I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

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Lillaahiya
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Lillaahiya »

Landerious wrote:There's not much wrong with that. It's true too

Try this: :mrgreen: We just finished praying Maqrib at a Somali musjid and while everyone was still sitting down and doing duco, this skinny odey with the biggest belly ever seen gets up and gets greated by this other guy with the words "al, war hebel ma uurbaad yeelatey?"

The odey shouts at the top of his voice "hooyada wase hadaan uur yeeshey madaa iwasey?"
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Classic!
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Dudaaye »

Islam has rules of etiquette and an ethical code involving every aspect of life.

Ethics of Greeting
Etiquette of Talking to Others.
Bathroom Etiquette
Islamic Etiquette of sleeping/eating/marriage/intimate relations,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

The Islamic Law has introduced and propagated a cluster of public ethics. At the same time, it warned of failure to strictly abide by it, as this will entail punishment in the Hereafter. Imam Muslim narrated that the Prophet (sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam) said: “Do you know who is the bankrupt?” They answered: A bankrupt among us is the person who has neither money nor property. The Prophet (sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam) said: “The bankrupt in my nation is the one who comes on the Day of Resurrection with prayer, zakat and fasting, yet he used to insult, slander, slay and beat others. Thus claimants are rewarded according to their good deeds. If one’s good deeds are gone, he is punished for his ill deeds until he is thrown into Hell.” ,,,, http://ipcblogger.net/omen/2011/01/10/s ... d-manners/

Manners and Islamic Etiquette of Talking to Others.

http://me-angelandferdaous.blogspot.com ... te-of.html
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by OliveOil »

Interesting topic...enjoyed every post :lol:
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by ciyaal_warta »

Murax wrote:
Landerious wrote:There's not much wrong with that. It's true too

Try this: :mrgreen: We just finished praying Maqrib at a Somali musjid and while everyone was still sitting down and doing duco, this skinny odey with the biggest belly ever seen gets up and gets greated by this other guy with the words "al, war hebel ma uurbaad yeelatey?"

The odey shouts at the top of his voice "hooyada wase hadaan uur yeeshey madaa iwasey?"

*DEAD :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: aniga waliba si dabaalnimo baan u qoslaa i would rolling on the masjid floor :lol:
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Twist »

Landerious wrote:There's not much wrong with that. It's true too

Try this: :mrgreen: We just finished praying Maqrib at a Somali musjid and while everyone was still sitting down and doing duco, this skinny odey with the biggest belly ever seen gets up and gets greated by this other guy with the words "al, war hebel ma uurbaad yeelatey?"

The odey shouts at the top of his voice "hooyada wase hadaan uur yeeshey madaa iwasey?"
LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL :lol: :lol: :lol:

That's just wrong, and even worse said in a mosque!
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Hyperactive »

authobillah, how is that funny!
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by sadeboi »

hyperactive wrote:authobillah, how is that funny!
because ninka yiri uur baad yeelatey aya edeb daran...and the old man responded like how a typical old man would respond to an insult..
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Hyperactive »

i just cannot imagine some one would joke like that, assuming both wey isla kaftameyeen.
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by sadeboi »

hyperactive wrote:i just cannot imagine some one would joke like that, assuming both wey isla kaftameyeen.

nope the older man seemed mad by the comment...the first guy insulted him in public
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Saraxnow »

Unless in special places such as Mosques or serious event happening, I say we should just leave them be. Come on, guys, how many people do you know who are as honest, straightforward and innocent as reer badiyes? :lol: These people have a child-like innocence about them and are also the source of a lot of our dhaqan.



Btw, Im still laughing at some of the comments :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by zingii »

LoL @ "ma uur baad yeelatay". :lol:
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Cinque Mtume »

hyperactive wrote:authobillah, how is that funny!
I was thinking the same, I would be in shock. I'm talking about the old guy's response, the first guy's insult is harmless and funny and there's nothing wrong with joking around in the masaajid. But the other guy embarrassed himself, he probably had a bad day or something or just very insecure about his calool kuusan
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Hyperactive »

cinque, i would shocked and feel embarrassed for him!! hope some one talked to him about it and how is unacceptable.
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Advo »

Cinque and Hyper

U nyggas don't have much experience with old Somali men so mahan, they make the most blunt unadulterated hilarious comments.

If it came from anyone else besides odoyaal it would not be funny but their arrogance simply will not allow them to ignore any subliminal disses.

:lol:
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Re: I Noticed Somalis Don't Have Decorum

Post by Enlightened~Sista »

Image



Paradise with neighbours
Issue 65 February 2010
EMEL Magazine


I recently attended the funeral of my 85-year old neighbour. Eileen was a widow. Her husband had died 16 years ago. She never had any children and lived alone with an aged rescue dog called Jackie. She would not answer the door if you rang her bell, and guarded her independence fiercely. She did not have visitors and was not easy to help. If you offered to do her shopping, she would refuse. “The walking keeps me alive,” she would tell you. She would occasionally come to ask for help, and we would do what we could.

At one point, there was a particularly difficult family who had rented the house in-between Eileen’s house and mine. The husband was afraid of the dog and he went to kick it. Eileen saw this as a wicked thing, and for her he was kicking her only companion. One day she was out in the street shouting, “Terrorists!” The police were called and I stepped in to calm things down. The family were from Somalia, and I must confess to being very angry with them. Eileen’s age demanded that they should have respected her needs. As Muslims, I felt they should have taken from the Qur’an which reminds everyone, “Serve God, and join not any partners with Him; and do good - to parents, kinsfolk, orphans, those in need, neighbours who are near, neighbours who are strangers, the companion by your side, the wayfarer you meet, and what your right hands possess.” (4:36)

Some would call Eileen cantankerous, yet I liked her. One day we stopped to talk on the street, and she looked at me. “I like you,” she said, surprised. I don’t think she liked many people. She liked our children too, and would always come with a gift at Christmas, a box of chocolates and a pound or two for each of the children. We would have presents ready for her and Jackie waiting by our front door.

The past few months of her life had been hard as she was in and out of hospital. I too had been ill – in and out of hospital – and did not see her much. And then, one evening, I saw that her house was boarded up. It took numerous phone calls to hospitals and police to eventually find out that she had died.

Ever since her death I can’t quite still myself. I feel like I did not do enough for her in her life or at her death. I can find my excuses – a busy life, working full time, bringing up three young children, she was difficult, etc. etc. But I feel particularly uneasy inside that I did not visit her in hospital when she was ill. And I am reminded of the Hadith Qudsi, “’O son of Adam, I fell ill and you visited Me not.’ He will say: ‘O Lord, and how should I visit You when You are the Lord of the worlds?’ He will say, ‘Did you not know that My servant so-and-so had fallen ill and you visited him not? Did you not know that had you visited him you would have found Me with him?’” I missed seeing Eileen, and I missed that opportunity to find God. I know in my heart I could have done more, and now the chance to help her is just not there anymore.

And I wonder how many more old people are out there like Eileen. They are hard to help and they turn you away, but they need our help. They can be grumpy and miserable, but they need company. They are fiercely independent, but they are not quite strong enough anymore to be so independent. We read horror stories of elderly people lying dead for months, even years.

It’s easy to say, “She’s not my relative; not my responsibility.” But they are our neighbours. The Qur’an and Prophet Muhammad’s teachings constantly remind us of our duty of care to the neighbour. Indeed, every religious text I can think of tells us to love our neighbour as ourselves. Even legal concepts, like the duty of care, have been derived from the idea of the neighbour.

For Muslims, the breakdown of the family has not yet extensively hit the communities. I can think of very few Muslim elderly living alone or in care homes. That is not to say it will not happen though, and if we imagine we are the future elderly and lonely neighbour, how would we like to be treated?

Our elderly neighbours can present for us a pathway to paradise. If we can extend human kindness to them, we will not only provide them with the dignity they deserve, but will grant ourselves an increase in our own humanity. We can’t just leave the care of the elderly to social services, though they too have a role to play. As individuals we have to decide what type of society we want to live in, and then take the responsibility to create it.


http://www.emel.com/article.php?id=68&a ... urn=somali
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