To Muslim Extremists: Not in the Name of Islam

Hassan Zillur Rahim

Posted Sep 25, 2004      •Permalink      • Printer-Friendly Version
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To Muslim Extremists: Not in the Name of Islam

Muslim extremists often cite the Quran, out-of-context and contrary to the Holy Book’s spirit of mercy and compassion, to justify their crimes. Thus, for instance, in the four-page document that investigators found in Muhammad Atta’s luggage in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, the terrorist ringleader invoked no fewer than 18 verses from the Quran to exhort his band of brothers to commit violence that took nearly 3,000 lives. Since the September attacks three years ago, we American Muslims have observed with increasing alarm and frustration how a minority of Muslim fanatics continued to wage one brutal terrorist act after another around the world—Moscow, Bali, Karachi, Madrid—leading to hundreds of lost and shattered innocent lives, all in the name of Islam and the Quran.

It became clear to us that we had a supremely important role to play in fighting these fanatics: We had to clearly and unequivocally condemn the killing of innocents, particularly when Muslims were the perpetrators.

As the world recoils from the horrifying images of bloodied, lifeless children being carried away by shell-shocked parents and rescuers from a Russian school in which Muslim Chechen radicals killed more than 300 people, our role becomes that much more urgent.

There are positive signs. Recently, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Washington-based Islamic civil rights and advocacy group released a “Not in the Name of Islam” petition on its website (http://www.cair-net.org) that states: “We, the undersigned Muslims, wish to state clearly that those who commit acts of terror, murder and cruelty in the name of Islam are not only destroying innocent lives, but are also betraying the values of the faith they claim to represent. No injustice done to Muslims can ever justify the massacre of innocent people, and no act of terror will ever serve the cause of Islam. We repudiate and dissociate ourselves from any Muslim group or individual who commits such brutal and un-Islamic acts. We refuse to allow our faith to be held hostage by the criminal behavior of a tiny minority acting outside the teachings of the both the Quran and the Prophet Muhammad.”

“As it states in the Quran: ‘O you who believe, stand up firmly for justice, as witnesses to God, even if it be against yourselves, or your parents, or your kin, and whether it be against rich or poor; for God can best protect both. Do not follow any passion, lest you not be just. And if you distort or decline to do justice, surely God is well-acquainted with all that you do. (4:135)’”

About 700,000 Muslims have already signed the petition—the essence of which is that it is preferable for Muslims to suffer injustice than to commit it—and the number increases everyday.

Similar sentiments are also being expressed in many mosques throughout America and by Muslim freethinkers on such websites as www.MuslimWakeUp.com and www.naseeb.com/naseebvibes Ordinary Muslims are reflecting on their faith and looking into their souls for a more inclusive view of Islam and its implications for humanity.

American Muslim women, in particular, are asserting themselves with a fervor unthinkable in the pre-9/11 days. The blind acceptance of the teachings of misogynistic imams and scholars is rapidly becoming a thing of the past. They are discovering new and holistic readings of the Quran that do away with gender apartheid and that calls for social justice and greater participation of women in the management of mosques and Islamic schools.

A group called “The Daughters of Hajar,” known as Hagar in the Bible and Jewish history, a national organization dedicated to empowering Muslim women actively challenges women to pray in the main hall and to boldly use the front door in mosques in which they were required to enter by a back door. Other groups warn Muslims of the danger of bloc-voting in national elections. Yet others decry the religious narcissism of the self-appointed guardians of the faith and exhort them to shun anti-Semitism and practice humility, kindness and intellectual honesty.

Ours is a community in which ordinary Muslims are beginning to explore their own understanding of the Quran and their relationship with the Creator, as opposed to allowing others to do it for them. A thinking, expressive and active community is the best antidote to the poison of fanaticism and nihilism that plagues the Muslim body today.

Words get around at lightning speed in the Internet age. When Muslim extremists realize that the Muslim Ummah (community of believers) will not stand by their criminal acts and, if called upon to do so, will also fight them, they may have second thoughts about embarking on suicidal missions in the name of Islam. The lives of civilians and school children may ultimately depend on it.


Originally published in the Berkeley Daily Planet at http://www.berkeleydaily.org/text/article.cfm?issue=09-10-04&storyID=19603 

Hassan Zillur Rahim Hasan Zillur Rahim writes on Islamic issues and has been a long time editor of Iqra, a national Islamic magazine. He also worked with us on the original print version of The American Muslim.

 

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