"The disintegration of the Dar al-Islam into smaller nation States - TopicsExpress



          

"The disintegration of the Dar al-Islam into smaller nation States during the period that followed the fall of the Khalifate was the dramatic and planed outcome of the loss of political sovereignty which Muslims continue to suffer today. Countries were created literally drawing lines in a map. National anthems and flags that later will invoke the emotional tears from its passionate subjects were created at premium in the West. Under the false label of independence a constitutional order was legally imposed upon the new nations. The Constitution became the legal template of an economic order that override Islamic Law in favor of the model of usurious domination of the West, namely, the introduction of Central Bank, National Debt and Legal Tender. The traditional way of muamalat was eliminated, erased and ignored by the new “constitutionalist” elites who led the process of so-called independence. It is important to notice that constitutionalism was in the modern history of Islam the label of anti-Khalifate and anti-Islam organisations and groups that worked for the undermining of Dar al-Islam. These groups were in their majority dominated by secularists, freemasons, humanists, colonial collaborators (like Abduh, the British Mufti) and straight forward traitors to Islam (like Syed Ahmed from Aligarh) who later became embellished in populist glow and given fantastic cultist attributes beyond any reality as "revivalists" or in some cases, "fathers of the nation" under the State propaganda. Secularism was embedded in the Constitutions through concepts such as religious tolerance (the end of The Law of the Dhimmies and Jizya), democracy, citizenship, and taxation (zakat becomes voluntary). The tacit validation of constitutions implied that the official Islam endorsed by the State will from now on portray a new formulation of Islam in which secularism is an integral part. Consequently the traditional way of the Fiqh based on the madhhabs was abolished or rather superseded by Constitutional and State Law." [extract from "The Gold Dinar in Pakistan" by Shaykh Umar Ibrahim Vadillo]
Posted on: Wed, 02 Oct 2013 03:58:21 +0000

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