Page 131 - Solution, the values of the Qurʼan
P. 131

Harun Yahya (Adnan Oktar)     129


            Muslims were killed, women raped and children slaughtered. The policy
            of both massacre and assimilation continues today. From what
            international organizations report, in Kashmir, hundreds of people have
            lost their lives under torture and thousands of others were disabled.
            Indians set houses on fire, and closed newspapers and schools with
            Islamic curricula. The pain has not ended yet; in cave-like shelters, many

            people currently live under very difficult conditions.
               Many people probably think they have nothing to do with these
            people living in remote parts of the world, hundreds and thousands of
            miles away from them. However, this is rather an inhumane way of
            thinking, far removed from the moral values of the Qur'an. As mentioned
            earlier, the responsibility of a believer is to communicate the religion to
            everyone, whether immediate family members or someone in a different
            corner of the world. Below are the lines quoted from a report by a
            journalist who visited a refugee camp in Kashmir. Even these descriptions
            alone would be enough to move one's conscience. The report illustrates
            the grievous conditions in the camp:
               The refugee camp in Ambor was set up in 1990 for Kashmiris fleeing from
               Jammu and Kashmir. The living conditions here are wretched. People are
               packed into small mud huts. In a single-story hut we entered, there was only
               one bed. We asked how many people lived in this single room. The answer
               was "9". The camp accommodated 214 families, with a total of 1110 members.
               Only seeing a mud hut provides an accurate picture of the gloomy life here.
               These huts generally have two rooms…A few obsolete crockery, one or two
               beds, if one ever can call them a bed. A mother knelt down in the corner with
               a baby in her arms. A pot boiling on a fire kindled with a few dry branches. I
               saw nothing around to eat! I did not have the courage to open the pot to see if
               there was anything inside. In several tents I saw, there was neither food nor
               anything to sleep on! In one of the tents, there was an old piece of sheet spread
               in the middle. Apparently, it was used as a bed. When I asked "How many
               people does this tent accommodate?" they answered: "11 people."…Still only
               an iron pot boiling outside!
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