Friday, February 20, 2015

Muslims answer violence with love and forgiveness

From a Huffington Post article by Antonia Blumberg:

"After the shooting of three Muslim students in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, a message of compassion rose up from many corners of the Muslim community.

"Farris Barakat, the brother of one of the victims, spoke at a vigil at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill the day after the shooting, saying: 
"I plead that you live in their legacy, that you share the good that you know of them ... It was quite possible, that this was an act based off of evil and a scared, ignorant man, do not let ignorance propagate in your life. Do not reply to ignorance with ignorance. Become an amazing, bright intellectual leader that I know this university can create."
"Thousands heeded Barakat's charge in the days that followed, organizing vigils, canned food drives, fundraisers and more to honor the lives of Deah Shaddy Barakat, Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha and Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha. . . .

"Muslim activists launched a campaign called "Feed the Hungry" to encourage groups and individuals around the country to participate in a nationwide canned food drive, referencing Deah Barakat's last Facebook post, which showed him delivering food and free dental supplies to homeless people in the Chapel Hill area.

". . . Despite these efforts, the Center for American Progress has warned that the roots of Islamophobia run deep and take many shapes, which became ever more apparent in the days following the Chapel Hill shooting. Just three days after the tragedy an Islamic center in Houston was set on fire, and over the weekend a Muslim school in Rhode Island was vandalized . . .  

"A man arrested for the Houston fire called the incident an accident, which some Muslim groups found hard to swallow in the context of other anti-Muslim attacks and threats reported in recent days.

"Nonetheless, Ahsan Zahid, assistant imam at the Quba Islamic Institute in Houston, said he was ready to turn the other cheek -- regardless of the man's motives.

"We have forgiven, we have forgotten and we'd like to express that we'd love to have [the arsonist] come by and see us and let us know what was the misconceptions that he had about us that led him to commit such a crime," Zahid told local ABC affiliate, KTRK. 

"'There's no reason for there to be so much hate within someone to want to do something like that, at that level of violence,' he said. 'But at the same time, we have forgiven. We don't want to know necessarily his motives, but we want to help him get better and get to know us better as well.'" 

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That is the face of Islam that the media need to let us hear more about.    This is what I have seen in some Muslim individuals that I know and admire.

Ralph

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