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Obama and the empire

alJazeera Magazine – Obama and the empire

Obama and the empire
31/03/2009 11:59:00 AM GMT Comments (12) Add a comment Print E-mail to friend
(AFP) Obama has by now clearly shown that he does not want to be the American leader who loses the American empire.

By Bill Christison

Various people have asked recently, “What are the implications of the global economic crisis for U.S. policies in the Middle East, and will Middle East countries lean more or less toward the U.S. as they suffer their own economic crises?” Not simple questions, but here, presented very briefly, are our first shots at them.

Let’s start by discussing what U.S. policies affecting the Middle East may emerge in coming months. A preliminary point that is necessary to make is that present policies inherited from the Bush administration are a mess. Practically everyone of every nationality who lives in the Middle East — and elsewhere for that matter — believes that the economic crises now moving in on the world were largely caused by the U.S.’s own extreme version of capitalism with its massive emphasis on privatization and on elimination of regulations that might have provided some protections for ordinary people.

At the minimum, there are widespread feelings of Shadenfreude over the pain the U.S. is now suffering, and at a political level there is intense dislike of the U.S. for policies that are seen, correctly, as arising from U.S. and Israeli colonialism and empire-building and that are blamed for the economic woes and inequalities now affecting nations everywhere.

There are two major scenarios of how U.S. Middle East policies may develop in the next year or so. Even now, no one knows enough about President Obama to know which scenario or variation on it might be likely. Increasingly, though, it appears that in foreign affairs, he is not going to change very much. We hope this is wrong. At least on the central issue of Palestine-Israel, Obama made it clear from the start of his campaign, well before the election, that he will support the right-wing elements of the Israel lobby led by AIPAC. But there still is the question of how strong his support will be.

The first scenario is that Obama will just bumble along, changing as little as he can get away with from Bush’s policies, except for clearing away some of the roughest edges of Bush policies on torture. Obama is expanding the war in Afghanistan and continuing the war in Iraq longer than he said he would. Under this scenario, he will try to keep talking as long as possible over Iran and try to avoid fighting. He will try to keep supporting a civilian government in Pakistan, but would not really oppose a return to military dictatorship in that country, if Pakistan would continue supporting his Afghanistan and Iran policies.

That’s the first scenario. Although its support for empire and colonialism makes it an undesirable scenario, at least Obama would be trying to avoid a major war.

The second, much more militaristic scenario is far worse, possibly involving more wars, but it describes what Obama’s policies in the Middle East may well turn into as the remaining months of 2009 pass by.

Right now Obama is faced with domestic economic difficulties greater than he would have thought, during most of his campaign, could conceivably happen as rapidly as they did. But he is also faced with a military-industrial complex that is now pushing for ever larger military expenditures and more aggressive foreign policies, among other things as a way to help solve U.S. economic difficulties. In addition to this, Obama is faced with the prospect of an Israeli government under Benjamin Netanyahu that is even more right-wing than the present one, supported by that portion of the Israel lobby led by AIPAC.

This part of the lobby is probably the strongest ally of the military-industrial complex in supporting more wars and more aggressiveness in U.S. Middle East policies. Obama showed his support for the lobby throughout his campaign and, most recently, did nothing to oppose the lobby’s successful trashing of Charles Freeman, a fine candidate for a senior intelligence position whom the lobby charged with being anti-Israel. Since a majority of U.S. voters generally support Israel without thinking much about it, the disorganized justice and peace movement in the United States is not very effective in opposing either the military-industrial complex or the right-wing Israel lobby.

Obama has by now clearly shown that he does not want to be the American leader who loses the American empire. In general, most European governments, most of the Arab governments, and the Japanese government as well, will not oppose him. Public opinion in these countries, in contrast to the governments, will be somewhat stronger in opposing U.S. policies of empire, but it is doubtful that the publics in these countries will be able to accomplish very much.

So the conclusion that one comes to if this second scenario turns out to be true is that we are facing a very dangerous period in world history. There are indeed forces in both the United States and Israel that want a clash of civilizations and are definitely not against further wars, and these forces are powerful. Obviously, the first nation to be affected by implementation of this scenario would be Iran. At this point it is impossible to know whether Obama will want to, or be able to, prevent these forces from dominating future U.S. policies throughout the Middle East.

— Bill Christison was a senior official of the CIA. He served as a National Intelligence officer and as director of the CIA’s Office of Regional and Political Analysis. Kathleen Christison is a former CIA political analyst. She is the author of Perceptions of Palestine and The Wound of Dispossession. This article appeared in CounterPunch.org.

Violence by Sabarmati Jail authorities against Muslim inmates

Violence by Sabarmati Jail authorities against Muslim inmates | TwoCircles.net

Violence by Sabarmati Jail authorities against Muslim inmates
Submitted by admin on 30 March 2009 – 9:38pm.

* Crime/Terrorism
* Indian Muslim

By TwoCircles.net staff reporter

New Delhi: Following complaints of torture and ill-treatment a PIL was filed on March 23rd in Gujarat High Court for the removal of the Jail Superintendent of Sabarmati Central Jail, V. Chandrashekar. Sabarmati Jail houses many of the accused under POTA and for serial blasts case. Their situation got only worse after the filing of Public Interest Litigation (PIL).

On March 24th, Chandrashekar went on leave and instead of his deputy taking the change, government appoints R.J. Pargi in his place. On the same day, Pargi takes charge of the jail and according to the inmates stated that he is there to teach them a lesson.

Chronology of events:

March 25, 2009

At around 10 in the Morning:

A PIL was filed in The High Court of Gujarat regarding immediate transfer of jail superintendent V. Chandrashekar and appointment of a court commission to inquire the allegations of atrocities committed by him.

At around same time:

Trouble erupted when an inmate Yunus Sareswala was not allowed to meet his ailing mother. There were some skirmish between Sareswala plus 3-4 people and jailor incharge and the other guards. Cross complaints had been filed against each other.

Later in the noon:

The POTA accused went on hunger strike demanding immediate removal of the Superintendent. They also wanted that the jail be governed as per the Jail Manual.

In Evening:

Convicted prisoners and undertrial prisoners in serial blasts joined the hunger strike along with POTA accused.

March 26, 2009

The POTA court upon immediate representation by various lawyers against the atrocities sent the public prosecutor, 3 medical doctors, and a defense lawyer inside the jail to do the panchnama. The order on the panchnama is pending till date.

Yunus Sareswala and Saiyed Mohmmad Juned and some other prisoner were severely beaten up by the police inside jail premises.

Hunger strike joined by almost whole jail (more than 70%). Police personnel from different part of the city were called upon and 100s of prisoners were beaten up for going on hunger strike.

March 27, 2009

Hunger strike entered the third day.

Mohmmad Juned taken out from the jail for medical treatment. In the Civil Hospital, he files an F.I.R. against 3 jailors alleging torture.

Relatives were not allowed to meet with the accused (jail visit).

Meanwhile Haji Faruk usman Gani give application to designated POTA court vide Outward No. 1112 stating fear that they will be targeted and killed by/ through police by some or other reason

In the Afternoon:

A “whistle-blowing” episode happened in Central Jail at around 5 in the evening when they are performing “Asr Namaz”. Many prisoners were beaten up severely especially the accused in serial blasts case. They were pinpointed and trashed. Several POTA accused were also beaten up like Shanawaz Gandhi, Yunus Sareswala, Mohmmad Juned, Javed Siddiqui, Zahid Khan, Haji Faruk, Usman Gani, etc.

No medical treatment was given to the injured. Some doctors from Civil Hospital were called but that was too little and too late. Also the Sabarmati Jail lacks medical facilities.

Late evening:

“10 number Kholi” – the place were most of the POTA accused were living was vacated. All the prisoner of that place were shifted in other barracks. They were not allowed to carry any of their belongings.

All the prisoners who were on the hunger strike were beaten up again. This time the beating was done by crime branch officials and other police personnel. Main victims were the accused in the serial blasts case and POTA

March 28, 2009

Prisoners are still on the hunger strike.

Family member had tendered an application as they were not allowed to meet concern undertrial prisoners.

On Saturday Jail authorities and prison IG rejected the application stating the reason that on Saturdays only advocate are allow for interview with the accused.

Advocates tendered an application at 3:45 pm to have legal interview with so called accused (POTA & undertrial prisoners). Request was granted for some i.e. they allowed interview with POTA accused from 5:30 to 6:00 and rest were rejected stating reason that they are on hunger strike. At around 6:00 pm advocates on records make oral submission in respect to rejected application to meet the Jail Superintendent. But one reason or another, they lingered till 6:30 pm and at last they said that Jail Superintendent is busy doing rounds for inspection and hence could not meet them.

Advocate who meet the POTA accused, get information that the incident that took place is the part of conspiracy by the Jail authorities & others and right now they are under great fear that some of them might be killed or ill-treatment (especially bomb blasts case accused).

It was suggested by the advocates here that there are other accused in 9 other states who are also accused in the serial blast case. It should be taken care of that they are not brought here and the accused here should be transferred to some other better jail where there safety and security can be taken care of.

March 29, 2009
No one is allowed to meet the inmates.

March 30, 2009
Situation is not much different. According to local civil rights activists, inmates are still not allowed to meet there family members and advocates.

Kodnani arrest: A ray of hope for justice in Gujarat

Kodnani arrest: A ray of hope for justice in Gujarat | TwoCircles.net

Kodnani arrest: A ray of hope for justice in Gujarat
Submitted by admin4 on 30 March 2009 – 8:16pm.

* Indian Muslim

Arrest of Kodnani shows wheels of justice have started moving in right direction in Gujarat; may act as a deterrence to prevent repeat of 2002; say activists.

By TwoCircles.net special correspondent,

Ahmedabad: With the arrest of Maya Kodnani, a former minister in Narendra Modi’s cabinet and Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader Jaydeep Patel following cancellation of their anticipatory bail by the Gujarat High Court on March 27, human rights groups, political activists and legal luminaries feel that the wheels of justice have now started moving in the right direction in the state.

Former physics professor and well-known human rights activist J S Bandukwala talking to TwoCircles.net on this issue said that Indian society has to recognize that there is no difference between Pakistani terrorist Ajmal Kasab involved in November 2008 Mumbai killings and Kodnani as well as Patel accused of mass carnage of Muslims in Naroda Gam and Naroda Patiya cases on the outskirts of Ahmedabad during anti-Muslim communal riots in February-March 2002.

“But the sad point is that Kodnani and Patel escaped justice for seven years because of protection from the Sangh Parivar and the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party in the state”, he says.

While Kodnani is reported to be close to BJP’s prime ministerial candidate L K Advani as both happen to be Sindhi migrants from Pakistan, Patel is known for his proximity to Modi. Like Patel, 53-year-old Kodnani has deep RSS roots as she was actively associated with Rashtriya Sevika Samiti, women’s wing of the RSS, since the time she joined the Baroda Medical College from where she did her MBBS and Diploma in Gynaecology and Obstetrics.

“The only way to prevent the repeat of 2002 is to punish the principal figures involved in those riots as we can see currently in UP Varun Gandhi is being deliberately built up by BJP to polarize society to gather votes’’, opined Bandukwala saying they are totally unconcerned about damage Varun’s hate speech can cause to the society.

“Our difficulty is that in the last 60 years we have not taken action against political leaders who preach hatred against a community or caste”, he pointed out. And this, according to Bandukwala, has encouraged the likes of Bal Thackeray and his family in Maharashtra and people like Narendra Modi in Gujarat and Varun Gandhi in UP to continue with their hate-mongering.

“As Modi’s political stature shot up after he engineered 2002 mass carnage and also went scotfree, Varun Gandhi wants to repeat it in UP for rise in UP as well as in national politics”, he pointed out.

“But once the law takes a firm stand and Kodnani is sentenced to death, it will completely discourage future rabble rousers”, Bandukwala hoped.

Welcoming the high court order, Vadodara-based Munir Khairuwala of Gujarat unit of All India Milli Council told TwoCircles.net that the arrest of Jaydeep Patel, a former state unit secretary of VHP had established the involvement of VHP and Sangh Parivar in 2002 riots.

“After the SIT declared Kodnani absconder, she should have been dropped from the cabinet by Modi but the latter allowed her to continue in violation of all democratic norms and conventions”, said Khairuwala. Kodnani and Patel were declared absconder on February 2 after they did not go to SIT for giving their statements despite summons issued to them. On February 5, they procured anticipatory bail from Additional Sessions Court in Ahmedabad. Gujarat High Court on March 27th canceled the sessions court order. Kodnani resigned before surrendering to the SIT set up by the Supreme Court.

Stating that the high court order would strengthen the faith of people in rule of law and judiciary, former Director General of Police R B Sreekumar, who was punished by Modi for speaking against him as chief of state intelligence bureau, hoped the SIT would bring out the larger conspiracy behind mass killings in other riot cases as well like Kidiyad, Gulberg Society and Ode and bring to book the real conspirators who designed and perpetrated genocidal crimes.

Stating that the arrest of only Kodnani from the ruling party would have limited effect, Sreekumar said that the arrest of real planners of the riots along with the collaborators in bureaucracy and police was a must for a long term solution to genocidal crimes in the country. His views were supported by senior Congress leader Arjun Modhjwadia who said that 2002 carnage was orchestrated by Narendra Modi and his colleagues and monitored by officials in Chief Minister’s office.

“So what SIT has done so far is just a tip of the iceberg and it still has a lot to do to detect the politically more influential accused and bring them to justice”, remarked Modhwadia.

Senior advocate and Jan Sangharsh Manch representative Mukul Snha, commenting on the development, said the high court ruling had only vindicated their seven year old allegation that post-Godhra violence was not a spontaneous reaction but an organized killing. In fact, the high court order has equated the Naroda Patiya and Naroda Gam killings with terrorism.

Sinha said that the judgment has opened up possibility of further investigation into larger conspiracy as to who organized and executed statewide violence.

“The buck should not stop at Kodnani or Jaydeep Patel but it must go deeper”, he demanded.

The high court order, he said, also proved that Nanavati commission appointed by the state government had not told the truth and hence, it must be disbanded immediately.

Mumbai-based activist Teesta Setalvad of Citizens for Justice and Peace, who played the chief role in getting SIT appointed by moving the apex court, sees a ray of hope for justice for Gujarat victims of 2002 carnage in the arrest of Kodnani.

“I hope the SIT probe will go further and deeper, nail more politicians and ministers who were involved in 2002 mass killings of Muslims”, she says.

She said that the Gujarat government had removed the name of powerful accused from the complaints and also influenced the judiciary in the state.

“The Best Bakery and Bilqisbano cases show that if trial is conducted independently result will be different”, she said, adding that the accused in the two cases were punished after their trial in Mumbai.

The judiciary in Gujarat had acquitted all the accused in the Best Bakery case in which 14 people had been burnt alive.

However, the government spokesperson and a minister in Modi’s cabinet Jay Narayan Vyas said that the high court order could not be seen as court holding Kodnani guilty. He said that high court’s decision was a mere legal procedure.

[Photo: The Hindu]

AMU MBA Student Ahmad Faraz awarded by TCS

AMU MBA Student Ahmad Faraz awarded by TCS | TwoCircles.net

AMU MBA Student Ahmad Faraz awarded by TCS
Submitted by admin4 on 30 March 2009 – 10:18am.

* Indian Muslim

By TwoCircles.net news desk,

New Delhi: Ahmad Faraz, an MBA first year student of Aligargh Muslim University AMU, has been awarded with “TCS Smart Manager Award”. As part of the award he wins a cash prize of Rs 25 thousand.

It is notable that Tata Consultancy Services invites students of management institutes from all over India to participate online in a “Case Study Contest” where in a business problem is given to them and they are asked to provide practical solutions to challenging business problems.

The students in large numbers from institutes such as IIMs, IITs, NITIE, NMIMS and etc. participate in the contest but only one gets the award.

TCS had advertised a case contest which was on a retail organization facing terrorist attack. Faraz had sent an analysis and solution for that one month back and has been awarded now.

Noteworthy, TCS contest has importance because it includes higher qualified personalities of the country such as NR Naryan Murthy, the chief Mentor of Infosys Technologies, Nitin nohria, the Associate Dean of Harvard Business School, S. Ramodarai, the CEO and M.D. Tata Consultancy Services, Omkar Goswami, the Founder and Chairperson of CERG advisory and Gita Piramal, the India’s foremost business writer.

Prof. Javaid Akhter the chairman of the department of Business Administration, Aligarh Muslim University congratulated Ahmad Faraz calling it as proud moment for all AMU members.

Sacramento Muslims try their hand at matchmaking

Sacramento Muslims try their hand at matchmaking – Sacramento News – Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee

By Jennifer Garza
jgarza@sacbee.com
Published: Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2008 – 12:00 am | Page 3B
Last Modified: Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2008 – 10:00 am

The meeting was well into its second hour when Tamir Sukkary let out a loud sigh, put his head in his hands and asked about chaperones.

Should we have them?

He knew this was a sensitive subject for some Muslims.

“Mahram? Of course,” answered one man, an outspoken member of the committee.

After a 40-minute discussion the Matrimonial Singles Task Force unanimously voted to encourage guests to have chaperones for its Jan. 24 mixer for single Muslims.

Because it is the group’s first event, members decided prudence is best. “It is important to be careful,” said Sukkary.

The Matrimonial Singles Task Force at Sacramento Area League of Associated Muslims, or SALAM, is believed to be the first of its kind in Northern California, and it is getting a lot of attention within the Sacramento Muslim community.

The goal of the group, which is made up of men and women, married and unmarried, is clear: Help devout Muslims find suitable mates.

It is not a dating service. “The goal is to find a spouse,” said Imam Mohamed Abdul Azeez, spiritual leader of SALAM.

The task force is taking every step to make sure Islamic principles are followed. Still, Azeez knows some Muslims do not approve. One local imam confiscated fliers for the singles mixer posted at his Sacramento mosque.

Azeez is determined. “We have to do something. The problem is widespread and it is serious,” said the imam. “All of the mosques in the area have failed in providing our people with an important but basic service – helping couples get married.”

Sukkary, 36, who teaches political science at American River College, is on the committee and is looking for a wife.

“It is hard for Muslims to meet, partly because there’s not enough lawful (halal) venues to connect single Muslims,” said Sukkary. “This service could really help.”

Practicing Muslims do not date. Traditionally, devout men and women meet spouses through friends and family. Chaperoned meetings are arranged. If the couple hits it off, an engagement ensues. If not, the prospective bride or groom go their separate ways.

In recent years, meeting potential mates has become more challenging, Azeez said.

That is because men and women have little, if any, interaction with the opposite sex. Growing up, Muslim boys are taught, as a sign of respect, never to approach a Muslim girl. That separation continues when they become adults. At many mosques, men and women must enter through separate doors to worship.

At next month’s mixer, organizers have planned every detail, including seating arrangements where men and women sit at the same table, how they will stand together in line at the buffet, and how workshops and games will steer the discussion to marriage.

In countries with large Muslim populations, meeting marital candidates is not a problem. It is more difficult in the United States because there are fewer Muslims and because many U.S.-born Muslims choose to find their own mates.

Those following the traditional route have a harder time.

Shemeem Khan is looking for a devout young woman for her son. She has asked friends of friends for help, but many of them are looking for spouses for their own children.

“I didn’t know how difficult it would be,” said Khan.

It has been more than a year since her son, a California Highway Patrol officer, told her that he was ready to get married. He is looking for potential mates, but it is customary to ask parents to help in the search.

Khan began approaching strangers at mosque. “Do you know of any young girls looking to get married?” she’d ask.

“There is definitely a need for this. People tell me all the time that they’re looking for someone, too,” she said.

Singles interested in the matchmaking service pay $50 and fill out a three-page application that covers cultural background (country of birth), education and lifestyle interests.

Religious practices are also asked: Do you pray? Wear a hijab, or head scarf?

A section for spousal criteria asks about such things as employment status and preferred nationalities.

“We wanted to be as thorough as possible,” said Khan.

The Matrimonial Task Singles Force reviews the applications and pairs them with ones they think will match.

The group started accepting applications a couple of months ago. So far, no matches have been made.

“We are hoping there will be one soon,” said Khan, who hopes that the group’s success rate will improve once it receives more applications.

Ming Ma filled out a form. She also plans to attend the upcoming singles event.

Ma, 28, is a Sacramento pharmacist who said she has always put her career at the forefront. She is now actively looking for a spouse.

Her mother is also helping in her search. They don’t always agree on what’s most important in a spouse.

“Our standards are clashing,” said Ma, who begins laughing. “For my parents, the priority is education, but that’s not as important to me.”

There is one criterion that her future spouse must meet.

“I’m looking for a practicing Muslim,” said Ma. “Someone whose faith is important to him. That’s why I’m doing all this.”

Islamic school thrives in Sacramento Part 2

Islamic school thrives in Sacramento – Sacramento News – Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee

Islamic school thrives in Sacramento
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By Jennifer Garza
jgarza@sacbee.com
Published: Friday, Mar. 13, 2009 – 12:00 am | Page 6B

“Our parents are really the backbone of the school,” said Wardany.

One-of-a-kind education

Gihad Silmi volunteers in the classroom twice a week. Two years ago, her family moved from Willows near Chico so their son Hussein, 13, could attend the school.

“No other school offers this kind of education,” said Silmi. She said she worried about the problems her son could face at a public school as he got older. “He was getting at the age when there’s a lot of peer pressure – you know, girl stuff. We wanted him to be around people with the same beliefs.”

Al Arqam is named after the man who started the first Islamic school in the Arabian Peninsula, a humble schoolhouse where the Prophet Muhammad taught.

From the outside, the Sacramento school isn’t much to look at. Tucked away in a troubled neighborhood, the school is surrounded by an 8-foot-high fence. A car from a private security firm is parked near the school’s entrance. Parents hired full-time security after 9/11, but the school – next door to the Florin Road sheriff’s station – has had no problems, said Wardany.

Inside, the corridors bustle with students heading to their next class. Volunteers pass out the latest edition of the student newspaper, the Torch. Fifth-grade boys recite scripture in their Quran class. Girls their age talk about their favorite foods in their Arabic class. A third-grade class learns about how Jackie Robinson broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier.

A group of seventh-graders from St. Francis elementary school in midtown recently toured the school to learn about Islam.

“This has been a real eye-opener. I had no idea this school was here,” said Angelique Bradley of Sacramento, a St. Francis parent. “I’m very impressed with the kids. They’re very respectful, especially with how they address the teachers.”

At Al Arqam, students and teachers refer to each her as “Brother” and “Sister,” one way faith is integrated into the curriculum. Daily prayer is required, and classes on the Quran and Arabic are mandatory. Muslim values and etiquette also are taught. Each month, the student body studies a theme, such as modesty or respect. Recently, a group of girls was assigned to shop at the mall for a modest teenage wardrobe.

“Needless to say, it wasn’t an easy assignment,” said Wardany, laughing.

While the lower grades are crowded, enrollment in the high school is small. By the time kids reach high school, parents have more options or they think their children have developed a solid religious foundation, said Wardany.

Ossama Kamel, 15, is a sophomore at the school. He plays sports with non-Muslim friends who teased him about the class size. “They say, ‘you have four kids in your class?’ ” he said, laughing.

Kamel knows some will criticize the school.

“There are haters out there, they think we’re training to be terrorists or something,” said Kamel, shaking his head. “What we’re learning is how to be good Muslims – good Muslim Americans.”

Islamic school thrives in Sacramento

Islamic school thrives in Sacramento – Sacramento News – Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee

By Jennifer Garza
jgarza@sacbee.com
Published: Friday, Mar. 13, 2009 – 12:00 am | Page 6B

  • BRYAN PATRICK/bpatrick@sacbee.com

    Heba Kelani, center, chats with friends outside a classroom at Al Arqam Islamic School in south Sacramento. The girls are wearing hijabs, or head scarves, part of the modest clothing that is worn at the school. Al Arqam is one of the fastest-growing faith-based schools in the region, drawing kids from outside the state.

It is 7:45 Thursday morning when the students at Al Arqam Islamic School line up for an assembly before school. As always, boys in their lines, girls in another.

The morning scripture reading can be heard throughout the south Sacramento campus. A kindergartner adjusts her hijab, or head scarf. A teenage girl whispers to her little brother to settle down. Two eighth-grade boys talk about “American Idol.”

Imam Mohamed Kamel steps forward, and the room quiets.

“Allah does not care about how good you look or how wealthy you are,” he said near the end of his five-minute talk. “All he cares about is how clean your heart is and how good your deeds are.”

Here at a converted Best department store across from Florin Mall, students learn lessons in academics and the Islamic way of life.

More than 300 students attend Al Arqam, which officials say has the only full-time comprehensive Islamic high school in California.

While other religious schools struggle with enrollment, Al Arqam is thriving and is one of the fastest-growing faith-based campuses in the region.

The students come from Sacramento and other parts of California, and a few are from other states. They come from different backgrounds, ethnicities and cultures but share a common faith.

They are all Muslim, they all dress modestly, they all follow the same dietary rules, and about 1:15 in the afternoon, they all break from studies to face Mecca and pray.

Last month, the Catholic Diocese cited declining enrollment for the merging of two south Sacramento schools and the closure of Loretto High School. Al Arqam, which started 11 years ago, has added 40 students in the past two years and has a waiting list of about 50 students, mostly for the lower grades.

Al Arqam started its high school three years ago. Enrollment is small in the upper grades, but administrators see those numbers growing as the children in the primary grades get older.

Two weeks ago, Al Arqam was accepted into the academically rigorous International Baccalaureate program, believed to be the first private school in the Sacramento region to achieve that status.

Families make sacrifices

Many families have moved to Sacramento just so their children could attend the school. Tuition is about $4,500 a year.

Ramseesha Sattar, 14, moved from Reno to Sacramento with her family after she and her siblings were accepted at Al Arqam. She plans to stay for high school.

During a recent computer class, she wondered, for a moment, what public school would be like in her hometown.

Perhaps, she said, no one would notice if she removed her head scarf or talked to a boy in the corridor. At Al Arqam, such behavior would bring unwanted attention. Conversation between a boy and a girl must be respectful and be for a specific purpose, such as asking about an assignment.

Still, Sattar said she would prefer Al Arqam over a public school.

“I like it here. I don’t mind the rules,” said Sattar “They’re teaching us about Islam, and that’s the way it is.”

Her father said the family didn’t hesitate to move even though he had to find someone to manage his restaurant in Reno while he started another business in Sacramento. He pays nearly $12,000 annually in tuition for this three children.

“Every sacrifice we have made has been worth it,” said Mohammed Sattar. “It was not easy. But it was important that the children get a good education and learn Islamic teachings.”

School officials predict interest in their campus will grow. “People in our community really value education, and they’re looking for an environment where their children can practice their religious values,” said Dalia Wardany, the school’s vice principal who has three children at Al Arqam.

Some Muslims have doubts about the school, said Wardany. She said they worry about the academic standards and if it is as good as a public school. “We’ve worked like crazy to change that,” she said, adding that they have received more inquiries since acquiring IB status.

Many of the school’s parents have brought their expertise to the school. Ninety-eight parents work at Intel.

Islamic laws of finance a cushion in hard times

Islamic laws of finance a cushion in hard times – Sacramento News – Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee

Islamic laws of finance a cushion in hard times
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By Stephen Magagnini
smagagnini@sacbee.com
Published: Monday, Mar. 30, 2009 – 12:00 am | Page 1A

  • CARL COSTAS/ccostas@sacbee.com

    Farouk Fakira, center, rents a home, as do many other local Muslims, because under Islamic law, interest is mostly banned. About 20 percent of the area’s 50,000 American Muslims closely follow such rules, says economist Irfan Haq.

  • CARL COSTAS/ccostas@sacbee.com

    Sajid Hussain, left, and Akhtar Khan, members of the Masjid Annur Islamic Center in Sacramento, discuss finances and faith recently.

The recession gripping the nation has taken less of a toll on American Muslims who follow age-old Islamic laws against paying – or charging – interest.

They’ve also been shielded by socially responsible retirement plans because Shariah– Islamic law – forbids investments in banks and mortgages as well as tobacco, alcohol, gambling, pornography or weapons.

“If everybody was Shariah-compliant, there would be no recession,” said Farouk Fakira, a Yemeni immigrant who moderated a discussion on Islamic finance at Sacramento’s Masjid Annur last week.

Fakira, 57, rents a home – like hundreds of other local Muslims – because “interest is pretty much forbidden. If you’re making money off of money, the only person who benefits is you.”

Shariah – 1,400 years of Islamic legal knowledge based on the words of the Prophet Muhammad – guides Muslims in daily life, said Imam Muhammed Abdul Azeez of Sacramento Area League of Associated Muslims, or SALAM.

Shariah prohibits usury, which often took advantage of a desperate person who needed to feed or protect his family, Azeez said. “There’s an element of exploitation here.”

The bottom line for many Muslims is, “if I don’t have the money to buy something, that means I can’t afford it,” said Deya Dean Elghassein, who’s Palestinian American.

His family helped him buy his home in Folsom with cash. “I do use credit cards, but they have to be paid off in full at the end of the month,” he said. He wouldn’t invest in Costco because it sells pork and alcohol, but he and others shop there “out of necessity.”

About 20 percent of the Sacramento area’s 50,000 American Muslims closely follow Islamic rules of finance – especially the prohibition against interest – said Irfan Haq, an economist who’s president of the Council of Sacramento Valley Islamic Organizations , an umbrella organization representing 10 mosques.

“Muslims in general have been much less affected by the recession because they’re very cautious and conservative in matters of finance and take a longer-term view of life,” Haq said. “They want to invest their funds in a way that pleases God so they can sleep peacefully – they care about the afterlife.”

Along with avoiding interest, another tenet of Islamic finance is not to invest in enterprises that violate Shariah: alcohol, gambling, banking and weapons. Azeez counsels his Muslim flock not to buy businesses that sell alcohol because “you cannot be in the business of spreading sin: Drunk driving kills.”

Mohammed Memon, a Pakistani American project manager for Oracle in Rocklin, has a 401(k) through Amana Mutual Funds – a Shariah-compliant fund based in Bellingham, Wash.

“They’re relatively better than other funds; I’m down 15 to 20 percent while many of my friends are down over 50 percent,” said Memon, 38.

Amana’s income and growth funds avoid bonds and interest-paying securities.

“We screen about 5,500 stocks a month for our 75,000 shareholders, and 2,200 to 2,400 pass,” said portfolio manager Nick Kaiser. “The growth fund’s biggest holding is Apple Computer. We buy technology, health care stocks and stocks with low debt. The income fund focuses on drug companies, energy stocks, mining.”

Shariah also prohibits gharar – the Arabic word for uncertainty or risk – and maysir – gambling – which includes real estate speculation.

Metwalli Amer, founder of SALAM, said he knows Muslims who speculated in real estate and lost their shirts.

Amer, 75, said Islamic finance is about living within your means and helping the needy. “If Muslims had followed that, we’d be much better off,” said Amer, an Egyptian immigrant.

But he said the majority of Muslims he knows “became greedy.”

Islam doesn’t prohibit wealth as long as you give back, he said. “The Quran promotes going into business and trading ventures that share the profits and loss.”

Amer said one Sacramento Muslim who was able to become a millionaire while adhering to Islamic financial principles is Kais Menoufy.

Menoufy left Egypt in 1976 and landed in California in 1985 after becoming vice president of a computer science company in Europe and saving his money by sleeping on floors.

“When I started my own company in Sacramento nine years ago, I rented an apartment for $800 a month in the Arden area and again was sleeping on a mattress on the floor,” said Menoufy, 62.

By plowing the profits back into his business, Menoufy said he built Delegata Technology Consulting & Systems Integration into a multimillion-dollar company with about 100 employees. “You spend as much as you can make,” said Menoufy.

He recently bought a home along the Garden Highway for cash.

While Islamic scholars generally say interest-based financial transactions are prohibited, sometimes American Muslims have no choice, said Azeez of SALAM. “Every day I get a question about interest and student loans – I tell them getting your education is an absolute necessity.”

If a student can’t get an interest-free federal loan, “get yourself a loan with an interest rate as close to inflation as possible – they cancel each other out,” Azeez said.

Some scholars say the financial relationship between consumers and banks is OK if there’s no exploitation.

Akhtar Khan, who has a doctorate in economics, bought his home with a conventional mortgage out of necessity, he said, but hopes to pay it off as soon as possible.

Muslims are allowed to buy a home directly from the owner with owner financing, some scholars believe.

Mohammed Memon bought his home from the builder. “No banks are involved – there can’t be a third-party contract.”

Hamza El-Nakhal, a retired microbiologist from Egypt, said he came to the United States with $10 in his pocket 40 years ago.

He got a bank loan to buy property here. “Many scholars say that if it’s necessary to buy your home and take out a loan to survive in a foreign country, it’s OK,” said El-Nakhal, who is on the board of the Islamic Center of Davis. “There were no Islamic lending institutions when I bought. Now there is.”

T
he Shariah-compliant Lariba Bank of Southern California, founded in 1987, lends money without interest – instead, it goes into partnership with its clients and then charges rent on the property.

Here’s how Lariba works: If you borrow $80,000 from Lariba on a $100,000 home, you send a monthly payment to Lariba that has two components. The first is a portion of the money you owe Lariba. The second component is a rental payment that declines each month as you build up equity.

The first month, you pay 80 percent of the monthly rent to Lariba. Every month, you pay off a portion of the loan without interest, and then pay a smaller percentage of the rent based on your share of the principal.

“The approach is one of investment as opposed to just lending money,” said Lariba’s president Mike Abdelaaty.

Rather than checking to see if a client has the ability to pay back a loan, he said, “we use the rental value of the property in measuring whether it’s a good investment.”

The monthly rent is fixed over the term of the loan, which is competitive with other banks, said Yahya Abdur Rahman, Lariba’s founder. “We’ve never kicked anybody out of their homes. We give them a three-month grace period, and then we tell them, ‘Maybe your home is too big for you and you need to move to an apartment.’ ” If the house is sold, 100 percent of the profit goes to the customer, he said.

Other religions, including Judaism and Catholicism, also had prohibitions against usury, said Rahman, whose more than 3,000 clients span all faiths.

China cracks down in Muslim west

China cracks down in Muslim west

BEIJING (AP) — An overseas rights activist said Monday that authorities in China’s predominantly Muslim far west are closing unregistered Islamic schools and conducting house-to-house searches in a new security crackdown in the restive region.

The campaign under way for five weeks in the city of Hotan underscores Beijing’s persisting concerns about separatist movements in its Central Asian border province of Xinjiang.

While anti-government protests and a security clampdown in Tibetan areas have grabbed attention over the past year, China has also been battling unrest in Xinjiang, with a flare-up in violence last year that killed 33 people. Like the Tibetans, many of Xinjiang’s ethnic minority Uighurs have chafed under Beijing’s rule and restrictions on the practice of religion.

The clampdown in Hotan — once a jade-trading center on the Silk Road and still a bastion of Uighur culture — was meant to quash dissent before August’s anniversary marking communist troops’ entry to Xinjiang 60 years ago, the Germany-based World Uighur Congress said Monday.

A congress spokesman, Dilxat Raxit, said in an e-mail that armed police were making nighttime raids from house to house. At least seven religious schools have been shut and 39 people arrested so far, Raxit said.

The official Xinhua News Agency earlier this month reported that Hotan authorities had launched a campaign against “illegal religious activity” at the end of February and “had already achieved some initial success.”

“Officials uncovered some illegal religious activities, seized a large number of illegal books, handwritten materials, computer discs, audio tapes and other propaganda materials as well as bullets, fuses, explosive and flammable materials, and other weaponry,” it said.

A secretary with Hotan’s Communist Party Propaganda Department on Monday denied that any religious schools were closed, people arrested or bullets, explosives and other materials seized. But he confirmed that some illegal religious activity has been halted and illegal books, writings, computer discs and audio tapes had been confiscated.

He refused to give his name or any more information and referred calls to other departments where the phone rang unanswered or officials said they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The clampdown is consistent with previous efforts to target a resurgent Islam that the government says is fanning radical, violent separatism in Xinjiang. A year ago, several hundred Muslims staged a protest in Hotan that rights groups said was against a ban on women wearing headscarves but that the government said was incited by an overseas Islamic group.

Uighur separatists have waged a low-intensity campaign of sporadic bombings and assassinations for the past 20 years as social controls loosened along with free-market reforms and as more ethnic Chinese came to Xinjiang in search of work.

Last August, violence in Xinjiang killed 33 people, including 16 border guards slain when two attackers rammed a stolen truck into the group before tossing bombs and stabbing them.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

10 Terms Not to Use with Muslims

March 30, 2009 Forward to a Friend Support CAIR Contact Us Update Your Profile

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HADITH OF THE DAY: KINDNESS AND SIMPLICITY – TOP

The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said: “Be kind, for whenever kindness becomes part of something, it beautifies it. Whenever it is taken from something, it leaves it tarnished.”

He also said: “Make things simple and do not complicate them. Calm people and do not drive them away.”

Imam Bukhari’s Book of Muslim Manners

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10 TERMS NOT TO USE WITH MUSLIMS – TOP
There’s a big difference between what we say and what they hear.
Chris Seiple, Christian Science Monitor, 3/28/09

Arlington, Va. – In the course of my travels from the Middle East to Central Asia to Southeast Asia it has been my great privilege to meet and become friends with many devout Muslims. These friendships are defined by frank respect as we listen to each other; understand and agree on the what, why, and how of our disagreements, political and theological; and, most of all, deepen our points of commonality as a result.

I have learned much from my Muslim friends, foremost this: Political disagreements come and go, but genuine respect for each other, rooted in our respective faith traditions, does not. If there is no respect, there is no relationship, merely a transactional encounter that serves no one in the long term.

As President Obama considers his first speech in a Muslim majority country (he visits Turkey April 6-7), and as the US national security establishment reviews its foreign policy and public diplomacy, I want to share the advice given to me from dear Muslim friends worldwide regarding words and concepts that are not useful in building relationships with them. Obviously, we are not going to throw out all of these terms, nor should we. But we do need to be very careful about how we use them, and in what context.

1. “The Clash of Civilizations.” Invariably, this kind of discussion ends up with us as the good guy and them as the bad guy. There is no clash of civilizations, only a clash between those who are for civilization, and those who are against it. Civilization has many characteristics but two are foundational: 1) It has no place for those who encourage, invite, and/or commit the murder of innocent civilians; and 2) It is defined by institutions that protect and promote both the minority and the transparent rule of law.

2. “Secular.” The Muslim ear tends to hear “godless” with the pronunciation of this word. And a godless society is simply inconceivable to the vast majority of Muslims worldwide. Pluralism which encourages those with (and those without) a God-based worldview to have a welcomed and equal place in the public square is a much better word.

3. “Assimilation.” This word suggests that the minority Muslim groups in North America and Europe need to look like the majority, Christian culture. Integration, on the other hand, suggests that all views, majority and minority, deserve equal respect as long as each is willing to be civil with one another amid the public square of a shared society.

4. “Reformation.” Muslims know quite well, and have an opinion about, the battle taking place within Islam and what it means to be an orthodox and devout Muslim. They don’t need to be insulted by suggesting they follow the Christian example of Martin Luther. Instead, ask how Muslims understand ijtihad, or reinterpretation, within their faith traditions and cultural communities.

5. “Jihadi.” The jihad is an internal struggle first, a process of improving one’s spiritual self-discipline and getting closer to God. The lesser jihad is external, validating “just war” when necessary. By calling the groups we are fighting “jihadis,” we confirm their own and the worldwide Muslim public’s perception that they are religious. They are not. They are terrorists, hirabists, who consistently violate the most fundamental teachings of the Holy Koran and mainstream Islamic scholars and imams. (More)

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CAIR: OBAMA HEADS OVERSEAS TO TACKLE WORLD ECONOMY – TOP
Richard Wolf, USA Today, 3/30/09

After 10 weeks in office trying to save the U.S. economy, President Obama is ready to take on the world economy. Whether the world is ready for his remedy remains in doubt.

Obama flies to London on Tuesday, then on to four other nations, for his first overseas trip since assuming office and with the global economy in shambles. It’s one of the most anticipated presidential trips since John Kennedy went to Berlin in 1963…

The trip is set to end in Turkey, a nation that is 99% Muslim but has direct ties to the West. “Turkey has always been viewed as a bridge between East and West, a kind of stabilizing influence in the region,” says Ibrahim Hooper of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

In his inaugural address, Obama pledged to seek a new relationship with the Muslim world “based on mutual interest and mutual respect.” As a result, his every move and phrase in Ankara and Istanbul will be closely followed. (More)

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CAIR: MUSLIMS SEEKING GREATER INFLUENCE – TOP
Effort puts resumes of top candidates in White House hands
Noreen S. Ahmed-Ullah, Chicago Tribune, 3/29/09

In a bid to get more Muslim Americans working in the Obama administration, a book with resumes of 45 of the nation’s most qualified—Ivy League grads, Fortune 500 executives and public servants, all carefully vetted—has been submitted to the White House.

The effort, driven by community leaders and others, including Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), was bumped up two weeks ahead of schedule because White House officials heard about the venture, said J. Saleh Williams, program coordinator for the Congressional Muslim Staffers Association who sifted through more than 300 names.

“It was mostly under the radar,” Williams said. “We thought it would put [the president] in a precarious position. We didn’t know how closely he wanted to appear to be working with the Muslim American community.”

The effort aims to get the administration focused on Muslim Americans, a group that has at times felt like a pariah. During the campaign, Obama’s staff prevented Muslim women wearing head scarves from being photographed behind him, in one of many incidents that left Muslim Americans feeling slighted by the candidate.

Now, Muslim Americans—who according to a recent study overwhelmingly backed Obama in the November election—have been carefully watching the administration’s every step.

Most expressed disappointment with Obama’s initial silence during Israel’s offensive in Gaza. They’ve been encouraged by the video message the president issued recently to the Iranian people on the eve of the Persian holiday of Nowruz, and they want more diplomacy with Syria and Iran. They’ve been troubled by FBI admissions of sending what activists call “agents provocateurs” into mosques, and the bureau’s break in ties with Muslim American organizations such as the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

Community leaders hope the White House will consider Muslim Americans for posts in the administration. They say this is not just a chance for Muslim Americans to show their patriotism but also a chance for the country to engage the community and recognize its importance. There are an estimated 7 million to 8 million Muslims in America, but there have not been any Muslims appointed to key positions, as yet.

A White House aide confirmed the Obama administration had received the resumes, noting that it is “not unusual” for the administration to consider lists of job candidates suggested by constituent groups.

“We’re still very much in the middle of the [hiring] process, even when it comes to very senior government employees. These things take time, and they’re all based on finding the right fit,” said the aide, who declined to be identified because he is not authorized to speak publicly for the administration.

“Muslims are not looking for handouts,” said Abdul Malik Mujahid, the Downers Grove founder of the Muslim Democrats, who points to Zalmay Khalilzad, tapped by former President George W. Bush for many key roles. “We’re just looking for equal opportunity and inclusiveness. That will give a far better message to the Muslim world than speeches.” . . .

Some hope Atty. Gen. Eric Holder will reverse Bush administration actions such as the FBI’s decision to break formal ties with CAIR because it was named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the case involving the Texas-based Holy Land Foundation.

“We’re hoping that once Eric Holder puts the department in order and places people in different positions, we can re-establish what were very positive relations [with the FBI] in our 15-year history,” said CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper. (More)

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CAIR-TX: GENDER EQUITY ROOTED IN TEACHINGS OF ISLAM – TOP
Sarwat Husain, San Antonio Express News, 3/28/09

Throughout history, women all over the world had to struggle for equality in a male-dominated world. During International Women’s Month, it’s worth considering how Islam’s teachings were an early harbinger of gender equity – contrary to a common misperception.

Prior to Islam, a female child was often regarded as a threat to the economic welfare of the family and some were even buried alive as soon as they were born. As an adult, she was a sex object that could be bought and sold. From this inferior position, Islam raised women to a position of influence and prestige in the family and in society.

Many of the rights conferred on women by the Prophet Muhammad more than 1,400 years ago have only partially and grudgingly been given to women in other cultures in recent centuries.

With respect to gender equity, the essential human dignity and fundamental equality of women in Islam is at one with the feminist movement of the West, despite images of Muslim women in the media and some agenda-driven circles as ignorant, oppressed and submissive. The perception that Islam subjugates women is far from the facts. (More)

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CAIR-CA: HUNDREDS MARCH TO HONOR CESAR CHAVEZ – TOP
Sam Stanton, Sacramento Bee, 3/28/09

More than 700 people took to the streets of downtown Sacramento today for a march honoring the late farm labor leader Cesar Chavez and to support issues ranging from workers’ rights to an end to the war in Iraq. . .

The event was the ninth annual march sponsored by the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement and included groups ranging from the Sacramento City Teachers Association to the Council on American-Islamic Relations. (More)

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CAIR-
SAN ANTONIO HELPS HONOR CESAR CHAVEZ – TOP

(SAN ANTONIO, TX, 3/30/09) The San Antonio, Texas, chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-SA) recently participated in a Cesar Chavez Ecumenical Service attended by representatives of many different faiths.

Speaking at the services as a representative of Islamic faith, Sarwat Husain, president of CAIR-SA said “We call on all people of good conscience to once again bring back the legacy of the union Leader Cesar Chavez by standing hand in hand in the long fight for peace and justice because we understand that service in the way of God is perfect freedom. It is neither restrictive nor limiting. Restrictions diminish a man’s capacities and happiness. Oh God! Once again we are standing at the cross roads of oppression and injustice. You taught us that true excellence lies, not in the intellectual or manual attainments of people of differing gifts; but in the moral attainments of a pure heart.”

The services that were held at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church were focused on issues of peace and justice, and in particular, how those issues relate to immigration.

CAIR, America’s largest Muslim civil liberties group, has 35 offices and chapters nationwide. Its mission is to enhance the understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties, empower American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and mutual understanding.

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MCCARTHYIST TACTICS ALIVE AND WELL, THANKS TO THE FBI – TOP
Yusuf Khan, Examiner.com, 3/28/09

Say, did you hear the big news about the FBI last week?

No? Come on!

Alright, because didn’t read it in the Christian Science Monitor or the OC Register I’ll fill you in. Here’s the scoop.

In their noble effort to rid our country from the plague of terrorism, the Federal Bureau of Investigation hired an informant whose job it was to infiltrate California mosques with the hope of identifying suspicious individuals.

To quote, the exact assignment according to the informant was, “We want to perfect and train you to infiltrate the Islamic community.”

Nice. Makes me feel great about popping into a local mosque for prayer.

Now you’d think that they would hire the ideal man for this noble, patriotic endeavor, right? Wrong.

In a profound display of extraordinary judgment. the man picked as the ideal candidate for the job was ex-con artist Craig Monteilh, convicted in 2008 for grand-theft.

Whoops. But wait, the fun doesn’t end here. Read on!

Monteilh’s assignment was to pose as a new Muslim convert named Farouk al-Aziz and spout fiery rhetoric to basically anyone who would listen. Whoever lended a sympathetic ear would be promptly reported to the FBI as a suspect terrorist.

As the “agent provocateur” visited mosque after mosque in SoCal, things weren’t going so well for the Feds or Monteilh. They weren’t finding any militants! In fact, the opposite happened. (More)

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PASSOVER: A DAY FOR FAITH AND UNDERSTANDING – TOP
Janet Jensen, News Tribune, 3/30/09

Muslims, Christians and Jews shared unleavened bread at a Passover Seder Sunday night in a Tacoma synagogue as a step toward building interfaith bonds and eventually a house.

Volunteers from the three faiths will join together to build a house on Tacoma’s East Side, from April 24 to mid-July, for Tacoma/Pierce County Habitat for Humanity.

Habiba Karim, a Muslim from University Place, said the interfaith Seder at Temple Beth El was important because “it gives us a chance to understand each other.”

Her mother-in-law, Zarina Karim, agreed. “There’s so much to learn,” she said.

Led by Rabbi Bruce Kadden, the group of 50 recounted the Passover story of the ancient Hebrews’ deliverance from slavery.

They sat at tables with plates containing traditional Passover elements including matzo, or unleavened bread.

The word Passover comes from the book of Exodus, which tells how God killed the firstborn of Egyptian households but passed over the homes of the Israelites. The Israelites had to leave in such haste they had no time to let their bread rise, thus the tradition of unleavened bread.

Allison Wisco, a Christian who lives in Tacoma, said she found it “interesting to be involved with the ritual of the Seder.”. . .

American Indians also attended the Seder and are taking part in the building project. A salmon bake and an interfaith comedy show are planned before the house in Tacoma is completed, said Cassandra Jarles, with Habitat in Pierce County. (More)

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NY: REACHING OUT TO CHRISTIANS: MUSLIMS MARCH FOR RECONCILIATION – TOP
Hundreds rally in Binghamton
George Basler, Gannett News Service, 3/30/09

Muslims from the Southern Tier and other communities as far away as Michigan and South Carolina gathered in Binghamton on Sunday to celebrate the Prophet Muhammad’s birthday and publicly urge reconciliation between Christianity and Islam.

“In many places Muslims and Christians are in conflict. This is senseless because it leads to a tremendous loss of life and suffering,” said M. Hasib Haqq, public relations spokesman for the new United Muslim-Christian Forum, which organized Sunday’s program.

The best way to overcome the conflict is to emphasize the commonalities between the two religions – namely belief in God, practice of The Ten Commandments and emphasis on “the golden rule” of “doing unto others as they would do unto you,” he said.

More than 500 people, including a small number of non-Muslims, filled West Presbyterian Church on Main Street for a series of speeches, followed by a march on Main and Court streets to the Broome County Courthouse lawn.

West Presbyterian’s board approved use of the church to “foster inter- religious dialogue, understanding and tolerance,” said the Rev. Andrew Stehlik, pastor, who spoke during the program. Other speakers included Binghamton Mayor Matthew T. Ryan; the Rev. Tim Taugher of St. Catherine’s Church in Hillcrest; and Khalifah Muhammad Hussein Adams, chairman of the Muslims of the Americas. (More)

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MI: EAST GRAND RAPIDS MAN CHALLENGES POPULAR IMAGE OF MUSLIMS – TOP
Charles Honey, Grand Rapids Press, 3/28/09

Muhammad Rasoul, chief operating officer of Global Forex Trading, has been in back-to-back meetings since 5:30 a.m., starting with a conference call to Japan and London. He hopes to be home in time to put his two younger kids to bed.

But in this typical wire-to-wire day, Rasoul also will make time for something sacred: the five prayers Muslims are expected to make each day.


Anytime, I can close that door and do whatever I have to do,” Rasoul says of his airy office at 4760 E. Fulton St. in Ada Township. “I really benefit from having that five minutes of peace and quiet to myself. It’s almost like a meditation.”

Prayer is an obligation Rasoul takes seriously, as he does all other aspects of his adopted Islamic faith. Whether it’s flying to Singapore on business or teaching his children about God, Islam is his guidebook for doing the right thing.

If you think you know who Muslims are, meet Rasoul and think again. (More)