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Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) - Politics (2) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) (8069 Views)

Aisha Ahmad, Ahmed Kuru May Replace Godwin Emefiele As CBN Governor / Senate Confirms Aisha Ahmad And Edward Adamu As CBN Deputy Governors / Senate Suspends Confirmation Of Aisha Ahmad As CBN Deputy Governor (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Nobody: 7:28pm On Oct 08, 2017
Throwback:


Thankgod Diamond bank is owned by an Igboman and managed by Igbos.

So you are saying an Igboman allowed this abracadabra to happen? Why will Diamond bank promote a Northerner to a position she is not qualified, in a bid to take up a CBN appointment that is the uncontested birthright of the Igbos?
Diamonds bank is not owned by an igbo man, in fact no back is owned by a single individual. However, an igbo man might own the highest number of shares and sit on the board of directors as chairman
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by SalamRushdie: 7:33pm On Oct 08, 2017
zinizta:
Do You Know What It Takes To Be An Associate Member Of The Institute - CFA. Of Course, You Don'T Know Much About This Topic You Are Meddling With.

And how does that amount to Fiscal and monetary experience abeg? Your madam is not qualified for the post jare but since any thing goes in Nigeria let her enjoy
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by zinizta: 7:53pm On Oct 08, 2017
SalamRushdie:


And how does that amount to Fiscal and monetary experience abeg? Your madam is not qualified for the post jare but since any thing goes in Nigeria let her enjoy
No Vex O. Na Which School U Graduate From?
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Nobody: 8:03pm On Oct 08, 2017
SalamRushdie:


And how does that amount to Fiscal and monetary experience abeg? Your madam is not qualified for the post jare but since any thing goes in Nigeria let her enjoy

Bro, i'm quitting the forum o. It would be an honor to have your whatsapp contact, can i PM you and we exchange contacts ?
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by fabre4: 8:17pm On Oct 08, 2017
Danladi7:


Igbo are emotional.

They are legendary haters.

-hate islam

-hate muslims

-hate yorubas

-hate yoruba muslims more-Tinubu and co

-hate yoruba Christian more-Awolowo,osinbajo,pastor Adeboye and co

-hate hausa fulanis

-hate hausa fulani muslim more.

-hate hausa fulani Christians more-yakubu gowon,jeremiah usein and theophyllus danjuma.

!!!!!!!!!!


and you love Igbo's right
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by ItsMeAboki(m): 8:41pm On Oct 08, 2017
NafeesaAA:
If you are a Christian and you think that Muslims criticising Aisha's dress are wrong, you are the one who is wrong, not because you have no business in the discourse but because you probably do not know how Islam asks Muslims to dress.

Indeed, Aisha's home ( Alh. Umaru Ndanusa) is a Muslim home. Now, what I am not sure of is if Aisha is still a Muslim. If she is a Muslim, those dresses are not the way of Muslims and Muslims have the right to complain about them. At that point, your duty as a Christian is to seek explanation as to how wrong they are on a Muslim's neck. If she is a Christian, Muslims have no right to complain. And their duty would be to continue with the business of living together in a mixed society like Nigeria.

The hypocrisy of all our complaints reside in the fact that before Aisha's case, Muslims have lived and transacted businesses with Christians whose dresses are worse than Aisha's, perhaps, because those people didn't call themselves Muslims. Also, Christians have lived successfully with Muslims putting on what could pass for deep Islamic dresses without qualms. Any muslim who says Aisha's dressing is not wrong is only being hypocritical. Allah says hypocrites exist among Muslims. He warned that they are terrible to be with. They can conjure misleading thesis to cause confusion. Muslims take their injunctions from the Qur'an and Hadith plus conclusions from their scholars, only.

Some of us who are Muslims know that Christianity forbids dressing that reveals the crevices of a woman; we know that Christianity promotes decency in dressing. Once upon a Sunday morning at ABU, behind Ribadu hall(girls hostel), a girl in her fullness of life was walking past, ahead of us to a church within the campus. Suddenly, we started hearing shouts and boos from atop the hostel: 'ashawo, seducer, sit not in front...' some Christian girls booed the badly dressed girl with a Bible in hand...instead of being remorseful, she stopped and began shaking her buttocks in the direction of her accusers. 'you don't have this', she replied. A Christian friend from Gombe who was with me simply concluded: 'wancan yar wuta ce'.

So, both Islam and Christianity, I know, preache decency in dressing. Perhaps, more than proclamation, Islam has gone further to describe the ways in which men and women should dress. Therefore, if any Christian must reach a conclusion on this matter, he must have the knowledge of how Islam prescribes her dress code. It doesn't have to be like Arabs. It could be a Nupe or Igbo or Idoma type of dressing but it has to be according to Islamic specification. A person's first responsibility to a group is to observe her codes.

Muslims who seek to correct any deviations must apply wisdom, diplomacy and persuasion either to a differing Muslims or a Christian needing education about what they know not in Islam. That's how the prophet of Islam did it. In fact, Christians are not the problem of Muslims in this matter but Muslims who know the truth and are pretending that her dressing is correct.

On the whole, the major problem is that Muslims think Islam is theirs only, when Allah says it is a package for mankind. If you take it all, how do others who are not Muslims access it. Nigerian Christians are no better; they also think Christianity is theirs. So, every little thing goes for war between these two groups.

May Allah bless you abundantly.
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Yameater(m): 8:45pm On Oct 08, 2017
IJOBA2:
SERIOUSLY TAKE A LOOK AT WHAT SHES WEARING, MUSLIMS WOMEN DOESN'T DRESS THAT WAY.... SHE DIDN'T DRESS LIKE NINJA sad
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Yameater(m): 8:46pm On Oct 08, 2017
ppl get mouth ehhhh
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Unik3030: 9:34pm On Oct 08, 2017
AnodaIT:

Please just take your tribalism go meet your colleagues in the gutters.

I'm talking about nepotism and pushing a barely qualified candidate to occupy a position that there are others from North and South far more qualified to handle
so an igbo man is d governor of cbn n u expect an igbo person to still b the deputy or what? she's from the north and she's qualified to be there simple
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by SalamRushdie: 9:43pm On Oct 08, 2017
supersystemsnig:


Bro, i'm quitting the forum o. It would be an honor to have your whatsapp contact, can i PM you and we exchange contacts ?

What are you quitting now ? Yes you can send me a PM
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by delpee(f): 10:08pm On Oct 08, 2017
zinizta:
Do You Know What It Takes To Be An Associate Member Of The Institute - CFA. Of Course, You Don'T Know Much About This Topic You Are Meddling With.

Most people haven't even bothered to read her CV nor do they understand what CFA means in financial circles. They just assume she's a marketer. Becoming a Chartered Financial Analyst isn't an easy task. She also has other qualifications including an MBA, M.Sc. in Finance and Management and shes a Chartered Alternative Investments Analyst.

How many people under 40 have all these put together? Let's give honour to whom it is due. She may not be the best but she's certainly qualified for the job.

May God guide her and grant her all that she requires to succeed. Amen

2 Likes

Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by zombieHUNTER: 10:20pm On Oct 08, 2017
Danladi7:


Igbo are emotional.

They are legendary haters.

-hate islam

-hate muslims

-hate yorubas

-hate yoruba muslims more-Tinubu and co

-hate yoruba Christian more-Awolowo,osinbajo,pastor Adeboye and co

-hate hausa fulanis

-hate hausa fulani muslim more.

-hate hausa fulani Christians more-yakubu gowon,jeremiah usein and theophyllus danjuma.

!!!!!!!!!!

Werey...... U forgot the most important one
I hate you more
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Maduawuchukwu(m): 11:14pm On Oct 08, 2017
supersystemsnig:


Bro, i'm quitting the forum o. It would be an honor to have your whatsapp contact, can i PM you and we exchange contacts ?

Why are u leaving?
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Nobody: 11:17pm On Oct 08, 2017
Maduawuchukwu:


Why are u leaving?


Because i want to make some people free so they can enjoy their freedom
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Maduawuchukwu(m): 11:19pm On Oct 08, 2017
supersystemsnig:



Because i want to make some people free so they can enjoy their freedom

Lol. Did anybody accuse you of suffocating them? You can't run because of some peeps nah.
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Nobody: 11:21pm On Oct 08, 2017
Maduawuchukwu:


Lol. Did anybody accuse you of suffocating them? You can't run because of some peeps nah.

Na,i'm not even useful to the forum...Make i go.. some people are annoying, let me go so i can have peace
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Maduawuchukwu(m): 11:23pm On Oct 08, 2017
supersystemsnig:


Na,i'm not even useful to the forum...Make i go.. some people are annoying, let me go so i can have peace

Haha. Sensitive much? If you feel that the forum is preventing you from achieving somethings then please leave. This online life no get gain.
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Nobody: 11:25pm On Oct 08, 2017
Maduawuchukwu:


Haha. Sensitive much? If you feel that the forum is preventing you from achieving somethings then please leave. This online life no get gain.

I agree. I have personal reasons. among them is to prevent myself from been blackmailed
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by RedboneSmith(m): 8:04am On Oct 09, 2017
NafeesaAA:
If you are a Christian and you think that Muslims criticising Aisha's dress are wrong, you are the one who is wrong, not because you have no business in the discourse but because you probably do not know how Islam asks Muslims to dress.

Indeed, Aisha's home ( Alh. Umaru Ndanusa) is a Muslim home. Now, what I am not sure of is if Aisha is still a Muslim. If she is a Muslim, those dresses are not the way of Muslims and Muslims have the right to complain about them. At that point, your duty as a Christian is to seek explanation as to how wrong they are on a Muslim's neck. If she is a Christian, Muslims have no right to complain. And their duty would be to continue with the business of living together in a mixed society like Nigeria.

The hypocrisy of all our complaints reside in the fact that before Aisha's case, Muslims have lived and transacted businesses with Christians whose dresses are worse than Aisha's, perhaps, because those people didn't call themselves Muslims. Also, Christians have lived successfully with Muslims putting on what could pass for deep Islamic dresses without qualms. Any muslim who says Aisha's dressing is not wrong is only being hypocritical. Allah says hypocrites exist among Muslims. He warned that they are terrible to be with. They can conjure misleading thesis to cause confusion. Muslims take their injunctions from the Qur'an and Hadith plus conclusions from their scholars, only.

Some of us who are Muslims know that Christianity forbids dressing that reveals the crevices of a woman; we know that Christianity promotes decency in dressing. Once upon a Sunday morning at ABU, behind Ribadu hall(girls hostel), a girl in her fullness of life was walking past, ahead of us to a church within the campus. Suddenly, we started hearing shouts and boos from atop the hostel: 'ashawo, seducer, sit not in front...' some Christian girls booed the badly dressed girl with a Bible in hand...instead of being remorseful, she stopped and began shaking her buttocks in the direction of her accusers. 'you don't have this', she replied. A Christian friend from Gombe who was with me simply concluded: 'wancan yar wuta ce'.

So, both Islam and Christianity, I know, preache decency in dressing. Perhaps, more than proclamation, Islam has gone further to describe the ways in which men and women should dress. Therefore, if any Christian must reach a conclusion on this matter, he must have the knowledge of how Islam prescribes her dress code. It doesn't have to be like Arabs. It could be a Nupe or Igbo or Idoma type of dressing but it has to be according to Islamic specification. A person's first responsibility to a group is to observe her codes.

Muslims who seek to correct any deviations must apply wisdom, diplomacy and persuasion either to a differing Muslims or a Christian needing education about what they know not in Islam. That's how the prophet of Islam did it. In fact, Christians are not the problem of Muslims in this matter but Muslims who know the truth and are pretending that her dressing is correct.

On the whole, the major problem is that Muslims think Islam is theirs only, when Allah says it is a package for mankind. If you take it all, how do others who are not Muslims access it. Nigerian Christians are no better; they also think Christianity is theirs. So, every little thing goes for war between these two groups.

I wonder if the Jordanians are having this debate about their queen. Or the Syrians about their First Lady...

1 Like

Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by FrankGiel: 11:01am On Oct 19, 2017
NafeesaAA:
If you are a Christian and you think that Muslims criticising Aisha's dress are wrong, you are the one who is wrong, not because you have no business in the discourse but because you probably do not know how Islam asks Muslims to dress.

Indeed, Aisha's home ( Alh. Umaru Ndanusa) is a Muslim home. Now, what I am not sure of is if Aisha is still a Muslim. If she is a Muslim, those dresses are not the way of Muslims and Muslims have the right to complain about them. At that point, your duty as a Christian is to seek explanation as to how wrong they are on a Muslim's neck. If she is a Christian, Muslims have no right to complain. And their duty would be to continue with the business of living together in a mixed society like Nigeria.

The hypocrisy of all our complaints reside in the fact that before Aisha's case, Muslims have lived and transacted businesses with Christians whose dresses are worse than Aisha's, perhaps, because those people didn't call themselves Muslims. Also, Christians have lived successfully with Muslims putting on what could pass for deep Islamic dresses without qualms. Any muslim who says Aisha's dressing is not wrong is only being hypocritical. Allah says hypocrites exist among Muslims. He warned that they are terrible to be with. They can conjure misleading thesis to cause confusion. Muslims take their injunctions from the Qur'an and Hadith plus conclusions from their scholars, only.

Some of us who are Muslims know that Christianity forbids dressing that reveals the crevices of a woman; we know that Christianity promotes decency in dressing. Once upon a Sunday morning at ABU, behind Ribadu hall(girls hostel), a girl in her fullness of life was walking past, ahead of us to a church within the campus. Suddenly, we started hearing shouts and boos from atop the hostel: 'ashawo, seducer, sit not in front...' some Christian girls booed the badly dressed girl with a Bible in hand...instead of being remorseful, she stopped and began shaking her buttocks in the direction of her accusers. 'you don't have this', she replied. A Christian friend from Gombe who was with me simply concluded: 'wancan yar wuta ce'.

So, both Islam and Christianity, I know, preache decency in dressing. Perhaps, more than proclamation, Islam has gone further to describe the ways in which men and women should dress. Therefore, if any Christian must reach a conclusion on this matter, he must have the knowledge of how Islam prescribes her dress code. It doesn't have to be like Arabs. It could be a Nupe or Igbo or Idoma type of dressing but it has to be according to Islamic specification. A person's first responsibility to a group is to observe her codes.

Muslims who seek to correct any deviations must apply wisdom, diplomacy and persuasion either to a differing Muslims or a Christian needing education about what they know not in Islam. That's how the prophet of Islam did it. In fact, Christians are not the problem of Muslims in this matter but Muslims who know the truth and are pretending that her dressing is correct.

On the whole, the major problem is that Muslims think Islam is theirs only, when Allah says it is a package for mankind. If you take it all, how do others who are not Muslims access it. Nigerian Christians are no better; they also think Christianity is theirs. So, every little thing goes for war between these two groups.
I have taken time to go through your profile and your posts, and to a large extent I agree with a lot of the things u post particularly about the Fulani herdsmen.
But On this issue as related to the VP CBN, I disagree with ur stance. Not because what you have stated is wrong, but u have drifted off the point at hand.. Do Muslims have a right to criticize her for her dressing?? I'll say yes, but that's only if she claims to portray the dresscode for Islam.
This lady has dressed this way for the past 10 years, no one drew a sword. She has risen through the ranks diligently. Now she is criticized because she is now the VP of the CBN. That's sheer hypocricy.. Where have her critics been all this while.. Its only right if she is judged on her pedigree.. Leave judgement for her husband or if she claims to be am example of how a Muslim woman should dress.. Other than that we have no right to speak against her..
My 2 cents..

1 Like

Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Belafonte(m): 11:39am On Oct 19, 2017
magaliyu:
is high time to get a woman vice president. or those anyone has problem with that?

If any woman can earn her way to VicePresidentship, no problem. Vice president doesn't fall on people, they don't dash people, dem dey work reach dia.
Re: Debate On Mrs. Aisha Ahmad's Choice Of Dressing ( Deputy Governor Of CBN,) by Vivere: 11:47am On Oct 19, 2017
RedboneSmith:

I wonder if the Jordanians are having this debate about their queen. Or the Syrians about their First Lady...

No it is only in Nigeria, that some people leave the substance and chase the shadows.....

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