could be disrupted. Julia Gillard yesterday called the video "truly repulsive". "(But) there is never any excuse for violent behavior. To anybody who wants to replicate that behavior today, I just want to say very strongly that this kind of conduct has no place on the streets of our country," the Prime Minister said. Tony Abbott said the protests were not "an acceptable face of Islam ... Newcomers to this country are not expected to surrender their heritage, but they are expected to surrender up their hatreds". He added, "I think all Australians need to give a very strong message ... violent protest is never acceptable in a country such as ours." Keysar Trad, founder of the Islamic Friendship Association of Australia, was appalled to see children at the protest holding up signs that read "Behead all those who insult the prophet". He said, "Our prophet would be sitting in heaven wondering are those really my followers?"
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Down Under |
"Uncovered meat" kicks door, blames vandals |
2009-03-19 |
AUSTRALIA'S most controversial sheik, Taj Din al-Hilali, has been caught on videotape kicking in a door at his own mosque before calling police to report an act of vandalism. The head imam at the Lakemba mosque, who caused outrage in 2006 by comparing scantily clad women to uncovered meat, was shown on a CCTV security tape kicking open the door just minutes before reporting the incident. The Nine Network's A Current Affair last night broadcast the videotape from March 9, showing the incident, which Sheik Hilali initially denied. "There is a trick in this camera. There is a trick in this film," he told ACA. See it's a lying Infidel camera But in a letter sent by Sheik Hilali's lawyers to ACA yesterday, he admitted kicking the door, saying the damage had already been done to the door before he kicked it. "What he did do was to kick open a door to the mosque that had already been damaged by others in order to gain entry to it," the letter said. Lebanese Muslim Association president Shawky Kassir said they had called the police "for a little problem, but we have fixed (it) and everything is under control". The footage shows four young men locking the door behind them at 10.28pm. Nine minutes later, Sheik Hilali checks the lock and pushes on the top of the door, bending it on its hinges. After checking the corridor, he disappears from view before rushing towards it and kicking it open at 10.46pm. It is understood the name of the suspected culprit was put forward to NSW police, but it is not known if he was interviewed by the authorities. A NSW Police media spokesperson said they started to investigate the matter but three days later were told by a mosque official that he did not wish to take the matter any further. "The matter remains under investigation. Further senior members of the local community will be consulted to discuss the incident." |
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Sheik Hilaly says he's more Aussie than the PM |
2007-04-13 |
![]() The Australian Federal Police is investigating $70,000 raised by the Sydney-based Lebanese Muslim Association (LMA) and handed out in Lebanon by Sheik al Hilali. LMA president Tom Zreika has said allegations have been made in the Muslim community that Sheik al Hilali gave some of the money to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. "When I get back to Sydney, I will be asking how this money was accounted for," Sheik al Hilali told the newspaper. "I get accused in the media of spending the money, but at the end of the day I don't know how the money was spent. I was just writing down the names on a piece of paper." Sheik Al Hilali said his widely criticised remarks supporting the hardline Iranian regime were meant to encourage world peace. Both the government and opposition called for the sheik to be sacked and to leave the country after he called on Australian Muslims to back Iran's hardline regime. Sheik al Hilali told the newspaper he had spent 50 years promoting peace and accused the Prime Minister of running a dictatorship. "It's a disgrace for the leader of a democratic country to be picking on religious people, especially one who is practicing a form of dictatorship that could almost be Saddam Hussein-like," Sheik al Hilali said. "I respect Australian values more than he does. Australian people like peace and they like humanitarian welfare and they are attracted to just causes." |
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'Hezbollah' sheik denies al-Hilali funding | |||
2007-04-11 | |||
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The Australian Federal Police is investigating $70,000 raised by the Sydney-based Lebanese Muslim Association and handed out in Lebanon by Sheik Alhilali. LMA president Tom Zreika has said allegations have been made in the Muslim community that Sheik Hilali gave some of the money to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. But Sheik Shaaban told of how he accompanied the mufti to war-torn villages in southern Lebanon. (He was) giving them (villagers) cash payments of $200-$300 Australian dollars, Sheik Shaaban told the paper.
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Aussi Mullah Pleads: Join Teheran in the Trenches |
2007-04-08 |
Richard Kerbaj April 09, 2007 AUSTRALIA'S most senior Islamic cleric, Taj Din al-Hilali, called on the Muslim world to unite behind the radical Iranian regime and to serve in its "trenches" in published comments during a visit to Tehran last weekend. As Tehran was involved in a tense standoff with Western powers over the detention of 15 British naval personnel seized after they were accused of trespassing in its waters last month, the Iranian media were using Sheik Hilali's quotes in a propaganda drive. The controversial Australian mufti was quoted as saying that the global Islamic nation would never "kneel" to its enemies. In reports published in Iran on Saturday, Sheik Hilali was quoted as saying that Muslims needed to overcome their sectarian divisions that have led to much "bloodletting" in Iraq. Leaders in Australia's Muslim community have attacked the Egyptian-born cleric over his reported comments, saying he had no authority to speak on their behalf. The comments will increase the pressure on the mufti, who caused a national furore last year when he compared scantily clad women with uncovered meat. He is under investigation by police over allegations that he passed money raised by members of the Muslim community in Australia to supporters of al-Qa'ida and Hezbollah's terrorist arm during a visit to Lebanon lastyear. The Australian revealed last week the Sydney-based Lebanese Muslim Association had raised $70,000 in conjunction with other Islamic bodies following the Israel-Hezbollah war in Lebanon. The money was earmarked for war victims. The weekend reports of Sheik Hilali praising Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's hardline Islamic regime follow his January outburst on Egyptian television when he described Westerners as "the biggest liars". "Anglo-Saxons came to Australia in chains, while we (Muslims) paid our way and come in freedom. We are more Australian than them," he told Egyptian television. They came as phony refugees, and accepted "settlement" funds. In Tehran, the mufti was billed as a celebrity by the Islamic Republic's newsagency. "The mufti of Australia has called on the Islamic world to stand in the trenches with the Islamic Republic of Iran which possesses the might and power," Iran's al-Alam News reported on its website in Arabic on Saturday. It reported that Sheik Hilali - who was in Tehran for the three-day International Islamic Unity forum - told Alalam TV on Friday following the conference opening that he was committed to the unity of the Islamic nation. "(Islamic unity) is what has brought all participants together at this Islamic unity conference, to show the whole world that they are dedicated to the one God and dedicated to Islamic unity and the Islamic nation will not kneel in front of its enemies, never," Sheik Hilali was reported as saying. Attorney-General Philip Ruddock yesterday told The Australian he was concerned about Sheik Hilali's reported comments. "I would be concerned if any Australian was offering support and succour to Iran, particularly as it is intent on pursuing the development of the nuclear fuel cycle outside international scrutiny," Mr Ruddock said... |
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Cops probe Hilaly al-Qaeda link |
2007-04-06 |
ISLAMIC community leaders at Lakemba mosque are being interviewed by the federal police about mufti Sheik Taj al-Dene Elhilaly's decision to hand charity funds to supporters of al-Qaeda and Hezbollah terrorist outfits in Lebanon. Officers have seized documents from the Lebanese Muslim Association, which backs Sheik Hilaly, and interviewed its president Tom Zreika. Islamic Friendship Association spokesman Keyser Trad, who is in Lebanon, has also been contacted by police. The LMA raised $70,000 in conjunction with other Islamic bodies following the Israel-Hezbollah war in Lebanon. The money was meant for The Weekend Australian reports Sheik Hilaly, who is overseas, and LMA employee Sheik Yihya Safi will be asked by the AFP to provide a detailed outline of how they distributed the Australian-raised funds in Lebanon. It has been claimed that Sheik Elhilaly met with the leader of Hezbollah's terrorist wing, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah. |
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Down Under |
Australian imams urged to become lifesavers, firemen |
2007-03-22 |
Really, we don't make this stuff up.![]() Picked right up on that, didn't you, Tom? What was your first clue? The president of Australias largest Islamic organisation, the Lebanese Muslim Association, made the call in a 16-page report to be considered by the nations clerics at a meeting this weekend. Tom Zreika suggests Muslims have become as unpopular as communists once were, and accuses some clerics of inciting hatred and violence on the preposterous justification that they are simply acting in self-defence in a time of war. I'm not too sure how hollering "Lookit me! I'm the extreme lower end of a digestive tract!" can be termed "self-defense." Sounds more like a plea for a kick to the scrotum. We are not at war, says Zreika, who confirmed that details of his report published in The Australian newspaper on Wednesday were accurate. We have become the new communism, particularly in the West, and some people in our community are so repulsed by our actions it is making life unbearable for us and our offspring, Zreika says. "So the problem we face is: How do we overcome being repulsive?" In a nation where beach culture is strong and public service volunteers are hailed as heroes, Zreika said fire fighting and lifesaving could help Australias 300,000 Muslims improve their image. It would be great to see a turbaned imam fighting fires alongside other bushfire service volunteers, Zreika, a lawyer, says in his submission to the Australian National Imams Council. Organisations like the Surf Lifesaving Association should be joined as a matter of course by the imam and his followers. "Mum! You'll never guess what happened! I wuz havin' a swim when I got caught up in the undertow and swept out to sea! I thought it was all over, but then some obnoxious arsehole in a turban rescued me!" "Gosh, Molly! I wonder if it was the same obnoxious arsehole who put out the fire at the Jones' house?" |
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Aussie sheik plans Muslim political party |
2007-03-12 |
Sheik Taj al-Din al-Hilali has defied a ban on talking to the media to predict an Islamic political party will be formed this year. Speaking through an interpreter, the mufti told ABC Radio Australian Muslims need proper political representation. Sheik Hilali, who has already established a political committee of Muslim community elders, said a political party was the next step and predicted one would be formed by the end of the year. "There's a new committee with people who have some experience in politics and most certainly in the future there must be something along those lines," he said. Last week Muslim leaders banned five Islamic clerics, including Sheik Hilali, from talking to the media after they delivered a string of "anti-Australian" messages. The letter, obtained by The Australian, demanded the imams "pause and desist" from talking to any media outlet, in particular Sydney's Arabic community radio station Voice of Islam. The Lebanese Muslim Association warned the clerics that they could lose their positions as spiritual leaders at the nation's largest mosque if they defied the ban. Spokesman Keysar Trad said Sheik Hilali's vision was for a party founded on universal human values and open to all faiths and would attempt to win elections at all levels of Australian politics. Mr Trad said the idea of forming a party had been around for some years but had not progressed past drafting a manifesto. The mufti's proposal was for a party to represent Muslim interests without excluding people of other religions, Mr Trad said. "It's not going to be a party of Muslims only and it's not going to be called the Muslim Party," he said. "The whole idea is to promote fairness across the board and specific values, such as honesty and dignity and equality. "I think it's a good idea to establish a party that can act as an alternative for people who are no longer satisfied with the major parties." The party would fight to put a stop to politicians using the Muslim community as a "political football" and work on promoting greater social harmony, Mr Trad said. It would also try to tackle long-standing legal issues affecting Australian Muslims, such as divorces and marriages not being recognised in other countries. "We've discussed this with the government on a number of instances but we've never actually found them to be able to come up with a solution," he said. |
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Hilali gagged by Muslim leaders | |
2007-03-09 | |
![]() The Lebanese Muslim Association has gagged the imams from Lakemba Mosque in Sydney's southwest from media commentary - especially to Arabic news outlets - because of the "immeasurable damage" they have caused the community. A letter was yesterday sent by the Lebanese Muslim Association to its five imams, including Sheik Yahya Safi - the official Australian representative to the Mufti of Lebanon - Sheik Shady Suleiman, and Sheik Hilali. The letter, obtained by The Australian, demands the imams LMA president Tom Zreika yesterday told The Australian the letter was issued to end the "perceived un-Australian viewpoints given by some clerics". "One of the big issues is the double-speak by the various imams," Mr Zreika said. He added that the messages some clerics delivered in Arabic contradicted comments given in English while talking to the mainstream media.
"(While) most of our clerics are selected on the basis that they have Australian values and Australian characteristics ... some of them haven't (lived) up to that." The LMA's hardline approach towards silencing its clerics comes after the furore sparked by Sheik Hilali last year, following revelations in The Australian last month that the mufti was banned from delivering sermons at Lakemba Mosque. Sheik Hilali caused national and international uproar last October when The Australian uncovered a sermon in which he compared women to "uncovered meat" and joked about Sydney's infamous gang rapes. The cleric, who has been the nominal head of Australia's Muslim community for years, further compounded the controversy by subsequently appearing on Egyptian television to dismiss the furore over his insults to women and make disparaging remarks about Australia's convict beginnings. Sheik Shadi yesterday told The Australian that he supported the LMA's decision, saying it was in the best interests of the Muslim and wider community. | |
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Leaders plan to dump Hilali |
2007-02-07 |
![]() The future of the 66-year-old's spiritual position at Lakemba Mosque in western Sydney was thrashed out last week by more than 50 Sydney-based Muslim leaders during a secret meeting. The talks at the Lakemba Mosque last Thursday came after the Lebanese Muslim Association indefinitely banned Sheik Hilali - whose community support base continues to nosedive - from delivering sermons at the mosque following his return from Egypt last month. It is understood that Sheik Hilali, who came under fire from community leaders and politicians for comparing women to uncovered meat, initially resisted the ban before agreeing to abandon the pulpit on the basis of "mutual understanding" between him and the LMA executives. Lebanese Islamic leader Mustafa Hamed said the LMA, along with 10 Sydney-based Muslim community organisations present at the secret meeting, were negotiating a "long-service" package for the Sheik. Under the proposed package, the LMA would allow the cleric to continue living in a house next door to Lakemba mosque, which is owned by the organisation. It is also understood the golden handshake would include an indefinite weekly stipend of several hundred dollars. Mr Hamed, president of the Sydney-based community association Bhanin El Minieh, said yesterday that Sheik Hilali needed to accept that his position as Lakemba Mosque's spiritual head would be better served by someone less controversial. "If I didn't believe that it was in the best interest of the community, that the damage he's done is enough, I wouldn't say that he should leave," said Mr Hamed in an interview conducted in Arabic. "We are prepared to pay his long-service leave ... this is being currently negotiated in the community, among councils." Sheik Hilali, returning to his home mosque shortly before 7pm (AEDT) yesterday, at first refused to comment and then said there were no problems between him and the LMA. "Everything is all right," he said. "There is no news. Everything is all right. I am all right with the Lakemba ... everything is the same." Last October, The Australian exposed Sheik Hilali's inflammatory sermon, in which he suggested that rape victims who did not wear Islamic headdress were as much to blame as their attackers. And last month the cleric ridiculed Australia on Egyptian television while dismissing the furore over his insults to women. He said Westerners were "liars and oppressors" who had less right to live in Australia than Muslims. Mr Hamed said Sheik Hilali had both benefited and damaged the community since his arrival in Australia 25 years ago. "My opinion is that in his 25 years here, he has made mistakes and made good," Mr Hamed said. "But I think it's time for him to rest and leave a place for the new generation to work for the new generation." LMA president Tom Zreika yesterday said that Sheik Hilali needed to stop playing politics if the Muslim community was to recover from the damage his past remarks had caused. "He's a very useful and astute religious theologian, but we ask him to keep out of politics," Mr Zreika said. He said Sheik Hilali "unfairly implicated" the LMA every time the cleric strayed into the political arena because the organisation was in charge of Lakemba Mosque. "The community as a whole stands to lose more than they would gain by him pursuing this political dialogue," he said. The Australian National Imams Council is expected to meet by April to thrash out the nature of the mufti position. It is understood that council members have told Sheik Hilali, who has held the title since 1989, that they cannot guarantee his position. |
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'Freak-show' sheik told to keep politics out |
2007-01-26 |
![]() The cleric arrived home in Sydney this week after a two-month self-imposed exile in Mecca and Egypt following a sermon last year comparing sexily dressed women to "uncovered meat". He says his recent comments on Egyptian TV, saying Muslims were more entitled to live in Australia than Anglo-Saxons of convict origin, were misinterpreted. |
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