Muslims Demands Fairness Not Favors
By Mahmoud El-Yousseph
ccun.org, October 10, 2008
As a Muslim veteran and proud father of a US army solider, the DVD
“Obsession--Radical Islam's War Against the West” is very disturbing to
me. On the surface, it appears to be an educational DVD. However,
below this cleverly-packaged surface one will find anti-Muslim
propaganda, spreading fear and hatred towards Muslims. It also creates
the illusion that there is a war between Islam and Christianity. Even
more disturbing is that the Columbus Dispatch saw fit to distribute the
DVD as an insert, thereby making the newspaper complicit in spreading
hate speech and profiting from it.
I felt compelled to write after reading Editorial Page Editor Glenn
Sheller’s October 4th commentary defending the Dispatch’s decision to
distribute the DVD. He was basically contradicting the views on the
subject expressed in a letter from Abukar Arman, the President of Ohio
Chapter of The Council on American-Islamic Relations [CAIR] on the same
subject, published the same day.
I did appreciate the concerns expressed by Mr. Sheller and his
perspective on what law-abiding Muslims have to go through as a result
of hate speech, bigotry, and discrimination. But somewhere halfway
through his column, he lost me. He stated that free speech is more
important than Muslim concerns and that CAIR's reaction to the DVD is
equivalent to suppressing freedom.
However, CAIR’s published response and a previous letter on the subject
by Eric Weisgerber, a reader from Hilliard, expressed a similar point.
Mr. Weisgerber hit the nail on the head when he posed the question to
the Dispatch, "would you do it to any other race or religion if the
price is right, and what is the difference?" You and I know the
answer would be absolutely not. Such propaganda would be rejected right
off hand and dismissed as incendiary hate speech.
Speaking of suppressing freedom, Mr. Sheller sounds like the proverbial
pot calling the cattle black. Before the Dispatch accuses CAIR of
suppressing freedom and other forms of blackmails, inquiring minds want
to know why the Columbus Dispatch twice in the last four years refused
to publish paid political ads submitted by yours truly? Cases in point:
On the day Palestinian Chairman Yasser Arafat died in November 2004, the
Columbus Dispatch refused to publish an obituary as a paid advertisement
which I submitted through a funeral home in Westerville . Another
central Ohio daily newspaper did. The obituary was short with no
mention of Israel in the text. The newspaper that published it took heat
as well as praise from readers, and the funeral home received nasty
calls accusing the place of supporting terrorism. What a shame!
One reader asked if the paper would also run an obituary for Osama Bin
Laden. Finally the paper ran an editorial defending its decision and my
right to free speech. There is no place for censorship under a
democracy!
Last February I sent an inquiry about placing a paid political ad in
several newspapers across central Ohio about lifting the illegal and
inhumane siege imposed on 1.5 million Palestinians living in Gaza . All
papers agreed to do it except the Columbus Dispatch. Just for the
record: the ad was comprised by a map of Gaza surrounded by a barbed
wire with the slogan beneath: "Lift the siege on Gaza ," written in
Hebrew, Arabic and English. I am proud to say that the first newspaper
who agreed to do it was the Jewish Weekly, The New Standard. Surprised
by that publication’s response, I asked, “why did you agree to do it
when you know you could get backlash from your readers and
advertisers? The answer was, "to protect your right to free speech.”
Eight months later, I still have not heard from the Columbus Dispatch.
Muslims and Arab living here and elsewhere do not wish to have their
faith or ethnicity equated with violence and terrorism. Muslims as well
as Arabs are on the forefront when it comes to denouncing terrorism
against innocent Jews and Christians here or abroad. In the meantime
Muslims and Arabs are subjected to attacks and public insults in both
electronic and print media on a daily basis. That is what grinds my
gears.
I checked the Dispatch archives about the use of the term "terrorism" as
it relates to stories here and in the Middle East . Not one single
time was "Jewish terrorism" or "Christian terrorism" used when Muslim
were the victims. The aggressors are not Muslims in places like Lebanon
, Palestine , Iraq , Somalia,or Afghanistan . The victims are always
killed “in retaliation,” “caught in the cross fire,” or callously
referred to as “collateral damage.” Have the folks at the Dispatch and
other media outlets ever stopped to think about how obvious is their
bias? Excuse the expression, "As long as the dog makes a drop in the
backyard, does it make a difference what color the dog is?" Not to me,
unless the media favors one terrorist group over the other.
Finally, I must admit I am not a CAIR cardholder. I am also forever
grateful to the Columbus Dispatch for giving me a forum for 30 years to
address issues of concern to the local Muslim and Arab community on a
regular basis. Above all, the Dispatch did vouch for my loyalty and
patriotism when it came under question. I may have sounded ungrateful to
the Dispatch, but that is a constructive criticism with no malicious
intent. Freedom of speech is what I treasure the most living here at
home in the America that I love and care about. For that reason, I was
willing for 20 years to die for America if need be. I took an oath,
which I take seriously; to defend America not only against foreign
enemies, but also against domestic ones. That said, Muslims like me and
those dedicated men and women at CAIR-OH seek fairness, not favors from
the Dispatch and other news medium.
Readers Feedback:
elyousseph6@yahoo.com
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