08-23-2014, 03:08 PM
ابن سینا نوشته: 2-هیچ گاه،هیچ مسلمان حقیقی حق کشتن مسلمان دیگری را ندارد.پس این داعشی ها مسلمان نیستند
مساله اصلی اینجاست که اونها میگن افرادی که ما کشتیم مسلمان نبودن ...
ابن سینا نوشته: طبق احادیثی که در صحاح جانهایمان اهل سنت آمده است هیچ مسلمانی حق اهانت به صحابه پیامبر را ندارد حال آنکه داعش به قبر چندی از مهم ترین اصحاب ایشان توهین کردند
اینکه مساله مهمی نیست ... ما امروز فرقه ای به نام تشیع هم داریم که به بسیاری از صحابه توهین میکنه و تازه ادعا داره اسلام اصیل پیش خودشه !!
ابن سینا نوشته: برای اینکه در مورد دو فرقه ضاله وهابی و بهائی اطلاع داشته باشید به کتاب«خاطرات مستر همفر» رجوع کنید.در آنجا جاسوسی انگلیسی که نه مسلمان بود و نه در زندان مسلمانان بلکه یک جاسوس انگلیسی بود فاش می کند که این دو فرقه نتیجه کار استعمار انگلیس است نه برخاسته از تفکرات ناب اسلامی.
گویا شما هم مثل عوام الناس ایرانی فکر میکنید چون "وهابی" و "بهایی" هم وزن هستن از یه جا ریشه گرفتن !!! نه عزیز دل برادر ، اینها اصولا دو تفکر متفاوت هستن ...
ضمنا کتاب خاطرات مستر همفر ، یه کتاب جعلی هست و اصولا کسی به این نام وجود خارجی نداشته ....
Memoirs of Mr. Hempher, The British Spy to the Middle East - WiKi
Analysis
The "Memoirs" have been described as "probably the labor of a Sunni Muslim author whose intent is to present Muslims as both too holy and too weak to organize anything as destructive as Wahhabism."[SUP][2][/SUP] Bernard Haykel of Harvard's Olin Institute for Strategic Studies describes the document as an anti-Wahhabi forgery, "probably fabricated by one Ayyub Sabri Pasha".[SUP][1][/SUP] Sabri Pasha was an Ottoman writer who studied at the naval academy, and earned the rank of naval officer, serving for a time in the Hijaz and Yemen. He wrote historical works on the Saudi dynasty and died in 1890.[SUP][3][/SUP] In "The Beginning and Spread of Wahhabism", Pasha recounts the story of Abdul Wahhab's association with Hempher the British Spy, and their plot to create a new religion.[SUP][9][/SUP]A debunking by a Wahhabi author (Abul Haarith) points out that no evidence of Hempher can be found in computer database searches of libraries and rare books, and that facts and incidents related in the book do not conform to facts known from contemporary sources.[SUP][10][/SUP] The "Memoirs" claim Hempher travelled to Basra in 1712 and there met Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab, a student who spoke Turkish, Persian and Arabic. In fact, ibn Abdul Wahhab would have been 9–10 years old and living in his native region of Najd at that time, since he was born in 1115H (1703/1704 CE) and did not leave Najd, except for hajj, to "travel to seek knowledge until 1722".[SUP][10][/SUP] The book has Hempher boasting that the British Empire "was so vast it was said that the sun did not set within its boundaries," when in fact this claim was not, and could not, have been made until about a century later.[SUP][10][/SUP]
Other Wahhabi complaints about the memoir are that it would have been unlikely for the British to have supported and helped bin Abdul Wahhab as "there was no British presence in that region in the mid-18th century", and that there are only two explicit mentions of dates (1710 CE and 1730 CE) in a work purportedly based on a diary, which generally have dated entries.[SUP][3][/SUP]
The "Memoirs" have been described as "probably the labor of a Sunni Muslim author whose intent is to present Muslims as both too holy and too weak to organize anything as destructive as Wahhabism."[SUP][2][/SUP] Bernard Haykel of Harvard's Olin Institute for Strategic Studies describes the document as an anti-Wahhabi forgery, "probably fabricated by one Ayyub Sabri Pasha".[SUP][1][/SUP] Sabri Pasha was an Ottoman writer who studied at the naval academy, and earned the rank of naval officer, serving for a time in the Hijaz and Yemen. He wrote historical works on the Saudi dynasty and died in 1890.[SUP][3][/SUP] In "The Beginning and Spread of Wahhabism", Pasha recounts the story of Abdul Wahhab's association with Hempher the British Spy, and their plot to create a new religion.[SUP][9][/SUP]A debunking by a Wahhabi author (Abul Haarith) points out that no evidence of Hempher can be found in computer database searches of libraries and rare books, and that facts and incidents related in the book do not conform to facts known from contemporary sources.[SUP][10][/SUP] The "Memoirs" claim Hempher travelled to Basra in 1712 and there met Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab, a student who spoke Turkish, Persian and Arabic. In fact, ibn Abdul Wahhab would have been 9–10 years old and living in his native region of Najd at that time, since he was born in 1115H (1703/1704 CE) and did not leave Najd, except for hajj, to "travel to seek knowledge until 1722".[SUP][10][/SUP] The book has Hempher boasting that the British Empire "was so vast it was said that the sun did not set within its boundaries," when in fact this claim was not, and could not, have been made until about a century later.[SUP][10][/SUP]
Other Wahhabi complaints about the memoir are that it would have been unlikely for the British to have supported and helped bin Abdul Wahhab as "there was no British presence in that region in the mid-18th century", and that there are only two explicit mentions of dates (1710 CE and 1730 CE) in a work purportedly based on a diary, which generally have dated entries.[SUP][3][/SUP]