Quizzes & Puzzles17 mins ago
Ayesha
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I watched the very mediocre war film "Days Of Glory" (about French Algerian soldiers in W.W2) on D.V.D a while ago one of the characters was called "Ayesha" as a derogatory term, what is the basis of that insult?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks MrVeritas but it doesn't work with the context of the movie.
The character concerned was like the commander's batman, looking at the posts further down I wonder if the term is more to do with being Mohammed's b i t c h?
That was the idea I formed at the time.
But I'd be more than happy to concede that I'm wrong in my contention, maybe it's an Algerian thing.
The character concerned was like the commander's batman, looking at the posts further down I wonder if the term is more to do with being Mohammed's b i t c h?
That was the idea I formed at the time.
But I'd be more than happy to concede that I'm wrong in my contention, maybe it's an Algerian thing.
'She' is the title of a book by H. Ryder Haggard. It concerns a woman called Ayesha (She who must be obeyed) who is immortal. I haven't seen the film you're talking about, but I think it unlikely that there's any connection between that and this book.
The child bride of Mohammed was also called Ayesha. He was 49 and she was 6 when they married, and the marriage was consummated when she was 9. Perhaps, bearing in mind the setting and the subject of the film, this was a portrayal of a character who was perhaps homosexual or effeminate, and it was just a derogatory term.
The child bride of Mohammed was also called Ayesha. He was 49 and she was 6 when they married, and the marriage was consummated when she was 9. Perhaps, bearing in mind the setting and the subject of the film, this was a portrayal of a character who was perhaps homosexual or effeminate, and it was just a derogatory term.
There was no suggestion of homosexuality, I suppose the inference was that he's like the captain's wife, and that as the captain's the leader of their "flock" he's kinda their messiah.
I was just wondering if the term had a larger status within the Islamic vernacular or was just a line peculiar and unique to this rather mediocre film.
I was just wondering if the term had a larger status within the Islamic vernacular or was just a line peculiar and unique to this rather mediocre film.