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Name: Shumaira
Country: Canada
Birthday: 5/16/1982
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Interests: Islam, Christianity, Science, Macro-evolution, playing chess, intellectual puzzles/mind traps, writing Xanga logs, listening to Arabic/Hindi music and running, memorizing, day-dreaming about visiting Ancient Artifacts from Egypt, hanging out with my Bangladeshi girlfriendz, sleepovers, drinking Tim Horton's Iced Cappacino very very slowly, ...and thinking about God and all His Creations (All Praise Belongs to Him).
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Saturday, November 11, 2006

Beautiful nasheed...must see.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wIxIk2Wta58


Thursday, October 26, 2006

Bismillaah ir-Rahmaan ir-Raheem
Assalamu'alaikum wa rahmatullaahi wa baraakatu

The tongue
Author: Unknown.


Pick your teeth! It's one of the greatest sins and yet it's something we do day after day. Sometimes we don't even realize it. You're just chatting away with your friends and you begin to talk about somebody else. Our whole lives are based around 'Home and Away' and 'Neighbors', soaps based on lying, backbiting and cheating. But look at what the Prophet (sallAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) said about it:The Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) was sitting with his companions one day and one of them was speaking badly about someone who wasn't there. As the man got up to leave the Prophet (sallAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) said to him: "Pick your teeth!" "But I haven't eaten anything", the man protested. "No", the Prophet (sallAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) said "you have eaten the flesh of your dead brother!"As Allah tells us in the Qur'an: "Would any of you like to eat the flesh of his dead brother? No, you would hate it." [al-Qur'an 49:12]But what if it's true?The Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) told us, "Backbiting is to say something about someone they wouldn't like said about them ... If what bad you said about them is true, then you have backbitten and if it is false then you have slandered them!" [Muslim]

If you're still not convinced of how big a sin backbiting really is, then look at the punishment Allah has in store for the backbiters. The Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) described: "On the night of Miraaj (the Prophet's ascension to heaven), I passed by some people who had metal hooks in their hands and were clawing at their faces and their necks with them. I asked Jibraeel 'Who were these people?' He said 'These are the people who eat the flesh of human beings and disgrace them'" [Abu Dawud].This is how big of a sin backbiting is looked upon and yet we continue to backbite without a second thought, next time you lie, talk about somebody, remember Allah (subhanna wa ta'alaa) and the Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) and put them in front of you before you speak.

Just having a laugh! May be we think it's all right to take the mick out of someone so long as we say it to their face. We'll make fun of the way someone talks, walks, or how they look. Allah warns us against such behavior:"O you who believe, let not some men laugh at others, it may be the that they are better than you. Nor let some women laugh at others it may be that they are better than you. Nor abuse each other, nor be sarcastic to each other by using offensive nicknames..." [al-Qur'an 49:11]Don't forget that Allah made us the way we are, so how can you even think of making fun of his creation?

Cool to swear?Listen to yourself and to your friends speaking one day - nearly every sentence will have a swear word in it, thinking it's cool and macho to swear, copying the idols of TV and the cinema. Is it really 'cool' to swear? The Hellfire is far from being cool. People will wish they were cool then rather than being cool in this world.
Remember! That every time you speak , an angel writes down what you say, and that one day you will have to answer for every single word you ever uttered. So if you swear at someone then it's written down as a sin against you. You're only harming yourself. The Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) said that "abusing a Muslim is a sin and fighting with him is disbelief" [Muslim].

But sometimes you just have to swear! We've all been there - you're just so angry with somebody and the only way you can express yourself, is to swear at them. The solution? Don't get angry in the first place. A man came to the Prophet (saw) one day and said "Advise me". The Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) said "Don't become angry. Don't become angry. Don't become angry... when one of you gets angry while he is standing up, he should sit down. Then anger will leave him, and if not then he should lie down" [Ahmad].So let us follow this beautiful advice of the Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) and remember that anger is from Shaytan. If someone angers you or swears at you then don't harm yourself by doing the same but respond in a better way as Allah says in the Qur'an "Repel evil with what is better. Then he who was your worst enemy will become your best friend." [al-Qur'an 41:33]

It wasn't me who said it! How often do we say such a phrase or say that "I was only joking". We treat lies as being trivial. However we are told that Allah's messenger did not hate anything more than lying [Ahmed]. The Prophet (saw) was once asked "Can a Muslim be a coward?" He (saw) replied "Yes". He was then asked "Can a Muslim be a miser?" and the reply was "Yes". The Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) was again asked "Can a Muslim be a liar?" The Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) replied "No! A Muslim can never be a liar". Furthermore, he said "Truth leads to virtue and virtue leads to paradise... Lying leads to wickedness and wickedness leads to the hellfire" [Bukhari].

As we know that one lie leads to another ten lies which lead to bad actions. Remember you can lie and think that you have got away with it but on the Day of Judgment your hands, tongue and feet will bear testimony against you and tell the truth.But it's only words!One day, one of the Companions asked the Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam): "O Messenger of Allah, will we be called to account for what we say?" He replied "May you be lost to your mother! People will be thrown faces down into the hellfire, only on account to what their tongues said!" [Tirmidhi]Indeed the tongue controls the rest of your body. A well controlled tongue will keep us within Islam but a loose tongue will destroy us. The Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) said: "When a person gets up in the morning, all the parts of his body make a plea to his tongue saying 'Fear Allah regarding us, because we follow you. If you are right then we shall also be right, and if you are wrong then we shall also be wrong'." [Tirmidhi]

Instead of swearing, lying and engaging in useless talk we can use our tongues in better ways and what better than telling people about Islam. Allah says: "Who is better in speech than one who calls (people) to Allah and works righteousness and says I am one of those who bow down in Islam" [al-Qur'an 41:33]Your tongue can save you!Indeed if you control your tongue and speak good then paradise can be yours. The Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) said: "Whoever can guarantee me two things I can guarantee them Paradise". The companions asked "What, O Messenger of Allah?" He replied: "What is between his jaws (his tongue) and his legs (private parts)" [Bukhari].I must be doomed!"I have lied, backbitten people, and swear all the time. I must be going to hell!" No! Allah (subhanna wa ta'alaa) tells us in the Qur'an: "O my servants who have wronged themselves, never despair of the mercy of Allah - for truly He forgives all sins. He is the Forgiving, the Merciful." [al-Qur'an 39:53]So if you really repent and turn back to Allah and promise not to commit the sin again then truly Allah's promise is true and He will forgive you.

If you've backbitten someone - go and tell the person whom you backbitten and apologize sincerely and ask them to forgive you. But if you think that the situation will get worse then turn back to Allah sincerely begging for his forgiveness then to make up for what you said, go around and talk good of him.The best example As we know that the best person to have ever lived is the Prophet Muhammad (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) and he is the best of example for mankind. If we follow him we can never go wrong. Aisha (radiallahu 'anhaa), the Prophet's wife, described the Prophet's conduct as follows "He was neither an obscene talker nor a user of bad words. He did not shout nor did he repay evil with evil. He used to forgive people and overlook their sins" [Tirmidhi].

Final word of adviceA beautiful saying of the Prophet (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) that will ensure the protection of our tongue. The Messenger of Allah (salAllaahu 'alaihi wa salaam) said "Whoever believes in Allah and the Last day, LET HIM EITHER SPEAK GOOD OR KEEP SILENT!" [Agreed upon]


Sunday, October 08, 2006




Tonight I saw a CBC review of the documentary 'HOTHOUSE' that looks at the political perspectives of Palestianian prisoners.

To see a 2 to 3  minute clip of this documentary, go to http://www.cbc.ca/bigpicture/house.html.
Then on the right of the screen, under 'WATCH VIDEO' , select 'Watch a clip from the film'.  Then 'Watch the Town Hall Debate Video 41:09.  Very interesting....

Ma salaama,
Sara.




Saturday, October 07, 2006

As-Salamu Alaykum.

I did not write the below article, but got it in a forward to me in my email.  I'm not sure who wrote it or where it came from, so I apologize the lack of source.  Anyways, enjoy! and Ramadaan Mubarak! (I know its a little late....)


The great benefits of reciting the Qur'an
  
6/16/2004 2:22:00 PM GMT
  
 
                 

  
In a new study, Vander Hoven, a psychologist from Netherlands, discovered the effect of reading the Qur'an and repeating the word Allah both on patients and on normal persons.

The Dutch professor confirms his discovery with studies and research applied on many patients over a period of three years. Some of his patients were non-Muslims, others don't speak Arabic and were trained to pronounce the word "Allah" clearly; their
result was great, specially on those who suffer from dejection and tension.

Al-Watan, a Saudi daily has reported that the psychologist was quoted to say that Muslims who can read Arabic and who read the Qur'an regularly are enjoying a great chance of protecting themselves from psychological diseases. The psychologist explained how each letter in the word "Allah" affects healing of psychological diseases. He pointed out in his research that pronouncing the first letter in the word "Allah" which is the letter (A), released from the respiratory system, controls breathing. He added that pronouncing the velar consonant (L) in the Arabic way, with the tongue touching slightly the upper part of the jaw producing a short pause and then repeating the same pause constantly, relaxes the aspiration. Also, pronouncing the last letter which is the letter (H) makes a contact between the lungs and the heart and so this contact controls the heartbeat.

What is exciting about this study is that this psychologist is a non-Muslim, but interested in Islamic sciences and searching for the secrets of the Holy Qur'an.

Allah, The Great and Glorious, says in the Qur'an:

"We will show them Our signs in the universe and in their own selves, until it becomes manifest to them that this (Qur'an) is the truth". Qur'an (42:53)

Indeed to reflect on Allah’s verses is a form of worship that will bring one closer to Allah The Most High. This reflection is not a reckless and wandering one, rather it includes a study of the classical explanation of the verses being pondered over, as this would fulfill Ibnul-Qayyim’s great advice, “Such as reflecting over a book which a person has memorised and he expounds it so that he may understand what its author intends by it.”

The Holy Qur'an is not a book like any other, it is the timeless Speech of Allah, a Book for all ages, and it is not a man-created thing, the study guide for life and death and what comes after. Therefore it worth be given the greatest attention in studying rather than anyone else’s speech.

As a matter of fact reciting and pondering over the Holy Qur'an, the Words of Allah, devoting your time regularly to its study and implementation has tremendous benefits in this life and the hereafter. And here we will go through some of the verses to bring ourselves more close to Allah and understand the Majestic Words. Each benefit stands as enough of an encouragement to shun any laziness we have and dedicate ourselves to the Qur’an.

Here are Nine Great benefits for reciting the Holy Qur'an:   
 
  
1 - Reading and reflecting over the Qur’an fulfils an Islamic duty.
Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) summarized this Religion (Islam) when he said:

“The Religion is sincerity (Naseeha)!” So then Tameem ibn
Aws (may Allah be pleased with him) said: “We asked, ‘To whom?’” He said: “To Allah, HIS BOOK, His Messenger, the leaders of the people, and their common folk.”

The sincerity that is due to the Book of Allah includes its regular recitation, learning the rules of reciting it correctly and beautifully, learning its explanation, and the reasons for its revelation, affirming that it is the Truth, the perfect Speech of Allah, honoring it and defending it, abiding by the orders and prohibitions found in it, teaching it and calling to it.

Thus by reading and pondering over the Qur’an, one fulfills an obligation and is rewarded for that. Upon fulfilling this obligation, the Qur’an then becomes a proof for him on the Day of Judgment! This takes us to the second benefit.

2 - The Qur’an will be a proof for us on the Day of Judgment.

This is due to the Hadith of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH):

“And the Qur’an is a proof for you or against you.”

So on the Day of Judgment, the Qur'an will either be in your favor, or it will be a proof against you. Who could be saved from the terrors of that Day if Allah’s own Speech is against him?!?! Think carefully, and consider your position with the Qur’an! Are you neglecting it, contradicting it, ignoring its orders and prohibitions, are you thinking deeply over it?! Will it be on your side on the Day of Judgment.?!

3 - The Qur’an will intercede for us on the Day of Judgment.

A proof for that: Abu Umaamah narrated that Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) said:

“Read the Qur’an, for verily it will come on the Day of Standing as an intercessor for its companions.”

4 - Your status in this life will be raised.

In Saheeh Muslim, there is this beautiful story, that shows how a man from the people of Jannah (Paradise), ‘Umar ibn Al-Khattab, understood this principle. Some men came to question him during his khilaafah (reign)about the leadership of Mekkah, they asked, “Who do you use to govern Mekkah?” He said, “Ibn Abzaa.” They asked, “And who is Ibn Abzaa?” Umar replied, “A freed slave from those we freed.” They remarked, “You left a freed slave in charge of the people of the Valley (the noble tribes of the Quraysh)!?!?” So he answered them, “Verily he is a reader of the Book of Allah and is knowledgeable about the obligations of the Muslims. Haven’t you heard the statement of your Messenger?

“Verily Allah raises some people by this Book and lowers others by it.”

5 - You will be from the best of the people.

Uthman Ibn Affan (may Allah be pleased with him) said that Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) said:

“The best of you are the ones who learn the Qur’an and teach it to others”

6 - There are ten rewards for each letter you recite from the Qur’an.

Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) said:

“Whoever reads a letter from the Book of Allah, he will have a reward. And that reward will be multiplied by ten. I am not saying that “Alif, Laam, Meem” is a letter, rather I am saying that “Alif” is a letter, “laam” is a letter and “meem” is a letter.”

So try to recite as much verses of the Qur'an as you can.

7 – Those who recite the Qur’an will be in the company of the noble and obedient angels.

Aicha (may Allah be pleased with her) narrated that Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) said:

“Verily the one who recites the Qur’an beautifully, smoothly, and precisely, he will be in the company of the noble and obedient angels. And as for the one who recites with difficulty, stammering or stumbling through its verses (because he doesn't know how to read it but is trying to), then he will have TWICE that reward.”

So dedicate yourself to the Book of Allah, whether you are an ‘Arab or not! The excuses have been eliminated and the pathway has been cleared for you to embrace the Book of Allah without holding back or offering excuses!

8 - Your position in Paradise is determined by the amount of Qur’an you memorize in your life!

A proof for that:

Abdullah ibn ‘Amr ibn Al-’Aas heard Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) saying:

“It will be said to the companion of the Qur’an: Read and elevate (through the levels of the Paradise) and beautify your voice as you used to do when you were in life! For verily, your position in the Paradise will be at the last verse you recite!”

9 - The Qur’an will lead you to Paradise!
Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) said:

“The Qur’an is an intercessor, something given permission to intercede, and it is rightfully believed in. Whoever puts it in front of him, it will lead him to Paradise; whoever puts it behind him, it will steer him to the Hellfire.”

Thus, know that these nine benefits can only be attained by a sincere commitment to the Holy Qur'an, not by a person’s mere statement, “I love the Qur’an, it’s beautiful.” Rather the heart must be sincerely attached to Allah’s Book and the limbs and tongue will follow in this attachment.


Sunday, August 20, 2006

Salaams,

Sorry about my delay in responding to any comments or questions...as I am leaving day after tommorrow for England and haven't packed anything yet! :S

But before my vacation I just wanted to paste some articles from the Toronto star (Toronto's local newspaper) that I thought were pretty good.

Here are the 2 links to the articles...and i've also pasted them below...

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=1155937810425&call_pageid=970599119419
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1155765011266&call_pageid=970599119419&col=Columnist969907621513
Sara.



Israel's failed mission in Lebanon
Aug. 17, 2006. 01:00 AM
HAROON SIDDIQUI

It seems everyone has won the war in Lebanon. Hezbollah and its backers, Iran and Syria, have claimed victory. So have Israel and the United States. That was to be expected.

Far more instructive is the pathetic sight of the president of the world's largest power feeling the need to compete in a propaganda war with the leader of a terrorist militia.

George W. Bush is boasting, as he is prone to when things go horribly wrong, that the latest ruins of his making represent yet another glorious frontier on the road to redemption.

Israel has indeed destroyed part of the Hezbollah stockpile of rockets and missiles, killed dozens of guerrillas, driven away the rest from the border areas, and opened the way for the Lebanese army to patrol a buffer zone, with a multinational force. But Israel has not won.

Nor has the U.S. Both stand discredited in the eyes of much of the world. So are the two Western leaders who blindly backed this venture, Tony Blair and Stephen Harper.

Hezbollah is far from finished after the 34-day onslaught, the second longest Arab-Israeli war. It can claim that mighty Israel is not invincible, and that there are limits to military power, as the U.S. discovered in Iraq.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah lives.

This war began with the Israeli air force dropping tons of bombs on a site where he was said to be. He wasn't, just as Saddam Hussein wasn't in the bunker the American cruise missiles hit as the opening salvo of the 2003 Iraq war.

Some day, Nasrallah may be caught, as Saddam was. Or he may be assassinated by Israel, as was his predecessor, in 1992. But that may not make much difference. As veteran Israeli peace activist Uri Avnery wrote recently:

"Our army has killed, among others, Hezbollah leader Abbas Mussawi, PLO Number 2 Abu Jihad, as well as Sheik Ahmad Yassin and other Hamas leaders ... The place of Mussawi was filled by Nasrallah, who is far more able. Sheikh Yassin was succeeded by far more radical leaders. Instead of Arafat, we got Hamas."

If one aim of the war on Shiite Lebanon was to turn the Shiites against Hezbollah, the war has had the opposite effect.

They are voting with their feet, returning to the ruined south, despite Israeli warnings against it. Their cars and caravans are festooned with Hezbollah flags and Nasrallah's pictures. Surveying the ruins of their former abodes amid the stench of dead bodies, they are blaming Israel and the United States, not Hezbollah.

If another aim was to turn Lebanon's minority Christians, Druze and Sunni Muslims against the Shiites, that, too, has had an unanticipated result. Churches and non-Shiite neighbourhoods sheltered fleeing Shiite refugees, breaking age-old communal silos.

Not only that, but the patriarch of the Maronite Catholics, the most pro-Western of the Lebanese factions, met the leaders of other Christian denominations, as well as Sunnis and Shiites, and issued a joint statement condemning Israeli "aggression" and hailing the "resistance, mainly led by Hezbollah."

The popularity of Hezbollah and Nasrallah has spread across the Arab, indeed the Muslim, world. Both are hailed even in U.S.-occupied Iraq, whose U.S.-nurtured prime minister was among the first to condemn the war on Lebanon.

Seeing the popular trend, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan, which had rightly criticized Hezbollah's adventurism against Israel, have fallen silent.

Meanwhile, the two Israeli soldiers that Hezbollah had captured and for whose freedom the war was ostensibly waged are still missing.

Grand declarations that Israel and the United States would never negotiate with a terrorist group seem lost in talks with Hezbollah's go-between, Nabih Berri, the Shiite speaker of the Lebanese parliament.

As for the UN resolution that brought about the ceasefire, it is not clear how the call for the disarming of Hezbollah is to be achieved any more than a 2004 resolution demanding exactly that.

Maybe the resolution is meant only as the fig leaf to end an undertaking that could no longer be sustained. If Hezbollah had miscalculated how strongly Israel would react, perhaps Israel ended up miscalculating even more.

Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Affairs in Washington said before the ceasefire was brokered that "Israel's miscalculations have been so serious that its only hope for victory is to have the U.S. and the international community do for it what it cannot do militarily, which is to defeat Hezbollah."

These doubts are reflected in the sturdy debate in Israel itself. After an initial closing of ranks and an expression of broad support for the war, a majority of Israelis now believe that none or few of the war's aims have been achieved.

Questions have been raised about the changing goals and tactics (from a purely air war to an air-plus-ground war; a limited troop deployment to a major one; the need for a small buffer zone to a bigger one); about the gaps in intelligence on Hezbollah (its stockpiles of arms, and its warren of tunnels and caves); and about the promised knockout punch that never came.

Politicians and the military are trading blame.

All this must be hard to swallow for those, like Harper, who blindly backed this war. Some are comforting themselves with the notion that while the morning after the war looks too horrible to contemplate, the "morning after the morning" may bring the dawn of a new day.

That's what they have been saying about Iraq — for three years.

Haroon Siddiqui writes Thursday and Sunday. hsiddiq@thestar.ca.

Additional articles by Haroon Siddiqui


The Muslim malaise
Aug. 20, 2006. 07:03 AM
HAROON SIDDIQUI

He who wrongs a Jew or a Christian will have me as his accuser on the Day of Judgment.

— Prophet Muhammad

Contrary to the popular belief that the West is under siege from Muslim terrorists, it is Muslims who have become the biggest victims of the attacks of September 11, 2001, as inconceivable as that would have seemed in the aftermath of the murder of 2,900 Americans. Since then, between 34,000 and 100,000 Iraqis have been killed by the Americans or the insurgents. Nobody knows how many have been killed in Afghanistan. In the spots hit by terrorists — from London and Madrid to Amman, Istanbul, Riyadh and Jeddah, through Karachi to Bali and Jakarta — more Muslims have been killed and injured than non-Muslims.

None of this is to say that Muslims do not have problems that they must address. They do. But the problems are not quite what many in the West make them out to be.

One of the strangest aspects of the post-9/11 world is that, despite all the talk about Muslim terrorism, there is hardly any exploration of the complex causes of Muslim rage. Muslims are in a state of crisis, but their most daunting problems are not religious. They are geopolitical, economic and social — problems that have caused widespread Muslim despair and, in some cases, militancy, both of which are expressed in the religious terminology that Muslim masses relate to.

Most Muslims live in the developing world, much of it colonized by Western powers as recently as 50 years ago. Not all Muslim shortcomings emanate from colonialism and neo-imperialism, but several do.

As part of the spoils of the First World War, Britain and France helped themselves to much of the Ottoman Empire, including Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and what is now Israel, Jordan and the Palestine Authority. In later years, they and other European colonial powers created artificial states such as Kuwait and Nigeria. Or they divided peoples and nations along sectarian lines, such as bifurcating India in 1947 into Muslim Pakistan and largely Hindu India. In more recent years, the United States has maintained repressive proxy regimes in the Middle East to stifle public anti-Israeli sentiments, keep control of oil and maintain a captive market for armaments.

While the past casts a long shadow over Muslims, it is the present that haunts them. Hundreds of millions live in zones of conflict, precisely in the areas of European and American meddling, past and present — U.S.-occupied Iraq, U.S.-controlled Afghanistan, the Israeli Occupied Territories, and Kashmir, the disputed Muslim state on the border of India and Pakistan in the foothills of the Himalayas. Only the Russian war on Muslim Chechnya is not related to the history of Western machinations, but even that has had the tacit support of the Bush administration. These conflicts, along with the economic sanctions on Iraq, have killed an estimated 1.3 million Muslims in the last 15 years alone. Why are we surprised that Muslims are up in arms?

In addition, nearly 400 million Muslims live under authoritarian despots, many of them Western puppets, whose corruption and incompetence have left their people in economic and social shambles.

It is against this backdrop that one must look at the current malaise of Muslims and their increasing emotional reliance on their faith.

Economic Woes

The total GDP of the 56 members of the Islamic Conference, representing more than a quarter of the world's population, is less than 5 per cent of the world's economy. Their trade represents 7 per cent of global trade, even though more than two-thirds of the world's oil and gas lie under Muslim lands.

The standard of living in Muslim nations is abysmal even in the oil-rich regions, because of unconscionable gaps between the rulers and the ruled. A quarter of impoverished Pakistan's budget goes to the military. Most of the $2 billion a year of American aid given to Egypt as a reward for peace with Israel goes to the Egyptian military.

The most undemocratic Muslim states, which also happen to be the closest allies of the U.S., are the most economically backward.

The Arab nations, with a combined population of 280 million, muster a total GDP less than that of Spain. The rate of illiteracy among Arabs is 43 per cent, worse than that of much poorer nations. Half of Arab women are illiterate, representing two-thirds of the 65 million Arabs who cannot read or write. About 10 million Arab children are not in school. The most-educated Arabs live abroad, their talents untapped, unlike those of the Chinese and Indian diasporas, who have played significant roles in jump-starting the economies of their native lands.

A disproportionate percentage of the world's youth are Muslim. Half of Saudi Arabia's and a third of Iran's populations are younger than 20. There are few jobs for them. "Young and unemployed" is a phenomenon common to many Muslim nations.

A majority of the world's 12 million to 15 million refugees are Muslims, fleeing poverty and oppression. Europe's 20 million Muslims suffer high unemployment and poverty, especially in Germany and France. It was inevitable that many Muslims would find comfort in Islam.

Islamic Resurgence

Fundamentalism has been on the rise, and not just in Islam. There has been a parallel rise in Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Buddhism, with its inevitable political fallout — in the Israeli settler movement in the Occupied Territories, the politicization of the American conservative right (culminating in the election and re-election of George W. Bush), the rise to power of the Hindu nationalists in India, the Sikh separatist movement in the Punjab in India, and the aggressive nationalism of the Sinhalese in Sri Lanka.

That many Muslims have become "fundamentalist" does not mean that they are all fanatic and militant. Nor is the Muslim condition fully explained by the use of petro-dollars. First, Arab financial support for Islamic institutions around the world is still no match for the resources available for Christian global missionary or Zionist political work. Second, and more to the point, the rise of Islam is not confined to areas of Arab financial influence; it is a worldwide phenomenon.

Mosques are full. The use of the hijab (headscarf ) is on the rise. Madrassahs (religious schools) are packed. Zakat (Islamic charity) is at record levels, especially where governments have failed to provide essential services. In Egypt, much of the health care, emergency care and education are provided by the Muslim Brotherhood, in the Occupied Territories by Hamas, in Pakistan and elsewhere by groups that may be far less political but are no less Islamic.

With state institutions riddled with corruption and nepotism, some of the most talented Muslims, both rich and poor, have abandoned the official arena and retreated into the non-governmental domain of Islamic civil society.

The empty public sphere has been filled with firebrands — ill-tutored and ill-informed clergy or populist politicians who rally the masses with calls for jihad (struggle) for sundry causes. The greater the injustices in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Israeli Occupied Territories, Chechnya or elsewhere, the greater the public support for those calling for jihad. Jihad has also proven to be good business for many a mullah (Muslim priest) who has become rich or influential, or both, preaching it. Meanwhile, unelected governments lack the legitimacy and confidence to challenge the militant clerics, and fluctuate between ruthlessly repressing them and trying to out-Islamize them.

To divert domestic anger abroad, many governments also allow and sometimes encourage the radicals to rant at the U.S. and rave at Israel, or just at Jews. Sometimes even the elected leaders join in, as has Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmedinijad, denying the Holocaust and calling for Israel to be "wiped off the map."

In reality, most Muslim states are powerless to address the international crises that their publics want addressed. They have neither the military nor the economic and political clout to matter much to the U.S., the only power that counts these days. Or, as in the case of Egypt, Jordan, and the oil-rich Arab oligarchies, they are themselves dependent on Washington for their own survival.

`Muslims have developed a complex. They think they won't

be heard if they don't shout. Every statement

is like a war'

Sharifa Zuriah

Founder, Sisters in Islam

Feeling abandoned, the Muslim masses find comfort in religion. The Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation was a secular struggle before it became "Islamic." The same was true of the Lebanese resistance to the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon, and also of the Chechen resistance to Russian repression.

Similarly, domestic critics of authoritarian regimes have found a hospitable home in the mosque. Islam being their last zone of comfort, most Muslims react strongly — sometimes irrationally and violently — when their faith or their Prophet is mocked or criticized, as the world witnessed during the Danish cartoon crisis. They react the way the angry disenfranchised do — hurling themselves into the streets, shouting themselves hoarse and destroying property, without much concern for the consequences, and engendering even more hostility in the West toward Muslims and Islam. But, as the American civil rights leader Martin Luther King famously said, riots are the voice of the voiceless.

Muslims have developed a "siege mentality, which is what the screaming, dogmatic and atavistic clerics" appeal to, says Chandra Muzaffar, Malaysian Muslim human rights activist. As he was telling me this in Kuala Lumpur in 2005, Sharifa Zuriah, a founder of Sisters in Islam, an advocacy group for Malaysian Muslim women, intervened: "Muslims have developed a complex. They think they won't be heard if they don't shout. Every statement is like a war."

Then there is real war, the war of terrorism.

Terrorism's Fallout

"That a majority of Al Qaeda are Muslims is not to say that a majority of Muslims are Al Qaeda, or subscribe to its tenets," Stephen Schulhofer, professor of law at New York University, told me in 2003. But it is also true that most terrorists these days are Muslims. That may only be a function of the times we live in — yesterday's terrorists came from other religions and tomorrow's may hail from some other. Still, terrorism has forced a debate among Muslims, who are divided into two camps. One side says that Muslims should no more have to apologize for their extremists than Christians, Jews or Hindus or anybody else, and that doing so only confirms the collective guilt being placed on Muslims. The other side believes that as long as some Muslims are blowing up civilians in suicide bombings, slitting the throats of hostages and committing other grisly acts, it is the duty of all Muslims to speak out and challenge the murderers' warped theology.

The latter view has prevailed. Terrorism — suicide bombings in particular— has been widely condemned. Just because an overwhelming majority of Muslims condemn Osama bin Laden and other extremists, however, does not mean that they feel any less for Muslims in Iraq or Palestine. Or that the internal debate that he has forced on Muslims is new. Throughout their 1,400-year history, Muslims have argued and quarrelled over various interpretations of the Qur'an and religious traditions.

But it is a sign of the times that the most extreme interpretation of the Qur'an appeals to Muslim masses these days, and that far too many clerics are attacking Christians and Jews and delivering fire-and-brimstone sermons full of the imagery of war and martyrdom. This is contrary to the message of the Qur'an — Do not argue with the followers of earlier revelation other than in the most kindly manner (29:46) — and the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad: "Do not consider me better than Moses," and, "I am closest of all people to Jesus, son of Mary."

For all the emphasis that today's clerics put on the Prophet's war record, he spent a total of less than a week in actual battle in the 23 years of his prophethood. He advised his followers to "be moderate in religious matters, for excess caused the destruction of earlier communities." A moderate himself, he smiled often, spoke softly and delivered brief sermons. "The Prophet disliked ranting and raving," wrote Imam Bukhari, the ninth-century Islamic scholar of the Prophet's sayings. Ayesha, the Prophet's wife, reported that "he spoke so few words that you could count them." His most famous speech, during the Haj pilgrimage in AD 632, which laid down an entire covenant, was less than 2,800 words.

Muhammad was respectful of Christians and Jews. Hearing the news that the king of Ethiopia had died, he told his followers, "A righteous man has died today; so stand up and pray for your brother." When a Christian delegation came to Medina, he invited them to conduct their service in the mosque, saying, "This is a place consecrated to God." When Saffiyah, one of his wives, complained that she was taunted for her Jewish origins, he told her, "Say unto them, `my father is Aaron, and my uncle is Moses.'"

Yet angry Muslims, not unlike African Americans not too long ago, pay little heed to voices of moderation. This is partly a reflection of the fact that there is no central religious authority in Islam. Only the minority Shiites have a religious hierarchy of ayatollahs, who instruct followers on religious and sometimes political matters. The majority Sunnis do not have the equivalent of the Pope or the Archbishop of Canterbury. A central tenet of their faith is that there is no intermediary between the believer and God. This makes for great democracy — everyone is free to issue a fatwa (religious ruling) and everyone else is free to ignore it. But the "fatwa chaos" does create confusion — among non-Muslims, who are spooked by the red-hot rhetoric, and also among Muslims, who are left wondering about the "right answers" to some of the most pressing issues of the day.

Muslim Apologetics

There are two kinds of Muslim apologetics. The first is denial: there's little or nothing wrong with Muslims, when there clearly is. The second, seen among some Muslims in the West, takes the form of self-flagellation, of apologizing for their faith or distancing themselves from it. To wit:

"Yes, the problem is Islam, and we must fix it." (Why is Islam any more of a problem than any other faith? And how are they going to fix it?)

"I am a Muslim but I am not a fundamentalist Muslim." (Do Christians say, "I am Christian but not an evangelical Christian?")

"I am a Muslim but ashamed to call myself one." (Do all Hindus have to apologize for those few who, in 1992, went on a mosque-ravaging rampage in India?)

Some of these sentiments may be genuinely held. More likely, they reflect the immigrant pathology of catering to majority mores, a new twist on the past practice of immigrants to North America anglicizing their names.

Such defensiveness aside, Muslims do suffer from deeper problems. Many are preoccupied with the minutiae of rituals (Should one wash the bare feet before prayers or do so symbolically over the socks?) at the expense of the centrality of the faith, which is fostering peace, justice and compassion, not just for Muslims but for everyone. Many Muslims are too judgmental of each other, whereas a central tenet of their faith is that it is up to God to judge — Your Lord knows best who goes astray (53:30) (also, 6:117, 16:125, 17:94, 28:56, 68:7).

Some Muslims have taken to a culture of conspiracy theories. Hence the notion that Princess Diana did not die in an accident but was killed because the British royal family did not want her to marry Dodi Al Fayed, a Muslim. Or the canard that Jews working at the World Trade Center had advance notice of 9/11.

There is too much of a literalist reading of the Qur'an (a trait, ironically, also adopted by anti-Islamists in the West). There is too little ijtehad (religious innovation) as called for by Islam to keep believers in tune with their times. Theological rigidity and narrow-mindedness have led, among other things, to Sunni hostility toward the minority Shiites, as seen in the sectarian killings in Pakistan.

Muslims complain about the West's double standards, yet they have their own. While they often criticize the United States and Europe for mistreating Muslims, they rarely speak up against the persecution of non-Muslims by Muslims. They also show a high tolerance for Muslims killing fellow Muslims. The Sudanese genocide of the non-Arab Muslims of Darfur drew mostly silence. The killing of Shiites by the Sunnis in Iraq was shrugged off as part of the anti-U.S. resistance. The overt and subtle racism of the oil-rich Arab states toward the millions of their guest workers goes unmourned.

Muslims do not have much to be proud of in the contemporary world. So they take comfort in their burgeoning numbers. At the turn of the millennium in 2000, there were many learned papers projecting the rise in Muslim population. But if Muslims have not achieved much at 1.3 billion, they are not likely to at 1.5 billion, either.

To escape the present, many Muslims hark back to their glorious past: how Islam was a reform movement; how Muslims led the world in knowledge, in astronomy, chemistry, mathematics, medicine, natural sciences, philosophy and physics; and how the Islamic empires were successful primarily because, with some egregious exceptions, they nurtured the local cultures and respected the religions of their non-Muslim majority populations. This is why Egypt and Syria remained non-Muslim under Muslim rule for 300 years and 600 years, respectively, and India always remained majority Hindu.

As true as all that history is, it is not very helpful today unless Muslims learn something from it — to value human life; accept each other's religious differences; respect other faiths; return to their historic culture of academic excellence, scientific inquiry and economic self-reliance; and learn to live with differences of opinion and the periodic rancorous debates that mark democracies.

It may be unfair to berate ordinary Muslims, given that too many are struggling to survive, that nearly half live under authoritarian regimes where they can speak up only on pain of being incarcerated, tortured or killed, and that they are helpless spectators to the sufferings of fellow Muslims in an unjust world order. Yet Muslims have no choice but to confront their challenges, for Allah never changes a people's state unless they change what's in themselves (13:11).



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