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http://www.dailyrecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051218/NEWS01/512180357
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DAWN BENKO / DAILY RECORD
Ahmed Kandil, a
business education teacher at Parsippany Hills High
School, has found it a challenge to balance the
requirements of his Muslim faith with his job.
'Because I have classes sixth, seventh and eighth
periods, there is no time for the noon prayer. The
prayer takes five minutes and it would not be
sufficient in the transition time between classes to
be able to pray at school. In this case it's just
how my schedule worked out,' he said.
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To learn more
American Arab Forum,
www.americanarabforum.org
American Islamic Academy, Boonton
American Jewish Christian Muslim Association,
www.ajma.org
American Muslim Alliance,
www.amaweb.org
American Muslim Taskforce on Civil Rights and
Elections,
www.American-MuslimVoter.net
Center for Understanding Islam, Bernardsville,
www.cuii.org
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), New
Jersey chapter in Montclair,
www.cair-nj.org
Islamic Center of Passaic County, Paterson,
www.icpc.com
Islamic Society of North Jersey,
http://isnj.org
Muslim American Society,
www.masnet.org |
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DAWN BENKO / DAILY RECORD
Yursil Kidwai of
Bernards keeps his beard, despite his mother's
advice and despite being interviewed by the FBI
after the Sept. 11 attacks.
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TYSON TRISH / DAILY RECORD
Aref Assaf reads
the Quran with his daughter, Summer, at their
Denville home. 'In times of duress we tend to do
that, and I'm always reminded of a statement of
Benjamin Franklin --"Those who forsake liberty for
security deserve neither,"' said Assaf, president of
the American Arab Forum. 'That desire to keep a
balance between security and liberty is a big
challenge for any government.'
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DAWN BENKO / DAILY RECORD
Ahmed Kandil says
his prayers as his wife, Amina Zohny, and their
daughter, Medina, 7 months, watch at their Randolph
home. |
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American Muslims in the news
Headlines and news stories of late have been keeping the
daily lives of Muslim-Americans on Americans'minds and
highlighting civil liberty issues again and again:
This year James Yee, the West Point graduate and
former U.S. Army Muslim chaplain at Guantanamo Bay, came
out with his book, "For God and Country: Faith and
Patriotism Under Fire" (PublicAffairs, $24). It is the
story of his arrest in connection with charges that he
was an operative in an alleged spy ring that passed
secrets to Al-Qaida from suspected terrorists he
ministered to at Guantanamo Bay.
The charges were dropped in March 2004 but only after
Yee was held in solitary confinement at the naval brig
in Charleston, S.C., for 76 days and vilified throughout
the American media.
Five Muslim men were detained by the FBI on Sept. 19
after praying together near an air intake duct at Giants
Stadium. Devout Muslims pray five times a day, no matter
where they are, to keep God always foremost in their
minds.
The men, who were let go, said they believed they had
been singled out because of their faith.
Officials at the New Jersey Sports and Exposition
Authority said they had not been profiling.
Subsequently, the authority agreed to designate a
special prayer area in the football stadium and the
nearby Continental Airlines Arena.
Earlier this month the state Motor Vehicle Commission
apologized to several Muslim women who had been told to
remove their hijabs, or head scarves, while getting
their pictures taken for licenses. Muslim women cover
their heads to be modest and to show respect for God.
The agency held a meeting with the managers of its 45
offices statewide to raise awareness at all locations
that motorists are allowed to be photographed with their
religious head coverings.
-- Compiled by Lorraine Ash |
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12/18/05 - Posted from the Daily Record newsroom
Morris-area Muslims say trust still remains elusive
Many feel suspicion, trampled rights persist in
post-9/11 U.S.
BY LORRAINE ASH
DAILY RECORD
Related stories in same
issue;
Yursil Kidwai's mother still tells him to shave
his beard."She thinks it makes me look more like a terrorist," said the
27-year-old Pakistani-American, a computer expert who grew up in Paramus.
"She thinks it makes me look
more like a suspicious figure because I fit some stereotype of the people you
see on TV who do these horrible things."
Four years after Al-Qaida
launched its surprise assault on the United States and almost three years into
the war in Iraq, American Muslim communities in North Jersey and nationwide
still are explaining themselves. Still trying to fill voids of ignorance with
information about Islam. Still worrying about the erosion of the civil liberties
that inspired them or their parents to come to the United States in the first
place.
Headlines continuously keep
these issues in mind.
Kidwai, of the Liberty
Corner section of Bernards, has not completely restored that feeling of
comfortable citizenship he enjoyed before the 9/11 attacks. When the planes flew
into the twin towers in Manhattan, he was single, fresh out of college and
living in Mount Arlington because it was close to his job in Randolph. He was
proud of having his first apartment and getting used to paying his own
electricity bill and $800-a-month rent.
"The walls were thin and I
could hear my neighbors downstairs," he said. "Eventually, in wintertime, I
ended up having to buy an air conditioner because I could not control the heat."
After 9/11, his troubles got
larger. He had been moving out, in increments, in August and September 2001
because he bought a condo in Basking Ridge. When he was gone one day, he said,
the superintendent went into his apartment with people putting in new windows.
It was then that they saw Kidwai's Quran and prayer rug, as well as a few
arabesque jars.
Calling
the FBI
Combined with his passport,
stamped to reflect his latest family trip to Pakistan in 1997, the stuff in his
bachelor pad apparently made the superintendent uneasy enough to call the FBI.
One of the first things Kidwai, a second-generation Pakistani-American,
experienced in his new condo was a message on his tape machine from an FBI
agent.
"My reaction was that it
must be a prank call," he said. "The man left a number, though, so the next
morning I dialed the number.
"The agent said he wanted to
meet me as soon as possible. He said, 'Where are you right now?' They wanted to
meet me 'right now, wherever I am.' I told them they could meet me at home. They
said, 'No, no. Stay where you are. We're coming to you.'"
To this day Kidwai wishes
the agents who visited him at Concurrent Technologies, where he still works,
would not have involved his workplace. The CFO of the company allowed Kidwai and
the agents to use his office, an offer for which Kidwai is still grateful
because it gave him some privacy. The agents asked him about 9/11: What did he
feel about it? What did he know about it? Did he know anyone involved?
"They knew I had a copy of
the Quran in my home," he said. "They knew I had been to Pakistan. I don't know
the extent of what else they knew. The fact that someone had gone into my home
and through my things was not brought up."
Kidwai remembers telling the
agents that he thinks of Osama bin Laden as a miscreant, an anarchist, a
politically motivated person and not a religiously motivated person. Nothing
came of the inquiry in terms of stopping terrorism, but Kidwai has not been
quite the same since. That phone call from the FBI scared him.
"I remember thinking, what
if this is real? What is going on? Are all the horror stories I've heard of
people going to camps and disappearing true? Would that really become me?" he
said.
Today he shares his condo
with his wife and young son. If somebody else called the FBI on him again, he
still would cooperate because, he said, that's what a good citizen does.
But Kidwai, now director of
applications development at Concurrent Technologies, also would take legal
action. His home should not have been searched, he said. His privacy should not
have been invaded.
After his experience with
the apartment, Kidwai cannot help but wonder what would happen if there is
another attack. Would people stop talking to him?
Lots of
worry
"For some people that dial
goes one way or the other," Kidwai said. "We're on a very slippery slope in
terms of how much diversification we accept in our communities and how tolerant
we are. It doesn't take much to make a tolerant person very intolerant."
Other Muslim-Americans
worry, too. They worry to the point of educating themselves very well so they
can field any question about Islam. They worry to the point of holding forums
and giving talks to promote understanding of Islam. As Americans, they worry to
the point of organizing to fight for civil liberties.
Agha Saeed is a political
science professor at California State University, national founder of the
American Muslim Alliance and national chair of American Muslim Taskforce on
Civil Rights and Elections, a coalition of 11 major American Muslim
organizations. He flew here last week to address the group's New Jersey chapter
at a gathering of some 200 Muslims at the Shahnawaz Palace in Edison. He set out
an ambitious agenda for the group locally and nationwide: to take a lead in
restoring civil liberties for all Americans.
"There is an unnamed
movement in the United States for civil liberties and human rights, and that's
why city after city, county after county, state after state, are taking on the
responsibility to make this repeal request," Saeed told the crowd. Saeed was
referring to 391 cities, counties and states that have passed resolutions
calling for partial repeal of the U.S. Patriot Act on the grounds of
unconstitutionality.
[The House approved a
renewed version of the Patriot Act last week. The extension still needs Senate
passage.]
Parts of the act fight
terror, according to Saeed, but other parts dispense with elements of due
process and bypass restrictions on ex post facto laws.
There is no reason, he
added, why AMA of New Jersey could not play a leadership role in this new civil
rights movement.
"We are not asking something
special for Muslims," he said. "We are asking something special for America. We
are asking for America to be restored to its principles."
Political
involvement
Saeed also calls for 75
percent of American Muslims to vote in 2006 elections, and he urges them to run
for office, following the lead of such New Jerseyans as Ali Chaudry of Bernards
Township, who became the first Pakistani-American mayor in the country in 2004.
Certainly American Muslims
are not a decisive voting force, he said, but they can be a significant one.
There are 3.5 million
Arab-Americans nationwide, according to the 2000 Census, and 3,116 in Morris
County. The American Religion Data Archive estimated that there were 2,141
Muslims in Morris County that same year.
"Muslims constitute 2
percent of the voting population," Saeed said, "but we know from the published
records of the past 100 years of presidential elections that only 50 percent of
the people vote. So if we vote full strength we are 4 percent of the voting
population.
"We also know from the
published records that in an off-year like 2006 it will be roughly 37 percent
voter turnout. If we vote full strength we will be 5.5 percent of the voting
population."
Such involvement with
elections is one way of firming a foundation of trust between Muslim-Americans
and other Americans. But such trust also is built person to person.
"We need to make the
foundation of tolerance a lot stronger," Kidwai said, "so that if another
incident happens, all our dialogues weren't just dialogues that were forgotten."
In retrospect, Kidwai
wonders whether his being reported to the FBI had something to do with people in
his apartment complex knowing nothing about him except what he looked like.
"I was working a lot and I
didn't have much contact with the people in the community," he explained. "Maybe
it's my fault that I didn't reach out to them, I don't know. At the same time we
are a minority for a reason. There are not enough of us.
"But we can touch the people
who are around us and become close friends and make that level of understanding.
For those who will never be able to access a Muslim person or never be able to
understand one, I'm not sure. Then it's the job of our media and our
spokespeople and our leaders to be getting that message out."
No good
stereotypes
Getting to know Muslims
one-on-one whenever possible is an antidote to a new media phenomenon --
creating a stereotype of all Muslims as good and sweet, according to Nazish
Aghal, a 32-year-old corporate lawyer from Livingston who has done pro bono work
on civil rights issues. She is secretary of the Civil Rights Committee of the
New York City Bar Association. Born in India and raised in the United States,
Aghal is a Shia Muslim.
Creating a new good
stereotype of Muslims to counter the stereotype of Muslims as terrorists is
dangerous and should be avoided, she said.
"The good stereotype is also
wrong and unrealistic and creates this great difficulty of expecting people to
live up to this absurd reality," she said. "To live up to this good stereotype
every Muslim has to be super-patriotic, nicer than everybody else, nonviolent.
It's unreasonable because no one behaves like that. Nobody."
There are Muslims who are
gay, she said, and Muslims with drug problems. There are Muslims who would be
comfortable in interfaith sessions with Jews or Southern Baptists, and still
others who are more the New York liberal types. The point is: They're complex,
they're people.
"If you create just two
divisions of Muslim people -- the terrorists and the good Muslims -- and if you
happen to not fit in the good Muslim category, the assumption will be you must
be the other kind," she said.
Daily
life
In such a way the divide of
understanding between Muslims and non-Muslims goes on, as does real life as
Muslim-Americans continue to forge their way day by day.
Ahmed Kandil of Randolph, a
25-year-old business education teacher at Parsippany Hills High School, has been
employed there happily since September. So is his wife, Amina Zohny, 23, who
works part time teaching environmental science and biology.
At the outset of the school
year it was announced at a faculty meeting that neither Kandil nor his wife
would shake hands with anyone of the opposite gender because of their religious
values. The purpose of the announcement was to ensure that no one would be
offended. The couple appreciated that announcement.
In the meantime, Kandil has
watched with interest the story of the FBI detaining five Muslim men at Giants
Stadium in September because they were praying together near a main air intake
duct. They were let go, and the incident ended with the New Jersey Sports and
Exposition Authority designating a special prayer area in the stadium.
As a practicing Muslim,
Kandil prays five times a day. The prescribed hours for prayer are dawn, noon,
afternoon, sunset and evening.
"Because I have classes
sixth, seventh and eighth periods, there is no time for the noon prayer," Kandil
said. "The prayer takes five minutes and it would not be sufficient in the
transition time between classes to be able to pray at school. In this case it's
just how my schedule worked out."
He finds appealing the idea
of a special quiet room at schools that could be used for such a purpose by
people of all faiths. For the time being, though, he and his wife, happy with
the sensitivity that the school district has shown them, are doubling up on
their afternoon prayers to make up for missing the noon prayer.
World
watching
This time of year the
computer on Aref Assaf's desk in his Denville home rings out the calls to
prayer, and this entrepreneur and father of five stops what he's doing to pray.
Assaf likes to wear a
Palestinian scarf featuring the colors of his native Palestine -- green, white,
red and black -- and featuring a map of historic Palestine and a rendering of
the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem.
"Some of us felt it was
appropriate to seek a resolution passed by the City of Paterson requiring the
federal government to curtail egregious sections of the Patriot Act that are
unconstitutional and don't serve the purpose of stopping terrorism," said Assaf,
president of the American Arab Forum. "They were designed to take away our
liberties because of our sense of insecurity.
"In times of duress we tend
to do that, and I'm always reminded of a statement of Benjamin Franklin --'Those
who forsake liberty for security deserve neither.' That desire to keep a balance
between security and liberty is a big challenge for any government."
But it is one that must be
met, he contends, if all Americans are to live in the way the U.S. Constitution
decrees. The way the U.S. treats Muslim-Americans in particular is important
because it has much to do with the drama now on the world stage.
Muslim-Americans are much-needed ambassadors of goodwill to their brothers and
sisters overseas, according to Assaf.
"They talk to us first --
before they read some article in a magazine, some implanted story in a newspaper
or TV," he said. "We tell them how great America is and we can tell them how bad
America is. So we need this continued open door policy with our elected
officials."
Approaching Hughes
Currently he and others have
requested a meeting with Karen Hughes of the U.S. State Department. A Bush
appointee, she is undersecretary of public diplomacy and public affairs,
assigned the task of improving America's dialogue with the Muslim world.
"She is going to the Middle
East to try to improve the picture of America in those countries," Assaf said.
"We are telling her, 'You
cannot go there before you talk to us because we are able to help you do your
job.' We have a full agenda of things we can share with her."
The perception in 99 percent
of the Muslim world is that America is out to get Islam, conquer Muslim Arab
countries and occupy their lands to take advantage of their natural resources,
Assaf said. No one can help the United States change that perception better than
Muslim-Americans.
Assaf, born in a Palestinian
refugee camp, always has had a vision. That is why he came to the United States
26 years ago to study at Columbia University. That is why his family lives here
in the same town -- Denville -- and never leaves. It has to do with coming from
a background of statelessness, he said. He just wants to stay put and he also
wants the world to understand what he has come to believe: that America is a
great country and is not out to get or exploit the Muslim world or Arab
countries for their resources.
But first his dreams are
smaller. Maybe someday, he said, people will accept him so naturally and
thoroughly that people will call to ask him questions not about being an Arab or
a Muslim. Maybe someday they will call and ask about property taxes or music or
some completely different topic.
That would be progress. He
is, after all, he said, as American as he is Muslim.
Lorraine Ash can be reached at (973) 428-6660 or
lvash@gannett.com.
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