Showing posts with label oxford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oxford. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 March 2014

Condemnation of sexual grooming

In June 2013 a sermon condemning the sexual grooming of young girls was delivered Friday 28th, at 500 mosques across Britain after a series of trials in which men predominantly of South Asian origin were convicted.

The speech highlighted how the Koran condemns all forms of sexual indecency  and urged Muslims to protect children and vulnerable people in their  communities.

The move follows cases in Oxford, the central English town of Telford, and  Rochdale in northwest England, involving Asian men convicted of sexually  abusing girls, although police chiefs have stressed that grooming is not  restricted to a single ethnic or religious group.


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The sermon was organised by the not-for-profit group Together Against  Grooming (TAG) and was read out by imams in around 500 mosques nationwide.
The group said the sermon was supported by leading Muslim organisations  such as the Muslim Council of Britain, the Mosque and Imams National Advisory Board and the Islamic Society of Britain.
TAG spokesman Ansar Ali said: “We have been horrified by the details that  have emerged from recent court cases and as Muslims we feel a natural  responsibility to condemn and tackle this crime.”  
He said the issue was “much more complicated” than simply blaming Muslim  men.
Sexual grooming and child abuse afflicts all sections of society and is  perpetrated by people of all ethnic groups.”  
The sermon urges anyone who sees an “evil action” to act or speak out.
It was written by Alyas Karmani, an imam and youth worker in Keighley, West  Yorkshire, a town with a large Muslim population.


> Go back in time and read: Muslim leaders in Britain condemn sexual grooming

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Thursday, 23 December 2010

Revival of Jesus’ language at Oxford


Christ's endangered language gets new lease of life in Oxford

Jim Caviezel plays Jesus Christ in Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ, which is in Aramaic An Aramaic course offered by Oxford University is drawing scores of scholars from as far afield as Liverpool and London .
Some 56 scholars are now studying the Aramaic language there, outpacing the number of those currently studying classical Greek.It is the language that Christ spoke, but is regarded as "endangered" with ever fewer scattered groups of native speakers.
David Taylor has previously taught the language to groups of two or three people in his study, and was astounded by the turnout for his first public lesson. Though a few fell by the wayside, more than 40 stayed the course until the classes ended in time for Christmas.
John Ma, an Oxford classicist and one of the leaders of Project Arshama which organised the lessons, said: "You would probably have to go back 2,000 years to find a room so full with people speaking Aramaic – the time when Jesus would have been speaking the language."
Dialects of Aramaic – a 3,000-year-old language once spoken by millions across the Mediterranean and near east, from Syria to the borders of India – are still spoken, but Taylor believes the war may push it to the verge of extinction in Iraq.
His students were learning imperial Aramaic, from his own newly devised grammar, which is intended to be easier to learn as a beginner. They were not entirely convinced. Boris Chrubasik, an Oxford classics graduate, said: "Getting used to a semitic language is all but easy, and when the radicals start dropping one gets upset." However, he insisted staunchly: "Learning Aramaic is fun."
Most of the students were postgrad classicists like Chrubasik, but some theologians and biblical scholars came too.
Ma, a fellow and tutor at Corpus Christi, took the lessons himself and is beginning to dream in Aramaic. Very dull dreams, he admits. "Mostly verb paradigms (since there's some rote learning, as with other languages) and once saying to someone, 'Mindeam la avdeth anah' … I didn't do anything."
And he ruefully quotes a fellow student on mastering a particular vowel sound, "a guttural throat sound not unlike incipient vomiting".
However, after two lessons he could read in the original the words spoken by Christ on the cross: "My God, my God why did you forsake me." After eight, he realised to his surprise that he could understand the Aramaic dialogue in Mel Gibson's 2004 film The Passion of the Christ.
"It was very satisfying, it's not always like that when you learn a new language," he said.
The lessons were organised by Oxford University's classics faculty and faculty of oriental studies as part of Project Arshama, a collaboration between the universities of Oxford and Liverpool, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council. The project is focused on one of the treasures of the vast Bodleian library, the 13 Arshama letters, written on leather in the Persian empire in the 5th century BC – priceless to scholars because so many documents on parchment or clay have not survived. There will be a seminar and an exhibition on the letters next summer.
Ma has supplied some useful Aramaic phrases for the season (with a nervous eye on his tutor, because he's not quite sure he's got all his vowels right):
• "Shelam biznah qodemay, ap tamah qodemayk shelam", from a letter written 2,500 years ago, translates as "Peace here before me, and also peace over there before you", but colloquially means "I am well, and hope you're well too".
• "Anah rahem leki" (from a man to a woman) and "Anah rahmah lak" (from a woman to a man), which means "I love you".
• "Shelam we sherarat saggi hawseret leki" for "I have sent you peace and much strength".