• My Widget

RVD- One of a Kind DVD Review

I think RVD is one of the most creative wrestlers ever. And now a comprehensive 6 hour DVD has been made to document this fact. How many wrestlers have you seen leap across from one corner of the ring to the other? RVD trained as a kick boxer and as a wrestler. Add in a dash of acrobatics, and gutsy risk taking the result is Rob Van Dam. WATCH THIS clip and tell me he is not amazing.

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6/13/04 - Entry 06 Pakistan Journal

This is the sixth journal entry in a series of about 15 which I wrote over a three week period while I was in Pakistan this summer. If you go to the category Pakistan Journal you can see all the entries. There are some really interesting experiences and observations which I make throughout the trip(or well at least in my opinion).

6/13/04

Alhumdulilah my sister is married now, so you know what that means! I’m next hehe. I haven’t been able to write in a few days since I’ve been having a lot of stomach problems. I went to the printers place on the 10th. I spent most of my day with the brother who runs the business. It turns out Shahid Bai mentored him when he was younger and helped him join a Muslim youth group. Wow, What a coincidence.

A crazy situation took place while I was at the printer’s office. My stomach was hurting. I had to keep going to the bathroom after I would eat or drink anything. So I am sitting there and all of a sudden I really had to go. So I asked the brother to show me where the bathroom was. His office was basically in a storefront inside of a small building. So there was a public bathroom there for all of the workers. So he takes me, I do my thing and when I came out he’s standing there. I wondered why he waited for me. So I go back to the office and sit down and I immediately feel the need to do more of my thing. So I tell him now that I know where it is (on another floor) I can go by myself. So I head up there. I go into this one room, its like how we have stalls, they’re just small rooms next to each other. This room was different from the one I original went in. There were no hooks to hang up my clothes. So I was like damn, so I come out trying to find another available room. I go into another one and there are hooks in that one. So I think let me test out the faucet (which is used to fill/refill the lota) to make sure it works before I get stuck in there with no water. I realize that it’s leaking. The knob is made of plastic… I try turning it… and all this water comes gushing out at me (the knob flew out). And I am jumping around in there trying not to get wet. I can’t put it back in… The pressure from the water kept pushing it out! So I come out and look around to see if anyone can help. But everyone is busy doing their thing. So I ask this guy to help me. He comes in and he starts fixing it. I really had to go badly at this point. So as another room becomes vacant I go in there… But there’s no hooks! So I just say forget it. I come out and there is this area with a bunch of sinks. It’s just like a wudu area. I wash my hands and then I’m like standing around thinking how stupid I will look if I don’t go now and go downstairs then have to go again and have to run back up. Then all of a sudden the man who fixed the faucet says to me “Dou Rupee Nikal” which literally means “take out two rupees”. It’s like when you go to high school in Brooklyn and someone says to you “run your pockets son” or “Give me a quarter”. Was I being robbed? Was the guy just a bum? I had a 5 rupee bill so I just said “Take 5” and I bounced. I had like $700 American on me, the last thing I wanted to do is get robbed in a Pakistani bathroom. So I come down and tell the brother about what happened and he laughed. I think it was him who told me that guy cleans the bathroom (by his own will) and expects people to pay him for providing them a clean extcretionary experience. The brother said “You will find a lot of people like this in Pakistan”.

I felt really good that day because the brother told me a lot about the existing state of Islamic Work in Karachi. The mayor of the city is from an Islamic party. And Karachi is the most crime ridden city in Pakistan. The city leadership has been in the hands of the people who have caused the most amounts of problems. Life expectancy here is lower than the other parts of Pakistan because of the horrible standard of living. There is garbage everywhere! Some of the streets smell like sewage. And there is so much pollution. And I thought that New York City was dirty. It’s nothing compared to this! So the brother was literally showing me all the good work that has been done since the new mayor came in 2 years ago. He showed me specific roads which had been paved. He showed me current construction efforts to reduce overcrowding on roads. They demolished these side sidewalks to expand the roads to add more lanes. I got to appreciate Muslims (real Muslims) participating in government actually working for change and improving their society.

I had a  discussion with some brothers on the effects of colonization on the Muslim World. They were comparing the few lands which underwent little to no occupation in the Muslim World to the rest of it. Alhumdulilah I finally had found level headed Muslims in Pakistan! Until this point I had only come across secularist extremists. Some who abandon the deen, and others who manipulate it or don’t do justice to it. i.e. the molvis in the masjid which have marginalized the purpose, function, and real vision of Islam. And have perverted its application to a set of rituals.

The next day, the 11th was Jummah. My stomach had gotten worse but I was looking forward to hearing the khutbah at the Brailvi Masjid (which is pretty bad)… In these last 2 days (Thursday and Friday) Pakistan was really reminding me of hell. Since all these pakis would be going to hell (JUST KIDDING). But the extreme heat was killing us. My mother forced me to stay where she was staying for a few nights. The place was horribly designed. I felt like I was suffocating to death. The only thing that helped me was knowing that inshallah I would be going home in 2 weeks. So when I go to Jummah my stomach is hurting, the heat is really extreme and its causing me to feel really sick. Then the Imam gives the khutbah (or Baiyan I should say) on the topics of the virtues of praying in the masjid, praying, and praying while wearing a Topee and never praying without a Topee. This is the masjid with the loaners. When he started making stuff up I started feeling sicker and angrier. He said if you pray in the masjid on time all your problems in this world will go away. Your business will thrive etc etc. Which is not true. Then he starts saying “What good is your prayer if you are not wearing a Topee?” His khutbah should have been entitled: “Namaz Paro, Topee Pano” which means make prayer and wear a Topee. I only believed the things which he said that I already knew and I discarded everything else. After Jummah I was feeling really sick, I walked with my cousin really far, we were looking for a cold bottle of 7 up. But we had to settle for Pepsi. Since it was Jummah everything was closed. Which was cool. Oh yeah the Imam would sing Hadith in Urdu! It was hilarious! Every time he would say something about the prophet he would sing it! So funny, man it was scary when the entire crowded masjid would do the thing with the kissing of the hands and rubbing of the eye brows during the adhaan. I was complaining to my cousin about the khutbah saying how these molvis just want people to come pray at the masjid. They think that is Islam. The masajid there are only used for prayer and for nothing else. There is no such thing as a Muslim community here, because the people think they are already living in an Islamic State, which is ridiculous. Any Islamic parties or Jamaahs here are branded as sects or as political nuisances. The sects part is true. But I think that the non-sectarian Islamic Jamaahs get a really bad rap because of the common molvis in the corner masjids which have nothing to do with them. Also politics are seen as being dirty and un-islamic. So an “Islamic Party” seems oxymoronic to these people. Then again only 40% of them are literate. The common person here has issues with or misconceptions of the Islamic Work that is taking place in the country. The more educated people are, the better their understanding is of Islam, which makes so much sense since this religion revolved around ilm. I hate to “sound Salafi” but the more these people blindly follow the more lost they are from their true purpose of creation.

After Jummah the brother from the print shop picked me up and took me to eat lunch where I had a discussion with some good Muslim Youth. Every conscious Muslim that I met in Pakistan had the same question for me. They wanted to know how it was possible for Muslims in America to propagate Islam without being persecuted. The reason they asked this question is because from observing our Foreign Policy they came to the conclusion that our country hates Islam and wants to eradicate it from the globe. So based on this perception they were almost shocked to know that Muslims are openly propagating Islam and are building their own communities in America. I explained to them that although we do feel that our community is being unfairly targeted by individuals with certain agendas against us. Overall in society we have our place and have our freedom to practice and even spread our religion. I hope this would help to lessen their Anti-American sentiments and give them a more realistic view of how things work in the West. This must have been the best day of my trip.

I also learned that there was a historical conflict (over the past 20 years) in the city of Karachi where Muslim Student Organizations clashed with a certain organized street gang/political group called MQM/APMSO. The street gang had resorted to using violence and killing people. The Media blamed the Muslim Student groups as well for fueling the conflict. Due to this Muslim Student Groups had this really bad rep (which won’t go away) and had to work really hard to fix their public image by doing solid community based Islamic Work i.e. creating Children’s Islamic Magazines, and offering classes in computer technology.

When I got back to where I was staying that night I was all happy till I saw that the Jamaati hating Auntie had come over. She immediately went off again. She was like “All these Jamaatis have cable at home” (as if having cable is haram- besides who knows how true that even is). And she starts her ranting and raving. So this time I start arguing with her and start shutting her down. I asked the auntie if she had read any “Jamaati” literature and if she ever found anything wrong in it. She said “No”. So then I was done arguing.

The next day (the 12th) was the wedding day. I went to my uncle’s house and napped for most of the day. I was staying at my cousin’s house on the night before it was so hot that I slept on the roof. The next morning my father and I went out trying to find bananas. Since Pakistanis have such a hard time sleeping due to extreme heat their businesses do not open till 11 AM. Plus when the electricity goes out (which is every few hours) the ceiling fans don’t work. I hear Saudi is worse than this (somehow). I don’t think I’ve ever been in such a harsh climate before. Later on we go back out to search for bananas again. But first I go to get a haircut. There is this guy who has a make shift barber shop under a tree. He had his wires for his trimmer wrapped around tree branches. When he was trimming my beard I had to lean back on this chair which was really uncomfortable. There were flies all over the place since there were people selling fruit not too far from there. Then we bought bananas and headed for my uncle’s house. On the way we had to walk through this street which I call “the garbage street”. I felt like I was walking in a landfill. Just thinking about how low the standard of living was… I was becoming sick. My father ate a banana and tossed the peel into the street. I became really angry and I started going off on him (without raising my voice or being rude). He tried to justify it by saying he wasn’t adding to the problem because it couldn’t get any worse. I told him he had just made it worse. I used to think NYC was really filthy. But now I know what filth is. All I was thinking is “cleanliness is a part of Imaan” and these people criticize the West but the West would be more suitable for the actual inculcation of Imaan. Sure we have adhaan on loud speakers and people wear beards, turbans, and Topees. But where is the true essence of the deen? Why isn’t it reflected in the streets? Why is it confined to the masajid? Why do these people expect the government to clean up after their mess? Sure they need a better sanitation system but don’t they realize that the are making themselves sick by littering like this? The issue of air pollution maybe beyond the individual but the issue of litter is absolutely not. Haven’t these people heard of garbage cans? Even in their homes they might have like one small basket in a huge house. There are no garbage cans on the streets. Do these people think that this type of waste will evaporate? In some respects these people are medieval.

Finally the wedding. It was scheduled to happen at 8 PM but people were not expected to enter until 11 PM!! The groom did not get there till about 12! Dinner was at like 1 AM! And the photo shoots took another 2 hours! When people talk about Desi Standard Time I thought that it was a stereotype, it definitely is not. People don’t even come to their offices on time. We had this molvi do the nikkah khutbah, he said if his picture was taken or if the cameramen pointed their cameras at him he would run away. I thought he was nuts. It’s good that he is firm on his beliefs but he needs to wake up. These anti-technology molvis are living in the past. No object is halal or haraam it’s the usage that needs to be look at. I wonder what they think of Quran TV. Oh yeah I forgot cable is haram, so Quran TV must be haram by default.

I realized that in America the Desi Muslim community is no longer hanafi (in the Pakistani hanafi purest sense). Since many of these people blindly follow, they were just following what was happening in their masajid oversees. Now they follow what they see in their masajid in America. In America since we have a mesh of the various schools of thought we have a pretty assimilated application of fiqh. What’s being implemented in all the masajid is various fiqh. So Muslim see Muslim do. Quite frankly from being here I now know for sure I am not a hanafi and Pakistani-hanafi application  is very irritating to me. Reason being that priorities are given to all the wrong things i.e. the Topee. Imam Abu Hanifah was so dynamic. He was a scholar of Ahlul Ray. He always analyzed issues before forming judgments. His example is rejected in his own name over here! Its time for Zuhr now. So I need to be out soon.

Pictures from this segment of the trip:

[img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/34.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/35.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/36.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/37.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/38.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/39.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/40.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/41.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/42.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/43.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/44.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/45.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/46.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/47.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/48.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/49.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/50.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/51.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/52.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/53.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/54.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/55.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/56.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/57.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/58.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/59.jpg width=100 height=100]

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Transformers Vs. GI JOE Comics!

Click on the images to see actual size.

There are two different companies which have the rights to produce transformers vs. g.i. joe comics. The pics above are from Devil’s Due comics- http://devilsdue.net/index.html. The other is from Dream Wave. I like Devils Due’s comic much better since it is much more vibrant and colorful. Dream Waves is way to dark looking. Hasbro is the creator and owner of both G.I. JOE and transformers…. this idea is an ingenious one.. I would like to see a toyset where GI JOEs can sit inside Transforrmers… now that would be hot.

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Time magazine article on BitTorrent creator

here's an excerpt:
[blockquote]"Bram Cohen was an unusual kid. While other first-graders were outside playing, he was writing computer code. By junior high, he could solve Rubik's Cube in a few minutes. A college dropout, he went on to co-found a hacker's convention in San Francisco. "I was always really weird," he says. Yet it was only two years ago, at age 27, that he learned why. Studying psychological conditions, he determined that he had Asperger syndrome, a mild form of autism, which explained his social difficulties and seemed tied to his obsession with puzzles."[/blockquote]
Read Full article: [url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1025138,00.html]Downloading Hollywood[/url]

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6/9/2004 - Entry 05 Pakistan Journal

This is the fifth journal entry in a series of about 15 which I wrote over a three week period while I was in Pakistan this summer. If you go to the category Pakistan Journal you can see all the entries. There are some really interesting experiences and observations which I make throughout the trip(or well at least in my opinion).

6/9/2004

Last night we had a cultural wedding ritual called a Mayo it’s a pre-mehndi mehndi. I bet this was copied from the Hindus. Why can’t people be content with fulfilling the sunnah. Anyways I slept for a lot of yesterday. After Maghrib I was sent to my cousin’s house to pick up my clothes for this event. That was after Maghrib. This event did not start till like 11 at night! Then we wonder why desis in America are always late. They all purposefully did not leave their homes till about 10:30! Which is nuts (for me at least). I also went with my uncle to pick up “cold drinks” which essentially means Pepsi and 7up bottles in crates. We had to buy ice off of the streets. We purchased a slab of ice form this guy for like 100 rupees which is like 2 dollars. This crazy tent was setup for the event right in front of my uncle’s house (fathers cousin). These guys came to make the food on the spot! They made these Kababs on a grill and this team of two make these 3 feet long (in diameter) fried rotis (parratas). I took some pictures of that. The Kebabs were pretty undercooked no one liked it. But the roti was banging. All the kids were dying for second soda bottles. I used my privileges to get mine while all the little kids got yelled at hehe. I met a bunch of my third cousins. My father introduced me to their mother as a “Jamaati” (Which I am not, Although I do support their work). Anyways this lady starts going off on “Jamaatis” saying how they are hypocrites and she hates them. I was like “okay great”. And she kept going on and on. They really need to work on their public image here.

Yesterday I watched something called Q-TV which is Quran TV which is done by this company called ARY which has a few channels which it has started. So on QTV they had this Alim taking questions live. Someone called and asked about the different schools of thought (the 4 imams specifically) he wanted to know which ones we should follow. I don’t think the vast majority of Pakistanis even know who they are, so I was happy that this question was being asked. He gave an excellent answer explaining that all these imams were part of ahlus sunnah wal jammah and that they had different opinions in fiqh and not in aqeedah. He went on to say so you can do taqleed to ay of them. Then he pissed me off by saying “but we should follow Imam Abu Hanifah because he was the best and closest of them to Quran and Sunnah, he was Imam-e-Azam” He killed his answer.. And tossed his personal opinion in there and didn’t even say that it was his opinion. Any of the people watching WILL repeat what he said just like that. “We should follow Imam Abu Hanifah because he was the best”. And the funny thing is that I have actually heard people saying things like that. Yesterday I went to the masjid for a few prayers. At Zuhr time right when I was about to pray I looked up and realized that everyone was wearing a topee except for me… And I am like Yikes! They’ll kill me if they realize. So I leave the ranks searching for a loaner topee. But it was to no avail. So I thought okay let me see if I can find at least one other person not wearing a topee so if they want to come at me I can point at him and make a dash. After prayer everyone sits and waits to make dua. And the Imam MUST make dua out loud every single time. Again I don’t know if this is a Hanafi thing. So I knew no one would not make dua to just harass me. So before dua was over I bounced. I asked my father why he was not combining prayers since he would only be here for two weeks. One week in Lahore and one week in Karachi. And he was like “I think there’s more reward in praying at the set times”. I said “I don’t think so”. And he says “and I don’t want to leave my Sunnah Muaqada because its equal to fard prayers”. I wanted to say “you’re traveling!” But I already felt like I had pestered him enough and that I’d be annoying him if I wasn’t already. People here don’t know about combining prayers although they do know about Qasr (shortening prayers). So it must be a part of Hanafi Fiqh. Thank God I was raised in America with American Muslims (from all over). So I can both shorten and combine it. Even the normalized desis in America do this. Only the staunch Hanafis don’t. I wonder if stuff like this will be taught in the Al Maghrib Evolution of Fiqh Class. It’s so hard for me to explain to my cousins or uncles why I am not going to Asr because I prayed Asr wuth Zhur. To them it’s an abomination or something. And if they don’t know about something it’s automatically wrong, and not only is it wrong it’s also sinful.

I realized that secularism is instilled in these children from when they are really young. Someone had put my Qur’an on top of the TV set (It was the highest spot in the room) So my little cousin who is like 10 says “you can’t put the Quran on the TV that’s sinful” I said “why because you want to watch haraam on TV?” And he nods yes (they watch a lot of Indian movies with singing and dancing). So I said “so why don’t we hide the Qur’an, so then we can watch whatever we want on TV” I was basically saying that is what is already being done. People are concerned about the physical Kitab of the Quran witnessing their sins more than they are concerned about actually committing the sin. Also when I was getting my clothes from my cousins house all the kids were listening to Wedding Music and blasting it. So this one girl says “The Azaan!” So another kid runs to the radio trying to turn it off. Some can say this is a sign of respect, which it is. But if they really think what they are doing is wrong then why do they do it. They have Islamic channels and they have totally haraam channels. Why? So they can switch up according to their nafs. When they want to feel good about being Muslim they can watch some QTV. And when they want to be entertained they’ll watch Indian Movies or love songs or freemixtrous Paki Music videos. Most people here now have cable boxes/service which has about 90 channels. I asked my cousin if it’s regulated. He said the only thing which they take out is nudity/sex scenes from “English Movies” (American Movies). But when my cousins were channel surfing they showed Britney wearing one of her usual outfits performing. My point is that Islam here is such a side thing. It has nothing to do with anything. It is irrelevant to their actual lives outside of going to the masjid to pray. No masjid here has a women’s section. We should send all the “progressive Muslims” here so they can be taken care of. My aunt tried to justify why women shouldn’t go the masjid by saying the usual stuff. I didn’t even want to get into it with her. I did tell her than in America we have space for women in all of our masajid! And the progressive Muslims don’t think were making progress…ha. I’m sure it’s at the university level where this (type of thinking) is different.

One of my third cousins invited me to his house, but his mom was the one who said she hates “Jamaatis”. She had no idea about what she was talking about, but was yapping away anyways. I asked my father why he told her that I was a “Jamaati” and he said “who cares”. I told him people have a bad impression about these political Muslims, no matter how religious they are.

Pictures from this segment of the trip:

[img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/11.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/12.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/13.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/14.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/15.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/16.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/17.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/18.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/19.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/20.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/21.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/22.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/23.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/24.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/25.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/26.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/27.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/28.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/29.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/30.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/31.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/32.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/33.jpg width=100 height=100]

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State of the Blog Address

Well my mother doesn't like my Pakistan Journal too much. She's hidden my physical journal. Therefore until I can locate it, using my investigate techniques (learned from Batman) there will be no updates to the Pakistan Journal.

[html]<center>[/html][img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/psp.gif] [html]</center>[/html]

But what I will do for you is solicit something. If you would like to obtain a free PSP which is the next cool handheld video game system created by SONY the makers of PSOne and PS2… you should [url=http://www.FreePSPs.com/?r=15552578]CLICK HERE FOR FREE PSP[/url]  Yes this is another one of those [url=http://www.freeipods.com/default.aspx?referer=azee1v1@gmail.com]FREE IPOD[/url]  things. I have also tried [url=http://www.giftfox.com/xbox/index.php?verifyid=2053328]FREE XBOX[/url] .

Now back to your regularly scheduled program:

Many people are liking my blog. Alhumdulilah, I just wish they would vocalize these sentiments more in the form of comments! There is a link called add comment at the bottom of each post- try it.. I have added a link called Blogorama linking all my favorite blogs on the net. Come to think of it… this is my first blog entry about my blog. Someone took my pakistan journals and posted them all over pro-Paki sites to piss off some pakis. Thus we have some incoherent responses left to some of the journal entries.

I was wondering if all the wrestling stuff is scaring people away. I think I should spend more time writing reviews on Islamic Audio. I mean I just need to refresh my mind by relistening to parts of the series in order to do justice. I think I will do a review on either The Rise and Fall of the Ummah by Imam Zaid Shakir or The Rise and Fall of ECW with Paul Heyman. I've also watched G.I. JOE Season One so that definitely will get a review. Also The Power of Nightmares film I have to write about that. Someone recomended for me to watch Million Dollar Baby… I would rather watch footage of RVD when he was a teen kissing the dirty stinkin foot of the Million Dollar Man for a few hundred bucks.

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Control Room - Review

The skinney: This documentary was made to give American viewers an inside look at the controversial news outlet Al Jazeera. Which had become known to the American world when it started broadcasting images that mainstream media was avoiding. There is an underlying theme showing the conflicting analysis between not only the mainstream western Media and that of Al Jazeera but also the conflicting views between the US government and military and that of al Jazeera’s journalists on the issue of Ithe invasion of Iraq.

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Another Arab Wrestler in the WWE?

hassanWell not exactly, newly introduced WWE wrestler Muhammad Hassan in reality is an italian named Mark Magnus.

On the WWE site it states:

“All Muhammad Hassan wanted was to coexist with his American neighbors and feel a sense of belonging. That wasn’t meant to be. So now, Hassan and Khosrow Daivari are taking out their frustration in WWE.Hassan first directed his anger at Jerry “The King” Lawler, who took exception to Hassan’s anti-American rhetoric. The two squared off in a Monday Night RAW Arab-American debate, but that broke down into an ugly brawl. That event led to a match between Hassan and The King at New Year’s Revolution.During his in-ring debut at the pay-per-view in Puerto Rico, Hassan had an impressive showing, finishing off Lawler with a modified STO finisher. The next night on RAW, Hassan took out The Hurricane in a similar fashion. There’s no telling who’s next on the list for this bold newcomer.” On a wrestling discussion board someone made an interesting comment: “When does he start using the camel clutch as his finisher? And when will he start with “Iran, Number One. USA hak-too” (or however you simulate spitting)? How soon before he comes to the ring in those curly shoes?” and then he suggests that the WWE should send their gimmick back the 80’s ha.

MHRR05I recently watched the Royal Rumble in which Muhammad Hasan was making his entrance as 10 or so wrestlers in the ring just stopped and focused all their attention on him. The crowd started chanting USA USA USA, and as soon as he got in the ring all the wrestlers jumped him, beat him down, and threw him out collectively thus eliminating him. It was basically a way to let that rag head know USA is A OK. So what does he do? He attacks a much smaller wrestler from behind to take out his frustration out on him and gets booed by the fans in the process. Some are calling him an instant heel (bad guy). When the wrestlers were pounding on him it was almost being done patriotically especially since we are at war (with arabs and muslims?)But this is nothing new. the WWF (now known as WWE) has had a long history of having racially stereotypical characters. They had Nikolai Volkov a Russian who used to go toe to toe with Hulk Hogan, the real American hero. And then there was the legendary Iron Sheik (who carried an Irani flag to the ring). And then during the Gulf War they had the Wrestler turned GI JOE character Seargant Slaughter play the role of an Iraqi Sympathazier (he used to wear an Iraqi uniform to the ring-see image below). Hulk Hogan mentions in his autobiography (yes Hogan is literate) that Seargant Slaughter used to get death threats from crazy fans who believed he was really an Iraqi sympathizer.

And you thought the new season of 24 was bad!
[ vvv Make sure to read my followup comments by clicking the comments lnk below]

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The New Destro

NewDestro.jpg

I’ll add some commentary to this post… soon.

6/8/2004 - Entry 04 Pakistan Journal

This is the fourth journal entry in a series of about 15 which I wrote over a three week period while I was in Pakistan this summer. If you go to the category Pakistan Journal you can see all the entries. There are some really interesting experiences and observations which I make throughout the trip(or well at least in my opinion).

6/8/2004

Okay So I missed a day, can you blame me? well I’ll fill you in anyways. So I left off before I came to Karachi, so I’ll start from there. As we were going to get our luggage there was a man in white uniform who was holding up a sign which had my fathers name as well as my grandmothers name on it. My father asked “Who sent you? So and So?” And I’m just thinking I don’t trust anyone! Why not let him say who sent him! In Pakistan especially in Karachi everyone is in constant fear of getting robbed at gun point. So this guy says “Yeah”. And then I see other men in white uniform who are treating us like VIP’s. The reason is because my grandmothers little brother is some big time air force guy. He was retired from the air force. Then he himself came in and they let us leave with the quickness. He wouldn’t let me carry my own bags and made the guy in uniform do it. At that moment I thought wow all these big time guys really use their power and influence (or at least accept the perks). Any public officer in any country should be a public servant. But sometimes what happens is the public becomes their servants. I’m not saying the guy is not a good guy, he’s really nice… but I call it like I see it.

As we exit the airport I meet my brother in law to be for the very first time. He’s wearing a baseball hat and dress shirt and pants.. that could only mean one thing: He’s Bald! So he takes a look at my shiner and says “And I thought I had hair loss problems” or something like that ha. Right off the bat I could tell that he had a good sense of humor. Upon observing his teeth I thought oh no this guy either drinks a lot of tea, chews tobacco or smokes or worse – all of the above. One thing that I noticed about Pakistanis is that the majority of them don’t give a damn about dental hygiene… well I would make the point about them not caring about hygiene in general but lets stick to this for now. In most bathrooms at peoples houses you can’t find toothpaste… and its not because they cant afford it.. They just don’t know how important it is. There should be a dental revolution here. It should be stressed in the educational system. A few of my cousins never brushed in their lives… I don’t think they will have any teeth left by the time they hit 50.

The first place where we went was my brother in law to be’s house. We met his parents they were seemed pretty nice. I liked most of his brothers. One just popped in for a minute and left. I thought that was kind of weird. But the other guys seemed really cool and hard working. The youngest was running an English learning institute for youth. Two others (twins) were running a gift shop.

After that we went to my cousins home where my sisters were staying. It was really cool reuniting with my family. It had been 5 months since I had seen my mother! My sister, (the one getting married) was really happy to see me (in Pakistan) ha. This reunion was just like the Brady Bunch reunion. Well not just like it… well maybe it was more like the Capone N Noreaga Reunion… No wait it was more like the Jetsons meet the Flintstones… since it felt like we came from the future (America) to the Stone Age (Pakistan). One of my sisters commented that Pakistan is like the 1920’s (in America).

My other sister pointed out to me that over here (Pakistan) the older people, the people in their midlife (40s-50s) were the most important people in the family. While in America as you became older you become more irrelevant. It was an interesting point… but the problem with it is that the young adults have less worth in this society. I could tell by how people talked to me as if I was an inexperienced little kid. I seriously thought my mother has been here for too long when she went through all my clothes and said “I will not let you wear this here”. She told me to button up my shirt because it’s considered “bad” here. So I said “No, I’m from America this is how I dress” why should I conform to their norms. They should get over these petty things. I don’t care if someone wants to judge me according to their false precepts. Anyways, I thought she was nuts for thinking she could tell me how to dress. She had been here for way too long. Maybe parents over there could dictate what their kids wear. I rebelled against that notion when I was in the third grade… I thought I had laid down the law, guess not. My mother didn’t like the watch we got for the bro-in-law-to-be. I told her that she had lost her taste…ha. We paid a decent amount for that thing dang nabbit.

I have to write about Karachi. Karachi is a crazy place. I could tell by the first time I sat in a car… it was even worse than Lahore. Unlike Lahore there were no animals on the main road including horses and donkeys. But it had tons of cars, motorcycles, rikshas, and funkdafied busses. These people barely stop at stop lights. They have no problem driving on the wrong side of a 2 way road. In fact they drive against traffic on the wrong side of a major 3-lane 2 way street (3 lanes on each side) Also there is no real concept of a lane. The only right a pedestrian has is the right to get the hell out of the way before he/she is killed. Cars will honk every 10 seconds. They expect motorcyclists to immediately clear their path if they are in front of them. I had always head that the bigger your vehicle is, the more command you have on the road… now I saw it in person. No one stops if a pedestrian pops out of nowhere on the streets, they keep going. I am surprised I haven’t seen anyone get hit yet. Although I did see a motorcyclist crash his bike and land in the middle of the road. I have seen a family of 5 sitting on one motorcycle, its ridiculous… and the way women sit is sideways, sometimes only holding the man riding by his shirt. Then again in Karachi there is so much traffic you can’t really go that fast (over 40). Although the busses go as fast as they want.

Yesterday morning, well yesterday afternoon I went to a masjid here for the first time. I was walking from where my father and I were staying to where my sisters were staying it’s a good 15 minute walk and stopped to pray at this masjid called masjid Bilal. There I was handed a loaner topee made of straw.. which I was required to wear unless I wanted to be killed, or at least lectured, well at most banned from the masjid. I wish I could tell them… “You guys are hanafis and you don’t even know it!” I inspected the straw hat for lice before I put it on. In this masjid I noticed that when Rasulullah (S) is mentioned even in the adhaan or Iqamah these people kiss their fists, rub their eyebrows, and then kiss their fists again. They all did it suddenly and in sync… and the guy next to me noticed that I didn’t do it. Then this dude starts staring at me. And I am like OH MY GOD what’s going to happen next. I had always been warned to do as the natives do in the masjid… or else who knows what they will think or do to you. Especially in a place like Karachi where there is so much sectarian violence. What if they thought I was shia. There were a lot of Hari Pugurs (Green Turban wearers) present. They hate shias with a passion and have declared them kuffar and think they should be killed. So I just got out of there. One thing I noticed is that these bida doers always talk about this silsila nonsense. They say that they are only following alim-e-deen of the past. Now I know why these Salafis are so against blind following… because as Brother Musa Bryant once wisely said “Shrik happens”. The masjid itself was very nice though. I was very careful about not making massa on my socks because I know Pakis don’t understand that. I don’t know if it’s just hanafi fiqh or what. Its not like I could ask anyone here… they’d just give blanketh reference to the alim-e-deen whose silsila they have been following for so many years. Alim-e-deen who these people can’t even identify. I asked my elder cousin who is like 40 about all this bida stuff and he simply said it’s due to their not being any real people of knowledge around, then of course because of widespread misinformation aka silsila followers just copying each others actions. Also I realized that these people have a very strange figure head mentality of Islamic leadership. They want a molvi to lead them. The person MUST visually fit the bill. He must have a long beard, the older he is the better, or more sound his knowledge is. And as he becomes older his knowledge becomes even more authentic. And we know in Islam this is totally false. Look at the example of Hadrat Ali (r) who was younger than most but had a better understanding than most. I don’t think these people will ever get it. Why should any youth come to them, its much better if they stay away. Then again the majority of this country’s citizens are illiterate, but still in the biggest city you would expect more… but I guess it takes time for change to occur.

I went to an internet café here, it really sucked it was slow as hell, and I couldn’t access my AOL e-mail from it. The water here is supposedly really bad. So I was avoiding drinking it. I was only drinking bottled water that I bought from the store. That plan lasted for like a day. Then my relatives made me “say bismillah” and just drink the tap water. Since then I have experienced some headaches and some mushy goo.

Today is my sister’s mendhi. I hate this cultural crap. All the girls at my cousin’s house have been singing wedding songs and have been listening to music like crazy for the past few days. Which is okay, but I still don’t personally take a liking to it. I am much more pleased to see Wham Bam thank you I’mam nikkah ceremonies (simple) followed by a big waleema. Although I don’t think even my wedding could be small in terms of guests because I would invite EVERYONE. All of YM would definitely have to be there.

Yesterday I went to Tariq Road with my cousin and his wife. It was really cool because they are so chill. We first got me some dress shoes. Got real nice dress shoes for like 35 US. My cousin did a really good job at bargaining. It was funny because all the store owners would say “You can check all the stores on this road, I guarantee my price is the best”. And my cousin would say “Yeah, sure I will check all the stores prices, but I would rather be your customer, and don’t you want me to be your customer?” Then the numbers game would begin. His wife did a good job of saying “that’s way too much” every time any price would initially be thrown out there. The name of the game is making the person come down as low as possible even if you are already getting a good deal. It was really awkward for me because I still can’t count past 13 in Urdu. So I couldn’t understand the prices. My cousin would just whisper to me telling me “it’s too expensive”.

The scene at Tariq Road is so interesting. There are so many kids out there hustling, selling one thing or another. First you have your street vendors selling all sorts of funky snacks. Then you have your beggars walking around with their kids. Then you have people selling things like popcorn on a string to cotton candy, toy snakes, flutes, newspapers, you name it. The shops were the most interesting. The vast majority of the stores were shoe stores and women’s garment stores. It would be heaven (astughfirullah) for girls from America. Thank god there were no American girls with us. Back to the hustlers… You would find stores within stores. People had makeshift storefronts which would really be merchandise stacked on top of each other. There were many little kids running these operations. Some people even would pull their cars up the shopping strip, lay out a cloth over their car and then stack up their merchandise on top of it. I saw this person make a sale of this women’s shoe, he tossed it to his friend and he ran to another store to get the shoe in the right size. There were so many people running so many types of scams/gimmicks. I couldn’t help but think that the beggars here have No excuse. If a little kid can setup shop, why cant they? And these kids were making money! Even if they were selling cheap stuff. Because everyone needs something (supply/demand). It was sad to see so many youth smoking. And you could tell who the drug abusers were. Over here kids all hang out on their block s late at night. They sit outside because it’s just so hot (inside) and they just chat till late night. At the stores during closing time heavily armed policemen would be all over the place. Especially since people would take money out and head home. It’s really dangerous here for anyone who transports cash. They need some armored truck services. I have heard so many stories of people getting stuck up for their families jewelry and cash. When you drive around you see people staring at you, people here have a staring problem. But you have to wonder who is sizing you up to be their next victim. These guys will go fully armed into people’s homes. The police is said to be easily bought off over here. In fact they are known for that. In Lahore I saw a lot of army personnel, those guys are no joke.

Finally I must say I noticed something really strange about the women here. In Lahore I barely saw Hijabis there. In Karachi I saw both hijabis and what I call Burqabis (niqab included). But the strangest thing I saw was drop top Burqabis… sisters wearing burqa without hijab! This was very perplexing for me. Where are the priorities! You wear one long dark black cloth which is something extra to what’s fard because you think it’s the best way to cover okay fine… but how can you neglect what’s mandatory and do what’s not even mandatory and what’s not even recommended or prescribed but is just something which has culturally been adopted! Women wearing burqa and niqab in the context of the Pakistani market place is totally understandable. All of the shop keepers and street hustlers are men, young men who don’t marry till a very late age. And they call every sister who comes to shop “Baji” or “Appa” which means big sister. My sister really hates it because they harass you, trying to get you to buy stuff. In this context, especially if a woman is alone, Burqa and niqab makes sense. But this is where America and a place like Pakistan seem to be parts of two different worlds. In places like malls or department stores more women are the workers, and men are actually barely present. It’s kind of strange how sex based segregation helps to create this environment. Women are essentially banned from having any sales positions. I have seen some women driving… but have yet to see one riding a motorcycle… Judging by how women sit on motorcycles I guess it’s considered improper for women to sit in the position that men would sit in. Another funny thing happened. When we were leaving Tariq Road we got on this bus. I had to jump on to this moving bus. First I was getting on from the front and the driver started yelling at me. The reason was that only women sat in the front and there was a physical barrier between the sweaty crowded men’s section. As you can see a lot has happened in the last day or so. Till next time Peace.

Pictures from this segment of the trip:

[img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/07.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/08.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/09.jpg width=100 height=100] [img=http://www.azeemkhan.info/images/pakistan/10.jpg width=100 height=100]

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