Now, fatwa forbids Muslims from Facebook
Facebook forbidden to Muslims
Facebook forbidden to Muslims
Facebook forbidden to Muslims a real fatwa. The social network index was developed in Egypt as a likely cause of the increase in divorce and family crisis. E 'own community against the most commonly used among young people of Arab countries that, according to the newspaper "al-Quds al-Arabi, the Sheikh Abdel Hamid al-Atrash Muslim cleric has issued a decree that prohibits their use for the first time to all Muslims.
The author of the fatwa is the former chairman of the Fatwa Committee of al-Azhar Islamic university, an Egyptian cleric, who had issued the order after it becomes aware of the data emerging from a study released in the Arab country that the success of Facebook goes hand in hand with the number of divorces among the Muslim families.
"Facebook, or Internet, broken a family of five"
In recent days, a team of sociologists Egyptians demonstrated, studies in hand, that at least one out of five cases of divorce in the Arab country has been caused by a betrayal or anyway Facebook started online. For scholars of the social network to help the spouses betray himself through contact with strangers do not comply with Shariah. "This technology tool, like others of the same type, including satellite channels, are a double edged sword - concluded the Egyptian cleric -. While allowing the spread of Islam, on the other allow people to live love illicitly and to have interpersonal relationships forbidden by Sharia. So those who enter into these sites should be considered a sinner
The author of the fatwa is the former chairman of the Fatwa Committee of al-Azhar Islamic university, an Egyptian cleric, who had issued the order after it becomes aware of the data emerging from a study released in the Arab country that the success of Facebook goes hand in hand with the number of divorces among the Muslim families.
"Facebook, or Internet, broken a family of five"
In recent days, a team of sociologists Egyptians demonstrated, studies in hand, that at least one out of five cases of divorce in the Arab country has been caused by a betrayal or anyway Facebook started online. For scholars of the social network to help the spouses betray himself through contact with strangers do not comply with Shariah. "This technology tool, like others of the same type, including satellite channels, are a double edged sword - concluded the Egyptian cleric -. While allowing the spread of Islam, on the other allow people to live love illicitly and to have interpersonal relationships forbidden by Sharia. So those who enter into these sites should be considered a sinner
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