Monday 7 November 2016

Jagadeesh Krishnan : Saudi princess ordered Paris interior decorator to...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : Saudi princess ordered Paris interior decorator to...: Saudi princess ordered Paris interior decorator to ‘kiss her feet’ and guard to ‘kill’ him, say reports,” by Henry Samuel,  Telegraph , 29...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : “Female Chess Players Told To Wear Hijab at Champi...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : “Female Chess Players Told To Wear Hijab at Champi...: “Female Chess Players Told To Wear Hijab at Championship In Iran,” The world’s top female chess players are being forced to wear a hij...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : fuck the muhammad

Jagadeesh Krishnan : fuck the muhammad: Muhammad Was ‘History’s First Feminist’ FACT #1: The Qur’an allows (or, perhaps,  commands ) men to beat their wives...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : Sharia Court Accused of Protecting Wife-Beating Me...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : Sharia Court Accused of Protecting Wife-Beating Me...: Sharia Court Accused of Protecting Wife-Beating Men The Muslim Arbitration Tribunal in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, has been p...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : What are the best examples of "Humans will be Huma...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : What are the best examples of "Humans will be Huma...: What are the best examples of "Humans will be Humans"? This is a story told by my mother when I was very litt...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : What were some of the Roman crimes and their punis...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : What were some of the Roman crimes and their punis...: What were some of the Roman crimes and their punishments? Nude female doll in kneeling position, bound and pierced wit...

Sunday 6 November 2016

Jagadeesh Krishnan : France: Muslim “refugees” tell Christian “WE WILL ...

Jagadeesh Krishnan : France: Muslim “refugees” tell Christian “WE WILL ...: France: Muslim “refugees” tell Christian “WE WILL KILL YOU” “No, you are not free, you are in the Jungle. The Jungle has Ku...

France: Muslim “refugees” tell Christian “WE WILL KILL YOU”

France: Muslim “refugees” tell Christian “WE WILL KILL YOU”


calais-france-migrants
“No, you are not free, you are in the Jungle. The Jungle has Kurdish rule here – leave this camp.”
Before too long, all of Europe and the UK will have Islamic rules, which you will have to obey or leave — and hope you get out alive.
Muslim-persecution-Christian-refugees-Germany
“Christian convert in French refugee camp told: ‘We will kill you’”, World Watch Monitor, November 2, 2016:
A Kurdish church leader smuggled to Britain says he received death threats – for having left Islam for Christianity – while living in makeshift camps in northern France.
The church leader, who did not wish to be identified, spent nine months living in camps outside the French cities of Calais and Dunkirk. He told World Watch Monitor that Kurdish Muslims in both camps antagonised him.
“In Calais, the smugglers [saw] my cross [round my neck], and said: ‘You are Kurdish and you are a Christian? Shame on you,’” he recalled. “I said, ‘Why? I’m in Europe, I’m free, I’m in a free country.’ They said, ‘No, you are not free, you are in the Jungle. The Jungle has Kurdish rule here – leave this camp.’ The smugglers were from inside the camp, and were Kurdish. They said to me, ‘We will tell the Algerians and Moroccans to kill you.’”
The church leader, who taught art in his home in Iraqi Kurdistan, as well as helping to lead a church there, said he received further threats in the camp outside Dunkirk. “They [set] fire [to] my tent,” he said.
He said he moved from the so-called “Jungle” camp in Calais to the Grande-Synthe camp near Dunkirk after one of the people-smugglers told him, “You’re a Kurdish pastor? I’ve heard about you.”
“He was really dangerous, like a gangster. I was really scared,” he added.
The smugglers saw the cross round my neck, and said: ‘You are Kurdish and you are a Christian? Shame on you.’ They said to me, ‘We will tell the Algerians and Moroccans to kill you.’
A convert to Christianity from a devout Muslim family, he left Kurdistan after receiving death threats. He said he was arrested and beaten by police for preaching in the streets, and twice received letters warning him that he would be killed if he did not return to Islam.
“In the mosque the imams talked about me, and my father, and my little brother, who became a Christian too… The imam talked about us – ‘they are kafir [unbelievers], they have to die,’ from the stage, into the mosque microphone. My father [a Muslim] was filled with shame,” he said. “They were taught bad things about us in the mosque: ‘The Christians are kafir.’ Of course, they [also] say you are slaves to Israel, to the American people.”
Within his family, five of his close relatives also became Christians, he said. This strained some relationships, including with his father and two brothers, who are imams. He said one of his brothers supports ISIS, which, he said, has “definitely, definitely” created sleeper cells in Kurdistan.
He said his elderly father also tried to kill him, entering his bedroom one night with a knife. He left home the evening that four men, whom he described as having long beards and belonging to IS, came to his family home and asked where he was. He heard his mother lie for him, saying he was not at home, and escaped through the back door without the opportunity to say goodbye to her.
He said he had flown from Kurdistan to Turkey and paid around US$10,000 to cross the Mediterranean in the bottom of a boat packed with 56 others, including women and children. He also said he had experienced kindness, as he and a friend made their way through Europe from Greece, through Macedonia, Serbia and Croatia. They travelled by bus and train and walked other stretches of the journey.
“The people were really friendly and some people, when they saw us, they cried. I cried too. I cried all the time, because I missed my family and my country,” he said. “We went to Serbia. We were really tired; we didn’t take a shower for a long time. I don’t remember how long for, but we were really dirty. My whole body smelled really badly.
“When I was in Austria … this family said: ‘Stay with us in our house.’ They’re a really, really nice family. We [he was travelling with another Kurd] took a shower and we talked about our situation. I’m still in contact with them now.”
He added that the help they received, such as sharing food, was what he had done for the Syrian refugees who flocked to Kurdistan after the outbreak of civil war.
He said an Evangelical church in France had provided him with water, heating and clothes and had paid for him to stay in a hotel for a while.
He said one reason he wanted to reach Britain, rather than remain in France, however, was that he was scared following the gruesome murder of Fr. Jacques Hamel in northern France in July at the hands of two young men who had pledged allegiance to IS.
Now seeking asylum in Britain, he said that when he gets permission to work, he would like to be a missionary and lead a Kurdish church in the UK. His church in Kurdistan, which was made up of converts from Islam, was closed down by the authorities, but he said that he now feels safe in Britain….
By
K.Jagadeesh 

What were some of the Roman crimes and their punishments?


Nude female doll in kneeling position, bound and pierced with thirteen pins. Found in a terracotta vase with a lead tablet bearing a binding spell (katadesmos). 4th century CE, discovered in Egypt. (The Louvre.)
Roman laws began by banning magic, then refined them to be more specifically against harmful magic.
Many thought that Germanicus, son of the Chrestian, Antonia Minor, was killed by magic.
Below: Bronze statue of Germanicus on display at it:Museo civico di Amelia,Amelia, Umbria, Italy.
...it is a fact that explorations in the floor and walls brought to light the remains of human bodies, spells, curses, leaden tablets engraved with the name Germanicus, charred and blood-smeared ashes,* and others of the implements of witchcraft by which it is believed the living soul can be devoted to the powers of the grave. (Tacitus, Annals, Book II)
"Through his hatred of Germanicus and his zeal for anarchy," so ran the indictment, "Piso had, by relaxing discipline and permitting the maltreatment of the provincials, so far corrupted the common soldiers that among the vilest of them he was known as the Father of the Legions. On the other hand, he had been ruthless to the best men, especially the companions and friends of Germanicus, and at last, with the help of poison and the black arts, had destroyed the prince himself. Then had come the blasphemous rites and sacrifices of Plancina and himself, an armed assault on the commonwealth, and — in order that he might be put on his trial — defeat upon a stricken field." (Tacitus, Annals, Book III)
More on the subject of magic and Roman law:
Apuleius was accused of practicing magic, something outlawed under Roman law. The speech he delivered in his own defense against the charge of magic, in c. 160 CE, remains and it is from this Apologia that we learn how easy it was, at that time, for a philosopher to be accused of magical practices.[58] Perhaps in a turn of irony or even a tacit admission of guilt Apuleius, in his work of fiction Metamorphoses (or The Golden Ass), which perhaps has autobiographical elements, allows the hero, Lucius, to dabble in magic as a young man, get into trouble, be rescued by the goddess Isis, and then finds true knowledge and happiness in her mysteries.[59] Like Plutarch Apuleius seems to take for granted the existence of daemons. They populate the air and seem to, in fact, be formed of air. They experience emotions just like human beings, and despite this their minds are rational.[59] In light of Apuleuis’ experience it is worth noting that when magic is mentioned in Roman laws, it is always discussed in a negative context. A consensus was established quite early in Roman history for the banning of anything viewed as harmful acts of magic. The Laws of the Twelve Tablets(451–450 BCE) for example expressly forbid anyone from enticing his neighbors’ crops into his fields by magic.[60] An actual trial for alleged violation of these laws was held before Spurius Albinus in 157 BCE.[22]:XVIII:41–43 It is also recorded that Cornelius Hispallus expelled the Chaldean astrologers from Rome in 139 BCE – ostensibly on the grounds that they were magicians.[61] In 33 BCE astrologers and magicians are explicitly mentioned as having been driven from Rome.[61] Twenty years later, Augustus ordered all books on the magical arts to be burned. In 16 CE magicians and astrologers were expelled from Italy, and this was reinstated by edicts of Vespasian in 69 CE and Domitian in 89 CE. The emperor Constantine I in the 4th century CE issued a ruling to cover all charges of magic. In it he distinguished between helpful charms, not punishable, and antagonistic spells.[62] In these cases Roman authorities specifically decided what forms of magic were acceptable and which were not. Those that were not acceptable were termed "magic"; those that were acceptable were usually defined as traditions of the state or practices of the state's religions.
The problem in understanding this today is that we have difficulty understanding the characters of magic and religion - they are essentially the same. In Roman times, most practised magic in one religious form or another.
Ancient Greeks and Romans often turned to magic to achieve personal goals. Magical rites were seen as a route for direct access to the gods, for material gains as well as spiritual satisfaction.
And we find curse tablets all over the empire.
Below: Eyguieres curse tablet
These texts were typically scratched on very thin sheets of lead in tiny letters, then often rolled, folded, or pierced with nails. These bound tablets were then usually placed beneath the ground: either buried in graves or tombs, thrown into wells or pools, sequestered in underground sanctuaries, or nailed to the walls of temples. Tablets were also used for love spells and, when used in this manner they were placed inside the home of the desired target.[1] They are sometimes discovered along with small dolls or figurines (sometimes inaccurately referred to as "Voodoo dolls"[2]), which may also be pierced by nails. The figurines resembled the target and often had both their feet and hands bound.[3] Curse tablets also included hair or pieces of clothing. This is especially the case in love spells, which calls for “hair from the head of the love target.” Some love spells have even been discovered “folded around some hair,” probably to bind the spell itself.[4] “Not all tablets included a personal name, but it is clear especially in the Roman period, that tablets were sometimes prepared in advance, with space left for inserting the names provided by paying customers."[5]
Punishments for illegal magic included crucifixion.
By
K.Jagadeesh