December 23, 2008

Stealth Jihad Alert: Georgia judge jails Muslim woman for refusing to remove headscarf at security checkpoint - Campaign News - Terrorism Awareness Project

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 3:09 am

 

Stealth Jihad Alert: Georgia judge jails Muslim woman for refusing to remove headscarf at security checkpoint

Stealth Jihad Update: is it a violation of a Muslim woman’s civil rights to have to remove her hijab at a security checkpoint? Or is it simply an unhappy consequence of the situation that her own coreligionists have forced upon us, and which she should be willing to put up with in the interests of protecting innocent civilians?

The real question is whether American law or Islamic law must give way when the two conflict. Underscoring that as the real issue here is the involvement of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, an unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land Foundation Hamas terror funding case, and a skillful practitioner of legal intimidation tactics.

“Ga. Judge Jails Muslim Woman Over Head Scarf,” from AP, December 17 (thanks to all who sent this in):

ATLANTA (AP) — A Muslim woman arrested for refusing to take off her head scarf at a courthouse security checkpoint said Wednesday that she felt her human and civil rights were violated.

A judge ordered Lisa Valentine, 40, to serve 10 days in jail for contempt of court, said police in Douglasville, a city of about 20,000 people on Atlanta’s west suburban outskirts.

Valentine violated a court policy that prohibits people from wearing any headgear in court, police said after they arrested her Tuesday.

Valentine, who recently moved to Georgia from Connecticut, said the incident reminded her of stories she’d heard of the civil rights-era South.

”I just felt stripped of my civil, my human rights,” she said Wednesday from her home. She said she was unexpectedly released after the Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations urged federal authorities to investigate the incident as well as others in Georgia….

Last year, a judge in Valdosta in southern Georgia barred a Muslim woman from entering a courtroom because she would not remove her head scarf. There have been similar cases in other states, including Michigan, where a Muslim woman in Detroit filed a federal lawsuit in February 2007 after a judge dismissed her small-claims court case when she refused to remove a head and face veil….

Hall said Valentine, an insurance underwriter, told the bailiff that she had been in courtrooms before with the scarf on and that removing it would be a religious violation. When she turned to leave and uttered an expletive, Hall said a bailiff handcuffed her and took her before the judge.

Posted by Robert at December 17, 2008 2:08 PM

Stealth Jihad Alert: Georgia judge jails Muslim woman for refusing to remove headscarf at security checkpoint - Campaign News - Terrorism Awareness Project

FrontPage Magazine

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 3:05 am

 

A Streetcar Named Democracy

By David Solway
FrontPageMagazine.com | Tuesday, December 23, 2008

In insisting upon democratic elections in Islamic countries and demanding that we abide by the results, we suffer a profound disconnect from reality; in effect, we let the genie out of the bottle. And this is a genie with its own wishes to satisfy. Jihadist author Said Hawwa put the question concisely when he asked in his influential book Min Ajl Khutwa (English: For the Sake of a Step): “How can Allah’s will triumph if Muslims do not control decision-making in Islamic lands?”

For many Islamic parties and organizations, whether at war with their own governments or with the Western jahiliyya powers, the best way to control decision-making is under the auspices of Western-style elections, which are easily manipulated and may then be set aside when they no longer serve their purpose. As Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said, “Democracy is like a streetcar. When you come to your stop, you get off” (Wall Street Journal, October 19, 2006). And it was not so long ago that a Hamas spokesman, Farhad Assad, thanked America for the “weapon of democracy” (New York Times, February 15, 2006).

Turkish author Mehmet Metiner, in a book entitled All-Green Sharia, All-White Democracy, explicitly details this process: “our purpose was to establish an Islamic government and Islamicize the society through state power…we believed…this goal could have been accomplished via a political party.” We in the West seem to have forgotten that elections in themselves do not constitute democracy. In the Arab world, they are only mechanisms for regulating the balance between competing tribal, ethnic, sectarian and religious blocs intent on political domination, social coercion and economic exploitation—to be suspended the moment it seems opportune to do so.

In blindly imposing the democratic idea upon the Muslim Middle East, Western democrats excavate the terrain on which IslamoFascist dictatorships will build and consolidate their rule. IslamoFascism, says John Myhill, author of Language, Religion, and National Identity in Europe and the Middle East, “can’t be stopped with democracy. When the whole nationality is sick, democracy doesn’t help…Attempts at democracy in the Arab world have just made things worse.” Can we responsibly deny that he is right? “Unfortunately,” he continues, “the great majority of Westerners won’t recognize that their faith in democracy is misplaced until the level of catastrophe is so great, with millions of people dead, that there is no alternative and it’s too late to save the lives that will have been lost.” Though Myhill may be overstating his case, his prediction is more than a mere presentiment, as even a cursory glance at recent developments in Lebanon, Gaza, Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan and especially Iran should make clear.

Here the neoconservative conviction, as articulated by George Bush in an address delivered in Hungary in the summer of 2006, that “The desire for liberty is universal because it is written by our Creator into the hearts of every man, woman and child on the Earth,” is no less utopian than the universalist beliefs of his Left critics, and can lead only to a more dystopian world than the one in which we live. The muddled American foreign policy of exporting democracy to historically and culturally unprepared regions troubled by disruption and endemic violence, where terror groups run rampant and fundamentalist parties vie for power, is a strategy which generally leads to even greater mischief than the autocratic control we affect to deplore.

It is rather astounding that current American foreign policy has learned nothing from the folly of Woodrow Wilson who, in the sequel to WW I, worked to create a congeries of instant democracies in Eastern and Central Europe which became the breeding ground for WW II and the expansion of Communism. Better French philosopher André Glucksmann’s “humanism of Bad News” with its modest objective not to change the world but to prevent the worst excesses of totalitarian repression than the Wilsonian simple-mindedness of good intentions.

Yet the European Left, which has consistently mocked this naïve American effort, continues to insist that we support “democratic” parties, such as the Palestinian Authority and even Hamas, despite the fact that we create more problems than we solve in the process. Worse, we undermine our own security in helping to create what Fareed Zakaria in The Future of Freedom called “illiberal democracy”: “Democracy is flourishing,” he wrote, “liberty is not.”

The US and European (and Canadian) recognition of the breakaway Serbian province of Kosovo is just another instance of this global shortsightedness that is rapidly becoming the soupe du jour on the Western political menu: the unshaded enthusiasm for “democracy” will produce another Islamic stronghold and terrorist haven in the very heart of Europe, empowering rogue organizations like the KLA (Kosovo Liberation Army). Similarly, the newly pluralistic society, so-called, in Bosnia-Herzegovina is starting to unravel. According to ib (Bosnian Institute) online for September 16, 2008, Wahhabism is “a growing tendency” which, if it is not stopped, “will have serious implications for the rest of Europe.”

Misapplied democracy can easily become the Typhoid Mary of the political world, as in countries like Turkey and Pakistan where the rise of the Islamic parties through democratic means threatens disaster. The riskiness of the franchise in an Islamic context was fully understood by the government of Algeria in its crackdown against the fundamentalist parties poised to assume power in national elections. Elections in Egypt, suspect as they may have been, led to the quadrupling of the number of seats held by the Muslim Brotherhood. In Kuwait, the national elections of May 2008 handed victory to the Salafist party, that is, to the “Islamists.”

Indonesia is widely considered as an illustration of the compatibility between democracy and Islam and as proof that a Muslim nation may cohabit peacefully with the West. In order to maintain this Indonesian fiction certain inconvenient facts need to be ignored. To mention only two: the release of Abu Bakar Bashir, spiritual leader of the Jemah Islamiyah terrorist outfit responsible for the Bali bombing of October 2002, after serving only 26 months of his sentence; and the recent decision to allow Hizbullah’s Al-Manar television station to use an Indonesian satellite to broadcast propaganda across Asia and Australia. The fantasy of a political symbiosis between two such irreconcilable systems as secular democracy and credal authoritarianism is only a form of willed obscurantism whose consequences will have to be defrayed in the future.

As for Iraq, I would argue that the reasons for attacking it were entirely legitimate: to topple a bloodthirsty dictator with designs on regional hegemony, to prevent his acquiring WMD (which he had already done at Osirak), and to take the country out of the terrorist equation. But to expect a functioning democracy to emerge in an Arab setting, amenable to rational policies and actuated by a higher global vision, is entirely daft. Consider the fate of parliamentarian Mithal al-Alusi, one of Iraq’s very few enlightened legislators, who was stripped of his immunity and threatened with execution for having attended the International Institute for Counterterrorism conference in Israel in September 2008.

The recent, rather farcical shoe-bomber episode at a press conference in Baghdad, in which an Iraqi journalist hurled both his shoes at the visiting American President, is a reminder of how dubious the experiment of exporting democracy to the Islamic market can be. It does not seem to have occurred to the aggrieved journalist that he was able to do so only because of regime change. Under Saddam, he would have been tortured and executed. The lesson to be gleaned from this performance and, more importantly, the instant glorification of its perpetrator throughout the Arab world, is that democracy is not something the Arab world particularly appreciates—except, as we have seen, as a weapon to be turned against democracy itself.

The West, whether the European Lilliput or the American Brobdingnag, has not yet realized that Middle Eastern-style autocracies are categorically different from Western-style democracies. It has not absorbed the lesson that the franchise comes in the final stages of the democratic process, not at the beginning. It does not appreciate the role of culture and history in forming the folkways, attitudes and presuppositions of a people. It has not understood that the Islamic world does not play by our rules and that it lives by an entirely different code of conduct from that which we have long taken for granted—a code in which reciprocities, trade-offs, standard negotiating parameters and the dialectic of mutual advantage do not signify.

We refuse to see that we are dealing with a culture that is fundamentally alien to ours and that does not accept the axioms, postulates and expectations of politically pragmatic discourse or the procedures of reasonable accommodation. It is a culture whose institutional basis has almost nothing in common with the civic armature of Western civilization that has allowed the latter, albeit at great cost and in far too desultory a fashion, to resist its own homegrown tyrannies. In the 21rst century the Leviathan that would swallow us rises from another sea than our own. Western Christendom and post-Christendom are based on a completely different “symbolic order”—Jacques Lacan’s term for the way symbols are used unconsciously by a culture—from that of the Islamic world, especially with respect to the notion of individual autonomy, the modalities of personal salvation, the idea of participatory citizenship, the concept of the State as a “legal person,” the rule of established law and the binding force of international accords.

When a set of cultural assumptions rooted in an alien scripture and a traditional worldview which repudiate what we have come to understand as social and political evolution is added to these factors, the task before us takes on dismaying and redoubtable proportions. We really have little idea how foreign the Islamic mindset is to our way of thinking and feeling.

As Lee Harris argues in The Suicide of Reason, in a prolonged standoff the rule of law is no match for the rule of the jungle, the individualist “rational actor” cannot hope to triumph against the collectivist “tribal actor”—at least, not until he adapts his strategy to meet the challenge—and the “myth of reason” in which we have come to believe, if we are unable or unwilling to refocus our attitude to the world, will see to our defeat at the hands of those who do not recognize the “normal rules of engagement” and “cannot take a moral stance outside the perspective of [their] tribe.” The democratic option we hold so dear is only a snare and a delusion when deployed by these tribal actors who are far shrewder than their counterparts in the West. Both know what they want, but only one knows how to get it.

There are no immediate or foreseeable solutions to the predicament posed by the Islamic world. Certainly, ready-made, Western-style electoral democracy is not one of them. Realistically speaking, the West will have to rely on military vigilance, cutting-edge intelligence gathering, domestic control and occasional pre-emption to blunt the force of a theocratic civilization on the march. Such a response will be almost universally decried by a vast political and cultural constituency swayed more by the dream of mutual understanding and pastoral resolutions than by a sober appreciation of realpolitik. Nevertheless, if we regard survival as something worth striving for, there is no alternative.

In a January 2008 interview with the London daily Al-Sharq Al-Awsat, liberal Syrian intellectual Georges Tarabishi stated: “There can be no democracy without secularism, since only under secularism can one free oneself from religious or sectarian mentalities, and as a consequence think and choose with one’s mind. For this reason…democracy depends not just on the ballot box, but also, and primarily, on the box called the cranium.” This is well put. The cranium, however, may also confine and inhibit as readily as it may liberate, depending on whether it is closed or open to the world. Unfortunately, Western politicians, diplomats and intellectuals have not yet learned how to think outside the cranial box.


David Solway is the award-winning author of over twenty-five books of poetry, criticism, educational theory, and travel. He is a contributor to magazines as varied as the Atlantic, the Sewanee Review, Books in Canada, and the Partisan Review. His most recent book is The Big Lie: On Terror, Antisemitism, and Identity.

FrontPage Magazine

FaithWorld » Blog Archive » Lots of advice for Obama on dealing with Muslims and Islam | Blogs |

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 2:59 am

 

Posted by: Tom Heneghan

Tags: FaithWorld, Barack Obama, egypt, foreign policy, indonesia, islam, morocco, muslim, pakistan, turkey, united states

President-elect Barack Obama has been getting a lot of advice these days on how to deal with Muslims and Islam. He invited it by saying during his campaign that he either wanted to convene a conference with leaders of Muslim countries or deliver a major speech in a Muslim country “to reboot America’s image around the world and also in the Muslim world in particular”. But where? when? why? how? Early this month, I chimed in with a pitch for a speech in Turkey or Indonesia.  Some quite interesting comments have come in since then.

(Photo: Obama image in Jakarta, 25 Oct 2008/Dadang Tri)

Two French academics, Islam expert Olivier Roy and political scientist Justin Vaisse argued in a New York Times op-ed piece on Sunday that Obama’s premise of trying to reconcile the West and Islam is flawed:

Such an initiative would reinforce the all-too-accepted but false notion that “Islam” and “the West” are distinct entities with utterly different values. Those who want to promote dialogue and peace between “civilizations” or “cultures” concede at least one crucial point to those who, like Osama bin Laden, promote a clash of civilizations: that separate civilizations do exist. They seek to reverse the polarity, replacing hostility with sympathy, but they are still following Osama bin Laden’s narrative.

Instead, Mr. Obama, the first “post-racial” president, can do better. He can use his power to transform perceptions to the long-term advantage of the United States and become a “post-civilizational” president. The page he should try to turn is not that of a supposed war between America and Islam, but the misconception of a monolithic Islam being the source of the main problems on the planet: terrorism, wars, nuclear proliferation, insurgencies and the like.

Also on Sunday, the Istanbul newspaper Sunday’s Zaman ran a piece by sociologist Dogu Ergil who spelled out what he thought “moderate Muslims” expected of Obama.

(Photo: Blue Mosque in Istanbul, 9 Dec 2008/Tan Shung Sin)

Moderate or non-ideological Muslims expect Mr. Obama to support democratic trends in their countries, but not to push them from above using ruling elites that will never adopt a democratic agenda but rather will simply play for time, making only cosmetic changes. This will, in turn, further reinforce the power of autocratic regimes that are threatened by genuine democracy.

Muslim moderates look at religion as a cultural affair, wanting to render it autonomous of politics so that it will be protected from political power and in the same way, preventing it from seeking political power. So they want the Obama administration to press their governments to enact reforms that will pave the way to democratic politics and legal changes that will allow for more individual freedoms. They do not want a hypocritical stance from an America which advocates democracy but supports the most authoritarian regimes in the Arab world for the sake of oil deals and other strategic ends. The Bush administration set a very bad example of paying lip service to democracy, which, in fact, worked as a vehicle to blackmail Arab regimes and served America’s strategic interests.

Michael Fullilove at the Brookings Institution made a pitch for an Obama speech in Indonesia in the New York Times while several Moroccan blogs have been running a campaign (including a petition with a long list of reasons) to have him speak there. Saad Eddin Ibrahim, an exiled Egyptian sociologist and human rights who is a visiting professor at Harvard and Indiana universities, made the case for Indonesia or Turkey in the Washington Post.

Maleeha Lodhi, a former Pakistani ambassador in the United States and Britain, has a long list of suggestions for a reformed U.S. policy towards the Muslim world in the Harvard International Review.  The list is fairly extensive, although it would have been even more informative if it had included suggestions for what should change in the Muslim world.

(Photo: Badshahi Mosque in Lahore, Pakistan, 21 Dec 2007/Mohsin Raza)

How Obama manages issues in the Muslim world will determine the success or failure of his foreign policy…

In the Muslim world … perceptions have been shaped by decades of uneven handed policies and by US double standards that placed the security of Israel and the need for cheap oil above considerations of international law and justice for the Palestinians. In essence, Muslims regard US policies as responsible for the trust gap between the United States and the Islamic world. In the West, opinions concerning the cause for the gap with the Muslim world are more mixed. The most common view attributes this rift in relations not only to US policies but also to factors internal to the Muslim world– to the weakness and contradictions in those societies and particularly to the democratic deficit, which allows radicals to build support for their cause. This, in fact, inspires the idea that the United States should lead efforts to restructure the Muslim world. Irrespective of the reality, both perspectives urge the need to review and recast US foreign policy.

My vote for the most interesting argument goes to Roy and Vaisse, who ask the basic question of what role religion actually plays in the big issues facing Obama.

The truth is, Islam explains very little. There are as many bloody conflicts outside of regions where Islam has a role as inside them. There are more Muslims living under democracies than autocracies. There is no less or no more economic development in Muslim countries than in their equivalent non-Muslim neighbors. And, more important, there exist as many varieties of Muslims as there are adherents of other religions. This is why Mr. Obama should not give credence to the existence of an Islam that could supposedly be represented by its “leaders”.

(Photo: Olivier Roy, 4 Dec 2007/Charles Platiau)

Who are these leaders that President Obama would convene anyway? If he picks heads of state, he will effectively concede Osama bin Laden’s point that Islam is a political reality. If he picks clerics, he will put himself in the awkward position of implicitly representing Christianity — or maybe secularism. In any case, he would meet only self-appointed representatives, most of them probably coming from the Arab world, where a minority of Muslims live.

Do you think Obama should launch a special initiative aimed at the Muslim world, or, as Roy and Vaisse argue, assert that “American values are universal and do not suffer any kind of double standard, and that they could be shared by atheists, Christians, Muslims and others”?

FaithWorld » Blog Archive » Lots of advice for Obama on dealing with Muslims and Islam | Blogs |

December 21, 2008

rediff.com: ‘The jihadists are dragging us into the Middle Ages’

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 10:19 pm

 

‘The jihadists are dragging us into the Middle Ages’

December 19, 2008

Reportage: Arthur J Pais

Imagine the economic and social problems of Muslims in India is solved, Salman Rushdie said the other day; imagine the Kashmir problem is also solved; imagine too, the Israelis and Palestinians have made peace. Would al Qaeda and the various self-proclaimed jihadists “then put their guns down?”

He has no illusions any such thing would happen, he said firmly.

The jihadists are bent not only on “dragging us into the Middle Ages,” he declared but are also planning on world domination. “It is all about power grabbing.”

Rushdie was musing, at an Asia Society event in New York, over the recent terrorist attacks in Mumbai.

The terrorists were not really concerned what happened in Kashmir, he continued, and their action has to do with everything that overtook Sufi Islam in Pakistan and had it replaced by “fanatical Islam, an Arabised Islam.”

Mumbai-born Rushdie (who refuses to call Bombay by its new name, asserting that the name Mumbai is the creation of politicians), shared the evening with two other New York-based writers — Mira Kamdar (Planet India) and Suketu Mehta (Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found) — with immediate connections with Mumbai

Rushdie was forced underground for many years in the United Kingdom following the death fatwa against him by Iran in the 1980s

He was speaking for the first time extensively on the Mumbai attacks, and he covered a wide spectrum of topics including the “lamentable” response to the attacks by the security forces, the “nauseating” reaction of fellow Mann Booker Prize-winning writer Arundhati Roy (The God of Small Things) to the attacks and the “utter duplicity” of the Pakistan government in addressing the charges that terrorists were trained and dispatched from Pakistan.

Calling Pakistan the centre of world terrorism, he said, “all roads of terrorism in the world lead to Pakistan,” and though religious parties there got just about two percent votes in the general elections less than a year ago, the Pakistani “elite” is conniving with the religious groups to undermine India.

The jihadists tap into “the resentment the Pakistani elite feels for the success of India,” he said.

“Broadly speaking India is a free country, broadly speaking India is a democracy and broadly speaking India is economically successful,” he added. “On the other hand, Pakistan is a basket case.” There is no institution in Pakistan there on which a free society can be built.”

America has blindly poured billions of dollars into Pakistan after 9/11 and it only strengthened Pakistan’s jihadists, with the encouragement of the previous President and military leader Pervez Musharraf, he said. Mushraff “skillfully” manipulated the West. “To the westerners, he was a westerner, and to the mullahs he was a mullah,” he said.

Americans treated Pakistan with “velvet gloves,” he said even as the country was becoming the “world centre of terrorism.”

rediff.com: ‘The jihadists are dragging us into the Middle Ages’

UK think tank: Muslim group spokesman praised terror | International | Jerusalem Post

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 10:15 pm

 

A London-based think tank has revealed that the cofounder of a Muslim communal organization whose spokespeople are used by mainstream media outlets has glorified terrorism and attacks on Israel.

The Center for Social Cohesion (CSC) reported that last week Asghar Bukhari, cofounder and spokesman for the Muslim Public Affairs Committee (MPAC UK), said on the social networking site Facebook that any Muslim who died fighting Israel was a martyr.

Responding to comments by another contributor on a discussion entitled ‘Has Europe come to terms with Islam?’, Bukhari said, “Muslims who fight against the occupation of their lands are mujahadeen and are blessed by Allah. And any Muslim who fights against Israel and dies is a martyr and will be granted paradise.”

The Muslim leader went on to justify jihadism, saying, “The concept of jihad is a beautiful thing, and logical to those with a sincere heart. It tells the human being to stand up and fight against those who bring evil and oppression on this earth, and by standing up - roll back that oppression until the people are free from it.”

He continued, “There is no greater oppressor on this earth then [sic] the Zionists, who murder little children for sport. Any public attack on Islam… is not going to be tolerated by men like me. I have dealt with these Zionists before, a veneer of reason below which lies a crooked mind plotting and planning to extend their hatred against us.”

In 2006, The Observer newspaper revealed that Bukhari had given money to the convicted Holocaust denier David Irving.

In an e-mail to Irving, Bukhari wrote, “You may feel like you are on your own, but rest assured, many people are with you in your fight for the truth.”

The National Union of Students (NUS) has banned MPAC UK from campuses for being anti-Semitic. However, mainstream media organizations such as the BBC and Sky continue to use MPAC spokespeople, and Bukhari in particular.

CSC called into question the media outlets’ use of MPAC UK and their portrayal of it as a mainstream Muslim organization.

“The leadership of MPAC UK has been shown before to have expressed opinions which border on glorification of terrorism,” said Robin , a CSC researcher.

“Concern has previously been expressed to the BBC and other media about their continuing use of Bukhari and his organization. Despite this, they are regularly treated by the BBC and other mainstream media as representative of mainstream Muslim opinion,” Simcox said.

“Bukhari’s incitement and likely illegal public comments should be a matter of grave concern to broadcasters and others who have repeatedly given him and his organization a platform,” Simcox added.

The think tank has reported the incident to the police.

UK think tank: Muslim group spokesman praised terror | International | Jerusalem Post

The American Muslim (TAM)

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 4:25 am

What Barack Obama Can Learn From the Hajj

By Kamran Pasha

It’s a miracle (Obama, that is)
The Hajj, the grand Pilgrimage to Mecca, has just ended after having attracted a record four million Muslims from all over the world for a week of worship in the vast Arabian desert. I attended this year for the first time and experienced one of the most remarkable and transformative events known to humanity. Believers of every race, nation and age brought together to transcend our differences and unite before God.

But there was one topic that was on everyone’s lips as we sat together under a tent in the pilgrim camp at Mina – the improbable election of Barack Hussein Obama to the Presidency of the United States. Everyone I spoke with expressed wonder at God’s will in bringing such remarkable change after eight years of George W. Bush. Most were hopeful that Obama could restore to America its prestige as the moral leader of the world, squandered so recklessly by an Administration that redefined the meaning of the word “hubris.”

There was much that I learned from the Hajj on a personal spiritual level. But I also gained insight on the state of Muslim public opinion toward US foreign policy. These are lessons that would be helpful for our incoming President to keep in mind as he attempts to re-imagine America’s relationship with the Islamic world. Here are some of my thoughts:

Muslims are America’s allies against Al-Qaeda

One of the most consistent themes that I heard during the weeklong vigil at Mecca was the profound abhorrence for violence against civilians in the name of Islam. Whether I spoke with a Syrian neurosurgeon or a Saudi taxi driver, a deep-rooted rejection of Al-Qaeda and its brand of extremism was evident. This was particularly poignant due to the horrific events playing out in Mumbai at the height of the Pilgrimage. Indian pilgrims I met sorrowed for their besieged countrymen, many expressing horror that the streets they regularly walked in Mumbai had become a battlefield.

President Obama must recognize that the vast majority of the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims reject murder in the name of Islam and are America’s allies against terrorism. The United States must engage with this not-so-silent majority and work with it to defeat the extremists. Part of that engagement process will be to listen to these Muslims as well and address their grievances. My conversations with fellow believers at the Hajj reaffirmed that Muslims reject terrorism – and they also reject political oppression. Whether it be the suffering of innocent Muslims in Palestine, Kashmir, Chechnya, or at Guantanamo Bay, Muslims have valid grievances that are too often ignored by Americans. Obama must understand that the security of America requires a two-pronged approach – allying with mainstream Muslims against Al-Qaeda, while addressing the political grievances that are allowing extremists to recruit among the disenfranchised.

Saudi reform should be encouraged

As an American Muslim raised in Brooklyn, Saudi Arabia is another planet as far as I am concerned. The Kingdom’s synthesis of modern skyscrapers and medieval ideology is mind-boggling. And yet the nation is changing for the better. The new king Abdullah has proven to be a wise statesman, working to disempower the old fundamentalist elites who have been enemies of reform. King Abdullah surprised and delighted the Muslim world in March 2008 when he held a conference in Mecca inviting religious scholars of every branch of Islam, both Sunni and Shia, to work together to promote an Islam of compassion and human brotherhood. A few weeks later, he stunned the world by hosting an interfaith conference in Madrid, bringing together Jews, Christians, Buddhists, and Hindus with Muslims to work toward global peace. And he is beginning to rein in the mutawwin, the feared religious police who serve as the fundamentalists’ enforcers.

The King is slowly but surely pulling his country into the 21st century. But the fundamentalists should not be counted out just yet. The religious establishment may strike back against the Abdullah’s efforts to liberalize the Kingdom, and the prospect of civil war in Saudi Arabia one day is not impossible. What President Obama will have to do is work with King Abdullah to strengthen the modernizing elements within his regime. The most important reform Obama can encourage is to break the monopoly of fundamentalist religious scholars on interpreting Islam inside the Kingdom. The Kingdom must welcome Muslim thinkers of every school of thought into its Council of Senior Ulama, the clerical body that is the final authority on religious matters.

The believers I met on Hajj were united in their desire to see Saudi religious scholars bring their interpretations more in line with mainstream Muslim thought, especially in the area of women’s rights. One of the reasons I wrote my novel Mother of Believers about the Prophet’s wife Aisha was to show how active and influential women were during the birth of Islam, a tradition that has been ignored and suppressed by modern fundamentalists. Aisha was a scholar, a poet and a warrior who led armies into Iraq on an armored camel. She would have been shocked by the extreme limitations on women’s rights in the Kingdom.

President Obama will be in a position to help King Abdullah’s reform efforts. As someone who has known Muslims since childhood, Obama should be well aware that the fundamentalists are a small, if troublesome, minority in Islam. Now that King Abdullah has begun the long and painful process of moving his country out of the Middle Ages, he must be supported by the United States.

The center of Muslim power is moving East

One of the most remarkable things I noticed during the Pilgrimage was how many believers had come from Southeast Asia. I was delighted by the presence of huge numbers of faithful from Indonesia and Malaysia, which are rapidly becoming the future centers of Islamic influence. Speaking with many Southeast Asian Muslims, I realized that cultivating Indonesia, the largest Muslim nation with over 200 million believers, will be pivotal for America’s relationship with Islam. The fact that Obama studied in Jakarta as a child is a remarkable basis to solidify a strong friendship between our countries. Indonesian Muslims embrace a deeply tolerant interpretation of Islam and the White House must promote Indonesian voices in its efforts to build bridges with mainstream Muslims. There have been reports in recent days that Obama is planning to give a speech in a major Muslim country, and Indonesia should be placed at the top of the list of candidates.

Similarly, Obama should reach out to Malaysia, another Southeast Asian Muslim country with a moderate religious outlook. Malaysia will be particularly helpful in helping the United States to learn from the lessons of Islamic finance. Malaysia pioneered the idea of Islamic investment, which rejects the principal of interest that has been the cornerstone of Western finance – and will possibly be its death knell. As the world reels from the collapse of the interest-based lending system, Islamic alternatives will become increasingly popular. The Malaysians have been leaders in this now $700 billion dollar industry, and their adherence to a dual system, allowing Islamic banks to operate seamlessly alongside the traditional Western system, has many lessons for Americans seeking to find alternatives to the current financial malaise. President Obama should sponsor a conference on Islamic investment, bringing together Islamic finance experts from Malaysia, Dubai and the Persian Gulf states to work with Wall Street and develop new ways for American investors to prosper.

The Hajj represents the best of Islam

The Hajj is a chaotic event, with millions of people who speak different languages and have different cultural traditions thrown together in relatively close quarters. And yet I was heartened to see how gracious and patient people were with each other, merchants from Ghana helping elderly villagers from India perform rituals that transcended the differences between them. This was the Islam that I loved, the religion of peace and human cooperation that is almost never depicted in the media. It would be hard for any observer to imagine that the same religion that inspired millions of human beings to meet in the wilderness and embrace each other with love could also be used as the rallying cry for murder and madness. The fundamental disconnect between Al-Qaeda’s cruelty and the joyous heart of Islam was nowhere more evident than in the countless acts of kindness and generosity that I witnessed in Mecca.

President Barack Hussein Obama has the chance to ally with this Islam of joy and peace, for the good of the United States and the world. Let’s hope he takes it.

Kamran Pasha is a Hollywood screenwriter and the author of Mother of the Believers, a novel on Prophet Muhammad’s teenage wife Aisha, to be published by Atria Books in April 2009. To read his Hajj experiences, and learn more about the book, please visit http://www.kamranpasha.com

A JOURNAL OF HAJJ by Kamran Pasha
Part 1 Medina and the Prophet’s Tomb http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/features/articles/a_journal_of_hajj_medina_and_the_prophets_tomb/
Part 2 A Jewish cemetery and a battlefield http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/features/articles/a_journal_of_hajj_a_jewish_cemetery_and_a_battlefield/
Part 3 Recreating Genesis at the House of God http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/features/articles/a_journal_of_hajj_recreating_genesis_at_the_house_of_god/
Part 4 Finding God in the Wilderness http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/features/articles/a_journal_of_hajj_finding_god_in_the_wilderness/

The American Muslim (TAM)

SUNDAY’S ZAMAN

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 4:23 am

 

What we knew as Bombay, originally a Portuguese name derived from “Bom Bahia,” or “good bay,” in the 16th century, was transformed into “Mumbai” by Indian nationalists using a questionable link to a Hindu deity called “Mumba” in the 1990s. The city was recently attacked by a terrorist group which has defied the concept of the “nation-state” — defining the nation instead as a community of believers — and has churned out a political ideology derived from religion that has molded their minds and spirits to be lethal weapons to serve causes that even their religion forbids. But then this is the nature of belief, as long as you believe, your belief has the force of material existence.

The carnage in Mumbai, carried out in the name of religion, has once again cast a shadow on Islam by a group of fanatics that have added their beliefs to the arsenal of their criminal acts. This perverted fringe group has been bitterly criticized by the majority of the adherents of that religion, who sincerely believe that their religion is a creed of peace and compassion and who plead with world leaders not to brand their faith as a source of criminality.

Now that Barack Obama has been elected president of the US, still the most influential country in the world, the Muslims who detest the fact that their religion has been turned into an ideology of opposition and violence by extremists have expectations of the new world leader.

The Obama government’s mode of conduct concerning Muslims and Muslim leaders is the primary concern of both moderate Muslims and authoritarian rulers in the wider Middle East. They all know that the Bush administration’s tragic mistakes in the Middle East have played an important role in alienating Muslims and helped the rise of Arab and Islamist radicalism. The moderates have suffered a lot from Islamist radicalism that initially targeted them as heretics and “sellouts” before reaching out for the “distant enemy,” namely the West in general and the US in particular.

On the other side of the coin, rulers in authoritarian Muslim countries fear that Mr. Obama may adopt a policy of defense of individual freedom and pluralist democracies. This would really pose a threat to their power and privilege.

Moderate or non-ideological Muslims expect Mr. Obama to support democratic trends in their countries, but not to push them from above using ruling elites that will never adopt a democratic agenda but rather will simply play for time, making only cosmetic changes. This will, in turn, further reinforce the power of autocratic regimes that are threatened by genuine democracy.

Muslim moderates look at religion as a cultural affair, wanting to render it autonomous of politics so that it will be protected from political power and in the same way, preventing it from seeking political power. So they want the Obama administration to press their governments to enact reforms that will pave the way to democratic politics and legal changes that will allow for more individual freedoms. They do not want a hypocritical stance from an America which advocates democracy but supports the most authoritarian regimes in the Arab world for the sake of oil deals and other strategic ends. The Bush administration set a very bad example of paying lip service to democracy, which, in fact, worked as a vehicle to blackmail Arab regimes and served America’s strategic interests.

Moderate Muslims see that as long as there is great disruption in the world that is caused by exclusion, marginalization, poverty and ignorance, there will be resistance or even hatred against the existing world order and its domestic actors. So Muslims plead with Mr. Obama not to consider all Muslims as terrorists, but to be aware of the dire conditions which give rise to inequality and injustice — the real sources of a radicalism that threatens all nations. They call on Mr. Obama and world leaders with the rationale that the best protection of individuals and society is social justice and inclusion, not just armed forces and the police.

President Bush has not cared much about the violations of human rights and government repression in many friendly Arab and Muslim countries. The US army’s conduct in Iraq and elsewhere, in places such as Guantanamo, has eroded America’s credibility as a country that respects democratic ideals and the rule of law. Muslims all around the world sincerely hope that the Obama government does not repeat these gross mistakes, which have cost America its respect and moral weight in the Middle East and more generally around the globe.

It will indeed be a major mistake for the Obama administration to believe that American national security can be protected through tolerating the suppression of moderate and democratic Muslims in return for their repressive governments’ support of American strategic interests. If it incurs the wrath of young Muslims who may start to label the US as the real cause of their misery and repression, it may make the world a very narrow place for US citizens and for all those who could be brandished as “enemies of Islam.” No group may be as dangerous as the one whose members feel that life has no worth unless it is sacrificed, dedicating it to a sublime cause. I hope that we do not push our youth to those extremes by making their lives miserable, for they may make everyone else’s lives even more miserable.

SUNDAY’S ZAMAN

Op-Ed Contributors - Transitions - How to Win Islam Over - NYTimes.com

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 4:20 am

 

By OLIVIER ROY and JUSTIN VAISSE

Published: December 20, 2008

DURING the presidential campaign, Barack Obama said he would convene a conference of Muslim leaders from around the world within his first year in office. Recently aides have said he may give a speech from a Muslim capital in his first 100 days. His hope, he has said, is to “make clear that we are not at war with Islam,” to describe to Muslims “what our values and our interests are” and to “insist that they need to help us to defeat the terrorist threats that are there.”

This idea of trying to reconcile Islam and the West is well intentioned, of course. But the premise is wrong.

Such an initiative would reinforce the all-too-accepted but false notion that “Islam” and “the West” are distinct entities with utterly different values. Those who want to promote dialogue and peace between “civilizations” or “cultures” concede at least one crucial point to those who, like Osama bin Laden, promote a clash of civilizations: that separate civilizations do exist. They seek to reverse the polarity, replacing hostility with sympathy, but they are still following Osama bin Laden’s narrative.

Instead, Mr. Obama, the first “post-racial” president, can do better. He can use his power to transform perceptions to the long-term advantage of the United States and become a “post-civilizational” president. The page he should try to turn is not that of a supposed war between America and Islam, but the misconception of a monolithic Islam being the source of the main problems on the planet: terrorism, wars, nuclear proliferation, insurgencies and the like.

This will be an uphill battle, since this view of a monolithic, dangerous Islam has gained wide acceptance. Whether we’re talking about civil war in Iraq, insurgency in Afghanistan, unrest in Kashmir, conflict in Israel-Palestine, nuclear ambitions in Iran, rebellion in the Philippines or urban violence in France, people routinely — but wrongly — single out Islam as the explanation, rather than nationalism or separatism, political ambitions or social ills. This in turn reinforces the idea of a global struggle.

Even the recent attacks in Mumbai, India, cannot be seen primarily under the prism of religion. What the terrorists and supporters of Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistani militant group believed to have carried out the attacks, have achieved is to make normal relations between India and Pakistan impossible for the foreseeable future. Such groups have always used regional conflicts like that in Kashmir to hold on to power.

The truth is, Islam explains very little. There are as many bloody conflicts outside of regions where Islam has a role as inside them. There are more Muslims living under democracies than autocracies. There is no less or no more economic development in Muslim countries than in their equivalent non-Muslim neighbors. And, more important, there exist as many varieties of Muslims as there are adherents of other religions. This is why Mr. Obama should not give credence to the existence of an Islam that could supposedly be represented by its “leaders.”

Who are these leaders that President Obama would convene anyway? If he picks heads of state, he will effectively concede Osama bin Laden’s point that Islam is a political reality. If he picks clerics, he will put himself in the awkward position of implicitly representing Christianity — or maybe secularism. In any case, he would meet only self-appointed representatives, most of them probably coming from the Arab world, where a minority of Muslims live.

And such a conference would have negative effects for Western Muslims. By lending weight to the idea of a natural link between Islam and terrorism, it would reinforce the perception that they constitute a sort of foreign body in Western societies, or even some sort of fifth column. Most Western Muslims want first and foremost to be considered as full citizens of their respective Western country, not part of any diaspora. And most of them share the so-called Western values.

If the idea of a Muslim summit meeting should be dropped as soon as possible, then what should Mr. Obama do? No more — but also no less — than carrying out the ambitious program he put forward during the campaign: closing the prison at Guantánamo Bay, withdrawing from Iraq, banning torture, pushing for peace in the Middle East and so forth. These are not in any sense concessions to “Islam,” but on the contrary a reassertion that American values are universal and do not suffer any kind of double standard, and that they could be shared by atheists, Christians, Muslims and others.

Barack Obama should also put more faith in the capacity of the rest of the world to recognize that America has turned the page on eight catastrophic years during which its values have often been betrayed. After all, Americans have just elected a president whose middle name is Hussein. That name goes a long way with many Muslims.

Olivier Roy is a visiting professor at the University of California at Berkeley. Justin Vaisse is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.

Op-Ed Contributors - Transitions - How to Win Islam Over - NYTimes.com

December 19, 2008

Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting » Blog Archive » O’Reilly: Shoe-Thrower Shows ‘How Difficult It Is to Deal With Some Muslims’

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 1:44 pm

 

O’Reilly: Shoe-Thrower Shows ‘How Difficult It Is to Deal With Some Muslims’

12/17/2008 by Isabel Macdonald

Commenting yesterday on the Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at George W. Bush, Fox News host Bill O’Reilly declared that “this horrendous story points out how difficult it is to deal with some Muslims”:

Many Americans are simply fed up with these displays in the Arab world: unchecked violence, irrational thinking.

One could say that many people are fed up with displays of unchecked violence. Actually, as Iraqi journalist Muntader al-Zaidi was hurling his shoes at Bush, he explicitly cited the largest recent case of “unchecked violence in the Arab world”–the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq.

If Americans are fed up with violence and irrational thinking, that’ll be bad news for O’Reilly’s ratings. The Fox host, who was recently named as one of the nation’s top purveyors of anti-Muslim smears in FAIR’s report, Smearcasting: How Islamophobes Spread Fear, Bigotry and Misinformation, responded to the attacks of September 11 by calling for the bombing of Iraq (among other countries):

Their infrastructure must be destroyed and the population made to endure yet another round of intense pain.

Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting » Blog Archive » O’Reilly: Shoe-Thrower Shows ‘How Difficult It Is to Deal With Some Muslims’

December 18, 2008

Political Future of American Muslims - IslamOnline.net - Muslim Affairs

Filed under: News — ftaslimi @ 4:41 am

 

Political Future of American Muslims

By  Umar Lee

Freelance Writer

American Muslims

95 percent of American Muslims citizens voted in the recent Presidential election placing them far above the national average in America of around 50 percent and puts Muslims with other high voting groups such as American-Jews.

It is common in America after presidential elections for various communities to take stock in what they gained or lost in an election, how well they participated, and where does the community need to go from here to advance the communal agenda.

The Muslim community is no different in this regard. The American Muslim Taskforce on Civil Rights and Elections released a survey after the election that gave a general understanding of how Muslims participated in the 2008 Presidential election and the emerging trends amongst Muslim voters.

The poll found that 95 percent of American Muslims citizens voted (a figure that places Muslims far above the national average in America of around 50 percent and puts Muslims with other high voting groups such as American-Jews).

While there was no organized endorsement by Muslim leadership as there was in the 2000 Presidential election, President-elect Barack Obama still received an overwhelming 89 percent of the Muslim vote with the Republican candidate John McCain only getting a puny 2 percent according to the poll (making American Muslims the group in the electorate McCain did the most poorly in). The poll also found that the majority of American Muslims now identifying themselves as Democrats and only 4 percent of American Muslims now see themselves as Republicans.

Moving the Ball Forward

Both Congressmen Ellison and Carson ran as Democrats supporting traditional Democratic issues in heavily Democratic districts.

With this high Muslim turnout and the election of two Muslim congressmen in recent years, Keith Ellison of Minnesota and Andre Carson of Indiana, American Muslims are looking for a way to move the ball forward towards gaining greater political acceptance in America and a greater influence over the social and political debates of this society.

Shaheed Amanullah, a prominent American-Muslim political analyst, noted: “American Muslims are fundamentally engaging in the political process in America in two different ways. Some are operating in the system, such as those who work within political parties, and others are seeking to engage from outside of the system.”

Amanullah gives the examples of Congressmen Ellison and Carson. While both are Muslims, neither candidate represents a district with a significant percentage of Muslim voters. Both ran as Democrats supporting traditional Democratic issues in heavily Democratic districts.

“Muslims engaging the system from the inside tend to be more process driven and less issue driven. There is a belief that just by being Muslim and being in the process you can make a difference more so than just coming and knocking at the door from the outside. Those engaging from outside of the system tend to be more issue oriented and motivated by particular issues,” Amanullah said.

Assimilation Not Identity Renunciation

“I think that any [minority] group that stands for single issue losses respect” — Professor Kenneth Warren

When asked about American-Muslim involvement in the political process and working in politics, the director of the highly regarded Warren Poll of American politics, Kenneth Warren, stated, “I think that in America for most people it doesn’t matter your religion, the first step is to get the educational credentials. We are a credential oriented society. Normally you need those educational credentials. In terms of Muslims working for politicians, I don’t think being Muslim would help or hurt. They can get the job if they can handle it.”

The Professor of Administrative Law at the College of Education and Public Service at St. Louis University also noted that, like other minorities, Muslims have to assimilate into the society while not violating the principals of their religion or loosing their culture, and if this is done they can successfully work for political parties, elected officials, and campaigns.
When asked if Muslims should put “Muslim issues” first, such as Palestine, or focus primarily on issues that we share in common with the greater society such as health-care, the economy, and education Warren said, “That would depend on an individuals political preference and how they see themselves. Jewish friends of mine who are liberal all the sudden supported Bush because of his stance on Israel. This is a single issue and I do not think Muslims would do well to turn politics into a single issue just like I do not think it advances Jews to be so pro Israel that they become a one-issue interest group. I think that with the Muslim community, and this is just an opinion, some will try and influence the US position (on the Palestinian issue) but this may be a mistake. I think that any group that stands for single issue losses respect.”

To illustrate this point Warren points to the example of President-elect Obama stating: “Obama did not run with a black agenda” and Americans respected that in his opinion.

Warren and Amanullah both agreed that with the Muslim population in America being as small as it is it is impractical to only deal in those issues that exclusively concerns us.

Congregation is Power

The Muslim voice today is louder than it has ever been before in America and will only grow louder.

“In the United Kingdom if you are elected you can say you are representing Muslims because chances are you are coming from a district heavily populated by Muslims … that is not the case in America,” Amanullah observed.

Muslims, like other minorities in America, are affected politically by the portion of the population in different states and metropolitan areas. As an example, New York Jewish politicians, because they have 2 million Jews in the New York metropolitan area, can promote an aggressive pro-Israel position on all fronts. This could not be done by Jewish politicians living in areas with small numbers of Jews.

Northeastern Irish-American politicians for decades (and many still today) have been aggressively in favor of Irish Republicanism and some have even held radical positions on the Anglo-Irish Conflict. They were able to do this because of the high concentration of Irish-Americans in their districts. Irish-American politicians in the Midwest and South, with much lower Irish-American populations, could not take such aggressive anti-British stances no matter how pro-Irish they were, just as a matter of political reality.

In areas with a high concentration of Muslims, those Muslim politicians being elected can take more assertive stances on advancing those causes deemed to be representative of Muslims. While, Muslims being elected in districts such as the one Congressman Ellison represents, have to keep in mind that they were elected to serve the people of their district and not advance any cause peculiar to their own identity.

With the growth of the Muslim population in America will come a greater political awareness of Muslims and greater political organization within the community. It remains to be seen just how Muslims will help shape future American foreign and domestic policies; but one thing all studies and Muslim experts agree on is the fact that the Muslim voice today is louder than it has ever been before in America and will only grow louder.


Umar Lee is an American-Muslim writer, blogger, and documentary filmmaker specializing in political and social issues related to Muslims in America. He spends his time between St. Louis, MO and the East Coast.

Political Future of American Muslims - IslamOnline.net - Muslim Affairs