Showing posts with label spiritual. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spiritual. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2014

The Global Spiritual Awakening of Humanity


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The Global Spiritual Awakening of Humanity

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Egyptian Police Arrest Spiritual Leader of Muslim Brotherhood


Khalil Hamra/Associated Press


At an airport in Cairo, Egyptian military and police personnel carried coffins with the bodies of police officers who were killed near Rafah in the northern Sinai.




CAIRO — The Egyptian police arrested the spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood early on Tuesday hours after a court ordered the release of former President Hosni Mubarak, twin developments that offered a measure of how far and how quickly the tumult shaking Egypt in recent days and weeks has upended the tenuous political order still evolving after the revolution of 2011.




For the first time since Mr. Mubarak was overthrown two and half years ago, it was conceivable he might go free, even as his democratically elected successor, the Islamist Mohamed Morsi, remained in detention by the military that ousted him in early July and installed an interim government.


In a kind of counterpoint, the arrest of Mohamed Badie, the spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, showed the severity of the crackdown on Islamist forces that has left hundreds dead. A private television network that supports the military leadership broadcast footage of the Islamist leader in custody.


His incarceration, which followed the death of a son, Ammar, in clashes on Friday, was apparently designed to further deflate the Brotherhood’s resolve to maintain its challenge to the military-backed government with street protests clamoring for Mr. Morsi’s release.


Mr. Badie was arrested in an apartment in the northeastern Nasr City neighborhood of Cairo, news reports said, close to a mosque at the center of a six-week sit-in by Islamist supporters of Mr. Morsi at a protest camp that the security forces dispersed with gunfire and tear gas last Wednesday. Raids on that camp and another near Cairo University killed hundreds, sparking violent clashes. In recent days the protests have seemed less intense.


Charged with incitement to murder, Mr. Badie and his two deputies face trial later this month.


His arrest, made known in the early hours, came as Egyptians struggled to absorb the notion that Mr. Mubarak, deposed as reviled despot in February 2011, might be freed. Few legal analysts thought a release was likely, at least in the coming weeks. But under the government installed last month by Gen. Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi, they say, it is no longer a foregone conclusion that prosecutors will continue to find reasons to detain the former autocrat.


Some analysts said that even the possibility of Mr. Mubarak’s release, previously unthinkable, provided another sign of the return of his authoritarian style of government.


Since the ouster of Mr. Morsi, the interim government has brought back not only prominent faces of the Mubarak era but signature elements of that autocratic state, including an “emergency law” removing the right to a trial and curbs on police abuse, the appointment of generals as governors across the provinces and moves to outlaw the Muslim Brotherhood again as a terrorist threat.


The police scarcely bothered to offer a credible explanation for the deaths of three dozen Morsi supporters in custody over the weekend. After repeatedly shifting stories, they ultimately said the detainees had suffocated from tear gas during a failed escape attempt. But photographs taken at the morgue on Monday showed that at least two had been badly burned from the shoulders up and that others bore evidence of torture.


Security officers have a new bounce in their step. They are again pulling men from their cars at checkpoints for interrogation because they have beards and dealing out arbitrary beatings with a sense of impunity — Mubarak-era hallmarks that had receded in recent years. Among civilians, even those outside the Muslim Brotherhood, fear of the police is growing.


Badr Abdelatty, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, denied any resemblance between the new government and Mr. Mubarak’s. “The emergency law is just for one month and for one objective: fighting terrorism,” he said, using the term that the new government applies to both civil disobedience and acts of violence by Islamist opponents of the military takeover. “The only way to fight terrorism is to apply the rule of law, and some emergency measures for just one month, to bring back law and order.”


More than 1,000 Brotherhood members and other supporters of Mr. Morsi have died since Wednesday in a police crackdown, and his ouster has set off a wave of retaliatory violence from his supporters, mainly targeting churches around the country and security forces in the relatively lawless northern Sinai. In the latest episode there, militants killed 25 police officers and wounded 3 others on Monday in an attack on their minibuses. Officials said the bodies were found face down with bound hands, evidently assassinated.




Alan Cowell contributed reporting from London, and Mayy El Sheikh from Cairo.





NYT > Global Home



Egyptian Police Arrest Spiritual Leader of Muslim Brotherhood

Egypt arrests Brotherhood"s spiritual leader



CAIRO (AP) — Egypt on Tuesday announced the arrest of the supreme leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, dealing a serious blow to the Islamist group at a time when it is struggling to keep up its street protests against the ouster President Mohammed Morsi in the face of a harsh crackdown by authorities.


The Brotherhood’s spiritual guide, Mohammed Badie, was arrested in an apartment at the eastern Cairo district of Nasr City, close to the location of the six-week sit-in protest by supporters of Morsi, who also hails from the Islamist group. The encampment was cleared by security forces last Wednesday, along with another protest site in Giza, in a raid that killed hundreds of people.


Badie’s arrest is the latest stage in an escalating crackdown by authorities on the Brotherhood in which hundreds have also been arrested. The Brotherhood’s near daily protests since Morsi’s ouster have somewhat petered out the last two days, with scattered demonstrations in Cairo and elsewhere in the country attracting hundreds, sometimes just dozens.


Morsi himself has been detained in an undisclosed location since the July 3 coup, prompted by days-long protests by millions of Egyptians demonstrating against the president and his rule. He is facing accusations of conspiring with the militant Palestinian Hamas group to escape from prison during the 2011 uprising and complicity in the killing and torture of protesters outside his Cairo palace in December.


Badie’s last public appearance was at the sit-in protest last month, when he delivered a fiery speech from a makeshift stage in which he denounced the July 3 military coup that removed Morsi.


Badie’s arrest followed the death of one of his children, son Ammar, who was shot dead during violent clashes between security forces and Morsi supporters in Cairo on Friday.


Also, Badie and his powerful deputy, Khairat el-Shater, are to stand trial later this month on charges of complicity in the killing in June of eight protesters outside the Brotherhood’s national headquarters in Cairo.


Meanwhile, Egypt’s military-backed government is considering the outlawing of the Brotherhood, which has spent most of the 85 years since its creation as an illegal organization. The government is seeking legal advice on banning the group and has been coming under growing pressure from the media and a wide array of secular politicians to declare it a terrorist organization.


Brotherhood spokesman Ahmed Aref sought to downplay the significance of Badie’s arrest, writing on his Facebook page on Tuesday simply: “Mohammed Badie is one member of the Brotherhood.”


The private ONTV network showed footage of a man the network said was Badie after his arrest. In the footage, a somber looking Badie in an off-white Arab robe, or galabeya, sits motionless on a black sofa as a man in civilian clothes and carrying an assault rifle stands nearby.


Badie’s arrest came after suspected Islamic militants ambushed two minibuses carrying off-duty policemen in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula early on Monday, forcing the men to lie on the sand and shooting 25 of them dead.


The daylight attack raised fears that the strategic desert region bordering Israel and the Gaza Strip could be plunged into a full-fledged insurgency. The policemen were given a funeral with full military honors late on Monday. The men’s coffins, draped in red, white and black Egyptian flags, were jointly carried by army soldiers and policemen, and Egypt’s interim President Adly Mansour declared a nationwide state of mourning to mark their deaths.


The Sinai Peninsula has long been wracked by violence by al-Qaida-linked fighters, some who consider Morsi’s Brotherhood to be too moderate, and tribesmen who have used the area for smuggling and other criminal activity. Attacks, especially those targeting security forces, have been on the rise since Morsi’s ouster.


Monday’s attack targeting the policemen took place near the border town of Rafah in northern Sinai. A few hours later, militants shot to death a senior police officer as he stood guard outside a bank in el-Arish, another city in the largely lawless area, security officials said.


There was no immediate claim of responsibility for either attack. The United States condemned the slaying of the police officers and repeated its commitment to help Egypt combat terrorism in Sinai. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also denounced the attack.


The Sinai attack came a day after security forces killed 36 detainees during a riot on a prison-bound truck convoy north of Cairo. The killings came as police fired tear gas to free a guard who was trapped in the melee, security officials said.


Associated Press



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Egypt arrests Brotherhood"s spiritual leader

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Stories About Astral Projection

Astral projection is about traveling between this world and the outer world. If you have never had this experience before in your life, the first story you will hear about is like someone reading fairytale stories to you. As oppose to the astral traveler – it is their nature now.


Many people have not heard about Astral Projection before. The stories are true as many of them can be found in holy books. This indicates that they exist for several years. Many of the stories originate from ancient Egypt and China. During that time, the power of Astral Projection was used only by ruling elite to control the people there.


Astral Projection is sometimes also described as having an out of body experience. It is just like a dream or hallucination. The practitioner actually saw their spirits outside their body from high above. They can travel to places they have never been to before. It is indeed an exploding experience to another world. Many are fearful of the Astral Projection Risks and tend to stay away from it. Rest assure that it is very safe to practice Astral Projection anywhere.


There are people telling stories how they got cured from death threatening disease with the use of astral projection. This is true as the astral projection technique is about using the mind power, the strong believe of the spirits within the mind. According to astral the mind can live without the body but the body is nothing without the spirits. With astral projection, there are no borders between the outer world and the tangible life.


You have heard of Dejavu for sure. What Dejavu is the aftermath of astral projection. People who have flashes in front of their eye when they go to a place they know they had never visited before. All this sounds a little too much but astral is for real. Astral is nature and nature is what we live into. We do not control nature but nature is within us. The power of spirit to make things happen is proven to be right.


You might notice that people having dreams about very great or undesirable events that might happen to a couple of of their buddies, loved ones or relatives. Astral Projection is within your dreams for certain, some just do not believe of such great power. You can not use astral projection for individual advantages or to harm somebody else. However, it could be used to help other people in require.


Man and woman learning Astral Projection will see things on other realms which appear extremely genuine and very close to what they see in the real world.


Learn more about Astral Projection Stories. Stop by Vincent Lee\’s site for a FREE COURSE where you can find out all about Astral Projection for beginners and what it can do for you.



Stories About Astral Projection