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High School Life: The Muslim Scene
Written in conjunction with Su’di Abdulahi, my friend and a lärjunge of Abu AnonyMouse’s Madrasah.
Living Islam while in the West – it’s a common topic, especially with regards to youth. However, many of the articles and lectures on the subject are by those who have already left high school, and so I’ve decided to go to someone who’s still living in the trenches, so to speak. Let’s give a warm welcome to my friend and our sister in Islam, Su’di!
AM: All right, so let’s start with the ever-popular question: What are challenges that you face as a Muslimah trying to practice Islam in a fitnah-fied environment like high school?
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The Prophet (SAW) has taught us t
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Ebola, Fear and a Changing Texas
DALLAS — There is a little Ethiopian cafe here on Park Lane, down the street from where the man city officials call Patient Zero was staying. I walked in and asked the workers standing behind the counter if they knew anything about the patient, Thomas E. Duncan, a Liberian citizen who was the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States. Next to the cash register was a bottle of hand sanitizer.
They did not know him. But they called over a customer. The customer, a middle-aged woman, walked over. inom don’t think she heard my question, but she heard one word within it: “Ebola.” With a worried look on her face, she stretched her ledd in front of me, pumped the sanitizer a couple times and rubbed it on her hands.
Covering Ebola in Texas fryst vatten like this — fleeting moments of fear, often stirred bygd misinformation.
Perhaps if I was sick and infectious with Ebola and had sneezed on my grabb, and then I s
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