#Hadi Magazin
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guy60660 · 2 years ago
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Hadi Moussally | Kaltblut
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lgbtqiamuslimpedia · 8 months ago
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Anjasha al-Hadi
Birth : N/A
Nickname : Abu Mariyah
Ethnicity : Black
Occupation : Domestic servant
Religion : Islam
Gender : Gender non-confirming, Third gender
Sexuality : Queer
Death : N/A
Anjasha al-Hadi or Anjashah al-Hadi or Anjashah al-Aswad al-Hadi (Arabic: أَنْجَشَةُ ٱلْهَادِي) was a mukhannath individual during the time of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad (PBUH). Anjasha was assigned male at birth, but had feminine gender expression & used to mix with women. He/Ze had Ethiopian ancestry. Anjasha was also known as “Abu Mariyah/ Abu Maria”. The Arabic name Mariyah/Maria is feminine.
Anjasha/Abu Mariyah was served as a personal camel driver and domestic servant for Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) and had some responsibility of take caring the women of the Prophet's family. According to ahadith, Anjasha had a beautiful voice. While there are some claims suggesting that Anjasha was a sahabah of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), he/ze is not widely recognized among muslims as a prominent sahabah.
Gender & Sexuality
Wathilah Ibn al-Aqsa confirmed that Anjasha/Abu Mariyah was a mukhannath. According to Al-Nasa'i, Anjasha had no sexual desires toward women, this is why he/ze was allowed contact with women of Prophet's house. Ibn Hajar in his book "Al-Isabah Fi Tameez As`sahabah" reported that Anjasha led an honorable life among the companions and that they have enjoyed full rights.
References:
https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/33178
https://bedayaa.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Hadith-and-Queer-Identities.pdf
https://medium.com/my-kali-magazine/no-ordinary-story-2a0a58ed35b9?source=---------2
http://www.twelvershia.net/2013/05/05/response-to-the-queer-sahaba/
https://shamela.ws/book/9767/254
https://ar.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D9%82%D8%A7%D8%A6%D9%85%D8%A9_%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B5%D8%AD%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%A9
http://bit.ly/332cnjS
http://bit.ly/33R3GKa
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thirst-for-boys · 1 year ago
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Yoshi Sudarso and Refal Hady via both of their IG stories. Also Yoshi for Da Man Magazine.
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somediyprojects · 10 months ago
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Ramadan Calendar designed by Perry Abdel-Hadi, featured in issue #343/March 2024 of The World of Cross Stitching magazine.
🌙 Count down the days until Eid al-Fitr with this 30-day Ramadan calendar that will spread love and warmth to all those around you. 🪡 dmc_crafts 14-count ecru aida 🧵 dmc_embroidery threads Get the pattern by Perry Abdel-Hadi of stitchora_crossstitch in issue 343 (March 2024) of our magazine.
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By: Rosemary Neill
Published: Dec 2, 2022
In his bestseller The God Delusion, published in 2006, author Richard Dawkins famously wrote that the god of the Old Testament is “a vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic cleanser” and “a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal … capriciously malevolent bully’’.
Not for nothing has Dawkins been described as “a poster boy for militant atheism”.
The former Oxford University professor and evolutionary biologist is also regarded as a brilliant and passionate science communicator: His 1976 book, The Selfish Gene, reframed our understanding of evolution and has been named by the Royal Society as the most inspiring science book of all time, while his latest volume, Flights of Fancy – a surprisingly lyrical work aimed at the over 12s – looks at how animals and humans have “learned to overcome the pull of gravity and take to the skies’’.
In 2013, Dawkins was voted the world’s top thinker in a Prospect magazine poll. Yet in recent years, his controversial tweets and remarks about everything from aborting Down’s syndrome foetuses to Islamic fundamentalism have provoked sharp criticism and threats of cancellation.
Now aged 81, the career controversialist will conduct a national speaking tour in Australia in February, addressing topics including the wonders of science, the importance of reason and his scepticism about religion. Ahead of his tour, which starts in Melbourne, the British author gave a typically forthright, sometimes combative interview to Review.
During this encounter, conducted over Zoom from his Oxford home, Dawkins oscillates between donnish erudition and a kind of pugnacious rationalism, as he argues that parents should not have the right to “indoctrinate” their children with their chosen religion; that human foetuses are “no more a person” than animal foetuses; that anti-vaxxers are selfish; and that transgenderism has become “a mimetic epidemic” among schoolchildren. He also warns that human beings could one day be obliterated by the same kind of meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs.
You have been called a militant atheist, and you’ve argued that religion causes wars and entrenches bigotry. Yet you use the borrowed phrase “tooth fairy agnostic” to describe yourself. Tooth fairy agnostic – that’s right. We are all actually agnostic about anything you can’t actually disprove. You can’t disprove the tooth fairy; it’s trivial to bother about it, so that’s the way I am about gods.
Why do you oppose faith schools? I am not against education in religion. I think that’s important and that children should be taught about religion because it’s such an important part of history, politics, art and music. I’m against educating in a particular religion – I’m against a child being told, “You are a member of this church and therefore this is what you believe”. I like the child to be told, “There are people who call themselves Catholics and they believe this, and there are people who call themselves Muslims and they believe that” and so on. That’s important, but children should not be told what to believe.
Would banning faith schools amount to erosion of parental choice and authority? I think children have rights, and the right of a child not to be indoctrinated is important.
You get hate mail from evangelical Christians and you are also a trenchant critic of Islamic fundamentalism. As an outspoken public intellectual, what did you think of the recent attack on The Satanic Verses author Sir Salman Rushdie? It’s horrible. It’s irrational. It’s vicious. It was allegedly perpetrated by a very foolish person who doesn’t know what he’s doing. He has been indoctrinated by his Islamic upbringing and that’s one kind of reason why I find indoctrination so bad. (The suspect, Hadi Matar, has said that Ayatollah Khomeini, who issued a fatwa against Rushdie, is, “a great person”. Matar has pleaded not guilty to attempted murder and assault charges brought against him in the US.)
Many Christian fundamentalists in the US oppose abortion. What is your view of the US Supreme Court ruling that overturned the historic Roe v Wade decision? I deplore that.
You maintain that pro-choice activists in America are using the wrong tactics. Why? I think the pro-abortion lobby is tactically unsound when they say something like, “A woman’s body is her own to do what she likes with”. I happen to think that’s right, but that’s not going to cut any ice with somebody who thinks that an embryo is a baby, and they think therefore that abortion is murder. They’ll say, “Ah, but she contains another body which is not her own.” I think we should tackle that assumption. We should say, “A foetus is no more a person than, and no more has personal feelings … than the foetus of a cow or a pig, let alone an adult cow or pig.”
You dedicate your latest book, Flights of Fancy, to the billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk. Why does he impress you? He certainly is a high flyer and he certainly is a hero of our times. I do admire him and I think that he’s an appropriate dedicatee for a book about flight. He’s a man with immense imagination and he is a genius as an engineer, a genius as an entrepreneur.
In Flights of Fancy, you note how, just decades after the Wright brothers’ historic flight, we were in the era of supersonic and space flight. Does this constitute an extraordinary burst of progress within a short time? It is rather remarkable, isn’t it? I think it’s a very good century to have lived in for that reason. In a way it’s rather sad that things (to do with space flight) are only just taking off now after the 1960s, when men first stepped on the moon, and nothing much has happened since then, until quite recently. I’m glad things are getting going again.
In 2021, the American Humanist Society withdrew an award they had given you because of an old tweet. In that tweet, you called for a discussion about the vilification of those who deny transgender people “literally are what they identify as”. How did you feel about the award being cancelled? To be honest, I had actually forgotten that I ever had that award, but it is upsetting when your own side turn against you, of course. I’d never worried about religious fundamentalists disliking me, but when it’s your own team, it’s upsetting. It’s a remarkably foolish thing for them to do, because all I did was to raise a subject for discussion.
Has academe changed for the worse in terms of restrictions on freedom of speech since you first worked at the University of California, Berkeley, and Oxford University in the 1960s and ’70s? It’s not possible to imagine that we’re going to go on with this nonsense where you can’t even discuss something.
Why is the transgender debate so heated, and such a no-go area for many commentators? You’d have to ask a psychologist or a sociologist about that. It (the debate) seems to me to be utter nonsense. Of course, there are people who suffer from gender dysphoria, and one has to be sympathetic to them. But there clearly is a mimetic epidemic, especially among schoolchildren who get persuaded that somehow the cool thing to do is to be trans, and this is a very disturbing by-product of a very genuine phenomenon, which is gender dysphoria. That is quite a rare thing, but it’s being blown up into a kind of false, common thing.
With the recent closure of the Tavistock child gender clinic, it appears the UK is adopting a more cautious approach to hormonal and surgical treatments for trans-identifying children. How do you view this development? I think we’re seeing the beginnings of a very appropriate reversal of this trend.
You have 2.9 million followers on Twitter. Do your more contentious tweets scare your publishers? Possibly, but I’m not here to talk about Twitter.
Even so, why are you drawn to Twitter, given the nasty pile-ons that are a feature of the platform? I suppose, misguidedly, I thought it was rather a good way of raising discussion. That’s why I put “discuss” at the end of so many tweets, (as) a follow-on of the Oxford tutorials. I am afraid I rather over-estimated the intelligence of the Twitter audience.
You’ve said it would be fun to fly like a bird or go hang-gliding. Does your fear of heights hold you back? I certainly wouldn’t want to jump off a cliff.
No bungy-jumping for Richard Dawkins then? I might run down a hill, maybe.
Why do you believe there is merit in people establishing a colony on another planet? This, I think, is one of the motives of Elon Musk wanting to go to Mars. It’s interesting, by the way, that NASA has just succeeded in diverting or changing the orbit of a small asteroid. They need to do it for a much bigger asteroid in order to save us from the sort of catastrophe that hit the dinosaurs. But (the recent NASA diversion) is a very important first step. It’s a magnificent feat of engineering and science and mathematics.
During the Covid lockdowns, you wrote two nonfiction books and failed to complete a novel about bringing back Homo erectus, our ancient ancestor. Have you given up on writing fiction? I abandoned that, at least temporarily. It turned out to be much more difficult than I thought.
Why do you argue the Covid pandemic has been good for science? As soon as the genetic code sequence of the virus was decoded, which nowadays can be done very swiftly, several different teams of scientists got to work on making a vaccine, and they did it in double quick time; astonishingly quickly. I think that’s a great tribute to the genius of our species.
What about the rise of the anti-vaxxers? Has that surprised you? Tragically, really stupid opposition to vaccination has been whipped up, mostly in America, but it spread to other countries as well. A lot of people don’t understand that vaccination is not just about protecting yourself, it’s about protecting society as a whole, to get herd immunity so the epidemic doesn’t spread.
Is there a selfishness inherent in the anti-vaccination movement? Yes, they just think it’s a matter of individual liberty. They don’t realise that refraining from vaccination for no very good reason is rather like driving on the wrong side of the road …. We do owe a certain curtailment of individual liberty in the interests of society.
You invented the word “meme” (an idea or behaviour that spreads from person to person within a society.) We’ve seen Donald Trump turn memes into a political art form. Were you dismayed by that? He just lies and lies all the time, and unfortunately, I think it was Goebbels who said, “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.” Huge numbers of Americans actually believe Trump’s lies and it’s a tragedy.
You live in Oxford and drive a Tesla. Are we all going to be driving electric cars in future? It looks like it, doesn’t it? I think that’s a very good thing.
Some detractors say your reputation as a fierce supporter of atheism is in danger of eclipsing your insights as a visionary evolutionary biologist. I hope not. I’ve only written two books about atheism and about 17 about science, so really science is by far the more important part of my life.
The God Delusion has sold millions of copies, but what do you regard as your most significant book? Probably The Extended Phenotype, which is one book that I wrote for my professional colleagues, although I like to think it’s readable by nonscientists as well. It’s the main book in which I propose something which I suppose is original; something that is all my own.
Scientists don’t know how the universe started. Isn’t that an argument in itself that a god or creator must have kicked things off? That’s a terrible idea! The idea that just because you don’t know what the answer to a question is, therefore god did it. I mean, that’s a ridiculous argument. By all means say we don’t know – that’s true, we don’t know – therefore it’s better to try to find out. We don’t just lie down and say, “Oh, god must have done it”.
Across the globe millions of people, including those without a financial safety net, find comfort in religion. Can you see how rubbishing their spiritual beliefs can be perceived as arrogance? Not arrogance. I mean, if they don’t want to read my books, they don’t have to. My books are about what I believe to be true and what evidence is. I’m not going to refrain from writing books for fear that it might upset people. I write books about what is supported by scientific evidence. That is what I try to do, and if the evidence changes, of course I change my mind. That’s about it, really. I’m a scientist who writes books about science.
[ Via: https://archive.vn/Se49o ]
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xosqueendemleaxtariramseni · 6 months ago
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Xoşuuu magazin hesabı açmaq mənlik ama bi shipinizi alırım mdkxmdkdmd
Tamam, anonim, Selcan qızım açacaq ahahshsh hadi onu da shipləə
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infiniteglitterfall · 8 months ago
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I assumed it was new! But apparently My.Kali is an online zine from Jordan that actually started all the way back in 2008!
At first it was only in English. In 2016, for its 60th issue, it began publishing in Arabic too.
The only English-language publications to report on it at the time, as far as I can tell, were Haaretz, Tablet Magazine, and the Times of Israel. RIP to the Advocate!
(In near-defense of the white gay Western media, OUT did do a very similar but much shorter story about it that both links to and sort of copy-pastes the Times article.
The Advocate eventually mentioned My.Kali in 2018. Though only as part of a piece about a really cool report called, "Activism and Resilience: LGBTQ Progress in the Arabic-Speaking States in the Middle East and North Africa Region.")
The Times article talks about My.Kali's content in some depth; points out which articles in Arabic are different (and actually more interesting/"controversial") than the English-language content; and firmly debunks Western claims that My.Kali had gotten death threats.
Haaretz also covered the magazine's Arabic-language debut, in a fantastically snarky article that explains that My.Kali is "named after its founder Khalid Abdel-Hadi," whose nickname is Kali and who has even appeared on the cover.
"Abdel-Hadi came up with the idea for the magazine when he was just 18 and still in the closet. He and other university students banded together with the aim of creating a publication whose goals were battling homophobia, advocating for the legalization of gay sex, the legal recognition of transgender individuals and the empowerment for LGBT youth in the Middle East and North Africa.
"But wait just a minute! What’s going on here? Aren’t trans people being stoned in the Middle East, gays being dropped from roofs and lesbians forced to have their tubes tied? After all, isn’t this the fundamentalist-fanatic-Arab-Muslim world that oppresses women and persecutes minorities and kills LGBT folks for breakfast?
"Just two months ago, Xulhaz Mannan, editor of the only gay magazine in Bangladesh, was brutally murdered by Islamist militants. And Bangladesh and Jordan, you know, they’re the same thing. They’re both Muslim. And here I am acting like one of those pie-in-the-sky leftists, writing about an LGBT magazine that comes out in Arabic in Jordan, as if before you know it we’ll surely see Islamic State tanks rolling through the Iraqi desert waving rainbow flags.
"Hey, not to worry, before I get carried away here I’ll make sure to describe the horrors that we know and imagine. So — yes, in Iran, Saudi Arabia and Yemen, homosexuality is punishable by death. In Egypt, gays are arrested on trumped-up charges, for alleged membership in a certain cult, and in Syria and Iraq there have been cases of gays being shot in the street.
"....Meanwhile, it turns out that gay sex has been legal in Jordan since 1951. Just for comparison, as Edward Siddons noted when he interviewed Abdel-Hadi for i-D magazine, homosexuality was still banned in 'enlightened and progressive' Britain until 1982."
There IS one online queer English-language magazine that mentions My.Kali before this. GayDay interviewed the founder in 2012.
Things are hard for us everywhere.
It's very common to see people objecting to queer/progressive support for Palestine by saying that Hamas would shoot you or drop you off a roof.
It's equally common to see people objecting to any mention of queer life in Israel as "pinkwashing."
BOTH of these arguments are, in my opinion, bigoted talking points that de-platform and silence LGBTQIA+ people in the MENA region.
Hamas abducts, tortures, and shoots anyone in Gaza who dissents. It's famous for dropping members of the Palestinian government (not us queers) off of roofs, when it was violently kicking the Palestinian government out of Gaza in 2007.
Hamas is fucking terrible, to the point where hating queers is just ambient noise in all the rest of its oppression.
I've seen queer Palestinians talk about dancing in queer clubs in both Ramallah and Tel Aviv. Being kidnapped, tortured, and monitored by Hamas. Kissing on the beach. Losing their crush to the war. Going to the Jerusalem Pride March. Being forced into conversion therapy.
Secret hangouts and secret sex parties. Straight marriages as a cover, where you rent a separate apartment for your real relationship. Feminist events as a cover for lesbian community.
Moving in with other queer Palestinian roommates in Israel for the "job opportunities," and being with your wife and kids on the weekends.
Feeling excluded or pushed out of the queer Palestinian movement because they want to focus on queerness within Palestine, or heteronormativity, or religious conservativism, or collaborate with Israelis, rather than focusing primarily on ending occupation.
The pattern everywhere, globally, seems to be that we primarily face oppression from far-right religious groups and governments. They set the tone for the rest of society.
Sometimes very directly, by censoring the media and controlling our lives. Sometimes more generally, simply by having both power and opinions.
We face the same basic dynamic everywhere. Whether it's in Palestine, Russia, France, Israel, China, Canada, Brazil, New Zealand, Pakistan, or Uruguay.
The big difference between queer safety in any of these countries doesn't come from the people, the religion(s), or the economic system.
It comes from how conservative the current government is in any given place, whether a place has very conservative religious groups, and how powerful those groups are.
Also:
Trans activist and rabbi Abby Stein wrote a great piece for Tablet the following year that shouted out My.Kali.
And shout-out to Instinct magazine and Gay Star News, which wrote about the topless trans cover model you see above in 2018, with the amazing statement: "There have been transgender individuals on the cover of My Kali before, but they have always been transgender females.  For the first time, a transgender man is featured."
I don't think I've ever seen someone using "transgender females" to mean trans women, and I am so here for it.
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My.Kali: "is the first LGBTQ+ webzine for and from the Middle East and North Africa. they aim to demonstrate diversity and fight repressive forms and norms with art therapy, photography, and visual innovation. The magazine tackles issues related to women’s rights, personal politics, gender related matters, freedom of speech, alt-communities, and new media. This allows for a window of hope where societies’ minorities can find solidarity, offering a safe atmosphere of reassurance and certainty in the midst of regional turmoil."
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yazilimuniversitesi · 3 months ago
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Magazin Dünyasında Şok Gelişmeler: 3 Ekim Olaylarıyla Karşınızdayız!
3 Ekim’de Magazin Arenası Nasıl Şekillendi? Bugün yine magazin arenasında fırtınalar estiren olaylar yaşandı! ‘Son dakika magazin haberleri neler? Bugün yine magazin dünyasında hangi ünlü isimler çok konuşuldu?’ diye merak ediyorsanız, doğru yerdesiniz. Hadi, bu eğlenceli yolculuğa çıkalım!👇 Ünlü İsimler Podyumda! Ekim ayının 3’ü, özellikle ünlülerin podyumda şıklık yarışıyla dikkat çektiği bir…
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aykutiltertr · 4 months ago
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ESER ADI           :  BENİ HATIRLA SÖZ GÜFTE       : NAZAN ÖNCEL BESTE - MÜZİK : NAZAN ÖNCEL USÜL                  : 4/4 C SEBARE MAKAM - DİZİ  :  KÜRDİ - MİNÖR ARANJÖR        :  İSKENDER PAYDAŞ BENİ HATIRLA ŞARKI SÖZÜ VE AKORU Em  Bm   C  Am  Bm Em Resimlere bak, mektubumla avun, şarkılar tut Em Kendinden vazgeç, yastığına sarıl, korkular tut Bm                     C Dağılsın kalbin, öl hatta orda Am                        C           B Lanetler yağdır, beni hatırla Em                                                                   Am        Bm Her telefona sen çık, her kapıya sen koş, beni hatırla  x2 Am Sen bir yerlerde, ben bir şehirde Em                    B          Em Akşam olunca beni hatırla Em Mektupları yak, şarkılara küs, hasretler giy Em Depremler olsun, üst üste sonra, kahrından öl Nazan Öncel Unvanı Sokak Kızı Doğum 6 Şubat 1956 (68 yaşında) Karşıyaka, İzmir, Türkiye Başladığı yer Türkiye Türk Tarzlar Pop · rock Meslekler Şarkıcı · şarkı sözü yazarı · besteci Çalgılar Vokal · gitar · mandolin · piyano Etkin yıllar 1969–günümüz Müzik şirketi DMC Resmî site Resmî site Eş Salih Öncel (e. 1973–1985) Akşit Togay (e. 1997–2017) Çocukları Serkan Öncel Nazan Öncel (d. 6 Şubat 1956; Karşıyaka, İzmir), Türk şarkıcı, söz yazarı ve besteci. "Sokak Kızı" lakabıyla da anılan sanatçı, ilk kırk beşliği "Sana Kul Köle Olmuştum"u 1978 yılında yayınlamıştır. 1982 yılında LP formatında yayınladığı ilk albümü tutmayınca, TRT için demolar yapmayı bırakmış, sadece sahne çalışmalarıyla mesleğine devam etmiştir. 9 yıl sonra, 27 Aralık 1991'de[1] yayınladığı Bir Hadise Var albümünün satış başarısıyla da sağlam, kalıcı ve büyük bir başlangıç yapmıştır. Diskografi Ana madde: Nazan Öncel diskografisi Stüdyo albümleri Yayınlanma Albüm Format Satış ve sertifikalar Nisan 1981 Yağmur Duası LP +10.000 27 Aralık 1991 Bir Hadise Var MC, CD +1.500.000 24 Ocak 1994 Ben Böyle Aşk Görmedim MC, CD +600.000 15 Temmuz 1995 Göç MC, CD +200.000 12 Nisan 1996 Sokak Kızı MC, CD +450.000 10 Nisan 1999 Demir Leblebi MC, CD +200.000 24 Nisan 2004 Yan Yana Fotoğraf Çektirelim MC, CD +1.500.000[9] 30 Haziran 2006 7'n Bitirdin MC, CD +367.000[10] 28 Aralık 2008 Hatırına Sustum CD, LP +80.000[11] 27 Mayıs 2011 Hayvan CD +80.000[12] 25 Mart 2014 Bazı Şeyler CD 23 Mart 2018 Durum Şarkıları CD 24 Kasım 2023 Kara Plak Geceye Bir Şarkı Dijital, LP Tekliler 1978: Sana Kul Köle Olmuştum / Kader Bu, Çekeceksin 2010: Tuttum, Bırakmam 2015: Aşkitom 2016: Sakin Ol Şampiyon 2020: Bir Bilsem Ah, Bir Bilebilsem 2023: Deniz Tutmaz (Sade İnsanlar ile) 2023: Saykodelik (Cem Adrian ile) Ödülleri 2005 - 32. Altın Kelebek Ödülleri - Yılın Şarkısı Ödülü (Of Of)[13] 2007 - Magazin Gazetecileri Derneği 14. Altın Objektif Ödülleri - Yılın Şarkısı Ödülü (Aşkım Baksana Bana) 2015 Aşkitom Altın Plak ödülü 2019 Radyo Boğaziçi Yaşam Boyu Onur Ödülü Nazan Öncel Şarkıcı Genel Bakış Şarkılar Albümler Dinle Etkinlikler Videolar Beni Hatırla Yan Yana Fotoğraf Çektirelim · 2003 Aşkım Baksana Bana 7'n Bitirdin · 2006 Mühürledim Seni Kalbime Bir Hadise Var · 1991 Geceler Kara Tren Ben Böyle Aşk Görmedim · 1994 Hadi O Zaman Bazı Şeyler · 2014 Hay Hay Yan Yana Fotoğraf Çektirelim · 2003 Gitme Kal Bu Şehirde Bir Hadise Var · 1991 Kimler Gelmiş Durum Şarkıları · 2018 Erkekler de Yanar Sokak Kızı · 1996 Gidelim Buralardan Göç · 1995 Nereye Böyle Yan Yana Fotoğraf Çektirelim · 2003 Beni Bu Koca Şehirde Yalnız Bırakma Hayvan · 2011 Dillere Düşeceğiz Ben Böyle Aşk Görmedim · 1994 Aynı Nakarat Bir Hadise Var · 1991 Aşık Değilim Olabilirim Bir Hadise Var · 1991 Seni Bugün Görmem Lazım Hatırına Sustum · 2008 Hokka Yan Yana Fotoğraf Çektirelim · 2003 Aşkitom Aşkitom · 2015 Omzumda Ağla 7'n Bitirdin · 2006 Normal Hayvan · 2011 Saykodelik Saykodelik · 2023 A Bu Hayat Sokak Kızı · 1996 Ben Sokak Kızıyım Sokak Kızı · 1996 Bir Şarkı Tut Göç · 1995 Ölüyorum Anlasana Sokak Kızı · 1996 Bu Havada Gidilmez Demir Leblebi · 1999 Ukala Dümbeleği Yan Yana Fotoğraf Çektirelim · 2003 Ne Güzel Olur Bazı Şeyler · 2014 Aşk Beklemez Ben Böyle Aşk Görmedim · 1994 Bırak Seveyim Rahat Edeyim Sokak Kızı · 1996 Bazı Şeyler Bazı Şeyler · 2014 Ağla Erkeğim Ağla Bir Hadise Var · 1991
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pazaryerigundem · 6 months ago
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Herkes kendi mayosuna bakacak
https://pazaryerigundem.com/haber/178061/herkes-kendi-mayosuna-bakacak/
Herkes kendi mayosuna bakacak
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Son dönemde magazin dünyasında dönen ‘mayo’ tartışmasına Aslı Zen de katıldı.
İSTANBUL (İGFA) – Bayramda mayoyla Merit Park Otel Letafet’te sahneye çıkan Aslı Zen “Mayoyla çıkan kişiler bazı sosyal medya kullanıcı tarafından eleştiriliyor” sözlerine “Herkes kendi mayosuna bakacak. Benim mayom taş gibi… Bu yaşta giysinler de göreyim? Ben uzun tuvalet ve elbiseler giyiyordum. Herkes giyiyor ben de ‘Bir tur giyeyim’ dedim. Benim için cesaret kıyafeti çünkü daha önce giymemiştim” cevabını verdi. 
‘MORGÜL ÇIĞIRMIŞ’ Aslı Zen “Bayhan’ın ‘Tiryakinim’ ve Yılmaz Morgül’ün ‘Ateşe Düştüm’ şarkılarını söylemesi ile ilgili olarak da “Ben de cover şarkılar yapıyorum. Bayhan’ı beğendim, Yılmaz’ı beğenmedim. Yılmaz Morgül biraz çığırmış gibi olmuş. Bağırmak var bir de çığırmak var. Aslında güzel söylüyor şarkıları… Ama işte konuşuluyor. Başka ne yapsın adamcağız? 
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‘BENİMLE KİMSE SAVAŞMIYOR’
Büyük bir savaşın içindeyiz. Sürekli savaşmak zorundayız. Benim avantajım şarkı yazıyorum. Ferhat Göçer ve Fatih Ürek’e yazdığım şarkılarla hayatını değiştirdim. O yüzden benimle kimse savaşmıyor. Öyle özelliğim olmasa beni paralarlardı” diye konuştu. 
Uçakta İbrahim Tatlıses ile karşılaşan Zen “Elini öptüm, bayramlaştık. Uçakta ‘Hadi Hadi’ parçasını söyledik” dedi.  
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BU Haber İGF HABER AJANSI tarafından servis edilmiştir.
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fisiltihaberleri · 7 months ago
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Milli İrade Sakarya Meydanlarında STK'ları Adına MUHAMMED İKBAL EREN "Gazze’de insanlık ölüyor işgalci soykırım devam ediyor" SAKARYA MİLLİ İRADE STK’LARI Adına BİLGE İNSAN ABDULLAH İBNİ ABBAS KURAN VE HADİS İLİMLERİ AKADEMİ DERNEĞİ Başkanı MUHAMMED İKBAL EREN'in 17 Mayıs 2024 Cumartesi Saat 12.30 AKM ön��nde yapılan basın açıklaması şöyle, Bismillahirrahmanirrahim–HAMDELE VE SALVELE Değerli katılımcılar ve basınımızın güzide temsilcileri... Gazze’de insanlık ölüyor işgalci soykırım devam ediyor… Gazze’de, 225 gündür vedalar bitmiyor: Filistinli bir baba, şehit olan evladına veda ediyor. “Allah bize yeter, O ne güzel vekildir. Biz Allah’a aitiz ve şüphesiz O’na döneceğiz.” Diyor. https://www.fisiltihaberleri.com/haber/milli-irade-sakarya-meydanlarinda-stklari-adina-muhammed-ikbal-eren-gazzede-insanlik-oluyor-isgalci-soykirim-devam-ediyor-11099.html
#FısıltıHAberleri #AGD #Milliİrade #filistin #sondakika #haber #istanbul #izmir #türkiye #haberler #sondakikahaber #takip #gündem #asker #galatasaray #tbt #vatan #bilgi #bayrak #mhp #instagram #rte #magazin #15temmuz #video #chp #ultraslan #pöh #akp #gundem
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hazansohbet · 11 months ago
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garudabluffs · 2 years ago
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The Defiance of Salman Rushdie
After a near-fatal stabbing—and decades of threats—the novelist speaks about writing as a death-defying act. February 6, 2023
“I’ve always thought that my books are more interesting than my life,” Rushdie says. “The world appears to disagree.”
Published in the print edition of the February 13 & 20, 2023, issue, with the headline “Defiance.”
"Matar had stabbed Rushdie about a dozen times."
Many years ago, he recalled, there were people who seemed to grow tired of his persistent existence. “People didn’t like it. Because I should have died. Now that I’ve almost died, everybody loves me. . . . That was my mistake, back then. Not only did I live but I tried to live well. Bad mistake. Get fifteen stab wounds, much better.”
"Chautauqua has been a going concern since 1874. Franklin Roosevelt delivered his “I hate war” speech there, in 1936. Over the years, Rushdie has occasionally suffered from nightmares, and a couple of nights before the trip he dreamed of someone, “like a gladiator,” attacking him with “a sharp object.” But no midnight portent was going to keep him home. Chautauqua was a wholesome venue, with cookouts, magic shows, and Sunday school. One donor described it to me as “the safest place on earth.”
"As an undergraduate, Rushdie studied history, taking particular interest in the history of India, the United States, and Islam. Along the way, he read about the “Satanic verses,” an episode in which the Prophet Muhammad (“one of the great geniuses of world history,” Rushdie wrote years later) is said to have been deceived by Satan and made a proclamation venerating three goddesses; he soon reversed himself after the Archangel Gabriel revealed this deception, and the verses were expunged from the sacred record. The story raised many questions. The verses about the three goddesses had, it was said, initially been popular in Mecca, so why were they discredited? Was it to do with their subjects being female? Had Muhammad somehow flirted with polytheism, making the “revelation” false and satanic? “I thought, Good story,” Rushdie said. “I found out later how good.” He filed it away for later use."
READ MORE https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/02/13/salman-rushdie-recovery-victory-city Listen: Salman Rushdie speaks with David Remnick on The New Yorker Radio Hour
Salman Rushdie on Surviving the Fatwa 02/06/2023
Thirty-four years ago, the Ayatollah Khomeini, the Supreme Leader of Iran, issued a fatwa calling for the assassination of the novelist Salman Rushdie, whose book "The Satanic Verses" Khomeini declared blasphemous. It caused a worldwide uproar. Rushdie lived in hiding in London for a decade before moving to New York, where he began to let his guard down. "I had come to feel that it was a very long time ago and, and that the world moves on," he tells David Remnick. "That's what I had agreed with myself was the case. And then it wasn't." In August of last year, a man named Hadi Matar attacked Rushdie onstage before a public event, stabbing him about a dozen times. Rushdie barely survived. Now, in his first interview since the assassination attempt, Rushdie discusses the long shadow of the fatwa; his recovery from extensive injuries; and his writing. It was "just a piece of fortune, given what happened," that Rushdie had finished work on a new novel, "Victory City," weeks before the attack. The book is being published this week. "I've always thought that my books are more interesting than my life," he remarks. "Unfortunately, the world appears to disagree." David Remnick's Profile of Rushdie appears in the February 13th & 20th issue of The New Yorker.
"His antagonists were not merely offended; they insisted on a right not to be offended. As he told me, “This paradox is part of the story of my life.”
Rushdie went on, “I just thought, There are various ways in which this event can destroy me as an artist.” He could refrain from writing altogether. He could write “revenge books” that would make him a creature of circumstances. Or he could write “scared books,” novels that “shy away from things, because you worry about how people will react to them.” But he didn’t want the fatwa to become a determining event in his literary trajectory: “If somebody arrives from another planet who has never heard of anything that happened to me, and just has the books on the shelf and reads them chronologically, I don’t think that alien would think, Something terrible happened to this writer in 1989. The books go on their own journey. And that was really an act of will.”
LISTEN 54:51 https://www.npr.org/podcasts/458929150/the-new-yorker-radio-hour
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From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and Its Aftermath – July 20, 2010
“It would be absurd to think that a book can cause riots,” Salman Rushdie asserted just months before the publication of his novel The Satanic Verses.
"In February of 1988, the protests spread to Pakistan, where riots broke out, killing five. That same month, Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini called for Rushdie’s assassination, and for the killing of anyone involved with the book’ s publication."
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somediyprojects · 1 year ago
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Designs from the Halloween 2023 issue of Just CrossStitch magazine.
Check out these 6 UNIQUE STITCHES from our Halloween issue! 🧡🖤 They are spooky cool…. 👻
13 Spooky Street, designed by Kate Spiridonova (katestitcher)
Under the Sea Halloween, designed by Kathleen Hughes (kathleenhs66)
Pumpkin Spice, designed by Rhona Norrie (tangled.threads.and.things).
Scroll Pumpkin, designed by Anna Kobylianska (sweet.annet.cs)
Un-Welcome Sign, designed by Frony Ritter (fronyritterdesigns)
Sugar Skull Cat, designed by Perry A. Hadi (stitchora_crossstitch)
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gulden-gule · 5 years ago
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Resulullah (sav) kadınlarından biriyle beraber idi. Yanından bir adam geçti. Aleyhissalatu vesselam adamı çağırarak: "Bu benim zevcemdir." dedi. Adam: "Ey Allah'ın Resulü! Ben herkesten şüphe etsem de sizden şüphe etmem!" deyince, Aleyhissalatu vesselam: "Şeytan insana kanın nüfuz ettiği gibi nüfuz eder." buyurdular. Ravi : Hz. Enes Kaynak :Müslim, Selam 23, (2174) #AllahummesallialaseyyidinaMuhammed #allâhümmesallialâseyyidinâmuhammedinvealââliseyyidinâmuhammed #sallallahualeyhivesellem #peygamberefendimiz #resullulah #hadisişerif #hadis #siyerinebi #muhammedmustafasav #islam #dedikodu #magazin #yalan #flört #eş https://www.instagram.com/p/Bz0N9ysg4ti/?igshid=1i6wgqe9p8n6c
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projectqueer · 6 years ago
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