1. Apparently bollywho isn't the only one peddling couples consisting of islamic male and female of community targeted by islamic jihad.
"Jaffa". Israeli movie. Not watched it, but came across summary. The "romantic" couple here is - wait for it - islamic male and Jewish female.
That curious combination, which is a tell-tale sign of social engineering was lost to the person who made the following comment (taken off imdb) but the comment is otherwise informative: apparently this is the sort of trash that Israeli leftists like to make up. Sounds like the Indian left and out-and-out christoislamics.
2. Came across an impassioned indiafacts article some time back about some Khan who married Kareena Kapoor (they are both some of the ugliest looking-actors I've ever seen - and I've seen *way* too many of this sort from India - so they deserve each other). Oh yes, Saif-Ali Khan was his name - the spawn of Tagore's progeny (nee Sharmila Tagore) and some islamaniac cricketer who was still playing royalty in India. [Islamaniacs should go back to Iran/Arabia, and channel emir/sultan/khalif haroon-al-rashid/whatever there.]
For some reason the indiafacts article imagined that Saif Ali Khan's 2 wives mattered at all. Sure, they converted to islamania upon marrying him, just as his mother (of Hindu ancestry once-upon-a-time) did upon marrying his dad, but whereas the last at least is some reason for Hindu vocalist writers to add their two cents, Saif's 2 wives converting isn't.
Here's the article that wasted its breath:
indiafacts.co.in/open-letter-saif-ali-khan-must-pataudi-brides-convert-islam-marry/
By IndiaFacts Staff Distortion & Appropriation, Media October 16, 2014
Open Letter to Saif Ali Khan: Why must Pataudi brides convert to Islam to marry?
a. Wife #1 was one Amrita Singh. She was a Sikh who, as revealed in the article, converted to islam upon marrying Saif-Ali Khan. When the two split up, she seemed to have remained in islam.
Does it really matter, when her mother was a muslim?
So she merely had a stint at her dad's Sikhism for the first half of her life and then her mum's islam for the latter half.
(Perhaps she also figured that one invisible mono-deity is as invisible and as mono as the other.)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amrita_Singh
(And isn't Khushwant Singh that famous secular who likes to take jabs at Hindus now and again?)
Here's Amrita Singh's islamic cousin - from the maternal side - and her own mother:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayub_Khan_(actor)
Ayub Khan's wife is a hybrid Parsi and "Punjabi" of some kind (whenever a hybrid marries into christoislam, any Hindu or even Sikh ancestry becomes irrelevant and is merely denoted by regional indicator. In fact, for John Abraham, he referred even to his Parsi ancestry as Iranian/Persian while sticking to his catholic half as "catholic".)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niharika_Khan
Back to Amrita's islamic mum:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rukhsana_Sultana
Anyway, despite the Zoroastrian first-name of Amrita's mother - which Zoroastrian name was turned into merely "Iranian" after islam invaded India (hence Shah-Rukh and Rukhshana names are used by islamics), Amrita Singh's mother is in fact a muslim with a very islamic ancestry.
So Amrita's family essentially consists of people dilly-dallying between Sikhism and islam. So Amrita's move back into islam should be seen in that light.
And why *Hindu* nationalists should care - with half-baked info too - is beyond me.
b. The second wife of Saif Ali Khan was - as is typical of India's islamic actors in general - of another infidel variety: Kareena Kapoor.
Once more, the indiafacts staff member(s) who wrote the article questioning Saif-Ali Khan's requirement that his wives convert to islam (like his psecular anti-Hinduised mother was expected to), without his islamic family ever reciprocating of course, were taking unnecessary interest in Kareena's conversion.
As already stated before, she's not really a Hindu. Her mother, one "Babita" is actually christian despite having had a Hindu dad. (You know, the way Lara Dutta, Malaika Arora, etc etc are catholic christians like their mothers, despite having "Hindu" dads.) Moreover, from the way wackypedia has phrased it below, it seems like Babita is an Anglo-Indian to boot: having an English mother (which appears to explain why Kareena and Karisma look like that other Anglo-"Indian" Katrina Kaif, whose face also goes on and on.)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babita
Ref 6 was cited as proof of Babita's christian heritage, which seems more like full-blown christianism:
www.masala.com/my-mother-didnt-like-me-in-bikini-12806.html
Not half-christian (whatever that means), but fully christian.
Also Kareena does the typically christoislamic thing of referring to Babita's mother's religion - i.e. christian - and her father's region/sub-ethnicity as "Sindhi". I.e. Kareena doesn't recognise anything Hindu in her Sindhi grandfather on her mother's side, but does recognise the christianism of her maternal grandma. Who knows what "temples" she is fond of - possibly even some new age centre or an interfaith catholic centre like Fatima something or other.
In any case, she does visit the church. From one of those links at wackypedia:
timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/filmi-parties/bollywood/Kareena-Saif-at-St-Andrews-Church-in-Mumbai/articleshow/11242344.cms
In any case, of Malaika Arora and the half-Scottish Lara Dutta it is well-known that they are catholics, which means the St Andrews church - despite Babita having had an English mother - is catholic not Anglican. I.e. Babita is catholic and raised Karisma and Kareena as such.
Here, another divorce case:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaika_Arora_Khan
(Don't know why wackypedia lists Malaika Arora's ethnicity as "Punjabi" since her maternal half is not Punjabi, but a "Malayali" Catholic, whatever that is: it need not always be Syrian christian.) As for the surname Polycarp, it says nothing either. Polycarp is alleged to have been a 2nd century christian bishop in Smyrna (modern-day Turkey) who allegedly got martyred. Turns out he's another one of those airborne diseases: fictions. Specifically, Polycarp and Ignatius are further fictions forged as witnesses to/to prop up the fiction of jeebus:
jesusneverexisted.com/ignatius.html
Got side-tracked into christian fictions, as it's more exciting than bollywho. But back to the point. Kareena's catholic side (she attends mass at a church that her fellow catholics attend) is attested. Her Hindu side is not. (Will not count any new-ageisms on her part.)
Specifically, communion is a part of every catholic mass. IIRC, in catholicism, only the baptised may receive communion. (Which would mean Kareena, like Karisma, is baptised. And which would further underline the christianism of their mother Babita: not a "half-christian"/half-baked christian after all, but a full catholic.)
Kareena is a christian (at most a christian hybrid, which still does not bode well for any new-agey "Hindu" elements to her) who converted to islam after marrying Saif-Ali Khan, while Amrita's similar conversion to islam when she married Khan merely meant she converted into her mother's religion.
Personally, I think marriages between christian - esp. catholic - women and islamic men in India (such as that of Malaika and Kareena) is not only a "wonderful testimony" to secularism - as christomedia might say - but also reflects the close ideological bond christoislamism has in India. Also am of the opinion that precisely such hook-ups should be encouraged in India. Films like that Ghajjini, which Tarun Vijay went gaga over and which featured the catholic Syrian actress and some Khan, seems to have encouraged more such pairings. :yay:
Hindus need not lament Amrita returning to her mother's islam or Kareena returning fully to monotheism (whether Kareena is not allowed to attend catholic mass anymore is not relevant to Hindus). Neither really concerns Hindoos.
"Jaffa". Israeli movie. Not watched it, but came across summary. The "romantic" couple here is - wait for it - islamic male and Jewish female.
That curious combination, which is a tell-tale sign of social engineering was lost to the person who made the following comment (taken off imdb) but the comment is otherwise informative: apparently this is the sort of trash that Israeli leftists like to make up. Sounds like the Indian left and out-and-out christoislamics.
Quote:Excellent movie, while totally unrealistic.
Author: vivarto
15 July 2012
Leftist Israelis make up this fantasies. They invent a fake reality of Arab - Israeli love and understanding. In this respect this movie is just like the the "Egyptian Band".
In reality in Jaffa nobody calls Israeli Arabs "Palestinians" both Jews and Arabs refer to them as "Arabs".
The marriages between Arabs and Jews are rare, and only extremely rare survive beyond just a few years.
The hope that this movie is trying to instill in the hearts of the naive viewers is false.
In summary: a tragic waste of talent to make such a false movie.
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2. Came across an impassioned indiafacts article some time back about some Khan who married Kareena Kapoor (they are both some of the ugliest looking-actors I've ever seen - and I've seen *way* too many of this sort from India - so they deserve each other). Oh yes, Saif-Ali Khan was his name - the spawn of Tagore's progeny (nee Sharmila Tagore) and some islamaniac cricketer who was still playing royalty in India. [Islamaniacs should go back to Iran/Arabia, and channel emir/sultan/khalif haroon-al-rashid/whatever there.]
For some reason the indiafacts article imagined that Saif Ali Khan's 2 wives mattered at all. Sure, they converted to islamania upon marrying him, just as his mother (of Hindu ancestry once-upon-a-time) did upon marrying his dad, but whereas the last at least is some reason for Hindu vocalist writers to add their two cents, Saif's 2 wives converting isn't.
Here's the article that wasted its breath:
indiafacts.co.in/open-letter-saif-ali-khan-must-pataudi-brides-convert-islam-marry/
By IndiaFacts Staff Distortion & Appropriation, Media October 16, 2014
Open Letter to Saif Ali Khan: Why must Pataudi brides convert to Islam to marry?
a. Wife #1 was one Amrita Singh. She was a Sikh who, as revealed in the article, converted to islam upon marrying Saif-Ali Khan. When the two split up, she seemed to have remained in islam.
Does it really matter, when her mother was a muslim?
So she merely had a stint at her dad's Sikhism for the first half of her life and then her mum's islam for the latter half.
(Perhaps she also figured that one invisible mono-deity is as invisible and as mono as the other.)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amrita_Singh
Quote:Amrita Singh
Early life
Amrita was born to a Sikh family, raised as a Sikh. She is the daughter of Rukhsana Sultana, who was a political activist and Shavinder Singh, who was an army officer. She is the granddaughter of The Hon Sardar Bahadur Sir Sobha Singh, OBE, of Hadali, Sargodha, Punjab.
Her maternal grandmother Zarina, was the elder sister of actor Begum Para, mother of actor Ayub Khan. She was also the daughter of Mian Ehsan Ul Haque, who came from a landowning family. He was a judge and the Chief Justice of the highest court in the princely state of Bikaner, northern Rajasthan. Through her father, she is a relative of novelist Khushwant Singh and businessman Sir Sobha Singh of Naya Delhi.
She attended Modern School in New Delhi and is fluent in the English, Punjabi and Hindi languages.[3]
(And isn't Khushwant Singh that famous secular who likes to take jabs at Hindus now and again?)
Here's Amrita Singh's islamic cousin - from the maternal side - and her own mother:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayub_Khan_(actor)
Quote:Ayub Khan (actor)
Religion Islam
Spouse(s) Niharika Khan
Children Tahura / Zohra
Parents Nasir Khan
Begum Para
Ayub Khan (born February 23, 1969) is an Indian film and television actor, most known for TV series, Uttaran (2008ââ¬âPresent) . He is the son of actor Nasir Khan and Begum Para.[1] His father was the brother of actor Dilip Kumar.[2] His mother was the maternal aunt of Amrita Singh's mother Rukhsana Sultana.
Born to former 1950s actress Begum Para and actor Nasir Khan. His mother's sister Zarina is the mother of Rukhsana Sultana, mother of actress Amrita Singh.[3]
Ayub Khan is married to costume designer Niharika Khan, known for films like Rock On!! (2008) and The Dirty Picture (2011). They met while in college. When Niharika left to the US for her studies, they married other people. After 11 years they divorced and married each other.[4][5]
Filmography
Ayub Khan's wife is a hybrid Parsi and "Punjabi" of some kind (whenever a hybrid marries into christoislam, any Hindu or even Sikh ancestry becomes irrelevant and is merely denoted by regional indicator. In fact, for John Abraham, he referred even to his Parsi ancestry as Iranian/Persian while sticking to his catholic half as "catholic".)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niharika_Khan
Quote:Niharika Khan
Niharika Khan is an Indian costume designer who works in Hindi cinema (Bollywood), and is most known for her work in Rock On!! (2008) and The Dirty Picture (2011), for which she won the National Film Award for Best Costume Design as well as Filmfare Award for Best Costume Design.
Early life and education
Born to parents Punjabi and Parsi, Khan did her masters in public relations and HR from Seattle, US.[1]
Back to Amrita's islamic mum:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rukhsana_Sultana
Quote:Rukhsana Sultana
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rukshana Sultana promoted and motivated people in the Sanjay Gandhiââ¬â¢s "Indiri Bachaoââ¬Â a sterilisation programme in Delhi's politically hypersensitive Muslim quarters around Jama Masjid during the Emergency period in India. Rukshana was a boutique owner before she started working closely with Sanjay Gandhi[1] She induced 13,000 vasectomies in less than a year, the campaign erupted in rioting and violent clashes with the police and resulted in bloody deaths.[2] Rukshana was referred as Sanjay Gandhiââ¬â¢s right hand.[3]
Family
Sultana's mother, Zarina, was the daughter of Mian Ehsan-ul-haque, the Chief Justice of the princely state of Bikaner in northern Rajasthan. He came from a landowning family, originally from Jalandhar, Punjab. Sultana's maternal aunt (her mother's younger sister) was actress Begum Para,
Sultana, a Muslim by birth, married Shivinder Singh, a Sikh army officer. He is the nephew of the novelist Khushwant Singh and the grandson of construction magnate Sir Sobha Singh of Lahore. Their only child is the actress Amrita Singh, ex-wife of the actor Saif Ali Khan.
Anyway, despite the Zoroastrian first-name of Amrita's mother - which Zoroastrian name was turned into merely "Iranian" after islam invaded India (hence Shah-Rukh and Rukhshana names are used by islamics), Amrita Singh's mother is in fact a muslim with a very islamic ancestry.
So Amrita's family essentially consists of people dilly-dallying between Sikhism and islam. So Amrita's move back into islam should be seen in that light.
And why *Hindu* nationalists should care - with half-baked info too - is beyond me.
b. The second wife of Saif Ali Khan was - as is typical of India's islamic actors in general - of another infidel variety: Kareena Kapoor.
Once more, the indiafacts staff member(s) who wrote the article questioning Saif-Ali Khan's requirement that his wives convert to islam (like his psecular anti-Hinduised mother was expected to), without his islamic family ever reciprocating of course, were taking unnecessary interest in Kareena's conversion.
As already stated before, she's not really a Hindu. Her mother, one "Babita" is actually christian despite having had a Hindu dad. (You know, the way Lara Dutta, Malaika Arora, etc etc are catholic christians like their mothers, despite having "Hindu" dads.) Moreover, from the way wackypedia has phrased it below, it seems like Babita is an Anglo-Indian to boot: having an English mother (which appears to explain why Kareena and Karisma look like that other Anglo-"Indian" Katrina Kaif, whose face also goes on and on.)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babita
Quote:Babita
Babita Shivdasani (or Bhambhani) born 20 April 1948,[2][3][4][5] in Mumbai, is a former Bollywood actress. Babita was born to actor Hari Shivdasani, who was from a Sindhi family that migrated from Pakistan to India, while her mother is an English British national. Babita is the wife of actor Randhir Kapoor, and the eldest daughter-in-law of actor Raj Kapoor. She is also great-daughter-in-law of actor Prithviraj Kapoor. Her daughters are actresses Karisma Kapoor and Kareena Kapoor.
Babita was born to actor Hari Shivdasani, who was of a Hindu Sindhi family, and a Christian mother.[6] Shivdasani organized a screen test for her with veteran producer G.P. Sippy. He liked her screen test and gave her the opportunity to star in his film. She is the cousin of yesteryear actress Sadhana.
Career
She married Randhir Kapoor on 6 November 1971.[citation needed] After their marriage, Babita had to leave the film industry, as part of the Kapoor tradition which forbids women from acting in films. The marriage produced two children: Karisma Kapoor and Kareena Kapoor.[7][8][9]
After the birth of their daughters, their relationship was under strain and finally after a few years they separated. Babita walked out taking her daughters with her. She would eventually break the tradition for which she was forced to leave the industry. Her two daughters went on to become film stars of their generation unlike her who could never reach that kind of success.
After 20 years of separation, Babita re-united with husband Randhir Kapoor in 2007 and moved in with him.
Babita became a grandmother when elder daughter Karisma gave birth to a baby girl, Samaira Kapoor. Her second grandchild is Karishma's son Kiaan Raj Kapoor.
1. "Now, Saif-Kareena to exchange wedding vows in church". India Today. 18 October 2012. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
2. www.imdb.com/name/nm0044999/bio
3. www.iloveindia.com/bollywood/actresses/babita.html
4. cine-talkies.com/movies/bollywood-actress/babita/index.php
5. www.astrosage.com/celebrity-horoscope/babita-horoscope.asp
6. Sheeba Hasan (16 June 2009) My mother didn't like me in bikini. masala.com
7. Meena Iyer (2010-02-24). "Kareena: Yes, I eat! ââ¬â Times Of India". Articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2012-10-16.
8. "Kareena, Saif at St Andrewââ¬â¢s Church in Mumbai ââ¬â Times Of India". Articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com. 2011-12-26.
9. "Kareena, family and friends go to midnight mass at St Andrews". Mid-day.com. 2008-12-26.
Ref 6 was cited as proof of Babita's christian heritage, which seems more like full-blown christianism:
www.masala.com/my-mother-didnt-like-me-in-bikini-12806.html
Quote:With Kareena being extremely busy with her career and beau Saif Ali Khan, mom Babita has a lot of time on hand.
"She now does a lot of charity work with charitable institutions like the Mount Mary Old Age Home in Bandra and other places. She's a very giving woman. I should know. She sacrificed her own career and joys to bring up my sister and me," said the actress.
Not too many people know that Babita is half Christian.
"Her mother was a Christian and father a Sindhi. So we are as fond of the church as we're of the temple. Christmas is a big event for us," said Kareena.
Not half-christian (whatever that means), but fully christian.
Also Kareena does the typically christoislamic thing of referring to Babita's mother's religion - i.e. christian - and her father's region/sub-ethnicity as "Sindhi". I.e. Kareena doesn't recognise anything Hindu in her Sindhi grandfather on her mother's side, but does recognise the christianism of her maternal grandma. Who knows what "temples" she is fond of - possibly even some new age centre or an interfaith catholic centre like Fatima something or other.
In any case, she does visit the church. From one of those links at wackypedia:
timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/filmi-parties/bollywood/Kareena-Saif-at-St-Andrews-Church-in-Mumbai/articleshow/11242344.cms
Quote:Kareena, Saif at St Andrewââ¬â¢s Church in MumbaiExcept for Saif Ali Khan, practically all the names sound like christians and catholics in particular. ("Vishal Dadlani" will doubtless convert if he marries a christoislamic, so can include him already.)
TNN | Dec 26, 2011, 12.00AM IST
inShare
Babita with Kareena Kapoor and Saif Ali Khan
Babita with Kareena Kapoor and Saif Ali Khan
Christmas bells were ringing as the clock struck 12 and everyone gathered to attend Midnight Mass at St Andrew's Church on Saturday night.
Dressed in all black were sisters Malaika Arora Khan and Amrita Arora Ladak, who came to attend mass with mom Joyce. Another set of sisters who we spotted were Karisma Kapoor and Kareena Kapoor, who had beau Saif Ali Khan with her. Dino Morea, Deanne Pandey, Ash Chandler and girlfriend Junelia Aguiar and Viren Rasquinha also came to attend mass.
A pregnant Lara Dutta was also seen here. We also saw Sarah-Jane Dias and Vishal Dadlani on the bike, but the duo were headed elsewhere.
In any case, of Malaika Arora and the half-Scottish Lara Dutta it is well-known that they are catholics, which means the St Andrews church - despite Babita having had an English mother - is catholic not Anglican. I.e. Babita is catholic and raised Karisma and Kareena as such.
Here, another divorce case:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaika_Arora_Khan
Quote:Early life and background
Malaika Arora Khan was born in Thane, Maharashtra. Her parents divorced when she was 11 years old and the family shifted to Chembur. Her mother, Joyce Polycarp, is a Malayali Catholic and her father, Anil Arora, was a Punjabi native to the Indian border town of Fazilka. Arora worked in the Merchant Navy.[4][5][6] She is a Catholic.[7]
She completed her secondary education at Swami Vivekanand School in Chembur. Her aunt, Grace Polycarp, was the principal of the school. She is also an alumnus of the Holy Cross High School Thane where she studied until ninth grade. She completed her college education from Jai Hind College, Churchgate. She lived in Borla Society, Chembur opposite Basant Talkies before starting her modelling career.[8]
(Don't know why wackypedia lists Malaika Arora's ethnicity as "Punjabi" since her maternal half is not Punjabi, but a "Malayali" Catholic, whatever that is: it need not always be Syrian christian.) As for the surname Polycarp, it says nothing either. Polycarp is alleged to have been a 2nd century christian bishop in Smyrna (modern-day Turkey) who allegedly got martyred. Turns out he's another one of those airborne diseases: fictions. Specifically, Polycarp and Ignatius are further fictions forged as witnesses to/to prop up the fiction of jeebus:
jesusneverexisted.com/ignatius.html
Quote:Witness creation programme: "Ignatius and Polycarp" ââ¬â Twin stars in the Christian dreamscape
But what if Ignatius-cum-Polycarp is a demonstrable fabrication, the work of 2nd century Catholic Orthodoxy, seeding its own beliefs into an earlier era as "evidence" for a rebuttal to the challenge of Gnosticism, what then of this "witness to Jesus"?
[...]
Justin on Ignatius
Justin Priscus (the so-called "martyr"), writing in the mid-2nd century has not a word to say about any imperious bishop of Antioch.
A long-term resident of Ephesus, Justin records nothing of Polycarp either. Neither the celebrity martyrdoms of the dynamic duo, nor the compendium of their letters, merits a comment.
Could it be that none of the Catholic fable had been invented in Justin's day?
Got side-tracked into christian fictions, as it's more exciting than bollywho. But back to the point. Kareena's catholic side (she attends mass at a church that her fellow catholics attend) is attested. Her Hindu side is not. (Will not count any new-ageisms on her part.)
Specifically, communion is a part of every catholic mass. IIRC, in catholicism, only the baptised may receive communion. (Which would mean Kareena, like Karisma, is baptised. And which would further underline the christianism of their mother Babita: not a "half-christian"/half-baked christian after all, but a full catholic.)
Kareena is a christian (at most a christian hybrid, which still does not bode well for any new-agey "Hindu" elements to her) who converted to islam after marrying Saif-Ali Khan, while Amrita's similar conversion to islam when she married Khan merely meant she converted into her mother's religion.
Personally, I think marriages between christian - esp. catholic - women and islamic men in India (such as that of Malaika and Kareena) is not only a "wonderful testimony" to secularism - as christomedia might say - but also reflects the close ideological bond christoislamism has in India. Also am of the opinion that precisely such hook-ups should be encouraged in India. Films like that Ghajjini, which Tarun Vijay went gaga over and which featured the catholic Syrian actress and some Khan, seems to have encouraged more such pairings. :yay:
Hindus need not lament Amrita returning to her mother's islam or Kareena returning fully to monotheism (whether Kareena is not allowed to attend catholic mass anymore is not relevant to Hindus). Neither really concerns Hindoos.