Caramel Frappe said:
True that this involved religious beliefs hint why they burned the poor woman alive.. yet religion itself isn't responsible. Some people take beliefs way to far- including politicians. They don't have to be religious yet their beliefs in politics can drive them making very bad decisions (Hitler for say), or even scientists in their beliefs can cause them to create horrible things (video games and movies love to make scientists usually bad like in Resident Evil, ect.)
Still, it's the very hardcore religious people that usually tend to do acts like these. Sadly, my religion as a Christian is understandable to feel hatred towards since Christians tend to hate gays, judge people, and force their beliefs onto people. Yet they forget the very importance of a moral within the religion:
"Treat thy neighbor as you'd treat thyself." (Leviticus 19:18, Matthew 19:19, Matthew 22:39)
Even though I am a religious, I myself am not a holy person- I got flaws. Just I try to improve and still struggle. Yet it really does indeed sadden me dearly to see a mother die in such a state including having her daughter watch. That's not only traumatizing but will inflict her deeply, maybe even physically. All we can do is educate people hoping they won't take their beliefs to such a state and accuse people as being witches, satan(s), whichever it may be.
What does a religion become if the vast majority of the faithful are not willing to judge and act according to their religious beliefs? A spirituality, a set of traditions? Seems like a religion stripped of all power and influence to me, it ceases to be a genuine religion IMO. Passively/selectively believing in religious codes is a phenomena largely unique to the West, due to the rise of scientific thinking, personal freedoms and a common secular culture.
The more pervasive a religion is within a population (and the more deficient a population is of proper education), the more likely that individuals will judge and act based on these religious beliefs (including the use of force). In cases of extreme pervasiveness, the state and judiciary are willing to use force in the name of the dominant religion ex: Saudi Arabia, Israel. I agree that ideology can take the place of religion in this sense. The state "religion" of the USSR was Marxist-Leninism for example. Religious and ideologoical dogma take over where education fails; accepting what you are told to believe versus thinking independently and logically.
Blame lies soley with the individuals who carry out such acts of violence/oppression, but it is clear that their dogmatic beliefs are the root cause of the problem. If these people had not been "brainswashed" by the local shamans, do you really think they would have made the decision to burn another human being alive?
Albert Einstein is considered one of the most brilliant minds around, plus we use most of his theories/factors as evidence in science dealing with light, physics, ect. yet he was Jewish. The problem isn't religion itself, but the people who take their beliefs and warp it into judgement upon others without thinking it through.
If I saw a girl wearing Satan on her arm as a tattoo, I wouldn't think she was a witch or some sort of Satanist. Instead it's just an artistic style going on and she chose that for a particular reason. Doesn't define her as something against my religion but rather it's her choice to stand out as something in this modern culture. That, and there are many personal reasons why a war or act of crime is started. In America, protests and acts of violence are happening because of the people wanting the higher ups or higher classes to stop getting special treatment from the Government, and want fair jobs.
I wasn't saying that religous people are not intelligent. I was saying that secular education and the resulting democratic culture run contrary to religion. Science contradicts long held religious beliefs using undeniable facts. The Rule of Law provides a fair and egalitatian legal system, the same cannot be said of Sharia courts in the Middle East or the now abolished Christian legal systems. Secular humanism has unified large populations crossing borders and oceans, religious morality has a long history of creating violent divisions. If secular education was introduced as the global norm, major religions would decline to the simple spiritualities seen in much of the western world (this is exactly what the Islamist terrorists are fighting against).
If that girl lived in Saudi Arabia she would be imprisoned or murdered for violating the state's religious dogma, tolerance does not seem to exist in most religious societies.