Showing posts with label Celebrate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celebrate. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Tegan and Sara celebrate LGBTQ activism at Junos

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Tegan and Sara celebrate LGBTQ activism at Junos

Monday, February 24, 2014

South Africans celebrate life of Mandela

South Africans celebrate life of Mandela
http://i.ytimg.com/vi/ufA4DY8DlKI/mqdefault.jpg



South Africans celebrate life of Mandela

Tributes are being paid and prayers said for South Africa’s anti-apartheid icon. The country’s first black President died at his Johannesburg home on Thursda…




Read more about South Africans celebrate life of Mandela and other interesting subjects concerning World News Videos at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, February 14, 2014

“Genderfluid”: Libs Celebrate as Facebook Creates 50+ New Gender Categories


Leftists joyous at additions that will drive social conservatives crazy


Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
February 14, 2014


Facebook has bowed to pressure from LGBT activists by creating over 50 new custom gender options, meaning users can identify as things like “gender fluid,” “transmasculine” or “two spirit”.


Image: Facebook’s new gender options.



Leftist commentators are already hailing the decision, joyous that it will drive conservatives crazy.


“It screams of “political correctness gone mad,” writes the Guardian’s Paris Lees, “and I look forward to rightwing commentators telling us how absurd it is and how affronted they are by something that really isn’t a concern for anyone other than those it concerns.”


According to Lees, 56 different gender designations isn’t enough.


The Associated Press covered the story by affording numerous transgender activists a platform to celebrate the change, while providing “balance” with just one dissenting quote from Focus On The Family.


“Of course Facebook is entitled to manage its wildly popular site as it sees fit, but here is the bottom line: It’s impossible to deny the biological reality that humanity is divided into two halves – male and female,” said Jeff Johnston.


Some joked that the change could represent a financial windfall for companies that make bathroom signs.


Although dozens of new options were added to the social networking site, Facebook has refused to publish the full list.


However, Slate compiled a list of all 56 new gender options, which you can check out below.


- Agender
- Androgyne
- Androgynous
- Bigender
- Cis
- Cisgender
- Cis Female
- Cis Male
- Cis Man
- Cis Woman
- Cisgender Female
- Cisgender Male
- Cisgender Man
- Cisgender Woman
- Female to Male
- FTM
- Gender Fluid
- Gender Nonconforming
- Gender Questioning
- Gender Variant
- Genderqueer
- Intersex
- Male to Female
- MTF
- Neither
- Neutrois
- Non-binary
- Other
- Pangender
- Trans
- Trans*
- Trans Female
- Trans* Female
- Trans Male
- Trans* Male
- Trans Man
- Trans* Man
- Trans Person
- Trans* Person
- Trans Woman
- Trans* Woman
- Transfeminine
- Transgender
- Transgender Female
- Transgender Male
- Transgender Man
- Transgender Person
- Transgender Woman
- Transmasculine
- Transsexual
- Transsexual Female
- Transsexual Male
- Transsexual Man
- Transsexual Person
- Transsexual Woman
- Two-Spirit


Facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/paul.j.watson.71
FOLLOW Paul Joseph Watson @ https://twitter.com/PrisonPlanet


*********************


Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Infowars.com and Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.


This article was posted: Friday, February 14, 2014 at 1:17 pm


Tags: domestic news










Infowars



“Genderfluid”: Libs Celebrate as Facebook Creates 50+ New Gender Categories

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Politics to fore as Egyptian rivals celebrate Eid

CAIRO (Reuters) – Bitterly divided Egyptians prayed in public and children played as they celebrated the Eid al-Fitr holiday on Thursday.


Reuters: Top News



Politics to fore as Egyptian rivals celebrate Eid

Politics to fore as Egyptian rivals celebrate Eid




Members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi walk with their families in the sit-in area of Rab


1 of 2. Members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi walk with their families in the sit-in area of Rab’a al- Adawiya Square, where they are camping, on the first day of the Eid al-Fitr holiday after the end of the fasting month of Ramadan, in Cairo August 8, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Asmaa Waguih






CAIRO | Thu Aug 8, 2013 7:10am EDT



CAIRO (Reuters) – Bitterly divided Egyptians prayed in public and children played as they celebrated the Eid al-Fitr holiday on Thursday.


But the barbed wire and armoured vehicles in the streets of downtown Cairo and the barricades around Islamist protest camps attested to the dangerous political edge to the festivities.


Rival supporters of ousted Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi and the new army-installed government converged on separate sites in the capital of the Arab world’s most populous nation against the background of crisis.


Families flocked to dawn prayers at the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque, focal point of Islamist opposition to the government, then strolled and picnicked around the area.


“This is the best Eid of my life,” said Ali Mohamed, 40, a farmer from a village near the Nile Valley town of Minya, south of the capital. “It’s victory or death now. We had five elections and that traitor Sisi has reversed all that.”


He was referring to army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who led the overthrow of the Islamist Mursi on July 3 after huge demonstrations against his rule.


Egypt has been dangerously polarised since then with Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood and its loyalists demanding his reinstatement and the government and its supporters saying they are finished.


Tension has prevailed at the Brotherhood protest camps after the security forces threatened to dismantle them. Protesters have erected sandbag-and-brick barricades and armed themselves with sticks to confront any attack.


But Eid – the four-day holiday which marks the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan – offered a measure of relief.


Thousands packed into the Rabaa camp, spilling onto a street where security forces shot dead more than 80 Mursi supporters in clashes on July 27.


Boys lit firecrackers and worshippers handed out sweets and offered greetings to each other, an Eid tradition. Street stalls sold tea, snacks and plastic toys.


Others hawked posters of Mursi and green headbands with the Islamic inscription “No God but God”. One table sold tear gas masks and swimming goggles.


Groups chanted “Interior ministry thugs! “Egypt, our country,” and beat drums.


“We want to live as free Muslims,” said a 45-year-old English teacher, who gave her name only as Emmy. She wore a full face veil and gloves, a style favoured by the ultraconservative Salafi Muslims.


“We don’t want to be insulted in police stations. We don’t want to be harassed for wearing these veils or for growing beards.”


She said she wanted to work as an interpreter but companies would not hire her because of her dress.


Emad Abdelaziz, 53, an engineer, attended prayers with his wife and three daughters, all dressed smartly for the occasion.


“We came to Rabaa for the prayer because this year is not like any other. We are here to demand Mursi’s return,” he said.


Ghada Idriss, 35, had traveled from rural Minya province with her husband, two young sons, and two-month-old daughter.


“I came here because I want to make a small difference,” she said. “By sitting here peacefully, they will understand and know that we refuse the return of the system of Hosni Mubarak.”


TAHRIR RAP


Supporters of the government began gathering in Tahrir Square, the focal point of the uprising that brought down long-ruling strongman Mubarak in February 2011 and set in train Egypt’s prolonged and troubled revolution.


Some leftist and youth groups called for public prayers in the square to support what they regard as the second revolution — the overthrow of Mursi with mass public demonstrations.


Soldiers lounged atop armoured personnel carriers in the streets off the square, including outside the Egyptian Museum, home to a trove of antiquities for the age of the pharaohs.


Awad Abdel Gawad, a 60-year-old woodworker, said: “I am here to say happy Eid to the people of the revolution, of Tahrir Square. I want the revolution’s demands met and the country to flourish. Every revolution has troubles at the start but God will help us.”


Mursi supporters at the Rabaa and Nahda protest camps should avoid violence and give up peacefully, he said.


“The Rabaa people think Mursi’s coming back but he isn’t. He is gone,” Abdel Gawad said.


“I want to tell those in Rabaa ‘we are all Egyptians, all Muslims, and what harms you harms us, and we want a president who fixes the country and we are all with him.”


Although Mursi was democratically elected in June 2012, his rule divided the country. Many Egyptians feared he was trying to impose an Islamist regime on the country of 84 million people, while he failed to get to grips with a deteriorating economy.


The army justified his overthrow by saying it acted at the behest of millions who took to the streets to demand that he go.


Reem Adel, 17, a student at the University of Commerce, said she was at Tahrir to celebrate Eid prayers and commemorate the people she said had died under Mursi’s rule. She gave a cautious endorsement to Egypt’s new military strongman.


“Sisi has been good so far though we are worried about the future. We want Rabaa and Nahda dispersed but with the least loss of life because we are afraid violence would be used against us too later,” she said.


On a stage in the center of the sprawling Tahrir Square, a singer sang anti-Brotherhood rap and nationalist songs. Hundreds of mostly young people came early to the square, which was expected to fill up later in the day.


Portraits of Sisi hung from trees and lamp-posts, and some banners denounced U.S. President Barack Obama and U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson – perceived by government supporters as favouring the Islamists.


Flag vendors sold banners saying: “Egypt is guarded by the army. The Egyptian people delegate the Egyptian army to fight terrorism.”


(Reporting by Maggie Fick and Shaimaa Fayed; Writing by Angus MacSwan; Editing by Paul Taylor)





Reuters: Top News



Politics to fore as Egyptian rivals celebrate Eid

Muslims celebrate Eid with prayers, feasts








Afghans celebrate the Eid al Adha each other after offering Eid al Adha’s prayers outside Shah-e-Dushamshera mosque in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, August, 8, 2013. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Nazar)





Afghans celebrate the Eid al Adha each other after offering Eid al Adha’s prayers outside Shah-e-Dushamshera mosque in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, August, 8, 2013. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Nazar)





Pigeons fly outside the Shah-e Doh Shamshira mosque as Afghans head for morning prayers on Eid-al-Fitr in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, August, 8, 2013. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Nazar)





Imams or leaders of a mosque hold incenses upon arrival to host an Eid al-Fitr morning prayer at the Niujie Mosque in Beijing, China Thursday, Aug. 8, 2013. Chinese Muslims joined today the Eid festivity, marking the end of the month of Ramadan for Muslims across the world. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)













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(AP) — Millions of Muslims began celebrating the end of the fasting month of Ramadan on Thursday with morning prayers followed by savory high-calorie feasts to mark the holiday amid concerns over violence looming across parts of the region and elsewhere worldwide.


In Syria, mortars pounded an upscale district of Damascus in the same area where President Bashar Assad was attending Eid prayers at a mosque. It was not clear if he was targeted, but a government official told state TV Assad was not affected.


The Eid al-Fitr holiday includes three days of festivities after a month of prayer and dawn-to-dusk fasting for Ramadan, when observant Muslims abstain from eating, drinking, smoking and sex as a way to test their faith.


Despite Eid’s peaceful message, some countries remained on heightened alert amid fears over violence.


Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai took a moment after Eid prayers in a speech to thank security forces for their sacrifices in the war against the insurgency and called for the Taliban to lay down their arms, stop killing and join the political process.


In Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, throngs of believers made their way to mosques donning brand new clothes. The holiday is also a time of reflection, forgiveness and charity — cars were seen driving around the capital, Jakarta, handing out envelopes to the poor.


Fireworks exploded all night across Jakarta on Wednesday night, with hundreds gathering in a landmark traffic circle downtown to watch the impromptu displays.


Still, Indonesian authorities were on high alert after a small bomb exploded outside a Buddhist temple packed with devotees praying in Jakarta earlier this week. Only one person was injured, but two other devices failed to detonate. Officials have said the attack appears to have been carried out by militant Muslims angry over sectarian violence in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.


Indonesia’s National Police chief Gen. Timur Pradopo said he mobilized thousands of officers to help safeguard the millions involved in the mass exodus across the country, an archipelago of some 17,000 islands. Police also stood guard at mosques, churches and temples in many cities.


In the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, about 100 Muslims braved a stormy morning to pray at the city’s sole mosque on the edge of the city’s old quarter. The Vietnamese imam gave a sermon in Arabic and then English to the congregation, most of whom were expatriates. Vietnam is also home to some 60,000 indigenous Muslims, most of them in the south.


Meanwhile, in the Philippines government troops and police strengthened security in the southern province of Maguindanao and outlying regions due to a spate of deadly bombings and other attacks during Ramadan that were blamed on a breakaway Muslim group called the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement. The group, which authorities say has about 200 armed fighters, opposes peace talks between the government and the main insurgent group.


The hard-line rebels have vowed to continue fighting for a separate homeland for minority Muslims in the volatile south of the predominantly Roman Catholic Philippines.


Thailand’s security agencies have also warned about more frequent, escalated insurgency attacks at the end of the Ramadan period in the three Muslim-dominated southernmost provinces that border with Malaysia, despite the ongoing peace talks with Muslim separatists facilitated by its southern neighbor.


The separatist negotiators of the militant National Revolution Front vowed at the beginning of the Islamic fasting month that they would attempt to halt the attacks throughout the period, while Thai authorities had cut back their searches for insurgents but the unrest pursued.


In one of the most high-profile attacks this week, a well-respected Muslim cleric who is known to sympathize with Thai authorities in their bid to end the violence was shot dead at a local market on Monday. Six security officers and five civilians were injured in three other attacks on the same day.


“The end of Ramadan is the period the insurgents would attempt to show off their strategies and attacks,” said Col. Jaroon Ampha, an adviser to the National Security Council.


Muslims believe God revealed the first verses of the Quran to the Prophet Muhammad during Ramadan, which starts with the sighting of the new moon. The Muslim lunar calendar moves back through the seasons, meaning Ramadan starts 11 days earlier each year under the Western calendar.


Not all countries begin celebrations on the same day. India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, for instance, are expected to officially begin Eid on Friday after the moon is sighted there.


____


Associated Press writers Ali Kotarumalos and Andi Jatmiko in Jakarta, Indonesia; Jim Gomez in Manila, Philippines; Thanyarat Doksone in Bangkok, Chris Brummitt in Hanoi, Vietnam; and Farid Hossain in Dhaka, Bangladesh contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Muslims celebrate Eid with prayers, feasts

Muslims celebrate Eid with prayers, feasts



(AP) — Millions of Muslims began celebrating the end of the fasting month of Ramadan on Thursday with morning prayers followed by savory high-calorie feasts to mark the holiday amid concerns over violence looming across parts of the region and elsewhere worldwide.


In Syria, mortars pounded an upscale district of Damascus in the same area where President Bashar Assad was attending Eid prayers at a mosque. It was not clear if he was targeted, but a government official told state TV Assad was not affected.


The Eid al-Fitr holiday includes three days of festivities after a month of prayer and dawn-to-dusk fasting for Ramadan, when observant Muslims abstain from eating, drinking, smoking and sex as a way to test their faith.


Despite Eid’s peaceful message, some countries remained on heightened alert amid fears over violence.


Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai took a moment after Eid prayers in a speech to thank security forces for their sacrifices in the war against the insurgency and called for the Taliban to lay down their arms, stop killing and join the political process.


In Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, throngs of believers made their way to mosques donning brand new clothes. The holiday is also a time of reflection, forgiveness and charity — cars were seen driving around the capital, Jakarta, handing out envelopes to the poor.


Fireworks exploded all night across Jakarta on Wednesday night, with hundreds gathering in a landmark traffic circle downtown to watch the impromptu displays.


Still, Indonesian authorities were on high alert after a small bomb exploded outside a Buddhist temple packed with devotees praying in Jakarta earlier this week. Only one person was injured, but two other devices failed to detonate. Officials have said the attack appears to have been carried out by militant Muslims angry over sectarian violence in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.


Indonesia’s National Police chief Gen. Timur Pradopo said he mobilized thousands of officers to help safeguard the millions involved in the mass exodus across the country, an archipelago of some 17,000 islands. Police also stood guard at mosques, churches and temples in many cities.


In the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, about 100 Muslims braved a stormy morning to pray at the city’s sole mosque on the edge of the city’s old quarter. The Vietnamese imam gave a sermon in Arabic and then English to the congregation, most of whom were expatriates. Vietnam is also home to some 60,000 indigenous Muslims, most of them in the south.


Meanwhile, in the Philippines government troops and police strengthened security in the southern province of Maguindanao and outlying regions due to a spate of deadly bombings and other attacks during Ramadan that were blamed on a breakaway Muslim group called the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement. The group, which authorities say has about 200 armed fighters, opposes peace talks between the government and the main insurgent group.


The hard-line rebels have vowed to continue fighting for a separate homeland for minority Muslims in the volatile south of the predominantly Roman Catholic Philippines.


Thailand’s security agencies have also warned about more frequent, escalated insurgency attacks at the end of the Ramadan period in the three Muslim-dominated southernmost provinces that border with Malaysia, despite the ongoing peace talks with Muslim separatists facilitated by its southern neighbor.


The separatist negotiators of the militant National Revolution Front vowed at the beginning of the Islamic fasting month that they would attempt to halt the attacks throughout the period, while Thai authorities had cut back their searches for insurgents but the unrest pursued.


In one of the most high-profile attacks this week, a well-respected Muslim cleric who is known to sympathize with Thai authorities in their bid to end the violence was shot dead at a local market on Monday. Six security officers and five civilians were injured in three other attacks on the same day.


“The end of Ramadan is the period the insurgents would attempt to show off their strategies and attacks,” said Col. Jaroon Ampha, an adviser to the National Security Council.


Muslims believe God revealed the first verses of the Quran to the Prophet Muhammad during Ramadan, which starts with the sighting of the new moon. The Muslim lunar calendar moves back through the seasons, meaning Ramadan starts 11 days earlier each year under the Western calendar.


Not all countries begin celebrations on the same day. India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, for instance, are expected to officially begin Eid on Friday after the moon is sighted there.


____


Associated Press writers Ali Kotarumalos and Andi Jatmiko in Jakarta, Indonesia; Jim Gomez in Manila, Philippines; Thanyarat Doksone in Bangkok, Chris Brummitt in Hanoi, Vietnam; and Farid Hossain in Dhaka, Bangladesh contributed to this report.


Associated Press



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Top Headlines

Muslims celebrate Eid with prayers, feasts

Muslims celebrate Eid with prayers, feasts








Afghans celebrate the Eid al Adha each other after offering Eid al Adha’s prayers outside Shah-e-Dushamshera mosque in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, August, 8, 2013. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Nazar)





Afghans celebrate the Eid al Adha each other after offering Eid al Adha’s prayers outside Shah-e-Dushamshera mosque in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, August, 8, 2013. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Nazar)





Pigeons fly outside the Shah-e Doh Shamshira mosque as Afghans head for morning prayers on Eid-al-Fitr in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, August, 8, 2013. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Nazar)





Imams or leaders of a mosque hold incenses upon arrival to host an Eid al-Fitr morning prayer at the Niujie Mosque in Beijing, China Thursday, Aug. 8, 2013. Chinese Muslims joined today the Eid festivity, marking the end of the month of Ramadan for Muslims across the world. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Millions of Muslims across Asia began celebrating the end of the fasting month of Ramadan on Thursday with solemn sunrise prayers followed by savory high-calorie feasts to mark their holiest holiday, despite concerns over violence looming across parts of the region and elsewhere worldwide.


In Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, throngs of believers made their way to mosques donning brand new clothes to kick off the start of Eid al-Fitr, festivities that culminate after a month of dawn-to-dusk fasting and prayer when Muslims are supposed to abstain from eating, drinking, smoking and sex as a way to test their faith. The holiday is also a time of reflection, forgiveness and charity — cars were seen driving around the capital, Jakarta, handing out envelopes to the poor.


Not all countries begin celebrations on the same day. India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, for instance, are expected to officially begin Eid on Friday after the moon is sighted by officials there.


Despite the holiday’s peaceful message, some countries remained on heightened alert amid fears over potential violence in the Philippines, Thailand and Indonesia. Concerns also lingered in parts of the Middle East and Africa after Washington temporarily closed 19 diplomatic posts over terrorism worries while U.S. and British embassy employees were evacuated from Yemen where the government announced it had foiled an al-Qaida plot.


Earlier this week, a small bomb exploded outside a Buddhist temple packed with devotees praying in Jakarta. Only one person was injured, but two other devices failed to detonate. Officials have said the attack appears to have been carried out by militant Muslims angry over sectarian violence in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.


“Indonesia has the resilience to cope with terror … but we should not underestimate it,” Mohammad Mahfud, former chief justice of the Constitutional Court, said Thursday outside a mosque in Jakarta. “It still remains a concern for us.”


National Police chief Gen. Timur Pradopo said he mobilized thousands of officers to help safeguard the millions involved in the mass exodus across the country, an archipelago of some 17,000 islands. Police also stood guard at mosques, churches and temples in many cities. On Thursday night, fireworks exploded all night across the capital, with hundreds gathering in a landmark traffic circle downtown to watch the impromptu displays.


Authorities in Central Java also tightened security around Borobudur, an ancient Buddhist temple and a major tourist site.


In the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, about 100 Muslims braved a stormy morning to pray at the city’s sole mosque on the edge of the city’s old quarter. The Vietnamese imam gave a sermon in Arabic and then English to the congregation, most of whom were expatriates. Vietnam is also home to some 60,000 indigenous Muslims, most of them in the south.


Meanwhile, in the Philippines government troops and police strengthened security in the southern province of Maguindanao and outlying regions due to a spate of deadly bombings and other attacks during Ramadan that were blamed on a breakaway Muslim group called the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement. The group, which authorities say has about 200 armed fighters, opposes peace talks between the government and the main insurgent group.


The hard-line rebels have vowed to continue fighting for a separate homeland for minority Muslims in the volatile south of the predominantly Roman Catholic Philippines.


Thailand’s security agencies have also warned about more frequent, escalated insurgency attacks at the end of the Ramadan period in the three Muslim-dominated southernmost provinces that border with Malaysia, despite the ongoing peace talks with Muslim separatists facilitated by its southern neighbor.


The separatist negotiators of the militant National Revolution Front vowed at the beginning of the Islamic fasting month that they would attempt to halt the attacks throughout the period, while Thai authorities had cut back their searches for insurgents but the unrest pursued.


In one of the most high-profile attacks this week, a well-respected Muslim cleric who is known to sympathize with Thai authorities in their bid to end the violence was shot dead at a local market on Monday. Six security officers and five civilians were injured in three other attacks on the same day.


“The end of Ramadan is the period the insurgents would attempt to show off their strategies and attacks,” said Col. Jaroon Ampha, an adviser to the National Security Council.


Muslims believe God revealed the first verses of the Quran to the Prophet Muhammad during Ramadan, which starts with the sighting of the new moon. The Muslim lunar calendar moves back through the seasons, meaning Ramadan starts 11 days earlier each year under the Western calendar.


____


Associated Press writers Ali Kotarumalos and Andi Jatmiko in Jakarta, Indonesia; Jim Gomez in Manila, Philippines; Thanyarat Doksone in Bangkok, Chris Brummitt in Hanoi, Vietnam; and Farid Hossain in Dhaka, Bangladesh contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Muslims celebrate Eid with prayers, feasts

Muslims celebrate Eid with prayers, feasts








Afghans celebrate the Eid al Adha each other after offering Eid al Adha’s prayers outside Shah-e-Dushamshera mosque in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, August, 8, 2013. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Nazar)





Afghans celebrate the Eid al Adha each other after offering Eid al Adha’s prayers outside Shah-e-Dushamshera mosque in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, August, 8, 2013. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Nazar)





Pigeons fly outside the Shah-e Doh Shamshira mosque as Afghans head for morning prayers on Eid-al-Fitr in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, August, 8, 2013. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Nazar)





Imams or leaders of a mosque hold incenses upon arrival to host an Eid al-Fitr morning prayer at the Niujie Mosque in Beijing, China Thursday, Aug. 8, 2013. Chinese Muslims joined today the Eid festivity, marking the end of the month of Ramadan for Muslims across the world. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Millions of Muslims across Asia began celebrating the end of the fasting month of Ramadan on Thursday with solemn sunrise prayers followed by savory high-calorie feasts to mark their holiest holiday, despite concerns over violence looming across parts of the region and elsewhere worldwide.


In Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, throngs of believers made their way to mosques donning brand new clothes to kick off the start of Eid al-Fitr, festivities that culminate after a month of dawn-to-dusk fasting and prayer when Muslims are supposed to abstain from eating, drinking, smoking and sex as a way to test their faith. The holiday is also a time of reflection, forgiveness and charity — cars were seen driving around the capital, Jakarta, handing out envelopes to the poor.


Not all countries begin celebrations on the same day. India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, for instance, are expected to officially begin Eid on Friday after the moon is sighted by officials there.


Despite the holiday’s peaceful message, some countries remained on heightened alert amid fears over potential violence in the Philippines, Thailand and Indonesia. Concerns also lingered in parts of the Middle East and Africa after Washington temporarily closed 19 diplomatic posts over terrorism worries while U.S. and British embassy employees were evacuated from Yemen where the government announced it had foiled an al-Qaida plot.


Earlier this week, a small bomb exploded outside a Buddhist temple packed with devotees praying in Jakarta. Only one person was injured, but two other devices failed to detonate. Officials have said the attack appears to have been carried out by militant Muslims angry over sectarian violence in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.


“Indonesia has the resilience to cope with terror … but we should not underestimate it,” Mohammad Mahfud, former chief justice of the Constitutional Court, said Thursday outside a mosque in Jakarta. “It still remains a concern for us.”


National Police chief Gen. Timur Pradopo said he mobilized thousands of officers to help safeguard the millions involved in the mass exodus across the country, an archipelago of some 17,000 islands. Police also stood guard at mosques, churches and temples in many cities. On Thursday night, fireworks exploded all night across the capital, with hundreds gathering in a landmark traffic circle downtown to watch the impromptu displays.


Authorities in Central Java also tightened security around Borobudur, an ancient Buddhist temple and a major tourist site.


In the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, about 100 Muslims braved a stormy morning to pray at the city’s sole mosque on the edge of the city’s old quarter. The Vietnamese imam gave a sermon in Arabic and then English to the congregation, most of whom were expatriates. Vietnam is also home to some 60,000 indigenous Muslims, most of them in the south.


Meanwhile, in the Philippines government troops and police strengthened security in the southern province of Maguindanao and outlying regions due to a spate of deadly bombings and other attacks during Ramadan that were blamed on a breakaway Muslim group called the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement. The group, which authorities say has about 200 armed fighters, opposes peace talks between the government and the main insurgent group.


The hard-line rebels have vowed to continue fighting for a separate homeland for minority Muslims in the volatile south of the predominantly Roman Catholic Philippines.


Thailand’s security agencies have also warned about more frequent, escalated insurgency attacks at the end of the Ramadan period in the three Muslim-dominated southernmost provinces that border with Malaysia, despite the ongoing peace talks with Muslim separatists facilitated by its southern neighbor.


The separatist negotiators of the militant National Revolution Front vowed at the beginning of the Islamic fasting month that they would attempt to halt the attacks throughout the period, while Thai authorities had cut back their searches for insurgents but the unrest pursued.


In one of the most high-profile attacks this week, a well-respected Muslim cleric who is known to sympathize with Thai authorities in their bid to end the violence was shot dead at a local market on Monday. Six security officers and five civilians were injured in three other attacks on the same day.


“The end of Ramadan is the period the insurgents would attempt to show off their strategies and attacks,” said Col. Jaroon Ampha, an adviser to the National Security Council.


Muslims believe God revealed the first verses of the Quran to the Prophet Muhammad during Ramadan, which starts with the sighting of the new moon. The Muslim lunar calendar moves back through the seasons, meaning Ramadan starts 11 days earlier each year under the Western calendar.


____


Associated Press writers Ali Kotarumalos and Andi Jatmiko in Jakarta, Indonesia; Jim Gomez in Manila, Philippines; Thanyarat Doksone in Bangkok, Chris Brummitt in Hanoi, Vietnam; and Farid Hossain in Dhaka, Bangladesh contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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Muslims celebrate Eid with prayers, feasts

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Pelosi Distorts July 4 To Celebrate “health Independence”



Pelosi Trust Me SC Pelosi distorts July 4 to celebrate health independence


In a desperate effort to prop up an utterly unpopular law, Democrat hack and former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi seeks to redefine Independence Day with a shameless Obamacare plug.


While Americans across the nation take time to reflect on the sacrifice made by our founders to grant us the freedom — such as it is — we enjoy today, Pelosi claims “we’ll also be observing health independence.”


She is referring, of course, to the abysmal and falsely labeled Affordable Care Act, which was unfortunately upheld by the Supreme Court about one year prior to her recent comments.


Without cracking a smile, which is admittedly tough given her penchant for cosmetic surgery, she said the law “captures the spirit of our founders.”


There is nothing in our Constitution on which she could possibly base that absurd allegation, but history has proven that Pelosi and her cohorts on the lunatic left care little about backing up their reckless rhetoric.


Obamacare offers the exact opposite of “health independence,” as those subjected to its coverage are completely at the mercy of federal regulators. Pelosi did not stop with the requisite propaganda in support of her party; she also threw in a few jabs aimed at the right.


“If Paul Revere were here today,” she speculated, “we would need someone like him to be running through the streets saying, ‘Sequester is coming!’”


Reckless spending is somehow equated with liberty to the faulty mind of a leftist like Pelosi. In that regard, it is no wonder she will be spending Independence Day expressing gratitude for the most bloated, wasteful, and unnecessary bill in American history.






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Pelosi Distorts July 4 To Celebrate “health Independence”