Assalamu alaikum
This is one of the best recitations of surah Saffat you can find online. Alhamdulillah I have finally uploaded it; I had wanted to do it for a while but technical problems kept getting in the way... anyway the reciter is Sheikh Shuraim. Jazakallah Khair for watching, and don't forget to go to the pages and rate/comment/favorite/whatever. Part 1:
Part 2:
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Likes and dislikes about (World Cup) soccer
Assalamu alaikum
It's been a while, but it's the summer and I'm back and my period of, uh, hibernation seems to be over. Anyway, with all the World Cup hype (unfortunately no successful Muslim teams) I decided to make a list of things I like and dislike about World Cup soccer. It might surprise, or annoy, you that most of the things that I like are about soccer in general and many of the things I don't like are about the World Cup. Here we go....
LIKES
Assalamu Alaikum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh
It's been a while, but it's the summer and I'm back and my period of, uh, hibernation seems to be over. Anyway, with all the World Cup hype (unfortunately no successful Muslim teams) I decided to make a list of things I like and dislike about World Cup soccer. It might surprise, or annoy, you that most of the things that I like are about soccer in general and many of the things I don't like are about the World Cup. Here we go....
LIKES
- Easy, fun, accessible game
- Most popular sport in the world
- No advertising breaks, no timeouts
- Indiscriminate selection of World Cup host countries (Europe, East Asia, Africa, Americas, etc. It could be argued that Europe gets a lot though)
- No need for certain climates in host selection. For example, the Winter Olympics are always in cold climates and the Superbowl is always played in a warm city in the south. But the World Cup is played in all climates. Some 2010 South Africa games were played in freezing temperatures, as it is winter in the Southern Hemisphere.
- Many different leagues. This can be a good thing or a bad thing- see below for the bad. The good is that we get a variety of different players from a variety of different leagues and there's a league for every skill level (Premier League, La Liga, Serie A, et cetera). In other sports, like ice hockey, one league has a monopoly as the top league in the world - the NHL.
- The continuous clock. Why can't they just pause the clock if there's a delay and end the game at 90:00 sharp instead of having to worry about "stoppage time" in which the game ends abruptly at, say, 92:48? It makes it much more convenient.
- Terrible refereeing at the 2010 World Cup - they should have more referees (the field is huge, they need to cover it) and video review. If the technology is available, why not use it? Besides, humans are humans and humans make mistakes. There have been too many so far in this World Cup and video review is necessary. Bad offside calls, disallowed goals, the list goes on.
- Overtime - "golden goal" vs "silver goal." A silver goal (used in the World Cup) means a goal in OT is just a goal - it changes the score but the game goes on and the other team can still come back and win. A golden goal means sudden death - if you score, you win, and if no one does after a certain amount of allotted time, you go into a shootout. I like this because it adds drama and excitement to the game and makes a goal more, uh, what's the word.... epic. Scenario one: Rodriguez Fernando (made-up name) scores in OT of the World Cup final and goes crazy, knowing his team won. Scenario two: Rodriguez Fernando scores in OT of the World Cup final, but has to wait another 22 minutes until he realizes his team won. Even then the "stoppage time" dilemma creates more confusion. Scenario three: Rodriguez Fernando scores in OT of the World Cup final, but the celebration is dampened when the opposing team scores four minutes later. They score again and win the Cup (or win in a shootout). See what I mean? Scenario one would be the most wildly celebrated, and as soon as he found the back of the net he would know he just scored the biggest goal of his life.
- Too many players on the field. This leads to difficulty penetrating the defense and low-scoring games (despite the 24 ft by 8 ft goal) that can be boring at times. "Argentina passes the ball around... they try to get it deep but a German defender steals it and passes it up the field.... Germany passes the ball around... they try to get it deep but an Argentine defender steals it and passes it up the field.... Argentina passes the ball..." I think you get the point. If it was 7 on 7 or even as radically low as 5 on 5, there would be a lot more scoring chances and the game would be more fast-paced, exciting and high-scoring (8-7 instead of 1-0?). This is probably why Americans don't like soccer much, because they're used to scores like 33-27 (American football), 112-105 (basketball), et cetera.
- Too many leagues. I already said this adds variety to the sport, but it's a little too much sometimes. Too much going on, too many teams, and too many players to follow. And fans would like to see big teams from different leagues face each other more. I believe the top teams (i.e. league champions) from the top leagues only face each other once in a UEFA tournament.
- Dominance of certain teams in their respective leagues. Manchester dominates the Premier League, Madrid & Barcelona dominate La Liga, and this gets boring as they win the championship year after year. Maybe a draft would help even things out.
- The strange, irregular balls they use in the 2010 World Cup. Why can't they just use normal ones instead of ones that have different and unpredictable paths?
- Ending matches in a draw. Come on, let's go to overtime and decide who wins!
- Expensive tickets that are hard to get. This leads to a considerable amount of empty seats in World Cup games. If they lowered the price they would sell more (it's Africa, not Luxembourg).
- Those annoying vuvuzelas! I can't get the noise out of my head! Like a swarm of bees!
Assalamu Alaikum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh
Friday, November 27, 2009
Eid-ul-Adha Mubarak
Assalamu alaikum
This Hajj, the media over here was buzzing over H1N1, and a hundred cases were confirmed with 4 deaths. The people who were confirmed were taken to a hospital and quarantined. They were unable to complete the Hajj. I feel soooo bad for them. They put so much time and effort and money into it, and it came out to staring at a hospital ceiling... but hey, Allah's hand is in everything. Another inspiring story is of a woman from Gaza, Safia al-Shrafi, who planned to do the Hajj last year but her plans were ruined when her husband was killed in the war/siege/holocaust that took place. Aljazeera covered her story:
I can remember back to when I completed Hajj three years ago, Alhamdulillah. In Sha Allah I'll talk about that in a later post. Anyway, if you completed Hajj this year, then congratulations. If you haven't yet, than may Allah help you in completing it soon, In Sha Allah. And for everyone, I wish you a safe and happy Eid-ul-Adha!
Salaam,
This Hajj, the media over here was buzzing over H1N1, and a hundred cases were confirmed with 4 deaths. The people who were confirmed were taken to a hospital and quarantined. They were unable to complete the Hajj. I feel soooo bad for them. They put so much time and effort and money into it, and it came out to staring at a hospital ceiling... but hey, Allah's hand is in everything. Another inspiring story is of a woman from Gaza, Safia al-Shrafi, who planned to do the Hajj last year but her plans were ruined when her husband was killed in the war/siege/holocaust that took place. Aljazeera covered her story:
I can remember back to when I completed Hajj three years ago, Alhamdulillah. In Sha Allah I'll talk about that in a later post. Anyway, if you completed Hajj this year, then congratulations. If you haven't yet, than may Allah help you in completing it soon, In Sha Allah. And for everyone, I wish you a safe and happy Eid-ul-Adha!
Salaam,
Monday, November 16, 2009
The Importance of Sabr
Salaam
Sabr, or patience, is a very important trait that, unfortunately, many Muslims fail to comprehend. On average, we yell the loudest, punch the hardest, and are pretty much the most immature out of every other race/religion in the whole world. What a sad tale.
The other day, I was at the Masjid and there was an event going on. There are two main rooms, a banquet hall and a prayer hall where the actual prayer goes on. Both have glass doors and are right in front of each other, so it's easy to see what's going on. Here's a very crude Microsoft Paint depiction of the place, with green being the prayer hall (the arrow is the Qiblah direction), red being the banquet hall and yellow the glass doors.

In the banquet hall, there was some sort of community meeting and I was also present. Isha was at 8 pm. At adhaan time, the meeting was still going on. Some people had started to gather in the prayer hall and gave the adhaan while someone was talking. The meeting was delayed for a little bit, but a man went into the prayer hall and turned off the mike. 5 minutes later, while the meeting was wrapping up, the people who had gathered in the prayer hall started a Jama'ah without consulting the Imam, who was in the meeting. The mike was turned off the whole time, and the ladies couldn't hear a thing over in the women's side.
The Imam and everyone else who was present at the meeting went into the Masjid when the prayers were in the last Rak'ah. As soon as they finished, a man, let's call him Dr. X (even though that's not his name), went up and asked them... well, more like told them to go to the back so they could have a second Jama'ah - without even waiting a single second. One of the people who had been praying, let's call him Red-shirt White-beard (you can probably find out his appearance from that) got extremely angry.
If you have seen an argument, you know what it looks like. Two people begin talking and each wants to cut each other off louder than the other and the volume soars. But this was no normal fight. Immediately, Red-Shirt White-beard, or RW, began to yell and a lot of people began to yell back. This is what he said:
"What!!! You're trying to tell us to go in the back????? We didn't even get a chance to say Subhanallah!!!!" By this he meant he didn't get a chance to finish saying "Subhanallah" 33 times, yet alone start "Al Hamdulillah" or "Allahu Akbar" 33 and 34 times respectively. The volume kep rising. "Don't tell me to go back!!!!!!!! You get out of the Masjid!!!!!!!!" By "you" he meant Dr. X - who was also saying something but we couldn't hear over RW. "This isn't your Masjid, Dr. X!!! You can't make me do anything!!!!"
Everyone in the Masjid had their head turned in that direction, and a crowd was gathering around trying to make sure that RW didn't really blow it. The last thing we needed was blood on the carpet. Dr. X came forward and put his hand on RW, who was still sitting down in prayer position. Big mistake. RW exploded. "GET YOUR HAND OFF ME!!!!!!!!!!! DON'T TOUCH ME, DR. X!!!!!!! IT'S NOT YOUR MASJID!!!!!!!!!"
As RW caught his breath, Dr. X finally had a chance to say something. "It is my Masjid, it's all our Masjid. You have been coming here for only two months now; I've been here for years!"
RW stood up and began to argue back. "I come here for Isha every day! Every day! I don't see anyone else who is here right now in Isha- no one. Not you, not you, you..." at this point he pointed at couple people, including me. "Look at the time for Isha!" He pointed to a sign on the wall that had all the timings written on it. "8 o'clock! Look at the time now." It was, as far as I can remember, 8:17 or so.
RW had by now gotten up close and personal with Dr. X and pointed his finger close to his face. "It's not your Masjid, Dr. X!!!"
Now a man who had been standing next to me watching the fight spoke up as RW was leaving the prayer hall. "SHUTUP!!!!!!!!" He screamed it. Another guy nearby told him to cool it in a very, uh, unsubtle manner.
RW was walking toward the exit in the back, but he wasn't done yet. He pointed at Dr. X. "Enjoy your Masjid, Dr. X!!! I hope you do, because I'm never coming here ever again!!!"
When RW was finally gone, Dr. X said, "Someone who has only been coming here for only two months or so can't think that's he's the boss." The Imam went up to his area, and everyone else lined up. But he had a quick word to say, too.
"Arguing and raising your voice in the Masjid is forbidden in Islam, people. We should always keep that in mind." I couldn't agree more. Once the prayer was over, he added an extra two percent. "When there's an event in the Banquet Hall going on, you shouldn't start a Jama'ah without consulting me. We'll try to wrap things up as quick as possible and come and pray as a group. One time the Prophet, Peace Be Upon Him, delayed the Jama'ah so much some of the Sahabah were left waiting for hours. So always check with the Imam before starting if there's an event going on in the Banquet Hall."
I'm not saying anyone that night was an angel. Dr. X and others should have waited a bit before jumping up and asking.... I mean telling the other people to go to the back. And RW was just paranoid. The man who yelled "shutup" didn't help put out the fire, either. In fact, he just fueled the flames. He could have tried to resolve the situation a little instead of making it worse. As for RW's behavior, I have no comment. He's a grown, mature man and it's people like him who are representing Islam in America today. What a shame.
There were kids present on that day, too. What did they learn? To yell and scream? Or to be polite? What will they do when they're older?
I'd like to end this very long post with a few ahaadith.
-------------------------
At this point the Prophet got up. Abu Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) asked him, “Are you displeased with me, O Messenger of Allah?” The Prophet replied, “No, but (when you remained silent) an angel came down from the heaven responding to this man’s talk. But the moment you started replying to that man, the angel went away and the devil sat down. And I cannot sit where the devil is sitting.” Abu Dawood 041 4878.
------------------------
Abu Hurairah (May Allah be pleased with him) reported: Messenger of Allah (PBUH) said, "The strong man is not one who is good at wrestling, but the strong man is one who controls himself in a fit of rage.'' (Al-Bukhari and Muslim).
------------------------
Sulaiman bin Surad (May Allah be pleased with him) reported: I was sitting with the Prophet (PBUH) when two men began to quarrel and curse each other and the face of one of them turned red and the veins of his neck were swollen (from rage). Messenger of Allah (PBUH) said, "I know of a word, if he were to utter that, his rage would vanish and that is: Audhu billahi minash-Shaitan ir-rajim (I seek refuge with Allah from Satan, the accursed).'' So they (Companions) said to him: "The Prophet (PBUH) tells you to utter: 'I seek refuge with Allah from Satan, the accursed". (Al-Bukhari and Muslim).
------------------------
Abu Hurairah (May Allah be pleased with him) reported: A man asked the Prophet (PBUH) for an advice and he (PBUH) said, "Do not get angry". The man repeated that several times and he replied, "Do not get angry". (Al-Bukhari).
-----------------------
In the end, it's the Muslims who are at loss... because of our own actions! We need to set examples instead of being sore thumbs. Patience, or Sabr, is an important quality that every single one of us needs to work on. Don't say you're "patient" already. RW probably thought he had all the patience in the world. Let's try to actually practice our religion, for a change.
Salaam
Sabr, or patience, is a very important trait that, unfortunately, many Muslims fail to comprehend. On average, we yell the loudest, punch the hardest, and are pretty much the most immature out of every other race/religion in the whole world. What a sad tale.
The other day, I was at the Masjid and there was an event going on. There are two main rooms, a banquet hall and a prayer hall where the actual prayer goes on. Both have glass doors and are right in front of each other, so it's easy to see what's going on. Here's a very crude Microsoft Paint depiction of the place, with green being the prayer hall (the arrow is the Qiblah direction), red being the banquet hall and yellow the glass doors.

In the banquet hall, there was some sort of community meeting and I was also present. Isha was at 8 pm. At adhaan time, the meeting was still going on. Some people had started to gather in the prayer hall and gave the adhaan while someone was talking. The meeting was delayed for a little bit, but a man went into the prayer hall and turned off the mike. 5 minutes later, while the meeting was wrapping up, the people who had gathered in the prayer hall started a Jama'ah without consulting the Imam, who was in the meeting. The mike was turned off the whole time, and the ladies couldn't hear a thing over in the women's side.
The Imam and everyone else who was present at the meeting went into the Masjid when the prayers were in the last Rak'ah. As soon as they finished, a man, let's call him Dr. X (even though that's not his name), went up and asked them... well, more like told them to go to the back so they could have a second Jama'ah - without even waiting a single second. One of the people who had been praying, let's call him Red-shirt White-beard (you can probably find out his appearance from that) got extremely angry.
If you have seen an argument, you know what it looks like. Two people begin talking and each wants to cut each other off louder than the other and the volume soars. But this was no normal fight. Immediately, Red-Shirt White-beard, or RW, began to yell and a lot of people began to yell back. This is what he said:
"What!!! You're trying to tell us to go in the back????? We didn't even get a chance to say Subhanallah!!!!" By this he meant he didn't get a chance to finish saying "Subhanallah" 33 times, yet alone start "Al Hamdulillah" or "Allahu Akbar" 33 and 34 times respectively. The volume kep rising. "Don't tell me to go back!!!!!!!! You get out of the Masjid!!!!!!!!" By "you" he meant Dr. X - who was also saying something but we couldn't hear over RW. "This isn't your Masjid, Dr. X!!! You can't make me do anything!!!!"
Everyone in the Masjid had their head turned in that direction, and a crowd was gathering around trying to make sure that RW didn't really blow it. The last thing we needed was blood on the carpet. Dr. X came forward and put his hand on RW, who was still sitting down in prayer position. Big mistake. RW exploded. "GET YOUR HAND OFF ME!!!!!!!!!!! DON'T TOUCH ME, DR. X!!!!!!! IT'S NOT YOUR MASJID!!!!!!!!!"
As RW caught his breath, Dr. X finally had a chance to say something. "It is my Masjid, it's all our Masjid. You have been coming here for only two months now; I've been here for years!"
RW stood up and began to argue back. "I come here for Isha every day! Every day! I don't see anyone else who is here right now in Isha- no one. Not you, not you, you..." at this point he pointed at couple people, including me. "Look at the time for Isha!" He pointed to a sign on the wall that had all the timings written on it. "8 o'clock! Look at the time now." It was, as far as I can remember, 8:17 or so.
RW had by now gotten up close and personal with Dr. X and pointed his finger close to his face. "It's not your Masjid, Dr. X!!!"
Now a man who had been standing next to me watching the fight spoke up as RW was leaving the prayer hall. "SHUTUP!!!!!!!!" He screamed it. Another guy nearby told him to cool it in a very, uh, unsubtle manner.
RW was walking toward the exit in the back, but he wasn't done yet. He pointed at Dr. X. "Enjoy your Masjid, Dr. X!!! I hope you do, because I'm never coming here ever again!!!"
When RW was finally gone, Dr. X said, "Someone who has only been coming here for only two months or so can't think that's he's the boss." The Imam went up to his area, and everyone else lined up. But he had a quick word to say, too.
"Arguing and raising your voice in the Masjid is forbidden in Islam, people. We should always keep that in mind." I couldn't agree more. Once the prayer was over, he added an extra two percent. "When there's an event in the Banquet Hall going on, you shouldn't start a Jama'ah without consulting me. We'll try to wrap things up as quick as possible and come and pray as a group. One time the Prophet, Peace Be Upon Him, delayed the Jama'ah so much some of the Sahabah were left waiting for hours. So always check with the Imam before starting if there's an event going on in the Banquet Hall."
I'm not saying anyone that night was an angel. Dr. X and others should have waited a bit before jumping up and asking.... I mean telling the other people to go to the back. And RW was just paranoid. The man who yelled "shutup" didn't help put out the fire, either. In fact, he just fueled the flames. He could have tried to resolve the situation a little instead of making it worse. As for RW's behavior, I have no comment. He's a grown, mature man and it's people like him who are representing Islam in America today. What a shame.
There were kids present on that day, too. What did they learn? To yell and scream? Or to be polite? What will they do when they're older?
I'd like to end this very long post with a few ahaadith.
-------------------------
“I guarantee a house in Jannah (Paradise) for one who gives up arguing, even if he is in the right; and I guarantee a house in the middle of Jannah for one who abandons lying even when joking / for the sake of fun; and I guarantee a house in the highest part of Jannah for one who has good manners.” (Prophet Muhammad (صلي الله عليه وسلم) - reported by Imam Abu Dawud)
----------------------------------
At this point the Prophet got up. Abu Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) asked him, “Are you displeased with me, O Messenger of Allah?” The Prophet replied, “No, but (when you remained silent) an angel came down from the heaven responding to this man’s talk. But the moment you started replying to that man, the angel went away and the devil sat down. And I cannot sit where the devil is sitting.” Abu Dawood 041 4878.
------------------------
Abu Hurairah (May Allah be pleased with him) reported: Messenger of Allah (PBUH) said, "The strong man is not one who is good at wrestling, but the strong man is one who controls himself in a fit of rage.'' (Al-Bukhari and Muslim).
------------------------
Sulaiman bin Surad (May Allah be pleased with him) reported: I was sitting with the Prophet (PBUH) when two men began to quarrel and curse each other and the face of one of them turned red and the veins of his neck were swollen (from rage). Messenger of Allah (PBUH) said, "I know of a word, if he were to utter that, his rage would vanish and that is: Audhu billahi minash-Shaitan ir-rajim (I seek refuge with Allah from Satan, the accursed).'' So they (Companions) said to him: "The Prophet (PBUH) tells you to utter: 'I seek refuge with Allah from Satan, the accursed". (Al-Bukhari and Muslim).
------------------------
Abu Hurairah (May Allah be pleased with him) reported: A man asked the Prophet (PBUH) for an advice and he (PBUH) said, "Do not get angry". The man repeated that several times and he replied, "Do not get angry". (Al-Bukhari).
-----------------------
In the end, it's the Muslims who are at loss... because of our own actions! We need to set examples instead of being sore thumbs. Patience, or Sabr, is an important quality that every single one of us needs to work on. Don't say you're "patient" already. RW probably thought he had all the patience in the world. Let's try to actually practice our religion, for a change.
Salaam
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Surah Yousuf part 3
Here's the video. Sorry I hadn't updated in a while; I'm still getting used to the new version of Windows Movie Maker.
Salaam
Salaam
Monday, September 21, 2009
Eid is finally here!
Salaam!
Yeah, you bet I've been waiting. That's all I have to say for now. See ya.
Yeah, you bet I've been waiting. That's all I have to say for now. See ya.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Muslims getting...
...fatter. Yeah, it's true.
Yesterday (or was it the day before?) I was reading Taraweeh in a local Masjid, and I noticed that Muslims in America are a bit.... uh.... overweight. I'm serious. We eat too much. I wonder if they eat that much in Muslim countries.
Well, back to what I was talking about. I was reading Taraweeh, and who would have thought, there was a fat guy next to me. And a REALLY fat guy on the left. I was sandwiched, and my arms were really tight and pressed against the sides of my body, I had to lean back with my feet still lined up with their's just to get some relief (putting pressure on my heels which was not comfortable at ALL), my arms were being pushed in during Sujood, and the list goes on and on and on and on....
The average per capita calorie consumption in America (according to 2007 data) is 4000 (it's actually 3990, but what difference does 10 calories make? I probably burned 10 calories writing this post). Now, two years later, it's probably well over that. And I have a feeling that this country's 7,000,000 million Muslims (mainly the immigrants - 5,000,000 are immigrants or descended from immigrants, the rest are converted) are contributing a LOT to that number. Among Muslims, it's probably 5,000. Or maybe 6 or 7,000. See ya later, Mr. 8000-calorie-diet Michael Phelps. Your days are over. An American Muslim could beat that any day. Even in Ramadan.
Kareem, trade in the burger for a salad. Not to mention you got it at McDonald's, so it's HARAAM. Habeeb, drink an orange juice instead of a soda. Fatima, lose the french fries. Start eating healthy foods, people! Your future depends on it! Haven't you heard of cholesterol? But that's not the point. The point is, when you eat fatty foods, or large amounts of food, or both (the most popular choice), you get REALLY fat and your going to end up bothering the person next to you in Salaah or Taraweeh or something else like that. Then he/she will go to his/her blog which gets 3 views a day (more like a week. Possibly even a year!) and right an article similar to this one. So throw out that hot dog you're chowing down on (you got ketchup on the computer) and go eat an apple. NOW. Unless you're fasting. I assume you're not, because you wouldn't have been eating a hot dog.
Salaam

Yesterday (or was it the day before?) I was reading Taraweeh in a local Masjid, and I noticed that Muslims in America are a bit.... uh.... overweight. I'm serious. We eat too much. I wonder if they eat that much in Muslim countries.
Well, back to what I was talking about. I was reading Taraweeh, and who would have thought, there was a fat guy next to me. And a REALLY fat guy on the left. I was sandwiched, and my arms were really tight and pressed against the sides of my body, I had to lean back with my feet still lined up with their's just to get some relief (putting pressure on my heels which was not comfortable at ALL), my arms were being pushed in during Sujood, and the list goes on and on and on and on....
The average per capita calorie consumption in America (according to 2007 data) is 4000 (it's actually 3990, but what difference does 10 calories make? I probably burned 10 calories writing this post). Now, two years later, it's probably well over that. And I have a feeling that this country's 7,000,000 million Muslims (mainly the immigrants - 5,000,000 are immigrants or descended from immigrants, the rest are converted) are contributing a LOT to that number. Among Muslims, it's probably 5,000. Or maybe 6 or 7,000. See ya later, Mr. 8000-calorie-diet Michael Phelps. Your days are over. An American Muslim could beat that any day. Even in Ramadan.
Kareem, trade in the burger for a salad. Not to mention you got it at McDonald's, so it's HARAAM. Habeeb, drink an orange juice instead of a soda. Fatima, lose the french fries. Start eating healthy foods, people! Your future depends on it! Haven't you heard of cholesterol? But that's not the point. The point is, when you eat fatty foods, or large amounts of food, or both (the most popular choice), you get REALLY fat and your going to end up bothering the person next to you in Salaah or Taraweeh or something else like that. Then he/she will go to his/her blog which gets 3 views a day (more like a week. Possibly even a year!) and right an article similar to this one. So throw out that hot dog you're chowing down on (you got ketchup on the computer) and go eat an apple. NOW. Unless you're fasting. I assume you're not, because you wouldn't have been eating a hot dog.
Salaam

Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)