SEPTEMBER 1999, pages 92, 151
Mahjabeen’s Musings: A Muslim-American Pilgram Along the American
Way
We Can Mix Morality With Politics by Changing
the System, Not Ourselves
By Mahjabeen Islam-Husain
Congress recently voted to post the Ten Commandments in all public
schools, with the hope that the “thou shalt not kill” and other
Divine orders will permeate the psyche of our schoolchildren, and
thereby deter them from all things wild and heinous. A representative
in Congress went so far as to state that had we done this earlier,
perhaps the Littleton massacre would not have occurred.
In the same session of Congress a vote for the rating of videos
was defeated, on the premise that it violated free speech, by essentially
the same margin by which the Ten Commandments proposal was passed.
As a Muslim, who must believe in the Torah and the Bible, I have
no personal objection to the posting of the Ten Commandments, as
I am sure most of my fellow Muslims would not have either.
What I do strongly object to is that this violates the First Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution. Our congressional representatives are
willing to sacrifice the right to freedom of religion, but not that
of free speech.
In my opinion, the voting results should have been reversed. The
passive posting of the Ten Commandments will be predictably ineffective
in comparison with the rating of videos, which research and anecdotal
data show greatly influence the minds of young people.
So, apparently, the agenda of the Christian Right won, and so did
the agenda of the entertainment industry. What is even more worrisome
is that slowly but surely American society is being pulled by a
variety of forces, ostensibly with virtuous messages, but each and
every one of them having a large ulterior motive.
Therefore posting the Ten Commandments in public places is not
as much of a problem as the likelihood that it is the harbinger
of more to come. Perhaps it’s “only just begun.”
My paranoia in this regard was swiftly vindicated when Rep. Helen
Chenoweth (R-ID) urged Congress to pass a resolution recommending
a Day of Prayer. Possibly due to the ridicule heaped on members
of Congress for the Ten Commandments resolution, they did not adopt
the Chenoweth proposal. Perhaps she should have waited a year or
so. By that time there would probably have been another national
tragedy and, with the public in shock, its representatives would
have passed the proposal with nary a squeak.
All of the Arab and Muslim organizations have
coordinated their protests.
Politics and its practitioners are an enigma to me. The about-faces
in which they excel make politics a less than honorable occupation
to the casual observer. Principle becomes redundant in the quest
to obtain, and then hold, power. Even to discuss the antithetical
nature of power and principle is to immediately become irrelevant.
We are able to do a collective shrug and say “You gotta do what
you gotta do.”
Much to Zionist chagrin and Arab and Muslim delight, First Lady
Hillary Clinton last year said the Palestinians should have a state
of their own. Although the White House was quick to advise that
the First Lady’s opinions were independent from official U.S. policy,
we were thrilled. After all, who knows how much a marital relationship
affects these things and vice versa?
Mrs. Clinton then decided to make history by being the first First
Lady to “explore” running for the Senate. But as part of the process
she took a pin to our balloon by stating that should she be elected,
she would support Jerusalem becoming the undivided capital of Israel.
Perhaps the concepts of an independent Palestine and of Jerusalem
being Israel’s “undivided” capital are compatible, but once again
it looks like a political about-face.
Folklore has it that since New York has the largest concentration
of Jews in America, and Israel has America’s most powerful lobby,
winning elective office in either New York City or New York state
is not possible without the requisite obeisance to whatever Israel
wants. Obviously Hillary is not about to challenge the conventional
wisdom.
Salam al-Marayati, director of the Muslim Public Affairs Council,
and a well- respected human rights activist and social reformer,
was appointed to the Commission to Counter Terrorism, following
two visits by Hillary Clinton to the Islamic Center of Southern
California, where she met with him and his physician wife, Dr. Laila
al-Marayati. But when a hue and cry against the appointment started
with a far-right Zionist extremist and then spread to the “mainstream”
American Jewish organizations, House Democratic leader Richard Gephardt
of Missouri surrendered unconditionally and rescinded the appointment
on the lame pretext that background checks on Marayati would take
longer than the life of the commission. Again a matter of brazen
political expediency. One is forced to question whether all members
of these commissions have lengthy background checks and, equally
to the point, in this transparent information age, would not the
address of my uncle's Wyoming cabin be available to Big Brother
at the click of a mouse?
Hopeful Signs
All this depressing news has fed right into my paranoia. But at
the same time I am aware that with the 2000 elections looming, this
is a time of incredible import for American Muslims. With six to
eight million Muslims in the United States, if only two million
of us become politically mobilized enough to vote as a bloc, and
if we demonstrate to candidates that this is precisely what we are
about to do, we will put ourselves on the political map of the United
States.
The very fact that a Muslim was nominated to serve on such a commission,
and that all of the Arab and Muslim organizations have coordinated
their protests at the injustice of removing him, should be seen
positively by Muslims. It is not too long ago that we might have
seen some of our leaders or would-be leaders tempering their outrage,
hoping to thereby become Bill’s or Hillary’s or Dick Gephardt’s
favorite “Muslim” or “Arab” of the month. It didn’t happen this
time, and that is a clear indication that we are making headway.
Unlike the politicians, we must not be intimidated by the organization
and clout of the Jewish lobby. Instead we must learn from it, and
emulate the good and eschew the bad. They have gotten to this point
by focused hard work.
In the past our problem has always been the same, and that is our
disunity. We Muslims remained divided, regardless of the time or
place.
Happily, most of the current American Muslim political activists
recognize this weakness, as well as the incredible potential strength
that we, as a united community, have in our numbers.
We must set as a goal to have at least 2,000 Muslims elected to
public office in 2000. And we must examine the records of candidates
at all levels, from state legislatures to the White House, and agree
on which are best qualified to serve in public office judged by
our own standards.
This is the only way to illustrate to American political candidates
that American Muslims are here, not just to stay but to participate
just as effectively in the life of our nation as all the other groups
that have preceded and will follow us. Most importantly, our collective
confidence in our political potential now needs the positive reinforcement
that only the sweet sound of the words “we did it!” can provide.
Dr. Mahjabeen Islam-Husain is a Sunni Muslim Pakistan-born family
practice physician living in the Midwest. She and her husband, a
Shi’i Muslim who also is a physician, have three daughters, and
both are active in their local Islamic communities and in national
Muslim-American affairs. She may be reached via e-mail at tennisjunkie@pol.net |