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#TryFasting 2011 – Post Mortem

Well, they did it!  My seven friends woke up before dawn, went without food and water all day, and updated the #TryFasting hashtag to let us know how they were experiencing a day in the life of a Muslim during Ramadan.

I am so impressed with them!  Sure there was some grumbling, but overall they maintained an AWESOME positive attitude and threw themselves into the experience without reserve.

To wrap things up, I wanted to share some of their tweets and give you some links to their reflections on the day.  (Check back for updates!)

@Orchid8

[Read her account on her blog - click here]

@HollyMVG

[Read her account on her blog - click here]

@JenzTweets

Jen wrote her own blog post which she let me share here in full:

I don’t follow an individual religious practice. A friend of mine recently called me a religion slut, which is actually pretty accurate. I’m just fascinated by religious practice in general. So when I kept seeing my friend Amanda (@ImTheQ) tweeting about fasting for Ramadan, I suggested joining her for a day. She promptly accepted, and several other people chimed in. We set a date, August 16, and @ImTheQ assigned a hashtag, #tryfasting.Others have already written excellent posts about how the fasting itself was, Sarah Vela’s post is great summary of that angle of the experience: http://orchid8.posterous.com/tryfasting  But I’m going to focus on the very best thing that happened that day. In the morning, while we were chatting about it on Twitter, a troll sent a really nasty tweet at the group of us (not the good kind of nasty, either). I, like the idiot I am, managed to be shocked, while @ImTheQ assured us that this happens all the time. Of course, none of us were deterred by it, it only cemented our resolve.

I’d seen @ImTheQ talk about catching this kind of crap, but I didn’t get it. I feel like a major fool for how extreme my not-getting-it was. I don’t think you ever truly understand someone else’s experience until you walk in their shoes, and that’s part of the problem with harassment and discrimination. It’s so easy to think you do get it, and when that happens, it’s easy to discount their hardships. And further, it’s easy to imagine that your difficulties are worse and the problem is that the other side doesn’t understand you well enough. From there, it’s a short step to justifying the discrimination you lob at others. Because it’s all their fault, right? After all, they are WRONG. If only they’d try harder to understand, if only they knew what you had to go through. What you’re missing is that they’re going through all the same shit, you only think you have it worse because you’re the one dealing with yours. And naturally, your troubles are more important than anyone else’s.

Religion is one of the most pronounced subjects for this, but the same inequities exist in all kinds of areas: politics, gender, sexual orientation, knitters vs. crocheters—okay, maybe that last one isn’t so bad, but still. It’s the Us Vs. Them that’s killing us. And the second you fall into thinking that your side is superior, you lose all moral high ground. But you won’t even know that it’s happening, because you’ll think you’re right.

I still can’t claim to know what it’s like to be a Muslim in the U.S., and I never will. But I feel incredibly lucky to have gotten that tiny bit of insight. There is a duality in all things, and just because someone else believes differently from you doesn’t mean that either of you is wrong. If we could ever get to a point where we all could accept and live that philosophy, the world would be a better place for it.

@LanceFR

[Read his account on his blog - Click Here]

@g_ack

@UpSheepCreek

@GenP13

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Celebrating Ramadan at the White House

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Ramadhan 2011/1432

“Shall I not inform you of a better act than fasting, alms, and prayers? Making peace between one another: enmity and malice tear up heavenly rewards by the roots” – Prophet Muhammad

Ramadan Mubarak!

Our blessed month of fasting and charity has arrived!  Muslims around the planet will be abstaining from food and drink from pre-dawn to sundown.  Here in Austin, Texas that means from approximately 5:30 am to 8:30 pm.  Lest you dismiss this as just another proof that Muslims are insane, I thought I might explain why we voluntarily go hungry for these 30 days.

Right around 610 A.D. in Arabia, an uneducated but good-hearted merchant named Muhammad used to take excursions out to the desert to spend time praying and pondering some of the injustice and misery he saw in his society.  One evening, an angel named Gabriel appeared to him and commanded him to RECITE!  And what came from Muhammad’s mouth were words of such exquisite beauty and eloquent language that those who heard it (including some of his enemies) were moved to tears.  That was, of course, the beginning of the revelation we know as The Qur’an (which means, in English, The Recitation).

The night of the very first revelation of the Qur’an occurred during the Arabic month of Ramadan.  Later, as Muhammad continued to receive revelations and more people heard the Message and embraced Islam, Ramadan was declared a holy month during which time all Muslims were to refocus their attention on their faith.

The main practice during Ramadan is fasting, which is also considered one of Five Pillars of our religion.  During the hours that the sun shines, Muslims refrain from food, drink, and sexual contact.  We also strive to make perfect prayers, read the Qur’an each day, offer charity to those in need, and meet together with other Muslims to encourage each other in our faith.

Fasting for 12-15 hours can be difficult, but the key to doing it successfully is waking up before dawn for a meal called suhoor.  When the sun sets, Muslims are commanded to break the fast immediately and it’s common to do so with water and dates, as was the custom of Prophet Muhammad.  We then partake in a break-fast meal called iftaar.

The benefits of fasting are many.  First, it allows you to focus on the spiritual aspects of your life, putting your physical needs on the ‘back-burner’.  Fasting has been done by religious people from the beginning of history as a way to purify the body and soul and teach self-control.  But perhaps the most important benefit to fasting is that it teaches us to empathize with those who are hungry because they have no choice.  Islam has a strong emphasis on social justice and on caring for those who are in need.  It is easy for us to forget that there are millions of people who go to bed hungry or thirsty each night because they simply cannot afford food, or have no access to it.

For those of you fasting this month, I wish you all success.  May Allah bless you and help you to keep your fast without hardship.  May your sacrifices be given with a joyful heart.  Ameen.

Asalaamo’alaikum!

 

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Don’t Ask, Don’t Tennessee: Why Muslims and the LGBTQ Community Should Be Allies

I’m honored to present this guest post by Chris Stedman.  Chris an Interfaith and Community Service Fellow, Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard and Managing Director, State of Formation at Journal of Inter-Religious Dialogue. He is also a columnist for Huffington Post Religion and blogs at NonProphet Status. He tweets from @ChrisDStedman.

This year, two notable controversies have been brewing in Tennessee: a proposed bill that would forbid educators from using the word “gay” in the classroom, and a court battleto determine whether or not Islam is a religion. (The verdict? Islam is in fact a religion—for now, anyway.)

These two issues may seem unrelated, but I believe they’re actually symptoms of the same problem—our nation’s historical difficulty with those who are seen as disrupting the status quo. Intolerance against Muslims and LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) individuals isn’t exclusive to Tennessee; with a fever-pitched debate over Park51 (or the “Ground Zero Mosque”) and headline-grabbing concerns about anti-LGBTQ bullying, these issues are a national concern.

Last month, I went to Tennessee for the first time. I spoke at Vanderbilt about the need for the religious and the nonreligious to find better ways of engaging with one another and identifying action-oriented shared values, sharing some of the experiences I write about in my forthcoming memoir, (F)a(i)theist: How One Atheist Learned to Challenge the Religious-Secular Divide, and Why Atheists and the Religious Must Work Together (working title, Beacon Press 2012).

While there, I talked with a number of people about the ongoing struggles for Tennessee’s Muslim community. We discussed their Lieutenant Governor’s remarks that he is “not sure” if the Constitution guarantees freedom of religion to Muslims and his characterization of Islam a “cult;” proposed legislation that would make the practice of Sharia punishable by 15 years in prison; and how the site of a future mosque had been the subject of arson.

This wasn’t my first exposure to the challenges many American Muslims face. When I lived in Chicago, I worked extensively with the Muslim community. At first blush, it seemed we had little in common. I once walked into a meeting in a too-small t-shirt and neon green skinny jeans, my tattoo sleeve exposed and hollow gauges in my stretched earlobes, when a woman with a bright smile framed by a beautiful purple headscarf approached me and asked why I was there. I told her that I was a contract employee of the Interfaith Youth Core (IFYC), and was interested in learning more about what they were doing.

“Oh!” she exclaimed. “And what faith tradition are you a part of?”

“None,” I said, returning her smile. “I’m an atheist.”

Her eyes flicked to my right, as if to check with someone if it was alright for me to be there. But her hesitation didn’t last long; within minutes, we were gushing over our mutual love for a new Brother Ali song, “Tightrope.” In it, Brother Ali, a Muslim rapper from my home state of Minnesota, tells the stories of a young Muslim woman who faces discrimination for wearing a headscarf and a closeted gay teenager who is the son of an anti-gay Christian minister. We bonded over how we both felt that the song had represented struggles we ourselves had experienced, and the parallels between them. By the end of the conversation, we had uncovered a lot of common ground between our seemingly disparate identities.

After that conversation, I reflected on how different it was than the ones I had when working with the Somali community in Minneapolis, Minnesota. I volunteered weekly at the Brian Coyle Community Center (BCCC). Just blocks from my college, BCCC served the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood—one of the most densely populated areas in Minnesota, with nearly 2,000 apartment units in a two-block area. The makeup of the neighborhood was primarily Somali immigrants, the majority of whom were Muslim.

I volunteered at BCCC and started to become an active member of the community. As a result, I began to understand better the joys and challenges the Somali immigrant community in Minneapolis faced. When a young girl with round brown eyes and a striking red head scarf vividly described her first encounter with snow, I felt like I was experiencing Minnesota winter for the first time. When a mother with one child in her left arm and two running around her feet thanked me for helping her son with his math homework, I informed her that he actually knew more about the subject than I did. When I missed a week due to a bad cold, everyone grinned at my return and told me how much they had missed and worried about me. We became invested in one another’s lives, and we taught one another how to be together. They even tried to coach me on some rudimentary Somali, but always playfully chided me for not sounding forceful enough: “You sound too Minnesotan!” they’d say with a chuckle (and they were right: I did).

But when it came to matters of religious life, I disengaged. As a former evangelical Christian turned atheist, I believed that religion was something best left undiscussed. They were free to their religious beliefs, I thought, but it didn’t mean I had to listen to them talk about it.

One day I stayed late, caught up in conversation with a group of regulars. Gradually all but one trickled away, leaving me and a young woman I had spoken with a handful of times. She was petite, but her presence filled the room—she spoke rapidly and precisely. A couple plates of food scraps sat on the table in front of us as we quizzed one another on the details of our lives.

After some talk of how terrible the Minnesota NBA team had been playing that year and which local politicians we were voting for, she paused and looked down at the nearly empty plate in front of her and took a deep breath.

“You know, some days I’m really afraid to go out in public because of how I dress. I just get tired of dealing with the stares and jeers my hijab elicits,” she said, barely audible. We were both silent. I heard a shout from down the hall that the gymnasium was closing and all basketballs should be returned to the equipment closet.

“It’s not exactly the same thing, but I think I can empathize,” I said before I could stop myself. She looked up. Her face showed that she was curious about how I, a white male who looked like every other young hipster, might relate.

“Sometimes I get really nervous about the looks I get when I’m holding another man’s hand in public.” I wasn’t sure how she would respond to this new information. I wasn’t really out as queer to anyone at BCCC—I assumed that, because many of them were religious, it would be an issue. She smiled, and I realized I hadn’t taken a breath in the last minute.

“When I’m afraid of how others might receive me,” she said, leaning in, her elbows sliding across the table in perfect unison like a pair of synchronized swimmers, “it is my belief in Allah that gives me strength.” She wasn’t proselytizing; she was sharing her beliefs. She hadn’t asked for clarification about what I had said, hadn’t condemned me; she hadn’t even blinked.

“May I ask you: what gives you strength when you get such looks, or when someone says something disparaging about you because of who you are?” She looked me in the face, her eyes warm and brown and invitational.

I froze. I looked down at her elbows and noticed that they were fixed in place, their choreography finished. The show was over, and I too was done.

“Um, do you know when this place shuts down for the night?” I asked, shifting my head to the left, unable to look her in the eye.

Her religious beliefs were integral to her identity, and she opened a door for us to discuss the things that mattered to us both with candor and honesty. But I was afraid to open up to her—the gulf I imagined between the experiences of a gay atheist and Muslim woman seemed too vast. Rising abruptly, I picked up the plates from the table and grabbed my bike helmet with a fumble, inventing some story about a big paper that was due the next day.

Working with the Muslim community in Chicago, I realized how problematic my “don’t ask, don’t tell” approach to working with the Muslim community in Minneapolis had been; how my refusal to engage the religious identities of those I worked with at BCCC closed me off from countless opportunities to build bridges of understanding and respect with a community I honestly knew very little about, aside from my academic study of Islam. And how, by refusing to open up to them about my own beliefs and experiences, I denied them the opportunity to learn about me—to really know me and understand the challenges that I faced.

Religious and LGBTQ identities are important, and when we try to tuck them away in some dark and dusty corner we lose something integral. When open discussion about essential aspects of our identity becomes taboo—when we are forced to silence the stories of who we are and what matters to us—intolerance goes unchallenged and we are its accomplices, complicit in allowing others to be cast aside. When we see the other as so different that we think we can find no common ground, we allow others to see them as not-quite-human, too.

It is fear of the unknown that keeps us apart. Telling people that they can’t use the word “gay” in the classroom, or suggesting that Islam isn’t a religion—that it shouldn’t been seen as in the same realm as Christianity and other religions—and that Muslims shouldn’t be able to build a Mosque, prevents us from learning about one another. Religious literacy is abysmal in the United States while religious diversity thrives, breeding ignorance and fear of the other. The time that a friend of mine had her hijab ripped off, and the time I was physically assaulted by a group of men who shouted “fag” at me, share a common root.

Last year, a Gallup poll demonstrated something the LGBTQ community has known for some time: people are significantly more inclined to oppose gay marriage if they do not know anyone who is gay. Similarly, a Time Magazine cover story featured revealing numbers that speak volumes about the correlation between positive relationships and civic support; per their survey, 46 percent of Americans think Islam is more violent than other faiths and 61 percent oppose Park51, but only 37 percent even know a Muslim American. Another survey, by Pew, reported that 55 percent of Americans know “not very much” or “nothing at all” about Islam. The disconnect is clear—when only 37 percent of Americans know a Muslim American, and 55 percent claim to know very little or nothing about Islam, the negative stereotypes about the Muslim community go unchallenged.

The Muslim and LGBTQ communities face common challenges that stem from the same problem—that diverse communities don’t have robust and durable civic ties. This is why the Muslim and LGBTQ communities ought to be strong allies.

This shouldn’t suggest that there won’t be some profound disagreements, and that engagement won’t be fraught and difficult—perhaps especially so for those whose identities are located at the intersection of LGBTQ and Muslim—but if we avoid this engagement simply because it may be hard, or messy, or complex, then we have ceded victory to the forces of intolerance and allowed our voices to be subsumed by those whose bombastic volume is designed to drown us out.

As Robert Wright wrote in the New York Times last year, the LGBTQ community has learned that engaged relationships change people’s hearts and minds, and this is a model that can be applied to the issue of anti-Muslim bias as well. All the more, I believe that the LGBTQ and Muslim communities would do well to join together and decry the voices that wish to marginalize either—and, often, the voices that marginalize both.

Until Tennessee, and all of the United States, is a safe place for both LGBTQ individuals and Muslims, it will not be a safe place for anyone. But together, Muslims, LGBTQ individuals, and all of those committed to equality can ensure that this is so.

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Ten Reasons Why It’s Good To Be a Muslim in America

1.  Freedom of Religion is the Law of the Land.

Unlike some places in the world, the freedom to practice Islam (or any other religion for that matter) is a fundamental right, written into the foundation of U.S. Law.  This means that we are guaranteed the right to practice Islam–and to practice it in the way we choose–by the highest law of the land (whether some of our fellow “patriot” citizens like it or not). When it comes to our faith, we answer only to God. So…yeah. Piss off, Peter King.

2.  Diversity of the Muslim Community.

Within the American Muslim community, we have immigrants from all over the world–as well as American-born converts of every ethnic origin.  This has given us a chance to really examine what parts of our faith are based on Islam and what may be culturally influenced, superstitious, or just something someone’s grandma just made up.  The result has been (and continues to be) a renaissance in Islamic thought, with America’s Muslims leading the way. This diversity also guarantees that we get to sample a really excellent range of food at our community functions.

3.  Freedom of Speech/Press.

Just take a few minutes to speak with journalists, bloggers and activists from other parts of the world and you’ll thank your lucky stars and stripes that you have the freedom to say what you like without being arrested, beaten, tortured or having your family threatened. The worst thing that will happen here is someone will call you names. (Which they have a right to do, too! See? It’s win/win!)  Muslim Americans have the right to speak out and express ourselves regardless of who may oppose us. I only wish more of us were doing it.

4.  A (mostly) Reliable Justice System.

No justice system is perfect, but I’m proud to say that America’s is one of the best.  Those who are poor, have minority status, or who may not have a culturally popular message are still protected under the law–and there is legal recourse against even the most powerful and wealthy if they should attempt to exploit or persecute those who are less advantaged. Of course, there are no guarantees, but it’s certainly better than disappearing into a dark, dank prison and never being heard from again just because your local land-owner wants to screw your wife.

5.  Full Rights to All Citizens.

When you become a citizen of the United States of America, you have full rights regardless of your gender, ethnicity, religion or income.  There’s no waiting period for new citizens, no caste system, and no personal bias that can keep you from exercising your rights. So, uh, yeah. Don’t be shy. Get out there and take those rights for a test drive!

6.  Open-Mindedness.

It is true that Muslims have recently had to deal with some unsavory, Islamophobic goons making lots of noise in the media, but the reality on the ground is that the majority of Americans are open-minded and willing to give anyone the benefit of the doubt.  Culturally, Americans are ‘bottom line’ kind of people.  They are more interested in the results of what you’re doing than how you go about doing it.  If you’re here to be a positive, contributing member of our society, you’re generally welcomed and respected even if your fellow citizens don’t quite understand the scarf or the no bacon thing. Just don’t let your dog crap on their lawns or cut in front of them before they’ve had their morning coffee, and it’s all good.

7.   The Right to Vote.

As a citizen on the United States of America you have (at least theoretically) the same political power as any other citizen.  Once we all figure this out and begin to organize, Muslim-American issues will be taken much more seriously by elected officials. However, since we tend to have a hard time even organizing Eid Prayers once a year, I’m not going to start holding my breath on this one.

8.  Economic Opportunities.

Unlike many places in the world, America offers great economic opportunities to all kinds of people, including immigrants.  Entrepreneurship, hard work, savvy business sense, intelligent investment and education are rewarded no matter who you are, or where you come from. This is different from certain *other* countries that shall remain nameless, where immigrants are basically treated like second-class citizens, exploited for slave wages, occasionally beat up or raped and booted out if they make a fuss. (Just sayin’)

9.  Opportunity for Interfaith Dialogue.

Because America is so diverse, Muslims here get a chance to understand different faith traditions. And I’m not just talking about Sunnis, Shias and Sufis! Get to know your local Baptists, Wiccans and Mormons while you’re at it! The exchange of ideas and the ability to share experiences with people of different religions is a vital step toward promoting peace, tolerance, and understanding all over the world.

10.  (Relative) Security.

Any time I’ve asked an immigrant family why they chose to move to the U.S., the #1 response has always been the same:  Security. You see, most of the Muslims who come here are educated and have money. But they are sick and tired of living in constant fear and turmoil.  We live in relative safety and security here where we can send our kids to school without worrying that a roadside bomb will blow up their school bus before they get home, and when we go to turn on the light switch there’s actually electricity available for us to use. What that means for us as American Muslims, however, is that we have an even greater opportunity to live our faith and to help contribute our skills and talents toward solving problems that we all face–regardless of our religion. Alhamdolillah.

HAPPY FOURTH OF JULY!

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