International Quranic Open University and Muslims of the Americas Inc.
Islam in America Part 5
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Islam in
America: Slander and setbacks, the struggle continues.
Slander and setbacks, the struggle continues (P-5)
US Attorney General John Ashcroft, top evangelists Franklin Graham, Jerry Falwell and Jimmy Swaggart are some of the people who have, either through ignorance or prejudice, spoken ill of Muslims or their religion. Mr. Ashcroft in an interview with syndicated columnist Cal Thomas in a web interview said: "Islam is a religion in which God requires you to send your son to die for him. Christianity is a faith, in which God sends his son to die for you." The CAIR report charged that despite several requests, Ashcroft did not respond publicly. "Eventually, under increasing public pressure, he said that the reported remarks 'do not accurately reflect what I believe I said'," the CAIR report said. Here are some of the remarks made by other prominent people: Franklin Graham who offered invocation during the inauguration of President Bush and called Islam an evil religion told Fox News cable network on Aug 5, 2002: "I think it's {terrorism} more mainstream. And it is not just a handful of extremists. If you buy the Quran, read it for yourself, and it's in there. The violence it preaches is there. Baptist Minister Jerry Falwell, during an interview on CBS's ‘60 Minutes’ on October 6, 2002 said he thought Prophet Muhammad was a terrorist. Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart in a November 10, 2002 interview with the Toronto-based station CFMT referred to Prophet Muhammad as a "sex deviant" and "pervert". Speaking of the American Muslims, Rev. Swaggart said: "We ought to tell every other Moslem (sic) living in this nation that if you say one word, you are gone." Another high profile case that is making headlines these days in the United States and which will definitely find a place in the CAIR's report next year is one that involves US Deputy Defense Secretary Lt. Gen. William "Jerry" Boykin. The top Pentagon official assigned the task of capturing Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein is reported to have said that he was in "the Army of God" and claimed that Muslims worshipped an "idol". Lt. Gen. Boykin, who gave a religious twist to the war on terrorism, described it as a war between Judeo-Christian civilization and Satan. Muslim calls for his removal fell on deaf ears with President Bush going only as far as to say that Lt. Gen Boykin’s views did not reflect his or his administration’s opinion. But Muslims in the United States point out that the President was prompt in condemning as anti-Semitic Malaysian statesman Mahathir Mohammad's relatively innocuous observation that the Jews control the world by proxy. This was not the first time the Muslims failed to influence President Bush, whom they more or less unanimously supported at the 2000 presidential election. Earlier this year, the Muslims cried, shouted and screamed against the appointment of avowed anti-Muslim scholar Daniel Pipe as a board member of the government-sponsored US Institute of Peace, but their protests fell by the wayside with the Bush administration going ahead with the nomination and Congress approving it. Despite their failure to influence the administration and their disagreement with President Bush's foreign policy, a number of Muslim leaders attended a White House Iftar dinner this week amidst a debate within the community on whether to attend or not to attend. At this dinner, President Bush, as usual, sang hosannas for US Muslims and their religion and struck a distinction between terrorism and the peaceful preaching of Islam. Though crestfallen, the Muslims in America feel they are winning their battle. Victory is coming in the form of a Muslim reawakening in America. According to the results of a CAIR poll, roughly half of American Muslims surveyed say they have increased their social, political and interfaith activity since 9/11. The Muslim community which for the past several decades had been living with an immigrant mentality is waking up to stake their claim in the political sphere. It appears that the more they are derided, the greater their resilience is. |
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