UCI incident showcases dangers of rampant rumors...
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UCI incident showcases dangers of rampant rumors
The most disturbing aspect of the pseudo-controversy over
graduation stoles worn by Muslim students at the UCI was seeing the
nation’s leading Jewish advocacy groups morph into purveyors of
anti-Muslim hate and shills for right-wing extremists.
California Muslims were dismayed when the American Jewish Congress
falsely claimed that the Islamic graduates planned to wear stoles
indicating support for terrorism. We were sickened when the
Anti-Defamation League distributed a news release referring to the
Islamic declaration of faith, or “shahada,” as an “expression of
hate” that is “offensive to Jewish Students.”
The shahada, “there is no god but God and Muhammad is the
Messenger of God,” is the core Muslim belief in the oneness of God
and is one of the “five pillars” of Islam. No person can be a Muslim
without believing in the shahada. When someone accepts Islam, we say
they “take shahada.” (Ironically, the Jewish declaration of faith,
the Shema Yisrael, similarly states: “Hear O Israel, the Lord our
God, the Lord is One.”)
This particular conspiracy theory began, as most do, with a lie
spread on the Internet. Earlier this month, right-wing extremists
began claiming that Muslim students at UCI planned to wear stoles
bearing the word “shahada.” They mistranslated “shahada” as the
Arabic word for suicide bomber.
As the controversy spread from Internet hate sites to right-wing
media outlets, few Islam-bashers bothered to mention that the stoles
did not in fact bear the word shahada, they bore the shahada itself.
They also forgot to mention that, along with the declaration of
faith, the stoles bore the Arabic phrase, “God, increase my
knowledge.”
The Jewish leaders pounced on the issue when it hit the legitimate
media. Anti-Defamation League representatives handed out their news
release attacking the shahada at a press conference held by the
Muslim graduates to say their stoles were an expression of pride in
Islam and had nothing to do with Palestinian suicide bombers.
Five members of American Jewish Congress confronted, some would
say intimidated, Muslim students at the UCI graduation ceremonies.
(Imagine if a Muslim group sent its members to confront Jewish
graduates who wore yarmulkes or stoles bearing the Shema Yisrael.)
Perhaps the leaders of both groups should read about other events
that took place as they were demonizing the linguistic essence of
Islam.
On Friday, Muslims in the Tampa suburb of Lutz, Fla., found the
words “Kill all Muslims” scrawled on the interior of their vandalized
community center. On Saturday, a Florida newspaper reported that the
FBI is investigating threats against a Charlotte Harbor mosque. Last
month, three Miami Islamic centers were vandalized.
Incidents targeting mosques and Islamic centers have occurred
recently across America. For example, a man was arrested for
threatening an El Paso, Texas, Islamic center. Also in Texas, an
arson suspect was arrested at the scene of a fire at a Muslim
business in San Antonio, and vandals scrawled racist graffiti on the
interior of a Lubbock mosque.
In May, unknown arsonists torched a UCI student display set up to
challenge the wall Israel is building on Palestinian land. The Orange
County Human Relations Commission recently released its 2003 annual
report that showed a 50% increase in hate incidents directed at
members of the Muslim and Arab-American community. In April, CAIR’s
own annual report on the status of American Muslim civil rights
showed a 70% increase in anti-Muslim incidents nationwide in 2003,
with the largest number occurring in California.
This is the battle that all of us, Muslims, Christians and Jews,
need to fight. Instead of seeking ways to demonize one another in a
zero-sum game of political and religious “gotcha,” let us all work
together to challenge intolerance and to build a better America for
ourselves and for our children.
SABIHA KHAN
Anaheim
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Sabiha Khan is the communications director for
the Southern California office of the Council on American-Islamic
Relations.
Local commentary might sound like hate
Michael Glueck didn’t like it when Muslim students wore stoles of
religious significance to a recent graduation ceremony at UCI. He
didn’t like it so much that he has demanded that UCI administrators
apologize to the community. He even wrote a commentary about how much
he didn’t like it (“UC Irvive makes an unjustifiable and dangerous
decision” in Tuesday’s Daily Pilot). Is it reasonable to guess, from
what he’s written, that Glueck isn’t a Muslim? And, if he isn’t, then
what makes Glueck think he can dictate to those whose faith he may
not share, or demand that they not be allowed to reasonably express
their faith as they see fit? Did someone appoint Glueck our supreme
leader when we weren’t looking?
Of course, most of what Glueck writes is just factually incorrect.
To bolster his opinion that Muslim students shouldn’t be allowed to
profess their faith by wearing a religious symbol that is meaningful
to them, he misinterprets what separation of church and state
actually means and implicitly suggests that if someone (if that
someone is a Muslim, apparently) wears a religious symbol that can be
seen by others, and if one attends a state-supported school, that
this amounts to a breach of the principle of a separation of church
and state. This is, of course, nonsense.
Such twisted logic could eventually lead to a situation where
people of various religions, who believe they should display their
faith, would be barred from attending state-supported schools that
their taxes support unless they hid the expressions of their
religious feelings.
Wouldn’t that be a little like Jews having to hide that they were
Jews in Germany in 1938? Glueck also indicates that wearing the
stoles might have been an attempt to “polarize the community,” and
that the students were allowed to “provoke rather than pacify.” What
Glueck writes could have been written in Germany against the Jews.
Thus, we might have read in 1938 that Jews were polarizing the
community by wearing Stars of David or yarmulkes, and they were
trying to provoke rather than pacify.
Now, there must be an element of reasonableness and consistency in
all this. It would not be acceptable for someone to justify tearing
down a religious display put up by people of another religion (as was
apparently also done at UCI) or to show up at graduation nailed to a
cross because the person believes his religious faith demands that.
But, in the case at UCI, what got Glueck all worked up was nothing
more than a piece of cloth around a student’s neck.
Perhaps the best way to address Glueck and what appears to me to
be his implicit intolerance for an outward expression of some
religious feelings that he seems to not be in agreement with, is to
turn the situation around: Will Glueck demand that UCI stop Jewish
students from wearing yarmulkes? If not, why not? And, even if he
does so demand, Glueck, as far as I know, hasn’t been given the
authority to demand that others believe as he believes or that they
express themselves in ways that he finds acceptable.
Of course, in his misguided commentary, Glueck attempts to find
cover for what appear to be intolerant views when he makes a
ridiculous comparison between the simple wearing of stoles and
“bring(ing) in gladiators and horses and start(ing) World War IV.”
Glueck’s commentary isn’t the stuff born of reasoned, even-handed,
fair-minded thinking. To Muslims, it probably sounds like hate.
Freedom does not mean that we must all be homogenized and
“Stepfordized” into plain-wrap Americans, consistent with Glueck’s
views, but that we may all live our lives and worship as we each see
fit with a minimum of intrusion by those of different views and
religions.
When people of one religion can force people of another religion
to not wear their religious symbols, we’ve entered a dark day for
American notions of freedom. If Glueck doesn’t like looking at the
Muslim stoles, then he should look in the other direction, not demand
that they not be worn. If Muslims don’t like looking at whatever
expressions of faith, or lack thereof, that Mr. Glueck chooses to
show to the world, then they, too, can simply look in the other
direction.
It’s called freedom of expression. Glueck should go back and read
the 1st Amendment and try to understand why the founders of this
nation made it No. 1 on their list.
M. H. MILLARD
Costa Mesa
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