Please Hit

Folks, This is a Free Site and will ALWAYS stay that way. But the only way I offset my expenses is through the donations of my readers. PLEASE Consider Making a Donation to Keep This Site Going. SO HIT THE TIP JAR (it's on the left-hand column).

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Islamic Family Love--> Attempted Honor Killing Gets Praised


The religion of Peace has a problem with Women. The women who was gang-raped in Saudi Arabia and sentenced to 200 lashed is only one example. Women's rights are compromised by a section in the Koran, sura 4:34, that has been interpreted to say that men have "pre-eminence" over women or that they are "overseers" of women. The verse goes on to say that the husband of an insubordinate wife should first admonish her, then leave her to sleep alone and finally beat her. Wife beating is so prevalent in the Muslim world that social workers who assist battered women in Egypt, for example, spend much of their time trying to convince victims that their husbands' violent acts are unacceptable.

Beatings are not the worst of female suffering. Each year hundreds of Muslim women die in "honor killings"-- murders by husbands or male relatives of women suspected of disobedience, usually a sexual indiscretion or marriage against the family's wishes whether it actually happened or not.

In the case below it was a brother trying to kill his 19 year-old sister for dishonoring her family. Even though he failed, he was praised for attempting to protect his family's honor. What a sick society !!!

Brother praised for 'honor killing' attempt

Yaakov Lappin and Ruth Eglash ,

A 19-year-old Israeli Arab woman has survived an attempted "honor killing" by her brother on Tuesday in the Arab village of Na'ura, near Afula, after two bullets fired at her head shattered on impact, failing to penetrate her skull.

Paramedics said the girl survived by playing dead, leading her brother to stop shooting and kicking her. He proceeded to dial emergency services, telling paramedics: "I just shot my sister."

The 24-year-old suspect was warmly praised by some members of his family for the attempted murder. He is in police custody.

The brother said his sister had been violating the family's honor for a "long time."

Using his younger brother's car, the suspect drove to the entrance of their village, making sure that his sister returned home shortly after midnight.

The victim was surprised to see her brother, police said, as the suspect ruthlessly proceeded to fire two shots at her head before landing brutal kicks all over her body to confirm that she was dead.

According to police, the attack had been carefully planned over a long period, and the suspect had informed his family of his murderous intentions. Family members who knew of the plot and cooperated with the suspect will also be arrested and charged in the near future, Afula police chief Dep.-Cmdr. Orly Malka told The Jerusalem Post.

"He simply stole a gun, fired a number of shots, kicked her, and stopped when he thought she was dead," Malka said. She added that her district had seen no major changes in the number of attacks against women among Arab families. "There has been a constant which hasn't changed in 100 years," Malka said.

Nurit Kaufmann, director of Violence Against Women at WIZO, which runs the National Hot Line for Battered Women and Children at Risk in partnership with the Social Affairs Ministry, said that this incident and the murder earlier in the week of a woman by her husband highlighted that the public had a long way to go in eliminating violence against women. She said that even mild signs of violence needed to be reported immediately.

"I can only urge women to report any form of violence against them to the professionals out there that have the tools to help," she said. "In both of these cases, if professional organizations had been involved we may have been able to prevent the terrible outcomes."

Kaufmann said that regarding honor killings specifically, much progress had been made in the Arab community to raise awareness of the phenomenon, but that this murder highlighted there was still much work to be done.

No comments: