T
TheAtheist
Guest
First question of the evening…
When people speak about Muslims or Islam, i’ve often noticed they do so in a very abstract manner.
The label starts to take on their understandings derived from readings of the Koran, news reports, blogposts on the internet, etc. etc.
All of this information becomes the lens by which a person starts to say…interact with “Ahmed the Muslim” if I may create an example.
“Ahmed” is assumed to pray 5x a day, to not partake of wine, to not break the fast during Eid, to actually pay zakat.
What i find surprising of course, is that few people actually ask “Ahmed” what he does. The individual gets lost in the data so to speak.
So here’s the question of the evening - do any of you non-Muslims have any sort of personal connection to a Muslim?
I’m defining personal here to be = Close.
So not someone that you encounter on the street occasionally, or your next door neighbor or co-worker you barely talk to…
But perhaps a friend, a relative, an honored rival, a lover.
And if you do possess this personal connection, how would your opinion he or she differ from that Abstract Muslim which often gets addressed by people…
When people speak about Muslims or Islam, i’ve often noticed they do so in a very abstract manner.
The label starts to take on their understandings derived from readings of the Koran, news reports, blogposts on the internet, etc. etc.
All of this information becomes the lens by which a person starts to say…interact with “Ahmed the Muslim” if I may create an example.
“Ahmed” is assumed to pray 5x a day, to not partake of wine, to not break the fast during Eid, to actually pay zakat.
What i find surprising of course, is that few people actually ask “Ahmed” what he does. The individual gets lost in the data so to speak.
So here’s the question of the evening - do any of you non-Muslims have any sort of personal connection to a Muslim?
I’m defining personal here to be = Close.
So not someone that you encounter on the street occasionally, or your next door neighbor or co-worker you barely talk to…
But perhaps a friend, a relative, an honored rival, a lover.
And if you do possess this personal connection, how would your opinion he or she differ from that Abstract Muslim which often gets addressed by people…