Muslim American News Briefs
ccu.org, August 27, 2008
In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the
Merciful
AMERICAN MUSLIM NEWS BRIEFS - 8/22/08
* Hadith: Do Not Abuse Anyone
* CAIR-MI: US Muslims Stepping Up
Political Activism (AP)
* Video: Pilot Put on Watch List After
Conversion to Islam (CNN)
* Anthrax Suspect Opposed Dialogue with
Muslims (JTA)
* Scholar: Anti-Islamic Polemics Use
Sex to Attack Prophet
* U.S.-Led Forces Kill 76 Afghan Civilians
(Reuters)
-----
HADITH OF THE DAY: DO NOT ABUSE ANYONE -
TOP
The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said: "Do not abuse
anyone...Do not look down upon any good work, and when you speak to
your brother, show him a cheerful face."
Sunan of Abu-Dawood, Hadith 1889
-----
US MUSLIMS, ARABS BECOMING
POLITICAL FAITHFUL - TOP
JEFF KAROUB,
Associated Press, 8/22/08
SEE:
CAIR
Civic Participation Guide,
CAIR
Election Website
Faced with a choice of White House hopefuls they fear are not
entirely sympathetic to their issues, American Muslims are stepping
up their activism to unprecedented levels in hopes they can
influence the upcoming administration in its infancy.
The efforts stem in part from difficulties many Muslim- and
Arab-Americans say they have experienced since the terror attacks of
Sept. 11, where they have found themselves on the defensive and
struggling to convince at times skeptical fellow citizens that they
can be both Muslims and loyal U.S. citizens.
"I've never seen the level of activism I now see," said Shibley
Telhami, a Mideast scholar at University of Maryland and fellow at
the Brookings Institution.
"The number of people who have become more active and visible on
the national political front has increased dramatically because
people have suddenly sensed that they have to be more active in
order to ... defend themselves as Americans, defend themselves as
Arabs and Muslims," he said…
Dawud Walid, executive director of the Michigan chapter of the
Council on American Islamic Relations, said neither candidate has
officially met with Muslims in Michigan, an important swing state
with one of the nation's largest Muslim populations.
Walid said that may lead Muslim voters past the "lesser of two
evils," to a third-party candidate or no candidate at all. In
broader terms, it also raises concerns about both candidates'
foreign policy skills, he said.
"If the candidates cannot engage the American Muslim community
in a healthy way, which is the world's most educated Muslim
community, then how can they strengthen economic ties or have a
meaningful successful diplomacy in the Muslim world?" he said.
(MORE)
-----
VIDEO: MUSLIM PILOT ON WATCH LIST -
TOP
CNN,
8/21/08
A pilot who converted to Islam may be jobless now that he is on
the terrorist watch list. CNN's Jeanne Meserve reports.
-----
IVINS BELIEVED JEWS WERE GOD'S CHOSEN -
TOP
JTA,
8/4/08
The government scientist who killed himself as he faced arrest
for the 2001 anthrax attacks was an evangelical who believed Jews
were God's chosen people.
The Frederick (Md.) News Post republished letters from Bruce
Ivins in the wake of his suicide last week. Ivins was an anthrax
researcher at the government's biological weapons research lab in
Fort Detrick, Md.
In one letter he praises a rabbi for refusing to engage in
dialogue with a controversial local Muslim cleric.
"By blood and faith, Jews are God's chosen, and have no need for
'dialogue' with any gentile," Ivins wrote in 2006.
Earlier letters suggest that he saw President Bush's re-election
as a victory for evangelicals.
"You can get on board or get left behind, because that Christian
Nation Express is pulling out of the station!" he wrote after the
election.
Ivins killed himself as the U.S. Justice Department prepared to
arrest him. Ivins' beliefs are significant because the 2001 attacker
in notes appeared to be a radical Islamist, writing "Death to
America, Death to Israel, Allah is Great." (MORE)
-----
I DIDN'T KILL 'THE JEWEL
OF MEDINA' - TOP
Wall
Street Journal, 8/9/08
Asra Q. Nomani's "You Still Can't Write About Muhammad" (op-ed,
Aug. 6) falsely asserts that I am the "instigator" of the Random
House Press decision not to publish a novel about the Prophet's wife
titled, "The Jewel of Medina." I never had this power, nor did I
single-handedly stop the book's publication. Random House made its
final decision based on the advice of other scholars, conveniently
not named in the article, and based ultimately on its determination
of corporate interests.
As a historian invited to "comment" on the book by its Random
House editor at the author's express request, I objected strenuously
to the claim that "The Jewel of Medina" was "extensively
researched," as stated on the book jacket. As an expert on Aisha's
life, I felt it was my professional responsibility to counter this
novel's fallacious representation of a very real woman's life. The
author and the press brought me into a process, and I used my
scholarly expertise to assess the novel. It was in that same
professional capacity that I felt it my duty to warn the press of
the novel's potential to provoke anger among some Muslims.
There is a long history of anti-Islamic polemic that uses sex and
violence to attack the Prophet and his faith. This novel follows in
that oft-trodden path, one first pioneered in medieval Christian
writings. The novel provides no new reading of Aisha's life, but
actually expands upon provocative themes regarding Muhammad's wives
first found in an earlier novel by Salman Rushdie, "The Satanic
Verses," which I teach. I do not espouse censorship of any kind, but
I do value my right to critique those who abuse the past without
regard for its richness or resonance in the present.
The combination of sex and violence sells novels. When combined
with falsification of the Islamic past, it exploits Americans who
know nothing about Aisha or her seventh-century world and counts on
stirring up controversy to increase sales. If Ms. Nomani and readers
of the Journal wish to allow literature to "move civilization
forward," then they should read a novel that gets history right.
Denise A. Spellberg
Assoc. Professor of History and Middle Eastern Studies
University of Texas at Austin
-----
U.S.-LED FORCES KILL 76 AFGHAN CIVILIANS
- MINISTRY - TOP
Sharafuddin Sharafyar,
Reuters, 8/22/08
HERAT, Afghanistan (Reuters) - U.S.-led coalition forces killed
76 Afghan civilians in western Afghanistan on Friday, most of them
children, the Interior Ministry said.
The coalition denied killing civilians. Civilian deaths in
military operations have become an emotive issue among Afghans, many
of whom feel international forces take too little care when
launching air strikes, undermining support for their presence.
"Seventy-six civilians, most of them women and children, were
martyred today in a coalition forces operation in Herat province,"
the Interior Ministry said in a statement.
Coalition forces bombarded the Azizabad area of Shindand district
in Herat province on Friday afternoon, the ministry said. Nineteen
of the victims were women, seven of them men and the rest children
under the age of 15, it said. (MORE)
-----
CAIR
Council on American-Islamic Relations
453 New Jersey Avenue, S.E.
Washington, D.C. 20003
Tel: 202-488-8787
Fax: 202-488-0833
E-mail: info@cair.com
URL:
http://www.cair.com
|