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Muslim Activism at the
Crossroads It's time for us to reassess our strategy. The
shortsightedness of Islamic public policy organizations in the United States
is glaring in light of the consequences of September 11, 2001: public
suspicion of Muslims, the rise of a tyrannical Justice Department, and
emboldened anti-Muslim bigotry.
It's a testimony to Americans' tolerance that Muslims in the United States
aren't suffering a broader backlash in a post-terrorist attack climate
juiced up by the constant drumbeat of anti-Muslim messages on Fox News, the
most popular news network in America, and omnipresent far-right media
commentators.
For a large segment of Americans who remain unconvinced that Muslims mean
them only good, the strategies of our public representatives do little to
convince them otherwise. The methodology of promoting our agenda through
political correctness is now ineffective. The realities of terrorism,
however statistically insignificant the number of its supporters, have
rendered the PC sledgehammer weightless: no longer can it be wielded to club
the misinformed and bigoted into silence.
In fact, political correctness was never an appropriate tool, since
victimology fosters resentment and sublimation of bigotry, not healthy
dialogue. It promotes begging rather than honor and dignity. It both depends
on and guarantees outsider status and marginalization. The political favors
Muslims gained were ephemeral and insubstantial, crumbs swept off the table
by patronizing politicians rather than real clout earned with respect. Who
today remembers Bush Jr.'s promises of abolishing secret evidence?
It's not that Muslims have nothing to complain about; it's just that
complaining should be relegated to about ten percent of our efforts. Dale
Carnegie said that you can make more friends by spending two months caring
about other people than you can in two years trying to get other people to
care about you. Americans don't need guilt trips to be convinced of Muslims'
good intentions-they need human contact. The elderly woman watching "The 700
Club" next door would dismiss Pat Robertson's rants if her Muslim neighbor
was visiting her regularly, bringing her hot meals and sharing coffee and
conversation.
People instinctively know that moral beliefs have moral results. What are
the moral results of our activism? Can anything of substance realistically
come from our current course? Actions speak louder than words, and, for all
the potential for good that Muslims hold, the action that Americans are most
familiar with is the terrorism in New York and Virginia. We've failed thus
far to place anything of substance in the counterbalance; instead, our
agenda comes off as introverted and self-serving.
The Qur'an tells Muslims that they are the best of mankind, not because they
are the "chosen people," not because of their faith alone, but because they
believe and "enjoin the right and forbid the evil." This verse is repeated
frequently but our behavior thus far suggests it has not taken root in our
hearts. The Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, visited his Jewish neighbor
when he was sick, even though that neighbor would throw trash on him as he
passed. This is our way, our history, not cynical political calculation.
And yet, but for notable exceptions, this teaching has not manifested in our
actions-especially with respect to national Muslim organizations. These
groups should look to the efforts of Muslims at Howard University in
Washington, who provide dinners for homeless women, or the work of Chicago's
Inner City Muslim Action Network, which, among its other activities,
operates a free medical clinic. The Virginia Muslim Coalition for Public
Affairs is in the trenches with Habitat for Humanity and other service
organizations. Heroes like these toil in relative obscurity while the lack
of vision of most national groups means their resources are devoted to
poorly planned, uncoordinated schemes that hold little chance of advancing
Islam's values and Muslim interests.
From a public policy perspective, Muslims have a built-in advantage in that
we believe passionately in issues that span the political spectrum, from
left to right. Our morality might be translated into American political
vocabulary as a "progressive conservatism," a principled centrism quite
reflective of the values of Middle America. This sets the stage for
broad-based coalition building; local experience shows that a range of
allies stand ready and eager to help us implement a moral program that will
benefit us and our countrymen, and demonstrate Islamic values in action. We
are frittering away an immense pool of political capital.
Muslims must not be beaten into retreat from this mission by bigots,
pro-Israel zealots, and an out-of-control Justice Department. We must not
remain introverted and selfish, slaves to the 9/11 syndrome, for we will
answer to our Creator for what we did with our time and resources. We no
longer have the luxury of simply lying back and complaining, even
justifiably, that we are mistreated. The central goal of Muslims should be
to put Islam into action and make a contribution, a lasting impact on this
nation. The alternative is compounded political and social weakness, public
ill will and suspicion, and ultimate obscurity.
Source:
http://www.atrueword.com/index.php/article/articleview/52/1/1/ |
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