Senator Christopher Coons: Poverty Relief and Communities of Faith

In an Ash Wednesday interview at the National Press Club, at an event on faith and fighting poverty sponsored by Yale Divinity School and International Relief and Development, Senator Christopher Coons (D-Del.) spoke about poverty relief, development, security, and the role of communities of faith in addressing these issues.

 

Imam Feisal Rauf: The Message We Need to Send


Watch Imam Feisal Rauf, who says his concern about Rep. Peter King’s hearings on American Muslims is “the impression it is giving that Muslims are de facto liabilities to homeland security” and “the perception it will raise among Muslims overseas.”

 

Congressional Hearings on American Muslims

As Congress prepares for March 10 hearings on the radicalization of American Muslims called by Rep. Peter King of New York, watch highlights from a recent Capitol Hill briefing on Islamophobia in the United States hosted by the Arab American Institute and the Muslim Public Affairs Council. Speakers included Maya Berry, executive director of the Arab American Institute; Matthew Duss, national security editor for the Center for American Progress; Deepa Iyer, executive director of South Asian Americans Leading Together; Suhail Khan, senior fellow at the Institute for Global Engagement; and Alejandro Beutel, government and policy analyst for the Muslim Public Affairs Council.

 

Ashes to Ashes

Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of the season of Lent for many Christians, and the imposition of ashes can serve as a reminder of human frailty, a public sign of religious faith, and an expression of pastoral care. Watch excerpts about Ash Wednesday from interviews in the Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly archives with Rev. Steve Buechler, a Lutheran pastor in Maryland; John Danforth, an Episcopal priest and former Republican senator from Missouri; and Rev. Jerry Kramer, an Episcopal priest who served in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina.

 

Baltimore Students Learn Lessons of the Shoah

by Matt Boivin

Holocaust survivor Rachel Bodner says the Nazis would never have succeeded in killing so many Jews in Belgium during World War II—the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum estimates the number at between 24,000 and 30,000—if only Jews and Christians had talked to one another.

“Why don’t people open their mouths? People didn’t and look what happened—the Holocaust,” says the 83-year-old Belgian Jew. Silence, she explains, was caused by ignorance, and silence and ignorance together led to oppression. Fear of confrontation also played a role.

Bodner, who hid from the Nazis in a Catholic convent and immigrated to the United States in 1947, had an older sister who perished at Auschwitz. This month she spoke about her experiences to Jewish and Catholic students in Baltimore as part of an annual interfaith program of study, dialogue, and commemoration called “Lessons of the Shoah,” the Hebrew word for “catastrophe” used by Jews to refer to the Holocaust.

post01-shoah

Led by Jeanette Parmigiani of the Baltimore Jewish Council and Deborah Cardin of the Jewish Museum of Maryland, which cosponsors the program, the purpose of “Lessons of the Shoah” is to help high school students develop respect for and understanding of each other’s faith.

Participants also focus on contemporary genocide, and a survivor of intergroup violence and ethnic hostility in eastern Congo spoke along with Bodner. In addition, students are required to work as a team on a social justice project they choose.

Some religious leaders have observed that interreligious dialogue is losing momentum among new generations of Christians and Jews and that remembering the Holocaust is not as compelling to young American Jews as it was to their elders. But young people are still willing to engage in interfaith dialogue if only given the opportunity, according to Donny Kirsch, coordinator of educational outreach for the Jewish Community Relations Council in Washington, DC who works with “Lessons of the Shoah.”

Kirsch also contacts Jewish congregations to locate Holocaust survivors still willing and able to talk about their experiences. As their numbers dwindle and advancing age makes it difficult for them to travel, Kirsch says it is increasingly important to create local opportunities like the interfaith program in Baltimore for survivors to share their stories.

Among the scholars and religious leaders who participate in “Lessons of the Shoah” are Rabbi Geoffrey Basik, founding rabbi of Kol HaLev (“Voice of the Heart”), a Reconstructionist synagogue community in Baltimore, and Father Robert Albright, a retired Catholic priest in the Archdiocese of Baltimore and former university chaplain who speaks to students on the history of Judaism and Christianity and who listened to Rachel Bodner’s testimony about silence and speaking out.

“If we as kids had a program like they have now,” he said, “this world would be a different place.”

Matt Boivin is an intern at Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly and a student at Spring Arbor University in Michigan.

Muslims Combating Extremism

 

Originally broadcast September 10, 2010

KIM LAWTON, guest host: Over the past year, several leading US Muslim groups launched new projects aimed at preventing extremism from taking hold in their communities. Last fall, I took a look at some of those efforts.

It’s late afternoon in Manassas, Virginia, not far outside Washington, DC, and at the Dar al Noor mosque they’re getting ready for a good all-American barbecue. The picnic is part of a new national initiative from the Muslim American Society called the Straight Path Campaign. It’s one of several new projects being launched by US Islamic groups in an effort to fight extremism within their community, particularly among young people.

IMAM MAHDI BRAY, Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation: We want them to say to America and prove to America through their efforts that, you know, we’re not terrorist suspects. We are America’s brightest prospects.

post02-extremismLAWTON: According to a new poll by the Pew Research Center, Americans hold conflicted views about whether Islam is more likely to encourage violence than other religions. Forty-two percent of those surveyed said that Islam does not encourage violence more than others, but 35 percent said it does. Almost a quarter said they didn’t know. The survey also found that almost 40 percent of Americans said they had an unfavorable view toward Islam. That’s a significant increase from just five years ago.

Since the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, many American Muslims say it’s become increasingly difficult to counter the perception that their faith is linked to violence, and that job has been complicated by some recent high-profile terrorism-related arrests of Muslim Americans, including several who were born or raised in the US.

EDINA LEKOVIC, Muslim Public Affairs Council: The fact that there has been a string of incidents presents a reality that we cannot afford to ignore, regardless of whether it’s emanating from our own homes, or our own mosques, or our own communities.

LAWTON: A Duke University study released earlier this year found only a relatively small number of US Muslims who had planned or carried out terrorist attacks. The study concluded “homegrown terrorism is a serious, but limited, problem.”

post03-extremismBRAY: One is one too many, and so we have zero tolerance for that kind of seductive narrative and that seductive type of presentation that lures young people into things that will ultimately ruin their lives.

LAWTON: One of the first priorities for mainstream US Muslim groups has been trying to fight extremist messages online, including many from foreign-based English-speaking Americans.

Al-Qaeda Online Video: “I am calling on every honest and vigilant Muslim, unsheathe your sharpened sword and rush to take your rightful place among defiant champions of Islam…”

SALAM AL-MARAYATI, Muslim Public Affairs Council: What happens in extremist groups is that really there’s a cult mentality. There’s blind following of a charismatic leader, these pied pipers that are speaking to us now on YouTube from caves and jungles and war zones that are trying to glamorize violence. That’s basically what we’re dealing with.

post04-extremismLAWTON: Hoping to offer a different view, American imam Suhaib Webb has set up his own Web site where he challenges radical statements and answers questions about Islamic teachings.

IMAM SUHAIB WEBB: You know the Prophet, peace be upon him, said “If the day of judgment starts and you have a seed in your hand, plant that seed.” Stay positive. Never allow yourself to succumb to that negative discourse.

LAWTON: He’s been urging other Muslims to tackle the issue of extremism head on as well.

WEBB: If you’re not going to take the position, someone else will take that position for you. If you’re not going to step up to the mic, someone else is going to grab it and spit. That’s just the reality.

LAWTON: Webb says a major problem is that many of the radical Web sites twist and misrepresent Islamic teachings, either intentionally or through ignorance. He was one of nine US scholars and imams who denounced extremism in a recent video produced by the Muslim Public Affairs Council.

post05-extremismLEKOVIC: Communities really need to focus on religious literacy so that our young people start at an early age knowing what the Quran actually says, and what the Quran actually promotes us to do, which is to be a part of society, to be contributing, and to be good to our families, and to be model citizens within whatever countries we live in.

LAWTON: With the Straight Path Campaign, the Muslim American Society is also trying to educate Muslim young people about the tenets of their faith. Imam Mahdi Bray draws from his own experience in the US civil rights movement and talks about the importance of nonviolence within Islam as well.

BRAY (speaking at mosque): Nonviolence, the sanctity of life, is valued, and it’s not the sanctity of Muslim life. It’s the sanctity of all life.

LAWTON: The campaign is holding a series of meetings with youth and youth leaders across the country to discuss violence and Islam, and also how to address injustice and discrimination in positive ways. Bray says it’s important not to dismiss the very real concerns and frustrations among young Muslims.

BRAY: Providing young people with skill sets and tools that embrace nonviolence but at the same time doesn’t give them the feeling that they’re just rolling over and that they’re not really fighting back against some of the injustices that they see every day in their lives both here and abroad.

post07-extremismAL-MARAYATI (speaking in meeting): We don’t separate Islam from politics. This is actually an act of worship for us.

LAWTON: The Muslim Public Affairs Council is trying to help young Muslims address their concerns through the political process. The group holds a Young Leaders Summit in Washington, where participants learn how government works.

AL-MARAYATI: It’s easy for somebody to exploit people’s angers and frustrations and lead them to destructive behavior, so our approach is promoting the theology of life within Islam—that Islam is meant to be a part of a pluralistic society.

LAWTON: The students see the mechanics of politics up close and get to meet with politicians, this year including Minnesota Representative Keith Ellison and Indiana Representative Andre Carson, the only two Muslims in Congress. Organizers say the experience gives young Muslims a new vision for what can be accomplished.

post08-extremismLEKOVIC: In a post-9/11 reality, they sometimes have a hard time believing that their own government and their own elected officials want to hear from them, or even care about their opinions, because what they see on their campuses and in their hometowns is a rising level of Islamophobia.

LAWTON: The various projects are intended to be proactive against radicalism, but they have also provoked controversy. Several outsiders have accused the campaigns and their leaders of not being tough enough against extremism, while some Muslims fear the new initiatives could give the impression that the problem is bigger than it really is.

IBRAHIM HOOPER, Council on American-Islamic Relations: Some of the young people said, “Ah, yeah, before you get going on that, make sure it doesn’t portray us all as so-called radicalized,” that that’s a danger as well—to project something that isn’t there.

LAWTON: Some Muslims have accused Bray of perpetuating anti-Islamic stereotypes.

BRAY: There are some who say, oh, there’s no problem, everything is just fine, you know? Well, everything is not just fine.

LAWTON: American Muslim leaders say their young people, like young people of all faiths, are trying to figure out their identities, and, the leaders say, religion should be a culturally relevant part of the mix.

AL-MARAYATI: Islam is a religion that has a book that is supposed to be universal and is supposed to apply at different times. Therefore it is our responsibility to interpret the principles from the Quran and the traditions of the Prophet to America in the 21st century, and by and large that has not been done.

LAWTON: It’s a matter that hits all too close to home for students like these.

MATEEN RIAC: Saying that everybody, all Muslims are terrorists, I think that is like a big issue, so like it makes people feel left out, especially in schools, they’re like, “Wow, am I really like that?”

ATTIQAH SYEDA: The words “Muslim” and “terrorist” are not synonymous in any way, shape, or form.

LAWTON: And that’s the ultimate message they hope takes hold.

I’m Kim Lawton reporting.

An update: On December 30, Mahdi Bray suffered a serious stroke. I spoke with his office this week and they told me he’s now recuperating at home and doing physical rehabilitation. They say they’re optimistic about his recovery.

Imam Mahdi Bray Extended Interview

Despite America’s trials and tribulations, one of the country’s redeeming qualities is that somehow it eventually finds a way to “get it right,” says Imam Mahdi Bray, executive director of the Muslim American Society’s Freedom Foundation. Watch these extra excerpts from his interview about young American Muslims with Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly correspondent Kim Lawton.