Just to run off on yet another tangent here...lol *how unusual for me*
Just pondering kids having different faiths to their parents and Deb's situation with her daughter taking up an Islamic path...
I understand that you are happy with that and will support her whatever she chooses, which I think is wonderful.
With reference to the question of how do parents reconcile their children's faith if it goes in direct opposition to beliefs held by the parents. We have focused a lot on the Christian/Salvation aspect of this, but I have been musing about how I would feel if Charlotte took up path that led her to people that perhaps would have been brought up with such a singular and intolerant view of religion, or had some beliefs (be it culturally or religiously) that affected how they perceive the roles of men and women, health, children, life basically.
This isnt making sense! lol I am trying not to offend anyone. So I will just say it - please dont be offended anyone, I hope what I am asking will be clear, I am taking the thought to the enth degree here...lol
Deb, how would you feel/handle a situation where your DD continued her path as a Muslim woman, and that led her to marriage with a very strict Muslim, with views about women and their roles in family and life that were in direct opposition to yours and how you had raised her as an empowered female?
Obviously her choice in the matter is paramount and if she chooses such a path then that is wonderful for her and her happiness. But how would YOU deal with her marrying a man who believed that she should be subservient to him? Or married a man who was raised in Saudi Arabia and they returned there and its very strict laws? How would you cope if she were in a situation that she chose and accepted as how things should be if her daughters were circumcised?
Like I said, these are obvious extreme examples I am using to illustrate the point. I am by no means suggesting that Muslim men are all abusive or that the faith itself dictates some of the more sensationalised aspects of many Islamic cultures. Just trying to see the extent to which ones endurance in such a delicate personal situation could stretch.
I am not sure if I could be fully supportive of Charlotte if she put herself in a position of disempowerment to any man or faith, if that makes sense. So I suppose this is the dilema of how religion can impact cultural practice. Where it is not the faith itself that sets up a situation, but rather how that faith is interpreted and effected by those who follow it?



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as her beliefs are very anti divorce or separation. How would I handle that if this were my daughter? I would become the interfering MIL everybody hates. I couldn't just sit back and watch even if she claimed that supporting her husband in this made her happy. I would be in there with books, tracts and Bible verses to convince her that the Christianity this group preaches is not the same as that of the Bible. I would be offering real, physical assistance (he took away her car). And, of course, praying A LOT.

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