As an American Muslim, I am consistently and aggressively asked — by media figures, religious leaders, politicians and Internet trolls — to condemn terrorism to prove my patriotism.
I emphatically refuse.
Make no mistake: The terror imposed by those who sympathize with Daesh (an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State militant group), al-Qaeda, Boko Haram, al-Shabab and other groups is just as foreign to me as the terror advanced by mostly white men at the alarming rate of one mass killing every two weeks in this country.
Therefore, just as I have never been asked to condemn Dylann Storm Roof’s attack on parishioners of a historic black church in South Carolina, Robert Dear’s attack on a Planned Parenthood facility, the murder of 20 children at Sandy Hook Elementary School, or the slaughter of moviegoers in Colorado or Louisiana, I will not be bullied into condemning terror perpetrated by psychopaths who misrepresent and distort Islam for their deranged purposes.
Not surprisingly, nativist rhetoric and policies targeting American Muslims always start with the same feral calls for condemnation. Asking us to apologize for violence that has orphaned generations of Muslims has the perverse effect of re-victimizing us by erasing our humanity and experiences. There is no other acceptable scenario in which the media, politicians and even our president would urge and expect victims to apologize publicly and rout out the ideology that contributed to their own persecution.
Since 2000, the majority of terror attacks have occurred in five countries — Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nigeria and Syria, all Muslim-majority countries.Close to 90 percent of the victims of Daesh are Muslims. A 2009 studyconducted by the Combating Terrorism Center (CTC) at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point concluded conservatively that al-Qaeda has killed eight times as many Muslims as non-Muslims.
Muslims across the globe are not threats. They are threatened.
Muslim vulnerability is not just contained abroad. The pernicious disease that is Islamophobia is spreading at home, thanks to a steady diet of repugnant rhetoric and equally misguided policies. While the number of hate crimes reported to the FBI fell in 2014 in most categories, the number of anti-Muslim hate crimes rose, with Muslim Americans experiencing five times the number of hate crimes today than they did before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
Examples of crimes, threats and harassment against American Muslims abound. Last month, a group of individuals euphemistically called “armed protesters” by the media rallied outside the Islamic Center of Irving in Texas, greeting worshipers with assault rifles and other weapons. Later, the organizing group published the names and addresses of Muslim families and “sympathizers” on social media. In New York, a store clerk was beaten by a man who yelled “I kill Muslims.” In California, a woman berated a group of Muslims praying in a park and then threw hot coffee on them. Elsewhere in California, police are investigating a fire at a mosque as a hate crime.
Rasheed Albeshari was praying in Castro Valley, Calif., on Dec. 7, when a woman approached him and began shouting insults about his Muslim faith. Albeshari was then "hit by an umbrella before taking a shower of coffee." (Facebook/Rasheed Albeshari)
The list goes on, with even children in the role of both target and perpetrator. A Muslim girl in New York was put in a headlock, punched repeatedly and called ISIS (an alternative acronym for the Islamic State) by her classmates. An aggrieved mother reported on social media that she had to comfort her 8-year-old daughter because she began packing a bag after she heard “someone with yellow hair named Trump wanted to kick all Muslims out of America.”
A friend who has committed herself to bringing interfaith communities together and who has never shrugged off a question about her identity as an American Muslim woman who wears hijab spoke to me of a paralyzing fear she feels every time she leaves the house. In a country that cherishes religious freedom, countless other women are sincerely questioning whether they should remove their hijab for the safety of their children.
Sadly, as Muslims, we contribute to our own oppression by erroneously believing that if we just apologize, then the anti-Muslim rhetoric will end. And it never does. Condemnation becomes our admission of guilt, and we indirectly concede that terror is borne of us, and, therefore, we must atone and condone policies that criminalize us to prove “we have nothing to hide.”
But these calls for condemnation serve only zealots who will never be satisfied. They thrive and profit off of the fear-mongering, hate and violence generated by othering and silencing an entire community who has lived and contributed to our nation since its founding. The first Muslims in the United States were brought over bound as slaves, not immigrants. Muslims fought in every war starting with the American Revolution and have contributed to every facet of society — law, education, medicine, government, fashion, music, architecture and sports. And while some American Muslims have prospered, many face challenges — poverty, unemployment and undereducation — often overshadowed by foreign policy and compounded by pervasive discrimination in our country.
But I believe in a freedom that is true, that is real and that is unapologetically principled. I will always do my part and fight for justice.
But terrorism is not mine. I will not claim it, not even through an apology.
Now, my take.
Some here at Daily Kos have quoted parts of this Rana’s opinion in order to make her personal objection to having her loyalty to this country questioned because she will not apologize for, condemn or denounce crimes in which she has nothing to do with...and as she said, are ‘foreign to her’...into a referendum against Islam.
I totally object to such shortsightedness in taking the humanity out of someones personal experience, and making it being a representative of the evils of another.
I talk about how hard it is, when people who have to explain the death of their loved ones because of a clash of ideologies being turned into a claim of teaching hate toward the other side...and here we go again.
When...oh...when can a person simply tell the truth, and it not be made into a damned agenda.
She states that she no more understands terrorism ‘in the name of Islam’, by Islamic jihadist groups ten she understands White young man walking into a church and shooting 9 worshipers in cold blood as they begged for thier lives, or a deranged human walking into a movie house or a school, or a women’s health facility, or a Sikh temple...and on and on and committing mass murder.
In fact no sane person, understands the mindset of the deranged, and if we did, we should seek help immediately before we become a danger to another.
So...why is she only asked to condemn and denounce crime in the name of Islam, and not crime against a policeman responding to a call at a women’s health clinic, or a child sitting at his or her desk in Sandy Hook?
She is right, in Muslims just believing that if they keep ‘apologizing’ for every terrorist act in the name of Islam, that the lies, bigotry, and hate against Islam will go away. However, it is those who demand the apologies are the ones using the condemnation as acknowledgement that Muslims recognize that the violence is inherent in Islam, and a concession to the liars that what they say is true.
In the end she states, and i agree, ‘Terrorism is not hers, and she will not claim it, even though apology’
Now, lets try to address this on a personal level. Should Rana’s opinion about her patriotism and heritage as an American be questioned in any way because she will not own, apologize for, condemn or denounce any crimes she has nothing to do with?
When we respond, lets take care that Rana is not just a Muslim, but she has human attributes like mother, daughter, wife, friend...but mostly a patriotic American, fighting hand to hand for justice within the American framework of law.
Lets also remember that Rana Elmir took on a case to defend Pastor Terry Jones’ (the Qur’an burning pastor) right to ‘condemn Islam’...because it is what we AMERICANS call the right to free expression.
Rana Elmir states:
“...I vehemently disagree with him (Pastor Terry Jones), said, this is blatantly unconstitutional to prevent him from speaking. I stand up for his right to express himself because I value my right to express myself. … There’s nothing more empowering for me than to defend the right of someone to express themselves when I so passionately disagree with them...”
newamericamedia.org/…
I am not sure how much more American we can be.
Let’s remember, that Rana Elmir is an American, born and raised. She is not subject to the sayings of kings and leaders in Egypt and Mullahs in the UK. Let not those people represent her in your response. Rana Elmir works for the ACLU, an organization known for fighting for justice. Lets also remember too, that she is coming from a personal perspective, and not invoking or claiming to speak for someone else.