MUHSIN HENDRICKS THE WORLD'S FIRST OUT GAY IMAM DEPARTS TO THE HEAVENS AFTER BEING ASSASSINATED - RIP GAY /QUEER IMAM ANOTHER LGBTQI ๐ณ️๐๐ณ️⚧️ MARTYR
From QSTPS
We mourn and celebrate the life of Imam Muhsin Hendricks who boldly stood out as a Gay Imam hence Gay Muslim. Islam being a strict religion to some extent can lead some of its adherents to mad murderous rage due to the storage of violent religious data in the brain leading to religious inspired murders.
The cure is to replace that violent religious data with peaceful religious data asap using all media and speaking events at our disposal. That way the violent religious data will dissipate and peaceful religious data.
The Peaceful Religious Data is that God aka Melekh King ๐ Yeshua Jesus is inside everybody and is everybody and performs every action of everybody in everybody and infuses all thoughts of everybody in everybody and puts all the words of everybody in everybody's mouth.
In his 30 years of Islamic Clericalism did God send brimstone to kill him ? NO
Did Angels come and destroy him ? NO
It is God Inspired killers that killed the God Inspired Gay Imam.
This means that differences lead to murder . Different colors when they meet if they are contrasting can lead to the murder of one color or both colors.
So it is advisable to encourage similar colors to live in their countries or cities so that they don't come into contact with contrasting colors. In fact that is how the old world was. Each Nation lived in walled territory . Each Nation is a color .
At QSTPS we encourage Gays to live in Gay city States or as Gays we create our Gay Country and we occupy different occupations in our country as we encourage the birth of boys alone via IVF with importing g sperm to cities that surrogate mothers who carry the foetuses until it they are born and sent back very safely to the Gay City State/Country. Same applies to Lesbians we encourage Lesbian to live in Lesbian city States or as Lesbians wil create a Lesbian Country and occupy different occupations in their country encouraging the birth of girls alone via IVF with them importing sperms from male residing cities / countries. Being women they will use AI to enhance their security just in case not that anything can happen because when men sexually connect with men they can't think of women so security for women will be standard and not exaggerated. The vice versa is when men do not sexually connect with men or are economically disempowered ( no money no power no sex ) insecurity is high and women become more vulnerable to attacks resulting in the need to enhance security drastically.
So comfort and strength to the
Gay Imam 's partner, family, friends , LGBTQI Muslims and Believers of South Africa and the World and every ally of the LGBTQI ๐ณ️๐ ๐ณ️⚧️ Community worldwide.
Founder of QSTPS,
Arthur Owiti / Tendaishe Owiti / Owiti
From BBC
Muhsin Hendricks, a pioneering figure dubbed the world's first openly gay imam, has been shot dead in South Africa.
The 57-year-old cleric ran a mosque in Cape Town intended as a safe haven for gay and other marginalised Muslims. He was killed on Saturday morning after the car in which he was travelling near the southern city of Gqeberha was ambushed.
"Two unknown suspects with covered faces got out of the vehicle and started firing multiple shots at the vehicle," police said in a statement.
News of Hendricks' death has sent shockwaves through the LGBTQ+ community and beyond, prompting an outpouring of tributes from across the globe.
Julia Ehrt, executive director at the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (Ilga), called on the authorities to thoroughly investigate "what we fear may be a hate crime".
"He supported and mentored so many people in South Africa and around the world in their journey to reconcile with their faith, and his life has been a testament to the healing that solidarity across communities can bring in everyone's lives," she said.
Hendricks was killed after he had reportedly officiated at a lesbian wedding, though this has not been officially confirmed.
The details of the attack emerged through security footage that was shared on social media.
It shows a car pulling up and blocking the vehicle in which Hendricks was travelling as it was pulling away from the curb. According to police, the imam was in the back seat.
The angle of CCTV footage reveals what happened from one side of the road - an assailant jumps out of a car, runs to the ambushed vehicle and shoots repeatedly through the back passenger window.
Hendricks' Al-Ghurbaah Foundation, which runs the Masjidul Ghurbaah mosque in the Wynberg suburb of Cape Town, confirmed he had died in a targeted attack on Saturday morning.
But Abdulmugheeth Petersen, chair of the foundation's board, appealed via a WhatsApp group for their followers to be patient, stressing the importance of protecting Hendricks' family.
Hendricks' work challenged traditional interpretations of Islam and championed a compassionate, inclusive faith.
South Africa's post-apartheid constitution was the first in the world to protect people from discrimination because of their sexual orientation and in 2006, became the first country in Africa to legalise same-sex marriage.
But despite a thriving LGBT community, gay people still face discrimination and violence. The country also has one of the highest murder rates in the world.
Hendricks came out as gay in 1996, which shocked the wider Muslim community in Cape Town and elsewhere.
That same year, he founded The Inner Circle, an organisation providing support and a safe space for queer Muslims seeking to reconcile their faith and sexuality before going on to establish the inclusive Masjidul Ghurbaah mosque.
He was the subject of a documentary in 2022 called The Radical, in which he said about the threats he faced: "The need to be authentic was greater than the fear to die."
Hendricks often spoke about the importance of interfaith dialogue and the need to address the mental health issues and trauma faced by LGBTQ+ individuals within religious communities.
He told the Ilga World Conference in Cape Town last year: "It is important that we stop to look at religion as the enemy."
Reverend Jide Macaulay, an openly gay Anglican minister, described Hendricks' death as "truly heartbreaking".
The British-Nigerian LGBTQ rights activist runs House of Rainbow, an organisation that provides support for gay people in Nigeria where same-sex relationships or public displays of affection are illegal, and paid tribute to Hendricks' bravery.
"Your leadership, courage, and unwavering dedication to inclusive faith communities have left an indelible mark," he said.
Sadiq Lawal, a gay Muslim man living in Nigeria, told the BBC that Hendricks, had made such an impact as he had made "the impossible possible" by saying the words: "I'm a queer imam."
"He's a mentor to many queer Muslims in Africa, especially in Nigeria, because of religious extremism," he said.
"I'm still in shock and devastated."
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