It was brought to my attention by a brother, that there are some important paragraphs in the above article by the Shia convert, in which he describes some of the Hawzah students of being corrupt thieves, criminals who would kidnap foreigners, and ignorant of basic matters such as Wudu', read here and I quote:
((But what hurt even more came next: we were both, on numerous occasions, accused of being spies. Sometimes directly, sometimes indirectly, but it happened all the time. In fact, when we left for the summer that year, both of our rooms were broken into, ransacked, and then pillaged, and all by our fellow seminary students, some of them in relatively high levels of study. (When we came back the following year, we were basically told by the religious authorities in Karbala who ran the seminary dorms that there was nothing they could do about it.) My point is, I’m not talking about some reckless and impulsive kids here, I’m talking about adults who are supposed to be legit, turban-wearing, bona fide religious scholars.
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My seminary handler and I had actually come up with a weirdly elaborate back-story to hide the fact that I am an American citizen by birth, in order to avoid potential troubles or even kidnapping by overzealous Sadri students or their friends and relatives outside of the seminary system.
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From the get-go, I had people who would observe with great care my ritual ablutions, waiting to point out any visible procedural error. Of course, they found mistakes; except that the mistakes were on their part. It became rapidly clear that many of my colleagues did themselves did not understand a number of very basic aspects of religious law.))