#Muslim girls
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finternetart · 2 months ago
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FREE MUSLIM WOMEN BODIES!!!
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sanriodoll97 · 4 months ago
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and even if only Allah knows of the good in your heart, remember that is all you need, and all you will ever need. ღ
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nailsandinspo · 10 months ago
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This is dope! + someone said guitar players could use this, too.
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b-lessings · 6 months ago
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Why is the point of hijab to conceal your beauty?
Well, it's literally in its grammatical root, in the name given to it. The verb root in Arabic means to hide, obscure, cover, withhold..
But religiously speaking, I am not a scholar to give you an insightful answer, nevertheless, what we know, believe in, and accept is that Allah swt gave us the hijab as a blessing, to protect us women. What is commonly known is that the hijab is given to protect us from the foreign men's gaze and whatnot, but I recently came across a more beautiful, more meaningful purpose to the hijab, is that Allah swt is protecting us from our nafs, from our desires, the desire to look attractive, to be the center of attention, to "turn heads", to be loud and seen and whatnot. As you know, as Muslims we are required to have hayae (modesty), which is in more aspects other than the way we dress, it's the way we speak, the way we walk, the way we interact in social situations, and the hijab only helps, being a physical reminder to the " code of conduct " of a Muslim woman, you wear it with you and it stays with you, goes with you everywhere , hugs you, protects you, makes you feel safe, and reminds you everyday of your submission to Allah's orders, to His rules, to His wisdom. It reminds you everyday, every time you put it on your head that you chose the modest life, you chose to put Allah's words above the little fun moments and little temporary rewards you could have experienced in this life. You chose to give up certain things to please your creator.
Now I might have deviated a little from the question, let me get back. Islam perceives the beauty of a woman as sacred, not to be on display, not available for everyone to see. And when we say " conceal " we don't mean deny or cancel. It does not mean that when you wear the hijab then you should no longer look beautiful, on the contrary, there is a radiance that comes with hijab, Allahuma barik, those sisters would be glowing. But again, by conceal we mean kinda hide, cover because it should not be on display, as Muslim girls are not cheap. They should be out of reach, in that sense.
I hope my answer did some justice to the blessing of hijab that Allah swt granted us, and may Allah swt forgive my shortcomings.
May Allah swt facilitate the step of wearing the hijab to any girl who desires it though scared, ease it for the girls struggling to keep wearing it everyday without falling to the temptations, guide us to perfect it and wear it the right way, and keep all Muslim girls steadfast on His path, ameen.
- A. Z. 🍃🤍
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face-claims-central · 7 months ago
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Elsadieka Alli - Muslim Guyanese, 2007
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aainsh · 12 days ago
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Princess Aisha👑💕!.
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whywoulditho · 1 year ago
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my new two roommates are so cute. when i moved in i asked them if it would be okay if we didn't step into the room with shoes because i needed the space to be clean so i could pray. they both got really excited and told me that lately they've been trying to do that too so it would be no problem. neither of them are a hijabi like myself but they're muslim and i guess they want to get closer to their religion. i was just happy that they were so supportive. anyway, today they got a package and RAN downstairs to get it, all giggly and excited. turns out they both ordered burkhas online and i swear their reaction was so SO precious when they put them on. they kept saying they look so stupid but they were also so happy. one of them said it was so comfortable she wanted to wear it to class tomorrow and they both laughed. just now they ran outside to go show it to their friends in other rooms. it was such a girlhood moment i love these girls they're so cute
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dissociatedbrainfarts · 4 months ago
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So I got married (a month to date) after being banned from boys and sex talk for half my life. Then I was expected to consummate within three days of my send off. Now I’m experiencing vaginismus and instead of being supportive considerate and HELPFUL, I get told to learn to shove it up there at the cost of losing my marriage (to my husband who I now love despite being unable to do it)
Make it make sense
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queer-red-panda · 7 months ago
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TO MY DEAREST MUSLIM FOLLOWERS (…if I have any) CAN SSOMEONE TELL ME
Is it OKAY
For a MUSLIM
TO BE HOMOSEXUAL
pls I’m writing a book rn and I’m getting mixed feedback from google so I’m confused pls- :(
like help
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fuckyouwatson · 6 months ago
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Guilty as sin is my new anthem.
It's for the Muslim girls that were in haram relationships that they fell deeply into and tried their best to maintain boundaries yet were shamed to no end when the relationship was discovered despite never doing anything physical.
I keep recalling things we never did. Without ever touching his sin, how can I be guilty as sin?
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mahoushojoe · 1 year ago
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i think the worst muslim demographic is the hijabi girls usually living in the US or canada with display names like "yasmeen 🦋" and "fatimah 🧿" who build entire platforms about how much life sucks for hijabis and how islamophobic the west is and "muslim girl power!!!" and sell overpriced abayas - all with zero self awareness about how much privilege they have over the muslims in the "motherland" that they shallowly idealize and ignore the problems of, blatantly erasing the narrative that YES the vast majority of muslim women are in fact forced to wear hijab- and in the same breath spout the most vile transphobic bigoted homophobic AND misogynistic shit i have ever heard under the guise of a painfully contrived victim complex where they genuinely believe that trans women are Out To Get Them Without Hijab And Turn Them Away From Islam. nobody gives a shit about you and your hijab, nobody likes you, yall are Not my allies, and i couldn't give two shits about you and i hope yall stay far far away from me because beyond spreading actually harmful rhetoric to young muslim women yall are genuinely the most annoying hypocritical and selfish type of person i can imagine
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indizombie · 2 years ago
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Muslim women students experienced the hijab ban as a denial of their autonomy and agency. As the PUCL team listened to the Muslim girls’ stories close up and large, what became clear was that for them, the hijab is a visible carrier of their self-identity and a way of remaking their own world by freely negotiating with their culture’s normative values and practices. However, they have also had to struggle with their teachers’ negative assumption that they are unaware of being oppressed by their own faith and by a community that does not value education for women. Journalists and political leaders repeatedly asked, “Are they coming to college for studying or for their religion? Let them go to their madrasas if they want to prioritise the hijab.” In insisting simultaneously on their right to education as well as the right to wear the hijab, they are confronting the dominant discourse on the hijab that has obstructed their educational possibilities that have in recent years opened up in Karnataka. In doing so, they are invoking an alternative discourse of gender justice. In this respect, their struggle is at one with the rallying cry ‘Jin, Jiyan, Azadi’ (Women, Life, Freedom) of Iranian women who are protesting the custodial killing of Mahsa Amini, a young woman, by the notorious Iranian ‘morality police’ for wearing her hijab ‘too loosely.’ The slogan ‘Jin, Jiyan, Azadi’ originates in the Kurdish resistance movement in Turkey and reflects similar struggles of women for complete autonomy and liberation. As Apoorvanand and Alishan Jafri argued, ‘Though the contexts of the protests in Iran and India are different, women in both countries are making the same statement. They are telling the state that they want to live their lives as free, thinking individuals – not as dull identical clones. In both cases, it is a battle between individuals and the state for ownership of the self.’
People's Union of Civil Liberties, 'Closing the Gates of Education: Violation of rights of Muslim women students in Karnataka'
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her-hijab-journey · 10 months ago
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worldgirlsportal · 1 year ago
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Burkina Faso is a landlocked country located in West Africa, bordered by Mali to the north, Niger to the east, Benin to the southeast, Togo and Ghana to the south, and Ivory Coast to the southwest. It has a population of approximately 21 million people and its capital and largest city is Ouagadougou.
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Get Girls Numbers - https://www.worldgirlsportal.com/list-of/burkina-faso-girls-number/
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b-lessings · 2 years ago
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Sisters, in these days what are you more likely to?
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capijoyoficial · 7 months ago
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Islã Moderno: Desafios e Estigmas
Vou expressar minha opinião sobre os desafios e reflexões de alguém que pratica o Islã, destacando a luta contínua para manter as tradições e valores em meio a influências modernas.
Compartilho estas observações sobre como a mentalidade e os hábitos islâmicos podem não ser compreendidos ou valorizados pela geração atual, especialmente em um contexto de mudanças sociais e culturais. Eles mencionam a dificuldade de seguir rigorosamente os ensinamentos do Islã em um mundo onde muitos questionam ou resistem a tradições consideradas pesadas. Além disso, o texto aborda o estigma associado ao Islã e a confusão entre ser um verdadeiro muçulmano (aquele que é submisso às Leis de Allah) e ser erroneamente rotulado como terrorista. É uma reflexão sensível sobre os desafios de viver a fé em um contexto diverso e em constante mudança.
Destaco a sensibilidade deste assunto ao abordar os desafios enfrentados por aqueles que buscam viver sua fé em um mundo em constante evolução e diversidade. Reflito muito sobre como as crenças e práticas religiosas que podem ser influenciadas e desafiadas por mudanças sociais, culturais e políticas. Além disso, busco enfatizar a importância de considerar os conflitos internos e externos que surgem ao tentar conciliar tradição e modernidade, fé e sociedade. Quero aqui nesta reflexão reconhecer a complexidade e a profundidade das experiências religiosas em um cenário global cada vez mais pluralista e interconectado.
Que Deus nos ajude a não esquecermos da essência das Sagradas Escrituras. Capí Joy
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