tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15240575.post1472994767377466273..comments2024-02-05T17:15:59.703-06:00Comments on hawgblawg: Satanism, West and EastTed Swedenburghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05355038670178440138noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15240575.post-62256224416176124742013-11-09T18:05:22.214-06:002013-11-09T18:05:22.214-06:00Dear, Ted
In your discourse about the relationshi...Dear, Ted<br /><br />In your discourse about the relationship between so-called 'Satanism' and the Arab world—or youth, in particular—it is pretty much a stretch of an effort to try pin this anticultural phenomenon that is based in antireligious dogmata. To wit, most Arabian Satanists are but a small-numbered groups of college kids (mainly girls, by the way, and increasingly high-school students right now); who come from wealthy families that are best to be described as 'disintegrative', with a knack for metal music.<br /><br />There are no certain cultural emblematic signs to Satanism in the Arab world. Most ardent countries are those of the so-called 'western' Arabian states that are heavily influenced by France and Italy, like Tunisia, Algiers, and Morocco. As far as I can trace the early beginnings of this whole quasi-religious movement in the Arab world, it appeared first in Kuwait and Bahrain in the late 60's and early 70's; especially in underground 'safe houses' where young, US-UK-educated college Kuwaitis and Bahrainis came back from these countries 'westoxified' on a heady mixture of drugs, sex, and yes... this floundering mantra of early heavy metal music played by bands like Black Sabbath, and Iron Maiden. Other similar countries that saw a belated rise of such activities were Iran and Pakistan (the first have a notorious following of Satanism that stretches all the way to Pattaya, Thailand).<br /><br />I met with many Arab Satanists during my college days and some were my close acquaintances, of whose only deliberation was how they wanted to side with Satan being a respectful fallen angel. In Jordan, for example, and some parts of Palestine (Ramallah, Jerusalem), the music is what matters and some bands have flourished during the mid-80's when most Jordanian and Palestinian families came back to the country after becoming well-to-do enough to raise their children with a certain amount of 'freedom'. This westernisation of normal, Muslim (and to a certain extent Christian) kids became a fashion statement that people in the region would adhere to (i.e. thick mascara, batcave ankle-boots, black wrist bands and chokers, angst bunny poses and such gothic/metal insignia). Few are those (if any), who take up Satanism as, say those in Scandinavian countries do to a religious level. Almost nobody knows about its origins that can be traced to the mid-1800's, or how modern rock-and-roll bands like the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin were actually strict followers of Crowleyism. <br /><br />Finally, the police acts only when the persons in questions are not sons of important persona or are related in anyway to those in the ruling seat (like the case with Morocco). In 2012, a huge hubbub erupted as members of the parliament started discussing Satanists in their hearings in Jordan, with 'horror' stories of mutilations and blood offerings and paganistic sacrifices blown out of all proportions after a simple Halloween party in one of the capital's richest parts (Abdoun: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFpBf4HLNxk" rel="nofollow">See this video</a> ).<br /><br />H.H.Hammerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09462766826817071023noreply@blogger.com