September 01, 2005
OUR FRIENDS THE KUWAITIS
Remind me, didn't we recently save the Kuwaitis from the tender mercies of Saddam? Maybe this creep could get a job on the editorial board of the NYTimes. They both have the same agenda: blame Bush.
Senior Kuwaiti Official: "Katrina is a Wind of Torment and Evil from Allah Sent to This American Empire"
"...As I watched the horrible sights of this wondrous storm, I was reminded of the Hadith of the Messenger of Allah [in the compilations] of Al-Bukhari and Abu Daoud. The Hadith says: 'The wind is of the wind of Allah, it comes from mercy or for the sake of torment. When you see it, do not curse it, [but rather] ask Allah for the good that is in it, and ask Allah for shelter from its evil.' Afterwards, I was [also] reminded of the words of the Prophet Muhammad: 'Do not curse the wind, as it is the fruit of Allah's planning. He who curses something that should not be cursed – the curse will come back to him.'
"When the satellite channels reported on the scope of the terrifying destruction in America [caused by] this wind, I was reminded of the words of [Prophet Muhammad]: 'The wind sends torment to one group of people, and sends mercy to others.' I do not think – and only Allah [really] knows – that this wind, which completely wiped out American cities in these days, is a wind of mercy and blessing. It is almost certain that this is a wind of torment and evil that Allah has sent to this American empire. Out of my absolute belief in the truth of the words of the Prophet Muhammad, this wind is the fruit of the planning [of Allah], as is stated in the text of the Hadith of the Prophet..."
See the rest here.
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Comments
Of course there are nuts in Kuwait but to be fair it was reported that Kuwait was contributing 500 Million for Hurricane relief. We DO have some friends in Kuwait, a lot in fact. I even met a Kuwaiti who named his son Bush.
Posted by: Richard "Ricardo" Munro
at September 5, 2005 12:52 PM
One of the best articles I read about God's role in the hurricane was by Rabbi Lapin. I have to admit that the Pope did say anything nearly as interesting, succinct or to the point.
Well said: “When these things happen, our response should be renewed determination to develop greater care, compassion, and collaboration among people in order to more effectively subdue nature.” Rabbi Daniel Lapin
FULL ARTICLE BELOW
Our prayers are with a suffering humanity after Katrina a terrible natural catastrophe.
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From: Rabbi Daniel Lapin [mailto:mail@towardtradition.org]
Sent: Friday, September 02, 2005 6:54 PM
To: rothaich5@bak.rr.com
Subject: Rabbi Daniel Lapin: "New Orleans—If God Didn’t Do it, Who Did?"
For free and unrestricted usage with attribution.
New Orleans—If God Didn’t Do it, Who Did?
September 1, 2005
by Rabbi Daniel Lapin
President, Toward Tradition.
"Nature, Mr. Allnut, is what we are put in this world to rise above." (Kathryn Hepburn in 'The African Queen')
The immediacy of the suffering makes us forget that disasters have afflicted mankind since the days of Noah. Like the Asian tsunami did, the New Orleans disaster provokes serious questions. Some ask, "What sort of God would allow so many innocent people to be killed?" Others present the quandary this way: There are only two choices. Either God is all powerful in which case he did this cruel thing or else he couldn’t stop it in which case he’s impotent and who needs an impotent deity?
In reality however, there is another approach. This catastrophe was horrible but instead of waving a defiant fist at God, let us calmly examine how He set up the world to work.
Anyone thinking about history recognizes that only rarely does God interfere with nature in a conspicuous manner. That is why when He does, we call it a miracle. The splitting of the Read Sea was one such event. Mostly God camouflages miracles, allowing believers to marvel and others to deprecate. I personally consider the founding of the United States to have been a miracle but I know better than to try and present this belief during one of my university campus lectures.
By and large, God allows the laws of nature to work. The doomed airliner falling from the sky never gets scooped to safety by a giant divine hand regardless of the piety of the passengers. Mountain climbers challenging frozen peaks sometimes die and people living in flood prone areas sometimes drown.
Obviously that provokes the question of why would a benevolent God create such a malevolent nature. Why must gravity compel airplanes with engine failure to tumble out of the sky? Why should earthquakes flatten buildings and shatter lives? Does water really have to rush toward its lowest point washing away anything in its path? The reason that God almost never interferes with His laws of nature and what is more, created nature to be far from benign is that He wanted us humans to work together to overcome nature’s menace. "And God said to them, be fruitful, and multiply, populate the earth, and conquer it." (Genesis I)
The important idea here is that the Bible commands humans to subdue the world and conquer it. That does not mean we are to ruin or obliterate nature but it does mean that we are to render ourselves less vulnerable to its harsh realities.
We resist disease with medicine. We conquer the heat of the desert with air-conditioning and we make the frigid plains habitable with heating.
Similarly those who choose to live in low lying areas are morally obliged to do everything possible in order to minimize flood risk. After a flood drowned more than a thousand Dutchmen in 1953, Holland created the world’s biggest land reclamation project to ensure it never happened again. You can be quite sure that once rebuilt, New Orleans will never flood again.
There is one more part to this. Apparently God is obsessed with bonding. It is really not so surprising that a monotheistic God whose prime characteristic is the ability to unify, created a world in which the best results come from bonding. Let me explain.
There are about one hundred chemical elements in the world. But very little that we need and enjoy in life is used in its elemental, un-bonded form. The water we drink comes about when two hydrogen atoms joyfully unite with an oxygen atom. The wood in our furniture, the plastic everywhere, our medicine, the steel in our buildings and vehicles—all these are the results of atoms bonding with one another. Why, even rust is the undesirable consequence of us failing to adequately prevent iron from leaping into embrace with oxygen.
God created almost everything seeming to yearn for bonding. Even humans were created to feel a deep emptiness that only bonding with another could heal. He created man and woman to ‘become one flesh’ as the greatest expression of unity.
After creating people, God had a problem: how could He ensure that humans unrelated to one another would bond and help one another? In other words, how could God incentivize community and cooperation among humans?
One answer was place them in a beautiful world but one filled with constant threat. Forest fires, earthquakes, disease, and floods are all perils that force frightened people to cooperate with one another. No single individual, all alone can discover the cure to a disease any more than a single peasant can defy a monsoon. However when banded together, people can create universities for medical research. Villagers can unite to construct dikes and dams to protect their homes. Casualty and property insurance is another example of strangers working together to help one another. That pleases God just as when siblings live together in love and harmony their parents feel delight. Whether we climb mountains, build tall buildings, or soar across the seas, we are defying nature just as we are when we build cities on low ground between rivers and lakes. Sometimes the rope snaps, the building falls, or the airship explodes. Sometimes the levees break and the pumps fail.
When these things happen, our response should be renewed determination to develop greater care, compassion, and collaboration among people in order to more effectively subdue nature.
###
Radio talk show and television program host, Rabbi Daniel Lapin, is president of Toward Tradition—
providing a voice for all Americans who defend the Judeo-Christian values vital for our nation’s survival.
Toward Tradition, dedicated to restoring America's culture and building alliances between Jews and Christians, is a 501(c)3 organization based in Seattle, WA. All gifts are tax-deductible: please click here to partner with us.
To contact us, please write to P.O. Box 58, Mercer Island, WA 98040
Thank you for your support.
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Posted by: Richard "Ricardo" Munro
at September 5, 2005 12:55 PM
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