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Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2006 3:40 pm
by COOL-MAN
Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2006 3:49 pm
by Sir-Luggoyo
Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2006 3:56 pm
by kambuli
Coolman.
Whether the Fuxx is the size of elephant or a monkey it is a disgusting sight walaahay.... I just can't stand that niiko specially when it is shaked in a nasty way.... There was this girl doing the niiko and she was doing it in such a way she was going all the way down... I felt like she was explicitly soliciting Sex walaahay waan yaxyaxay... And her mom was in the wedding...
Mar hadday dabada ku xidhaan garbastaarta... xaalku waa xun yahay..

Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2006 4:04 pm
by *HannaH*
Kambuli, there is niiko bil cadaan ah iyo niiko la qariyo..
Ilahaan kugu dharshee have you seen naag buranburasoo niikineysa at the sametime...but buranburka ku qarinysa niikada?

I love Somalis
Cubeed that is disrespecful to me walaahi, anoo naag Somaliyeed ah...dont call me Arab ever again

Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2006 4:05 pm
by Unclebin
^ Sheik Ishaaq banu hashim

Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2006 4:08 pm
by kambuli
Hannah,
Waa runtaa oo waan arkay. Laakiin walaal it is a little bit too much some times....
Bye all of you
Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2006 4:10 pm
by COOL-MAN
@ repeating istaqfurullah under their breath
sir, these ones don't need peeping toms, iyagaaba meel laga maro la helenin. the moment they see a man coming from outside they turn all at once in your direction. (i normaly use the back as my exit) and here is the funny part, markuu buranburka dhamaado, they all gather for fresh air after long periods of dancing with no break in a large space adjacent to the restaurant which is where the stairs to my house is located. wallahi markan soo maro that space waan isu yaxyaxaa. boqol indhoo oo kusoo eegayo bal adigu kaale wax oro

"walal ma meshan maa dagantahay? (gashaa? for the djiboutians)" this doesn't suprise me as i am cagdheer and women see in us what they don't see in other somali men

. normaly i dont answer, but on ocaasions i answer haa walal meshan baan galaa macsalaam. next question is "walal somali badan maa dagan guryahan

but by them am gone and out of their reach, they won't be able to hear even if answe back. what complicates things even further is i don't look like a wadad which makes them they think of me as an easy catch
lord dipshit is coming this weeking to ma place, he is the one on the hunt 24 seven, hopefully he will get his future mad xalimo out of my troubles

kambuli
am a wadad, never been inside a somali dance hole to witness those horrible things you mentioned

Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 10:34 am
by kambuli
Coolman,
Oo maxaad uga firdhan haweenka?
Good for you wallaahay, I wish inaan anna sidaada oo kale ahay wadaad, but I consider myself as "Qunyar Socod"

Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 10:34 am
by kambuli
Coolman,
Oo maxaad uga firdhan haweenka?
Good for you wallaahay, I wish inaan anna sidaada oo kale ahay wadaad, but I consider myself as "Qunyar Socod"

Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 11:59 am
by LaDy-Qac
Only arab wannabe' s play arabic songs in their weddings.
What' s up with somalis playing hip-hop at their weddings. A couple of months I went a wedding in which they played Busta Rhymes's - "Touch it". The nasty version!.

Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 12:09 pm
by michael_ital
Sounds like they're under the false belief that anything Arab is halaal.
LooooooooooL @ "In my dictionary, they equivalent to those who add the "Abu" prefix in their SOmali names, just to be close to Arabistan"

Man, ever thought of moving sxb?
Re: Genuine Question
Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 1:41 pm
by Aiman
[quote="kambuli"]Please just a genuine response
Last year I attended a wedding. There were girls who wore the xijaab. People danced all night..Those girls did not dance because they saw it as xaraam, at least that is what they said.
Then after a while an Arabic CD started playing then the two girls started dancing... belly dancing and all happy etc..
My question is;
Why some people think it is ok to dance with Arabic songs but not Ok to dance with Somali or English songs...
Walaahay I was like

what an ingnorance

[/quote]
They were hypocrite music is music whether it is in Arabic, Somali or English. Like LionHeart said they were using Islam not to dance the music that they are not familar with then dance the one they are fond with. Those girls are curupting the etique (etiquette) of what Xijaab means and its characteristic.
Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 6:04 pm
by Hambalayo2
[quote="kambuli"]
I see them as munaafiqeen big time.... Mar haddaad dabada ruxeyso what difference does it make whether you do it in Arabic or in Somali

[/quote]
Maybe it just wasn't their taste. Is this another jab at hating Arabs?
Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 6:15 pm
by michael_ital
[quote="Hambalayo2"]
Maybe it just wasn't their taste. Is this another jab at hating Arabs?
[/quote]
Could be a jab. But if it "just wasn't their taste", then why proclaim it "xaraam" ?
Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 6:51 pm
by Hambalayo2
Mike, I might have missed it, but I didn't see any part of kambuli's post in which she heard the girls proclaim the music xaraam. There is a big difference between sitting out some songs and jumping in when you feel like it.
They might have been wearing hijab, but that doesn't mean they thought the music was haram. Like I said, it could very well have been their personal taste.