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Muslim Community Members Encourage Coalition-Building

ADAMS (All Dulles Area Muslim Society)

By Ayesha Ahmad, IOL Washington Correspondent

STERLING, Virginia., March 26 (IslamOnline) - Muslims who were affected by the federal raids last week on their homes and businesses, as well as neighbors and community members, spoke out Monday night against the erosion of civil liberties and encouraged Muslims to join forces with other minority and civil rights groups in their search for justice.

Speaking at a town hall meeting held by Muslim organizations at the public library in Sterling - about 20 miles from Washington, D.C. - Louay Safi, research director of the International Institute for Islamic Thought (IIIT), described the shock his organization felt when it was raided.

"We've been involved in efforts to integrate Muslims… to make them part and parcel of American society," he said, adding that the constitution they were proud to uphold - based on values of freedom and due process of law - was now being degraded.

"This country developed and grew by the efforts of those who resisted this type of behavior," he said, referring to the order and performance of the raids. "People… were not given their rights on a platter, they had to fight… We have to stand up."

Between 150-200 people - mostly Muslims, but also press and non-Muslim community members - left standing room only in the library's meeting room; another 150 attendees had to be turned away and met instead at the ADAMS (All Dulles Area Muslim Society) Center mosque nearby.

Indignation felt by the local and surrounding Muslim community has been rising steadily since last Wednesday, when about 150 federal agents stormed several Muslim businesses, institutions and homes with search warrants alleging possible support for terrorist groups.

With local news stations and papers spreading the word, outrage has grown regarding the nature of the raids' targets - which included well-respected learning institutions - and the conduct of authorities involved in the raids, including handcuffing two women in their home for five hours and pointing guns at innocent people.

Also addressing the crowd at the library was Kit Gage, from the National Coalition to Protect Political Freedom, who urged the Muslim community to learn from those who had experience working for their rights from the federal government.

"You don't have to be a lawyer… to organize around your rights," she said. "It has to be done by the community as a whole."

Saying that it was the job of the people to "help the government figure out what really works," - because what they've been doing since September 11 is not working - she said that the community "can't just ask the Arab-American community to do it alone."

"It will only work if people get together" and learn from others who have experience, she said, adding that it was the responsibility of people who have been through it before to tell the Muslim community, "you're not alone."

Attending the town hall meeting was the Rev. Roberta Finklestein of the Unitarian Universalists of Sterling, who voiced her support for the Muslim community. "All Americans are threatened by the erosion of civil liberties".

Another community member, Reverend James Papile of St. Anne's Episcopal Church in nearby Reston, encouraged grassroots mobilization among faith communities, saying that, "change happens from the ground up."

Imam Johari Abdul-Malik, of Howard University, referred to a verse in the Qur'an that tells humans God has made them into different groups so that they may "know each other… That's what we have to do," he said.

The town hall meeting's moderator, Mahdi Bray - political advisor for the Muslim Public Affairs Council and a long-time civil rights activist - summed up the arguments on the necessity of joining hands with one statement: "This is not a Muslim tragedy, this is an American tragedy, and I pray to God that America will do better."

Others who spoke at the meeting included Imam Mohammad Magid of the ADAMS Center, who was there when the Center's day and Sunday school was raided because it leased the second floor of the IIIT.

He spoke to the effects if the raids on his community, saying that Muslim children who carried American flags after September 11 are now telling him they are afraid to go home, or afraid to go to their rooms at night, because they are afraid people will break in with guns and handcuff their parents.

"It's very difficult for me as a counselor, as an imam, as a spiritual leader in my community," he said. "What can I tell my community?"

Laura Jaghlit, a Fairfax English teacher whose home was raided Wednesday while she was away, also encouraged Muslims to stand together to overcome what happened to them.

And Nihad Awad, executive director of Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), who was in Saudi Arabia at the time of the raids, described how he had to defend his government to the Saudis he was meeting with, whose first reaction to the news of the raids was, "This is a war against Islam and Muslims."

"Our administration has the burden of proving otherwise," he said. "This incident has to be a turning point in our history… every one of us will be an activist," he continued, adding that the community members owed it to themselves and to their children to "stand up and say enough is enough."

Local Fox 5 news, which carried the story of the meeting later Monday night, reported that the Customs Agency, which obtained the warrants through the U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., did not have any response, and that the government was being "tight-lipped" about the raids.

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