If any of you have been following this riveting case... Video from Youtube: [video=youtube;Hx0CTwMLT8w]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hx0CTwMLT8w[/video] ...it seems that the jury had ruled on it and convicted all three family members of first degree murder. From the New York Times yesterday: In a related article about the case's effect on local Muslims: Local Muslims express mixed emotions following Shafia convictions All I can say is, that sometimes you can get the boy out the ghetto, but you can't get the ghetto out the boy. This seems to be a real problem also in places like Europe, who are finding that large infusions of backward, religiously orthodox immigrants of various faiths, have begun to skew their social precepts of how life should be lived. Personally, I think that western nations need to look not just at how people are persecuted in their foreign home, but also in their ability, propensity or probability to persecute others once they arrive; that is, these are just the sort of extremist immigrants that North America doesn't need. If people are going to come to North America and participate in Jihad, or practice ultra orthodox versions of Sharia or other extremist customs (like this family did), then it would be better not to have allowed them in to begin with. Comments?
Typically I'm against the world police sort of thing, but i just feel so terrible when i hear about things like this.
This is terrible, many of these kinda things happen over here... lotsa brothers who kill their own sisters etc.... crazy, how honor can be worth more than anything or anyone....
Frankly, this sort of eastern 'face' thing isn't all that new. It's just a matter of the interpretation. I guess for this one individual, the father, his command, control and demand of obedience from 'his' family as its patriarch, mattered more than the collective lives of a wife and daughters. Remember what happened in Raise the Red Lantern [1991], when the patriarch discovers wife three's infidelity? In essence, a lot of these cultural face things remain extant, especially in immigrant or international communities. They really have little place in the modern world as more often than not, they rely heavily on antiquated precepts of vassal ownership, bondage or subjugation; in effect, various forms of slavery.