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As I was leaving my neighborhood en route to Tarawih prayers last night, a car ran through a
stop sign and nearly crashed into my vehicle. Fortunately, I was able to
swerve and avoid any contact. Reverting back to some pre-Islamic ghetto
instincts, I immediately reversed, and sped up the street behind the reckless
perpetrator. I caught up with the car about half a mile up the road and
shouted at the driver, “Why don’t you learn how to drive!” The driver, a
female, shouted back, “f____ you! Terrorist!” Apparently my Kufi,
and my wife’s Hijab were sufficient evidence to
indicate that we were Muslim. The word “terrorist,” dripping with deep
contempt and hatred, based on a prejudiced view of two total strangers,
sounded eerily like another word that symbolizes the worst sort of
prejudicial hatred this country has known, namely, “nigger.”
Something foul is happening in this country as we move
deeper into this post 9-11 world. The growing racist hatred and denigration
currently directed at Muslims is indicative of a deep sickness. The most
disturbing aspect of this malady is that it is being deliberately induced.
The strategists behind the campaign may be motivated by their selfish service
to a foreign power, they may be motivated by an attempt to justify massive
security budgets, they may be motivated by a deep
hatred of Islam. Whatever their motivation, they know that the climate they
are creating is one that is often characterized by pogroms, and sometimes by
genocidal slaughter.
This climate is fueled by fictitious e-mails speaking of
fictitious diatribes uttered by fictitious Imams urging the Muslim faithful
to indiscriminately kill the “infidels.” It is fueled by the reckless
jingoism of hatemongering radio personalities. It is fueled by government
misinformation campaigns that create a public perception of imminent danger
to the people of this country from a technologically backwards, politically
divided, socially truncated Middle East. It is also
fueled by the ill-conceived, strategically counterproductive actions of a
handful of misguided Muslims who call themselves Mujahideen.
If the current climate deepens and manifests in concerted
campaigns of violence against the Muslims of this country it will not be an
anomalous situation. The genocide that destroyed the Indian nations that once
occupied this land took place in a similar climate. In the 1880s Chinese
immigrants were shot in the streets of some western cities and hamlets like
stray, rabid dogs. Those pogroms could only take place because a climate of
hatred and bigotry had been created. The internment of the Japanese during
World War Two took place in a climate of hate that was cultivated throughout
the 1930s. Finally, it was in a climate of bigotry and hatred that
dehumanizing violence was visited upon successive generations of African
Americans.
During such times, it takes a tremendous amount of
courage to resist and demand that the country live up to the meaning of those
lofty words that accompanied her inception, “We hold these words to be self
evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty,
and the pursuit of Happiness.”
This week one of the giants who dared to make such a
demand has passed on. On December 1, 1955, Rosa
Parks made the fateful decision to remain seated in the “white” section of a Montgomery, Alabama
bus. For that decision, she will forever stand in our memories. Many Muslims,
especially those who are new to this country may ask, “What do we find to
honor in this non-Muslim lady? She did not do anything big.” Let us be
explicit in answering that query. In the climate of hatred that provided the
context for Rosa Parks’ simple act of defiance, many people were being
brutally murdered for far less. In that climate, what she did was monumental,
and she suffered because of it. She and her family were harassed relentlessly
in the aftermath of her arrest. The pressure became so great that in 1957 her
husband, Raymond Parks, suffered a nervous breakdown. That same year she left
the south to reside in Detroit, Michigan.
That said, her act of defiance
in and of itself could be considered small. It was not even the first
incident of its kind in Montgomery. However, God decreed that on that day, Rosa Parks would sit.
And because she sat Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. stood up; because she sat the
city of Montgomery, Alabama stood up; because she sat the South stood up; because she sat
a nation’s conscience was roused.
In the ensuing agitation, civil and voting rights
legislation was passed, affirmative action legislation was passed, a black
man ascended to the bench of the Supreme Court, and most significantly, for
most of those reading this message, immigration laws were amended allowing a
flood of Muslim immigrants to enter this land. Now the political winds are
changing and the current mood is a harbinger of a struggle ahead for American
Muslims. We may well face the kind of climate faced by Rosa Parks deep down
in Dixie. That climate will challenge us in ways that it challenged
Mrs. Parks.
History remembers Rosa Parks favorably, just as it
remembers the legions that preceded her in demanding a dignified existence
for African Americans in this country. As we embark on our struggle to
maintain our dignified existence here, we should ask ourselves, “How will
history remember us?” The answer to that question lies in how we respond to
another question, the simple question that was presented to Rosa Parks, “Will
we stand or will we sit?”
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