Another female author joins the List of Things That Offend Muslims.
An Egyptian female author has spoken out in
defense of her controversial new book, Love and Sex in the Prophet's
Life, which caused outrage after it was circulated at the Cairo
International Book Fair last month.
"I wanted to explain sex from the real Islamic perspective and to make
it the reference for having a healthy sexual life," writer Passant
Rashad said in a statement to AlArabiya.net.
"When I mentioned the prophet I meant to demonstrate how his
relationship with his wives was the perfect example of a healthy sexual
life that is devoid of the complications Arabs try to impose on it
these days."
But the book has drawn sharp criticism.
Independent Egyptian MP Mustafa al-Gindi complained to the Minister of
Culture, Farouk Hosny, earlier this month saying the book insults the
Prophet and his wives, especially his third wife Aisha.
For those of you who don't know, Aiesha married Mohammed at the age of six, and "knew him" at the age of nine.
Tabari VII:7
"The
Prophet married Aisha in Mecca three years before the Hijrah, after the
death of Khadija. At the time she was six." Ishaq:281 "When the Apostle
came to Medina he was fifty-three."
"The book contains parts about positions and orgasms, which is totally
inappropriate for a book that had the prophet's name in its title,"
said Gindi.
A religious TV channel in Egypt denounced the publication and hosted a
series of sheikhs – Islamic leaders – who accused her of apostasy and
called for her killing, even if she were to repent.
Meanwhile, Islamic thinker Gamal al-Banna called for an end to the fatwas on writers.
"This is a backward way to understand Islam. We have to eliminate this
torrent of fatwas through reasoning and refutation of these lies. It is
only then that those bloodshed Sheiks will find no audience."
He called upon Arab information ministers to ban televised fatwas that
wreak havoc in society and make intellectuals live in constant fear.
"I kept silent, hoping this campaign will end or those sheiks will
contact me to discuss the book, but none of that happened. Now I fear
for my life," Rashad told AlArabiya.net.
In the aftermath of the fatwa, Rashad said that a bearded man came to her house on Thursday and threatened her.
"He banged on the door at two in the morning and asked my husband if I
was the author whose bloodshed is sanctioned. He told him that many
problems are coming my way, then left."
Rashad said she is not an apostate and would never insult the prophet.
On the contrary, she said she aimed to refute the myths propagated by
the enemies of Islam, who portray the prophet as obsessed with women.
Read the above link and decide for yourself.
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