>From salon.com

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A memo to American Muslims

It's time for us to search our souls. How can the message of Muhammad become
a source of horror and fear? How can Islam inspire thousands of youth to
dedicate their lives to killing others?

Editor's note: The heartfelt and brave missive below, which is circulating
on the Web, comes as a bolt of reason in an increasingly unhinged time.
Written by an American Muslim scholar who was born in India, educated at
Georgetown University and now teaches political science at a Michigan
college, the open letter calls upon fellow Muslims to cast aside violent
passions and superstitions and embrace Islam's higher calling. The memo is a
direct challenge to Islamic intellectuals and clerics like Egyptian sheikh
Muhammad Al-Gamei'a, imam of the Islamic Cultural Center and Mosque of New
York City, whose wild-eyed descriptions of the Sept. 11 terror attacks as a
Jewish plot deserve the emphatic condemnation of thinking people everywhere.

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By M. A. Muqtedar Khan

Oct. 18, 2001 |  In the name of Allah, the most Benevolent and the Most
Merciful. May this memo find you in the shade of Islam enjoying the mercy,
the protection and the grace of Allah. I am writing this memo to you all
with the explicit purpose of inviting you to lead the American Muslim
community in soul searching, reflection and reassessment.

What happened on Sept. 11 in New York and Washington will forever remain a
horrible scar on the history of Islam and humanity. No matter how much we
condemn it, and point to the Quran and the Sunnah to argue that Islam
forbids the killing of innocent people, the fact remains that the
perpetrators of this crime against humanity have indicated that their
actions are sanctioned by Islamic values. The fact that even now several
Muslim scholars and thousands of Muslims defend the accused is indicative
that not all Muslims believe that the attacks are un-Islamic. This is truly
sad.

Even if it were true that Israel and the U.S. are enemies of the Muslim
world, a response that mercilessly murders thousands of innocent people,
including hundreds of Muslims, is absolutely indefensible. If anywhere in
your hearts there is any sympathy or understanding with those who committed
this act, I invite you to ask yourself this question: Would Muhammad
sanction such an act?

While encouraging Muslims to struggle against injustice (Al Quran 4:135),
Allah also imposes strict rules of engagement. He says in unequivocal terms
that to kill an innocent being is like killing entire humanity (Al Quran
5:32). He also encourages Muslims to forgive Jews and Christians if they
have committed injustices against us (Al Quran 2:109, 3:159, 5:85).

Muslims, including American Muslims, have been practicing hypocrisy on a
grand scale. They protest against the discriminatory practices of Israel but
are silent against the discriminatory practices in Muslim states. In the
Persian Gulf one can see how laws and even salaries are based on ethnic
origin. This is racism, but we never hear of Muslims protesting against them
at international forums.

The Israeli occupation of Palestine is perhaps central to Muslim grievance
against the West. While acknowledging that, I must remind you that Israel
treats its 1 million Arab citizens with greater respect and dignity than
most Arab nations treat their citizens. Today Palestinian refugees can
settle in the U.S. and become American citizens, but in spite of all the
tall rhetoric of the Arab world and Quranic injunctions (24:22), no Muslim
country except Jordan extends this support to them.

While we loudly and consistently condemn Israel for its ill treatment of
Palestinians, we are silent when Muslim regimes abuse the rights of Muslims
and slaughter thousands of them. Remember Saddam Hussein and his use of
chemical weapons against Muslims (Kurds)? Remember the Pakistani army's
excesses against Muslims (Bengalis)? Remember the mujahideen of Afghanistan
and their mutual slaughter? Have we ever condemned them for their excesses?
Have we demanded international intervention or retribution against them? Do
you know how the Saudis treat their minority Shiis? Have we protested the
violation of their rights? But we all are eager to condemn Israel; not
because we care for the rights and lives of the Palestinians; we don't. We
condemn Israel because we hate "them."

Muslims love to live in the U.S. but also love to hate it. Many openly claim
that the U.S. is a terrorist state but they continue to live in it. Their
decision to live here is testimony that they would rather live here than
anywhere else. As an Indian Muslim, I know for sure that nowhere on earth,
including India, will I get the same sense of dignity and respect that I
have received in the U.S. No Muslim country will treat me as well as the
U.S. has. If what happened on Sept. 11 had happened in India, the world's
biggest democracy, thousands of Muslims would have been slaughtered in riots
on mere suspicion and there would be another slaughter after the culprits'
identity was confirmed. But in the U.S., bigotry and xenophobia have been
kept in check by the media and political leaders. In many places hundreds of
Americans have gathered around Islamic centers in symbolic gestures of
protection and embrace of American Muslims. In many cities Christian
congregations have started wearing hijab to identify with fellow Muslim
women. In patience and in tolerance ordinary Americans have demonstrated
their extraordinary virtues.

It is time that we acknowledge that the freedoms we enjoy in the U.S. are
more desirable to us than superficial solidarity with the Muslim world. If
you disagree, then prove it by packing your bags and going to whichever
Muslim country you identify with. If you do not leave and do not acknowledge
that you would rather live here than anywhere else, know that you are being
hypocritical.

It is time that we faced these hypocritical practices and struggled to
transcend them. It is time that American Muslim leaders fought to purify
their own lot. For over a decade we have watched as Muslims in the name of
Islam have committed violence against other Muslims and other peoples. We
have always found a way to reconcile the vast distance between Islamic
values and Muslim practices by pointing to the injustices committed upon
Muslims by others. The point however is this -- our belief in Islam and
commitment to Islamic values is not contingent on the moral conduct of the
U.S. or Israel. And as Muslims can we condone such inhuman and senseless
waste of life in the name of Islam?

The biggest victims of hate-filled politics as embodied in the actions of
several Muslim militias all over the world are Muslims themselves. Hate is
the extreme form of intolerance and when individuals and groups succumb to
it they can do nothing constructive. Militias like the Taliban have allowed
their hate for the West to override their obligation to pursue the welfare
of their people and as a result of their actions not only have thousands of
innocent people died in America, but thousands of people will die in the
Muslim world.

Already, half a million Afghans have had to leave their homes and their
country. It will only get worse as the war escalates. Hamas and Islamic
Jihad may kill a few Jews, women and children included, with their suicide
bombs and temporarily satisfy their lust for Jewish blood, but thousands of
Palestinians then pay the price for their actions.

The culture of hate and killing is tearing away at the moral fabric of the
Muslim society. We are more focused on "the other" and have completely
forgotten our duty to Allah. In pursuit of the inferior jihad we have
sacrificed the superior jihad.

Islamic resurgence, the cherished ideals of which pursued the ultimate goal
of a universally just and moral society, has been hijacked by hate and calls
for murder and mayhem. If Osama bin Laden were an individual, then we would
have no problem. But unfortunately bin Laden has become a phenomenon -- a
cancer eating away at the morality of our youth, and undermining the
spiritual health of our future.

Today the century-old Islamic revival is in jeopardy because we have allowed
insanity to prevail over our better judgment. Yes, the U.S. has played a
hand in the creation of bin Laden and the Taliban, but it is we who have
allowed them to grow and gain such a foothold. It is our duty to police our
world. It is our responsibility to prevent people from abusing Islam. It is
our job to ensure that Islam is not misrepresented. We should have made sure
that what happened on Sept. 11 should never have happened.

It is time the leaders of the American Muslim community woke up and realized
that there is more to life than competing with the American Jewish lobby for
power over U.S. foreign policy. Islam is not about defeating Jews or
conquering Jerusalem. It is about mercy, about virtue, about sacrifice and
about duty. Above all it is the pursuit of moral perfection. Nothing can be
further away from moral perfection than the wanton slaughter of thousands of
unsuspecting innocent people.

I hope that we will now rededicate our lives and our institutions to the
search for harmony, peace and tolerance. Let us be prepared to suffer
injustice rather than commit injustices. After all, it is we who carry the
divine burden of Islam and not others. We have to be morally better, more
forgiving, more sacrificing than others, if we wish to convince the world
about the truth of our message. We cannot simply be equal to others in
virtue, we must excel.

It is time for soul searching. How can the message of Muhammad, who was sent
as mercy to mankind, become a source of horror and fear? How can Islam
inspire thousands of youth to dedicate their lives to killing others? We are
supposed to invite people to Islam, not murder them.

The worst exhibition of Islam happened on our turf. We must take first
responsibility to undo the evil it has manifest. This is our mandate, our
burden and also our opportunity.

salon.com
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About the writer
Muqtedar Khan is a political science professor at Adrian College in
Michigan. He is on the board of the Center for the Study of Islam and
Democracy.

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