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Top Ten - Letter from Iraq
The Weekly Standard Website ^ | 7/14/2003 | Omar Amin, Specialist, U.S. Army

Posted on 07/17/2003 6:20:55 PM PDT by jocon307

*10*

As I write this from Baghdad International Airport my thoughts drift to an upcoming 4th of July, a time when American Muslims feel that sense of duality a little more strongly than usual (Mansoor Ijaz, Supporting Our Armed Forces: An American Muslim's Perspective): An appreciation for the freedoms we enjoy coupled with a longing for the lands of our heritage; proud of our advancements on these shores and bemoaning the inability of our homelands to re-visit the more glorious days of our past.

It's easy in our skepticism to look at cursory reports from the media and dismiss the events now unfolding in Iraq as either just another example of American imperialism or a catastrophic mess in the making. Yet doing so does no justice to the nation being re-born before my eyes. Every day more and more decent and hardworking Iraqis are standing up for themselves, learning that, as one Iraqi teacher lamented, "for every six steps forward we take five more back."

Now is the time for the American Muslim community to build bridges and tell the Iraqis that they will not be forgotten. We can help nurture a sense of ownership that the Iraqis have lost after years of being degraded. American Muslims are in a unique position to couple their education and knowledge to help Iraqis help themselves. We can act as liaisons between groups, advocates for rights, and fundraisers for needs no one else has yet to identify. For every American NGO there should be 10 American-Muslim NGOs working with Iraqis.

While skepticism given America's foreign-policy record in this part of the world may be warranted, on an interpersonal level I see the U.S. military treating Iraqis with respect over and over again. I see commanders asking me and other American Muslims for advice on how to deal with religious and cultural sensitivities and taking very seriously any real or perceived abuses by troops. I see Iraqis risk their safety and the safety of their families to inform on rogue elements. I see soldiers who've never left places like Kansas City understand and use the word inshallah. I've seen food distribution that was slow and methodical because U.S. soldiers there wanted to make sure that older mothers got what they needed first. Afterwards community leaders and elders who normally would have cursed these foreigners thank them for treating their people with dignity.

There is an Arab proverb that says a thousand days of tyranny is better than one day of anarchy. It's time we kick that proverb to the curb.

--Omar Amin, Specialist, U.S. Army


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Philosophy; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: americanmuslims; iraqwar; rebuildingiraq; soliders
If this is a re-post I apologize. This was a great letter that I thought deserved as wide an audience as I could arrange for it, and it was hard to do a really comprehensive search.

I think that part about the food distribution is particularly telling, being forced to wait one's turn behind the "older mothers" is probably not the usual way in these lands.

I can't figure out if being #10 means your's is at the top or the botton of The Weekly Standard's letter column, the letters they chose to publish are ususally amazingly pedestrian and dumb. (Sorry for any hurt feelings out there in cyber land.) This is about the very best one I ever remember reading.

1 posted on 07/17/2003 6:20:56 PM PDT by jocon307
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2 posted on 07/17/2003 6:23:12 PM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: jocon307
Bump to you!
3 posted on 07/17/2003 8:35:04 PM PDT by JustPiper (Am I going or are you coming? Socialist Democratic = Commie!)
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To: jocon307
Good stuff! Thanks
4 posted on 07/18/2003 6:21:08 AM PDT by Coop (God bless our troops!)
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To: jocon307
The letter in question. And yes it does deserve wide distribution.

(Mansoor Ijaz, Supporting Our Armed Forces: An American Muslim's Perspective)

Supporting Our Armed Forces: An American Muslim's Perspective
It's time for Arab- and Muslim-Americans to stand up and be counted in their support of democracy and our troops.
by Mansoor Ijaz
03/21/2003 7:00:00 AM

FOR MONTHS, ARAB- AND MUSLIM-AMERICAN lobby groups have passionately spoken out against war with Iraq, citing the potential for everything from the mass murder of Iraqi babies to the creation of tens of thousands of baby bin Ladens. Warnings of dire consequences have flooded underground Internet chat rooms frequented by the most vitriolic voices in these groups. Rarely did any of these activists cite the destruction Saddam Hussein has wrought on the Iraqi people or condemn his terror-enabling Baathist regime. Rarer still was there condemnation of the extremist rhetoric emanating from Islam's lunatic fringe, including the ethereal ruminations of public enemy number one, Osama bin Laden.

Citizenship Before Civil Rights: The Silent Majority Must Speak
BUT THESE VOICES do not represent the majority of Americans who hold Islamic religious beliefs or hail from Arab ancestries. Indeed, they represent a fraction, probably less than five percent, of the total Arab- and Muslim-American population. And this lobby's funding often comes from the pockets of wealthy, demented men in far-off deserts who are blinded by the ambition to defend Islam in the belly of the infidels.

Which is why now, when our armed services are asked to defend the very Constitution and Bill of Rights that enable minority dissent in this great land, all Arab- and Muslim-Americans share a moral responsibility to join together in support of the men and women who put themselves in harm's way for our right to speak. To do otherwise is simply no longer acceptable.

It is also high time the leaders and activists that represent these lobby groups learn the meaning of citizenship before demanding the civil rights that such an honor bestows. The silent majority of America's Arabs and Muslims--silent for too long--must now speak up.

We bear a greater responsibility to stand now because we understand the religious and ethnic motivations that have created the Middle East's tyrannical and autocratic regimes, and thereby spawned threats to U.S. security. We must bear the burden of teaching our brethren in that part of the world what freedom and democracy can mean for them, and why our military actions are designed for their liberation, not invasion or occupation.

The Structural Problem of America's Arab and Muslim Communities
UNFORTUNATELY, there is a chasm between responsible Arab- and Muslim-American voices and those of activist immigrants from the Arab and Islamic world who come to our shores in search of civil rights protections before accepting the responsibilities of citizenship.

Most of the immigrants who founded and formed our communities landed on U.S. shores in the mid-to-late 1970s. They were talented, often highly educated people who made valuable contributions to America's professions--doctors, scientists, engineers, teachers, and, yes, even some of our best taxi drivers. Today these people represent perhaps as much as one-third of the total U.S. Arab and Muslim population.

There's just one problem with these pioneers. They brought with them their prejudices and ethno-religious rivalries. Whether on the Israeli-Palestinian issue, Kashmir, Kosovo, or Iraq, they have spent the past three decades lining the pockets of our political leaders with cash earned from their very successful American enterprises, and then lobbying them with virulent, unproductive agendas.

They have used their resources to build our nation's mosques, a noble deed in its own right, but have too often allowed these mosques to be filled with hatred and animosity towards Jews and Christians and even Muslims who refuse to toe their line. And most dangerously, they have infected the minds of their children with the same prejudices and rivalries.

American-born Arabs and Muslims, who represent over half the population of our communities, are still in the building phases of life--getting an education, finding a job, paying the mortgage and getting the kids to school every day. They have neither the time nor the financial resources to play power politics with our "what have you done for me lately?" politicians, nor are many of them willing to challenge the Muslim traditions of questioning their elders even when they're wrong. And therein lies the structural problem--when and how to pass the baton of responsibility to the next generation for developing voices of reason.

The Silent Majority Speaks
THE MAJORITY of hardworking Arab- and Muslim-Americans want to speak out in the vivid colors of patriotism that define our nation in times of war. But many fear either being labeled as traitors by zealots who know little about Islam or being disowned by their parents for disavowing the antiquated beliefs of elders.

America's Arab and Muslim leaders, regardless of their views on the U.S. decision to disarm Saddam by force, need to make important changes in how they lead the community during times of peace, but especially so in this time of war. Rooting their activism in the principles that define citizenship is a good place to start. There is simply no room in American life for those Arabs and Muslims who believe they belong to some higher Ummah, or global Islamic community without borders.

Whether these leaders are imams in our nation's mosques or teachers in our public schools or activists in special-interest groups, they must publicly voice their support for our men and women serving in the armed forces. Imams, in particular, have this responsibility since they have spewed forth so much of the venom that afflicts our communities.

At today's Friday prayers, every imam in America who is a citizen or permanent U.S. resident has a moral obligation to ask his congregation to pray for the safe return of all our soldiers doing battle to rid the world of a menace to peace. They should invite U.S. media outlets to witness their prayers, so Americans can understand the unity of purpose we all share during this sobering time.

The highest honor an American ever holds is the title of Citizen of the United States of America. It is high time American Arabs and Muslims learn what that really means and use its lessons to raise up Muslims in far-off lands so they will not be so desperate to tear us down.

I, for one, will start by setting the example. I ask Almighty Allah to give the men and women of our armed services the courage to do right, the strength to forgive when wronged, and the wisdom to free a nation from the scourge a madman brought upon its citizens. God Bless you for defending my freedom and for defending our nation. May you come home safely, and for those of you who make the ultimate sacrifice, may God grant you peace in heaven.

Mansoor Ijaz, an American-born Muslim of Pakistani descent, is chairman of Crescent Investment Management in New York. He serves as Foreign Affairs and Terrorism Analyst for the Fox News Channel.

5 posted on 07/18/2003 7:55:33 AM PDT by Valin (America is a vast conspiracy to make you happy.)
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