SEPTEMBER 1999, pages 121-125
Muslim-American Activism
24th ICNA Annual Convention Attracts
Heavy Participation
The theme of the 24th Conference of the Islamic Circle
of North America (ICNA), held in Baltimore, Maryland July 2-4, was
“Youth, the Future of Islam: Myths and Realities.” ICNA has 3,000
members and 60 local units across the U.S. and Canada. Its primary
purpose is to provide intellectual, moral and physical training
from an Islamic perspective to families living in North America.
ICNA’s annual convention, held in different cities each
year, is now a major event that attracts thousands of Muslim families,
giving friends and relatives a chance to get together to celebrate
their history and Islamic heritage. The convention center in Baltimore
was well-equipped to handle the greater than usual numbers this
year at its convenient downtown location near the aquarium and scenic
harbor.
Some of this year’s keynote speakers from the U.S.
and overseas were: Prof. Ghulam Azam (Ameer Jama’ati Islami Bangladesh);
Sheikh Muhammad Siyam (former imam of Masjid Al-Aqsa); Mawlana Yusuf
Islahi (renowned scholar and writer); Abdullah Adami; Dr. Abdullah
Idrees Ali (former ISNA president); Dr. Sulayman Nyang (Howard University
scholar and historian); Imam Siraj Wahhaj (Famous Da’ee of Islam);
Dr. Mohammad Yunus (Ameer ICNA); and Dr. Ayub Thakur (from the U.K.).
Other speakers included Dr. Muzammil Siddiqui, Imam Jamil Al-Amin,
Dr. Mukhtar Maghraoui, Sheikh Abu Bakr Syed, Imam Muhammad Naseem,
and Qazi Hussain Ahmad.
There were extra programs for youths, young children
and women, interfaith discussions, and many workshops, as well as
family counseling and a marriage service. There were sessions in
English, Arabic, Urdu, and Bangla. Young Muslims for Faith and Action
programs included sessions to help youths growing up in North American
society to apply the teachings of Islam to work through social and
moral issues.
Some of the workshops focused on Dawah (presenting
the Islamic message to one’s family, friends, neighbors and society
at large), organization, and training. Between sessions and meetings,
visitors shopped in the ICNA bazaar area where they could find everything
from incense, perfume, dresses and computer programs to books, toys
and Washington Report on Middle East Affairs magazines. ICNA
has formed several important institutions, which each had booths,
such as The Message Publications, Sound Vision, MSI Financial Services,
ICNA Relief (which provides humanitarian aid to Kosovo refugees
in Albania and Macedonia), Muslim Alert Network, and ICNA Book Service.
Participants left laden with purchases and fresh ideas
and with every intention of returning next year for more.
—Delinda Hanley and Sadia Razaq
At Maryland Islamic Academy, Students Help Kosovars
As the world witnessed the humanitarian disaster in
Kosovo, the children of Al-Huda School, a full-time Islamic academy
in College Park, Maryland, chose not just to watch, but to act.
Under the guidance of Principal Muhammad Sani, the students
from kindergarten through sixth grade launched a fund-raising project.
The students’ efforts, which extended to families, friends,
and the community, raised $1,823 in fewer than three weeks, with
nearly $900 of the total raised by the fifth-grade girls.
After teachers explained to the children the perilous
situation of the Kosovar Muslims, Principal Sani said, “We hoped
that they would understand that regardless of race, color, nationality,
social and economic status, Muslims are united by a common factor,
Islam.”
By taking part in the campaign, students also learned
that every Muslim, regardless of age, has the capability to help
others and has a role to play in the larger Muslim community, he
said.
Particularly touching to the teachers was the students’
reactions to the suffering of their Muslim brothers and sisters,
Sani said. A second grader told him, “I wish I could go there and
live with them or that they could come here and live with me.”
“As Muslims in Kosovo, Palestine, Iraq, Kashmir, and
many other parts of the world continue to experience injustice and
weakness, I hope that children and adults will follow the example
of the students of al-Huda, and support their fellow Muslims,” Principal
Sani said.
— Sadia Razaq
Minaret of Freedom Dinner Examines
Hijab and Religious Freedom in Turkey
At the annual dinner of the Minaret of Freedom Institute
in Gaithersburg, Maryland on June 26, keynote speaker Avis Asiye
Allman, a Muslim artist of combined Christian and Jewish heritage
and a former visiting scholar at New York University, provided a
useful review of history in examining the issue of hijab and
religious freedom in Turkey.
Following World War I, the victorious allied nations
decreed that the Arab countries formerly under Ottoman Turkish rule
could be provisionally recognized as independent, subject to assistance
and advice of a state charged with the mandate for them. Britain
would be responsible for Iraq and Palestine, and France for Syria
and Lebanon.
Of the Arab countries, only parts of the Arabian Peninsula
remained free of European rule. Once the Ottoman occupation ended,
Yemen became an independent state under Yahya, imam of the Zaydis.
In the Hijaz, the western part of the Arabian Peninsula, the Ottoman-appointed
custodian of Mecca, Sharif Hussain, who had joined the war against
the Turks, ruled until the 1920s, when his domain was absorbed into
the expanding nation being created by King Abd al-Aziz Ibn Saud
from central Arabia. However, without known resources, few links
with the outside world, and surrounded on all sides by British power,
Yemen and Saudi Arabia were independent only within limits.
Of the former Ottoman territories, the only truly independent
state which emerged from the war was Turkey. Established in Anatolia
upon the framework of the Ottoman administration and army and dominated
until his death by Turkish military hero Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
Turkey embarked on a path which led it away from its Oriental past
and from the Arab countries with which it had been so closely connected.
It sought to re-create society on the basis of national solidarity,
a rigid separation of state and religion, and a deliberate attempt
to separate from the Middle Eastern world and become part of Europe.
In the 1930s in the new Turkish republic the Islamic
shari’a was formally abolished and replaced by secular laws
derived from European models. Part and parcel of Ataturk’s disestablishment
of Islam was using the term hijab to make a connection between
the veiling of women and the lack of democratic values and progress.
As Allman explained, for Ataturk, the embrace of hijab
by the Islamists was indicative of both their desire to control
women and their lack of democratic values. “In a 1925 speech Ataturk
claimed: ‘In some places I have seen women who put a piece of cloth
over their heads to hide their faces. Can the mothers and daughters
of a civilized nation adopt this strange manner, this barbarous
posture? It is a spectacle that makes the nation an object of ridicule.
It must be remedied at once.’”
Allman continued by saying, “From its creation, the
Republic of Turkey has represented a secular democratic experiment
in a Muslim country. However, Turkish-style secularism is not the
same as its Western counterpart. Secularism in Turkey does not mean
a complete separation between religion and state. In contrast to
America, the state openly controls religion and the limits are numerous:
open displays of religion are forbidden, male public servants cannot
grow beards and female civil service workers are not allowed to
wear hijab.”
The recent incident involving Merve Kavakci, a 31-year-old
veiled Turkish Muslim woman elected to serve in the Turkish parliament,
revealed not only the profound impact of Kemalism and its efforts
to erect a monolithic secular society, Allman said, but the extreme
polarization within the general population.
When Kavakci attempted to take her oath while wearing
a headscarf this past May, deputies from the Democratic Left Party
rose to their feet, clapped rhythmically and chanted, “Out! Out!”
Allman recounted. Only a few days later, Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit
announced that President Suleyman Demirel had signed an official
decree stripping Kavakci, who held both Turkish and U.S. nationality,
of her Turkish citizenship.
Allman, who has worked for many years on issues of religious
freedom abuses in Turkey, explained that although Kavakci’s case
received public attention, it is only one of a thousand like it.
Many women in Turkey have been prevented from obtaining an education
and employment because of their religious convictions, Allman charged.
“Beginning in the 1998-99 school year, the National
Board of Higher Education issued a ban against wearing the head
scarf which applies to all universities in Turkey,” Allman stated.
“An estimated 40,000 students wearing headscarves in about 60 universities
in Turkey have been deprived of their right to education.” Female
professors who chose to wear the head scarf also were affected.
In an effort to protest against the government’s policies,
three million people from all over Turkey joined in a nonviolent
demonstration, Allman said, adding that one day after this act 25
medical students were arrested and now 22 medical students are being
prosecuted.
In Turkey today, a fierce battle continues to rage over
the status of veiled Muslim women. As Allman said, “For many modern,
non-veiled Turkish Muslim women, Ataturk freed the women of Turkey
and for many Turkish intellectuals, the head scarf represents backwardness.”
As Turkish elites continue to regard any gain in Islamist political
influence as a disastrous regression in Turkish democracy, they
must be cautioned, Allman said. The practice of veiling is not antithetical
to democratic values.
The problem, Allman said, is that women do face oppressive
conditions in Muslim countries, as do their counterparts in the
West, but the problems of women in the Islamic world do not derive
from the veil or Islam, as imagined from a Western frame of reference.
In Turkey, women are not being oppressed by the veil or Islam, but
rather by the Turkish state in which they live.
—Sadia Razaq
Bonior Meets With Northern Virginia
Muslim Activists
Congressman David Bonior, second-ranking Democrat in
the House of Representatives, spoke to Muslim activists from the
Virginia suburbs of the U.S. national capital at a July 13 buffet
reception at the Dar Al Hijra mosque in Falls Church, Virginia.
Calling the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
“the worst law ever passed by Congress,” the Michigan congressman
said its provision “allowing secret evidence is being used to discriminate
against Arab Americans and Muslim Americans who have come from the
Middle East.”
Citing discrimination by successive past generations
against native Americans, African-Americans, German Americans in
World War I and Japanese Americans in World War II, Bonior said,
“The story is not new but every time it has reared its head, people
have banded together to fight it, and that is a very good thing.”
Bonior described the Secret Evidence Repeal Act of 1999
he and “about 20 co-sponsors “are introducing into the House of
Representatives and also expressed concern about reports of airport
profiling, saying he had brought the FAA administrator and eight
FAA assistants to Detroit to meet with constituents who felt they
had been discriminated against.
He also deplored the withdrawal by House Minority Leader
Richard Gephardt of an invitation to join the congressional commission
on counter-terrorism to Los Angeles Muslim activist Salam al-Marayati,
whom Bonior called “a good man and a member of the Human Relations
Commission in Los Angeles.”
In answer to questions from the floor, Bonior said,
“I want us to recognize the significance of the diversity of Jerusalem.”
He also said he believes that the Palestinians should have a state.
Asked to comment on reports that in pursuit of a Senate seat from
New York, First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton had called for moving
the U.S. Embassy to Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, Bonior said,
“If the reports are correct, I am saddened as well. I think you
should ask for a meeting with her.” Concluding, Bonior pledged,
“I will do all that I can to speak out for what is in the best interest
of peace.”
—Richard H. Curtiss
Muslim Leaders Invited to State
Department Discussion
Ambassador at Large for Religious Freedom Robert A.
Seiple chaired a June 22 meeting at the Department of State between
American Muslim leaders and representatives of several U.S. government
agencies to discuss issues concerned with Muslim civil rights.
Muslim groups represented were the American Muslim
Alliance (AMA), American Muslim Council (AMC), the Council for American-Islamic
Relations (CAIR), the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC)—all represented
in the American Muslim Political Coordination Council—American Muslims
for Jerusalem, the Islamic Institute, the North American Council
for Muslim Women (NACMW), the Islamic Supreme Council of America,
and others including Arab-American groups with Muslim members.
Government officials included Harold Hongju Koh, assistant
secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor, and representatives
of the Department of Justice, the White House and the Federal Aviation
Administration.
CAIR executive director Nihad Awad expressed concern
about the use of secret evidence by the Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) in deportation hearings, calling it “unconscionable
that those facing deportation are not allowed to see the evidence
that is being used against them.” Calling it “a clear violation
of the Constitution and of basic human rights,” Awad said “the Muslim
community feels that it is under siege.” He added that “people are
afraid to go to mosques that are under surveillance” and charged
that “many people have been approached by the FBI and asked to work
with them to monitor what goes on in those mosques.”
The CAIR director stated that, “The Clinton administration
at the political level has been very open to the Muslim community.
But at a lower level the opposite has been the case. Frankly, we
believe that the law enforcement operations have become an extension
of the pro-Israel community,” Awad said.
Former American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)
legal director Houeida Saad, now an attorney in private practice,
provided several examples of discriminatory treatment of Muslims,
both American citizens and aliens, by federal authorities. Other
Muslim leaders attending the meeting suggested that airport security
profiling targets Muslim and Arab Americans. In response, a government
representative said that “the Department of Justice civil rights
division has reviewed all aspects of security profiling and is convinced
that no such [religious and ethnic] profiling exists. “That said,”
the representative added, “all ethnic groups are going to be affected.
Be advised that the people who are selected for additional security
are selected quite at random.”
Khaled Suffuri of the Islamic Institute and Abdurahman
Alamoudi of the American Muslim Foundation took issue with the statement,
citing apparent evidence of specific ethnic or religious profiling.
Hesham Reda of MPAC said that to date secret evidence has been used
almost exclusively against Arabs and Muslims.
Expressing appreciation for the frankness of the discussion,
a State Department spokesman said, “We get numerous requests from
Jewish groups to discuss Middle East issues.” He said that before
the meeting, he had checked with the State Department spokesman’s
office, which confirmed that “we rarely get requests from Arab and
Muslim groups.”
Hedieh Mirahmadi, general secretary of the Islamic Supreme
Council of America (ISCA), which is often critical of other U.S.
Muslim groups, complained that “there are thousands of Muslims who
are not represented here and who do not agree with the leadership
which is here.” She added that “we can’t stand up in every case
where secret evidence has been used and say this is unfair. In some
cases the use of secret evidence is fair.”
Her colleague, Dilshad Fakroddin, editor of the Supreme
Council’s The Muslim Magazine complained about leaders at
the meeting speaking for “the entire Muslim community” when “there
are Muslims who disagree with the positions being expressed.”
Abdurahman Alamoudi invitedthe two ISCA representatives
to submit the names of other leaders who should be invited to such
meetings.
Executive Director Aly R. Abuzaakouk of the American
Muslim Council brought up the lack of Muslim representation at government
policymaking levels, noting that “inclusion of Muslim and Arab Americans
is of importance.” He cited the incarceration for more than two
years of Dr. Mazen Al-Najjar of Tampa, Florida solely on the basis
of secret evidence.
“We want the rule of law,” Abuzaakouk said. “We are
law-abiding citizens. But we say, charge him or release him. As
American Muslims we do not stand for any criminal act. We stand
for the law. But don’t keep him rotting in jail.”
A State Department representative said that when personnel
officers visit university campuses “we do make a point of contacting
Middle East policy centers” and “we also contact diplomats in residence”
to make known State Department interest in recruiting qualified
Muslims.
Nihad Awad reminded him that “Muslims in America are
your gateway to one-fifth of the world’s population.”
At the meeting’s conclusion, Hesham Reda invited the
State Department representatives to this year’s convention of the
Islamic Society of North America in Chicago, Sept. 3-6, which some
20,000 U.S. Muslims are expect to attend. The Muslim leaders expressed
thanks for, in the words of Nihad Awad, “the Clinton administration’s
openness to the Muslim community” and “other efforts to promote
inclusion.”
Ambassador Seiple responded, “If we don’t get [religious
freedom] right in this country, we have nothing to say to the rest
of the world.”
—Richard Curtiss
Doubleheader for National Muslim
Leaders
Hosting the June 27 semi-annual meeting of the American
Muslim Political Coordination Committee (AMPCC), its chairman, Dr.
Agha Saeed, general secretary of the American Muslim Alliance (AMA),
arranged three events for one day in Sunny-vale, California. The
program started with a meeting of AMA Northern California chapter
leaders. (AMA Southern California chapter leaders had met the previous
day in Orange County.)
The chapter leaders were then invited to join Dr. Yahya
Bashaof Detroit, national board member of the American Muslim Council
(AMC), Omar Ahmed, national chairman of the Council for American-Islamic
Relations (CAIR), and Dr. Maher Hathout, chairman of the Muslim
Political Affairs Council, at a luncheon with Northern California
mayors and state and federal officials. After introductory statements
the government officials fielded questions from the Muslim leaders
during an hour-long discussion which dealt with a wide variety of
mutual concerns.
In the afternoon the AMPCC officers met to adopt an
action plan which was then submitted to the Council of Presidents
of Arab American Organizations for joint efforts on the issues of
secret evidence and elections in the year 2000. (See text on p.
13 of this issue.)
—Richard H. Curtiss
AMA Leadership Training Conference
Texas chapters of the American Muslim Alliance (AMA)
held a training conference in Austin on April 22 to educate current
and future American Muslim leaders on the U.S. election process.
Four state legislators and state Republican party and Reform party
directors addressed the conference, which was attended by about
40 Texas Muslim leaders as well as a number of young Muslims from
Austin schools and universities. Chairman Syed Ahsani, of the Dallas-Fort
Worth chapter of AMA, a retired Pakistani ambassador, coordinated
and chaired the conference.
Representative Talmadge Heflin (R-Houston) opened the
conference with a presentation on the duties of state legislators,
how committees work in the Texas House of Representatives, and the
process of introducing and approving a bill in Texas.
Representative Toby Goodman (R-Arlington) described
how to get involved in Texas politics and how to campaign for elective
office. He said that of the 120,000 to 130,000 registered voters
in his district, only 12,000, fewer than 10 percent, actually voted
in the last election. This underlined the importance that Muslim
voters can have in influencing local politics.
Representative Al Edwards (D– Houston) also spoke about
the low level of popular participation in the election process.
Suggestions raised by the audience included more accessibility to
voter registration cards, possible changes to current laws to allow
same-day registration and voting, and the need to educate the community.
Representative Lon Burnam (D–Fort Worth) spoke about
his involvement in international politics, mainly in South America,
and how holding elective office can further personal goals in international
politics. Representative Burnam is also the president of the Fort
Worth chapter of Peace Action, the largest peace group in the U.S.,
and perhaps in the world.
Linda Curtis, a member of the Reform Party’s State Executive
Committee, spoke about “the need for a third-party reform agenda—the
Jesse Ventura phenomenon.” She explained that an increasing number
of Americans (30 percent) identify themselves as independent. As
a result, she said, most voting decisions are based on a candidate’s
personal credentials, and not his or her party affiliation.
Chairwoman Suzan Weddington of the of the state Republican
party described many ways to participate in political activism,
as did Wayne Hamilton, who advocated getting involved by volunteering
and interning in the offices of elected officials.
Eric Vickers, a member of the AMA executive committee,
described the need for Muslim participation in the political process.
He spoke of the lessons learned from his experience in running for
the U.S. Senate in Missouri and concluded that getting involved
should start at the local level by building name recognition and
acquiring local experience.
Hala el-Ali, media coordinator for the D/FW chapter
of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), introduced
ADC and spoke of the need for alliances between Arab-American and
Muslim-American organizations and the role that the newly formed
alliance between nine Muslim and Arab organizations can play.
—Hala el-Ali
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