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Islam in America Part 8
 


 

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Islam in America: The Jihad of American Muslims

by Ameen Izzadeen
(Deputy Editor The Sunday Times and Daily Mirror-Sri Lanka)

In 2003 Ameen Izzadeen spent nearly a month in the United States as a guest of the US State Department. This is part one of a series of observations penned  after his visit. As an outside observer Mr. Izzadeens insights are both enlightening and squarely on the mark.  Mr. Izzadeen addresses the concerns of Post 9-11 Muslims in America and the campaign to vilify  the American Muslims.  We present the series in its entirety.

The Jihad of American Muslims  (P-8)
Friday November 28th 2003

Early this month, US President George W. Bush in a televised  Washington speech called for democracy in West Asia and singled out  Iraq, Syria and Iran and accused the rulers of these countries of  torturing and oppressing the people they ruled.

In what could be described as a speech that lacked any semblance of  objectivity - though it underlined the Bush administration's  objective of justifying its occupation in Iraq - the President left  out from blame pro-American regimes in Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the  Gulf countries where, let alone democracy, even basic human and  labor rights are not heard of or adhered to.

If Mr. Bush's alleged wish for democracy is realized, the whole of West Asia will be a monolith of anti-American sentiment with Islamic parties being returned to office in western style democratic elections. Ironically, it is not democracy that will help Islamic parties come to office, but rather the lopsided US policies that
strengthen the hands of Islamists.

Despite the barrage of criticism that has now become common after every Bush speech, the President should be commended for stating in his 'Democracy in West Asia' speech made at the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington that "Islam is consistent with democratic rule."

"… To say Islam is incompatible with democracy is cultural condescension," said President Bush. But a majority of Muslims living in the United States, a country built on democratic principles, have been stating this ever since Islam was perceived to be a threat to Western economic interests.

Why is there no separation of church and state in Islam? This was the question with which I ended my last column and this is the question that is fired at US Muslims at every forum.

The answer to this, the Muslims say, is that Islam flourished within the framework of the State during the lifetime of Prophet Muhammad.  Justice, equality, democracy, human rights, federalism, and treaties among states and autonomy to minorities within a state were the hallmarks of the early Islamic state. Unfortunately, today neither the despots nor the Islamists in Muslim countries give a damn about these hallowed concepts, which were among the main attractions of Islam during its heyday.

This also sums up the answers we gave when our group was asked, during a lively inter-faith discussion at the Xavier University in Cincinnati, why there was no separation of church and state in Islam.  Though our discussion with Professors Joseph A. Bracken and James P Buchanan had many areas of agreement - for instance, the adverse impact of the globalization process and the need for inter-faith dialogue - we agreed to disagree on the subject of separation of church and state.

This was symbolic of the larger picture where the Muslims in America are trying to explain the Islamic perspective on many an issue while a large majority of Americans refuse, either through ignorance or prejudice, to accept their version or give them a hearing.

For instance, a question that was often thrown at the Muslims in America - also at us when we were there - was, "Why is Islam associated with violence?" Muslims, individually and collectively, are doing their best to explain that Islam has nothing to do with violence or terrorism, but a large majority of Americans refuse to believe them. Besides, when Muslims deny a statement that is erroneously attributed to Islam, their denial gets little publicity in the mass media. I am not making a sweeping statement denigrating the US media. The regional press which does not have national appeal is more objective in reporting or 'covering' Islam than the national media. It is easy to get a denial published or aired in the regional media, but the national media, which are controlled by a few powerful business firms with vested interests, simply ignore the Muslim pleas.

A case in point concerned an article carried in the July 28 issue of Newsweek magazine. The article titled 'Challenging Quran' scoffed at the Muslim scripture, dismissing it as a forged or plagiarized document. Muslims, especially the intellectuals, world over sent in petitions and letters challenging the article. But none was published, though the magazine sent in acknowledgement notes. So much for media freedom in the United States where there is no press complaints commission, like in Sri Lanka, Britain or Canada.

Among the television channels, the Muslims rate Fox as the most prejudiced and anti-Islamic channel while the Public Broadcasting Corporation (PBS) is credited as the best channel with objective journalism. Generally, the media, as far as the Muslims in the United States are concerned, are embedded to a distorted vision of Islam.  The early period of the war on Iraq showed that embedded journalism
was nothing but prostitution of journalism and production of bastardized news.

Amidst the barrage of media attacks, the Muslims face a daunting task in defending themselves. In fact, dealing with the media was the subject of one of the sessions of the Chicago conference of the Islamic Society of North America that I attended during my stay in the United States.

Making the task of the American Muslims more difficult are terrorist attacks purportedly carried out by Islamic radicals or extremists.

Every time a bomb aimed at a US or western target goes off, it is the American Muslims who pay the price. It is they who have to defend Islam and it is they who are subjected to hate crimes.

Terrorism has no place in Islam though the fight against injustice has. Given the power of the Western media, the killing of civilians by the so-called Muslim terrorists is blown out of proportions but the killing of Muslims by state terrorism gets little exposure. Hence every time, terrorism strikes, the image of Islam, which is regarded as the most misunderstood and misinterpreted religion of the world, is tarnished and the good work of the American Muslims in projecting
the true picture is undone.

That the Muslims in America have to do this job amidst a number of problems and challenges is, in itself, a Jihad or a holy struggle.  Their plea to the Muslims living outside America is "strengthen our hand".

Despite many a problem, the Muslims enjoy religious freedom. We visited a Madrasa in Atlanta - a Quran school run by Dar-Un-Noor School. We saw students sporting turbans and wearing 'Taliban' dress (Afghan-Pakistani dress). It was a surprise to me since the Bush administration is applying pressure on Pakistan and other Muslim countries to crack down on madrasas, which it sees as breeding grounds for Islamic terrorism. Atlanta Muslim leaders said they faced no such pressure from the authorities.

Another surprise awaited us when we attended the September 11 memorial service at the Martin Luther King Church in Atlanta. The inter-faith service began with the recitation of verses from Quran by a local imam. It showed the fruit of the American Muslims' effort to distinguish between Islam and terrorism - an achievement that they have attained while facing challenges in the form of anti-terrorism legislation and tough security measures adopted in the aftermath of
9/11.

Their call to 'strengthen our hand' is a worthy call, for they not only defend Islam domestically, but also take up the causes of the world Muslims. Their commitment to Muslim causes is not mere lip service such as we often hear from West Asian leaders. It is no exaggeration to say that the road to Palestinian independence could be paved through the struggle of the US Muslims. The same could be said about the Kashmir and Chechen crises.

The US Muslims are not trying to achieve this through violent means.  They believe in the dialogue of
civilisations as opposed to Samuel Huntington’s clash of civilisation, a theory that simply ignores coexistence between Islam and the West.

End

 

 

 

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