Shiite cults seek to wreak havoc in Iraq
Iraqi Shias: “Come, let us sleep with your wife, daughter, and sister, so the Mahdi may return”
Mahdi-Alert. Apparently some Shia groups in Iraq are operating under a doctrine that maintains if people engage in debauched behavior — sowing corruption in the earth — that would only speed up the return of the Mahdi. As with taqiyya, yet another example of how in Islam, the end often justifies the means, as in this hadith about niyya, or “intention”: “Actions are what they are by virtue of intent.” Timothy Furnish (author of Holiest Wars, which examines Mahdism) discusses this story here.
“Shiite cults seek to wreak havoc in Iraq,” by Usama Redha for the Los Angeles Times,Â
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Associated PressDetainees believed to be members of the Heaven’s Army cult sit blindfolded in early 2007 after a battle with American and Iraqi forces near the Shiite holy city of Najaf.A few fringe groups seek to sow chaos, convinced it will hasten the arrival of the Mahdi, the Shiites’ 12th imam who they believe will bring peace.
Her experience shines a light on the rise in Iraq of fanatical cults devoted to Imam Mahdi, the Shiites’ 12th imam. A descendant of the prophet Muhammad, he disappeared more than 1,000 years ago.
The Shiite faithful believe that in the world’s darkest hour, Imam Mahdi will return and bring justice and calm. But where mainstream Shiite believers wait patiently for that day, groups such as the one that tried to enlist Iman are convinced that they can hasten his reappearance by spreading chaos.
Already, two Shiite cults have tried to stage violent uprisings in Iraq. In January 2007, as many as 250 followers of a group called Heaven’s Army were killed when they massed to attack the Shiite shrine city of Najaf. A year later, as many as 80 people died in battles with the police and army during a revolt in Basra by another cult, Supporters of the Mahdi.
Some experts speak of the cults nervously, afraid of being tracked down by the groups for talking about their mysterious practices.
Dr. Hassan, a psychology professor at Baghdad’s Mustansiriya University who declined to give his full name because of worries about his safety, explained that some Iraqis had embraced conservative Shiite traditions with zeal after the 2003 ouster of Saddam Hussein, who had oppressed the country’s Shiite majority.
“Before the war, the situation was different. To talk about religious things was forbidden and one could be arrested,” Hassan said. “All these feelings bottled up inside and started to appear after Saddam’s fall.”
Iman, who also declined to give her full name, discovered the world of cults as she sought solace in religion in the months after her husband’s death. A friend suggested she do something positive while waiting for Imam Mahdi’s return.
“Her talks charmed me and made me think about heaven,” Iman said. She opened up to her friend in a way she couldn’t with her family. She told her friend how she had been lonely since her husband’s death.
“I liked to talk about my needs as a woman, and we were joking about many things. Unfortunately, sometimes I went too far talking about things I should never have talked about, but I was just joking,” she said.
The woman suggested that Iman sleep with her husband if she wanted to help speed up the Mahdi’s return.
“I looked at her and laughed. I thought she was joking. I told her, ‘No, he is too old for me. I want someone younger,’ ” Iman said. “She said, ‘I’m serious — all you have to do is sleep with my husband.’ ”
Others shared similar stories about the group, called Mumahidoon, or “those who prepare the way.”
Abu Jassem said the group preyed upon him when he was unemployed.
His recruiter was a good friend who knew of his religious fervor, and of his need for money. The friend sweetened the deal with the promise of a stipend for joining the cult. But then he told Abu Jassem of the one catch: He had to let his fellow believers sleep with his wife, daughter and sister.
“I was stunned but didn’t show my astonishment. Later I told them I refused the idea because these things were against my traditions and religion.”
Although Iraqi security officials dismiss the idea that such cults pose a genuine threat, Hassan is not convinced. “The cults in our society,” he warned, “could pose a danger.”
Times staff writer Ned Parker contributed to this report.
Super idiot fringe of an idiot group called Koranists. Such people must have IQ levels in negative numbers if they really buy all that Mahdi BS.
“Iraq: Woman told Mahdi would return faster if she gang bangs with Shia cult leaders”
The Mahdi express TRAIN to the end times?
What a sick “religion”. It’s all about sex, anywhere, any time for the male true believers. An ideology based on slavery, rape and murder. They’re all sociopaths.
Good idea, once all the women get into the gangbangs and like getting all different cocks all the time, Islam will die out lol. Lets face it, it survives by repressing and controlling people………especially women………gangbangs on the other hand require total sexual freedom for the women as well……..so that is at least a massive improvement………..Islam would be dead in the water if this caught on.
I am simply amazed at how such logically deprived websites can barely stay afloat with hate messages against religions. As if it wasn’t enough that the pioneer Freemason state, whose leaders have from time immemorial engaged in incest for preservation of power, are striving in the wipe out of every iota of belief in God since their forefathers from ancient Egypt, now comes this guy along with his mental acrobatics on his website just to further the pursuits of “novo ordo seculorum”. Christianity has already been infiltrated and adulterated with belief in the pagan god Horus through Constantine in the council of nicea, Judaism has been gang banged by Nebuchadnezzar and the rabbis of the round table, the atheists now after being senselessly plugged to the new world order, now come up with these mental acrobatics, almost scratching the bottom of the barrel of intellect, with attacks on Islam whose following grows by the day. All the attacks, personal invective remarks are shaming, to say the least. Be as it may, the belief in God will persist and no incest-indulged son of an ape, born by evolution, through such websites would damage the belief in one true God. You wont be the first, neither the last in your self terminating pursuit to end the belief in God which today, since 600AD, has been held aloft by Islam.