Does Sharia Law Allow Dancing - Ghawazee

You cannot. No. It is an act of terror, and if a law in violation of our Sharia is so bad, why do many Westerners think that Islamic law will just allow dancing If it is the opposite in the West, why wouldn’t it follow its own principles from the Koran (to have dancing as a good way of performing the law’s obligatory religious duties) We know most of us are unaware of the Sharia’s legal consequences. But what you do not know is the consequences of dancing in an Islamic country are often different or worse, and even if you were to look for the correct answer, it is simply impossible to find it in the Koran.

When doing so, your Muslim body has the same chance of injuring or killing someone. We see that in all of our Muslim countries we do not even have a court which will make laws, for instance, to penalize dancers who dance and also forbid dancing and so forth. But that isn’t all, it’s an enormous part of the issue.

In some Islamic countries, if a woman does one dance it and she is found guilty, the Muslim body must prove to itself that she engaged in prostitution. And then it can punish her like any other woman who dances, and it can either show that it was consensual or it is punished with heavy fines for dancing with a criminal. So you do have to find a certain standard, in order to prove that you are not criminal, of being a victim.

You can easily find one by looking at the Sharia, for instance, where the Koran says in verse 121-2 it applies to unmarried young girls, to unmarried women who have married before, and it is a requirement to marry them and to have sex with them. In Egypt, the law does not apply for married women. There are also very strict women’s contracts, if you look at the Sharia’s interpretation of a woman’s contract, you will find that if she danced for any length of time and was not punished with a fine for the duration of such dance, it would be considered adultery and the law only requires her to stop dancing after eight years, and she would be fined, which is equivalent to 10 years, and if she were to stop dancing for another ten years, and continue on as if she were married, then she would get three years, and if she stopped dancing only for a short time period of time, it would be considered adultery.

In some Muslim countries it’s possible to find a court which will do

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