User talk:2601:243:2200:60E:E454:4F00:A26C:7D42

Thank you Wiki anonymous IP address user for your message at User_talk:Porus_D%27Canara. However I must inform you that the edit has been reverted for misusing WP:Anonymity and for WP:Cyberbullying. As for the content erased at Kafir that is "not considered WP:vandalism", the same content will be transferred to appropriate Wiki articles regarding women's rights, Islamic slave trade, and Persecution under Sunni Islamic Caliphates.

Dispute on WP:Vandalism at Kafir
Thank you Wiki anonymous IP address user for your message at User_talk:Porus_D%27Canara. However I must inform you that the edit has been reverted for misusing WP:Anonymity and for WP:Cyberbullying. As for the content erased at Kafir that is "not considered WP:vandalism", the same content will be transferred to appropriate Wiki articles regarding women's rights, Islamic slave trade, and Persecution under Sunni Islamic Caliphates. Porus D&#39;Canara (talk) 08:38, 8 February 2020 (UTC)

Kindly suggest Wiki articles for the below content erased from Kafir

Non-muslims can be enslaved. Furthermore, slave women were not granted the same legal rights as other females. Sharia recognizes the basic inequality between master and women slave, between free women and slave women, between believers and non-believers, as well as their unequal rights. Sharia authorized the institution of slavery, using the words abd (slave) and the phrase ma malakat aymanukum ("that which your right hand owns") to refer to women slaves, seized as captives of war. Under classical Islamic law, Muslim men could have sexual relations with female captives and slaves without their consent. Slave women under sharia did not have a right to own property, right to free movement or right to consent. Sharia, in Islam's history, provided religious foundation for enslaving non-Muslim women (and men), as well as encouraged slave's manumission. However, manumission required that the non-Muslim slave first convert to Islam. Non-Muslim slave women who bore children to their Muslim masters became legally free upon her master's death, and her children were presumed to be Muslims as their father, in Africa, and elsewhere. Starting with the 20th century, Western legal systems evolved to expand women's rights, but women's rights under Islamic law have remained tied to Quran, hadiths and their faithful interpretation as sharia by Islamic jurists. Porus D&#39;Canara (talk) 08:47, 8 February 2020 (UTC)