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U.S. Muslims: Muslim Community Should Act To Protect Civil Rights

Muslims say more action should be taken to ensure protection of their civil rights

By Steve Smith, IOL Washington correspondent

WASHINGTON, March 27 (IslamOnline) – Arab and Muslim Americans say they are angry at both the recent raids on Muslim institutions and individuals and at leaders of the Muslim community for failing to respond to the encroachments on their civil rights.

“I do not see what all these Muslim and Arab organizations are doing on our behalf,” said Othman Amana, a 33-year-old Ethiopian immigrant to the U.S. “Every day we hear about new raids and new arrests, but nothing stops. They should try to find ways to stop all this.”

Amana, a worshiper at the Dar Al-Hijra mosque in Northern Virginia, which serves Muslim communities in Arlington, Fairfax and Alexandria, expressed indignation at Muslim groups for being bent on fundraising and but achieving very little on the ground.

“There are many fundraisings at this mosque,” he said. “There are leaflets all the time asking for extra donations. But they are like the countries we come from. They do nothing. We will be chased away here like we were in Africa.”

State interrogations of and raids on Arab and Muslim individuals and institutions in the United States over the past week have intensified recently, sending shock waves through these communities.

The latest clampdown has followed an announcement Wednesday, March 20, by U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, of a new round of interrogations of some 3,000 foreigners in the country. They are to be questioned in a bid to root out any connections they might have with militant groups.

Muslim and Arab groups greeted the raids with a barrage of usual condemnations, press conferences and loud fuming news releases – none of which has so far managed to rise to expectations of members of the community or their funds contributors or put the brakes to the harassment felt by Muslims here.

Amana was looking at a leaflet for an event organized by CAIR. “I appreciate their work and I think they are sincere people but I do not see how they helped the community,” Amana said. “Nothing has changed and we want to see actions.”

Mahdi Bray, Political Director of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, defended the organizations saying that they could not push away something that comes from the government. “It was all beyond our control,” Bray said.

Although there are dozens of Muslim and Arab lobbying groups in Washington, their influence on the U.S. political life remains minimal, particularly compared to that of the more established Jewish lobby.

Insiders attribute the feeble performance to the fact that these groups are relatively new to Washington with some groups being as old as only two or three years old. “I do not think there is anything better that we could have done,” said Bray.

“We are meeting congressmen and women, putting out press releases, and calling for the protection of the American civil rights.” Bray admitted that there is always a room for improving Muslim groups’ performance at this stage but pointed that the post September 11 atmosphere, created by anti-Muslim “other advocacy groups”, was making it harder for activists.

Bray, a respected figure in Capital Hill, said that the comparison with the Jewish lobby was also unfair because Jewish activism has started some 80 years ago and many of the pro-Israel Jewish groups are well established, with connections to the Capitol.

“Comparing the two groups is like comparing eggs to apples,” he said. “You need to watch us 10 years from now” Bray was referring to what he said Muslim groups’ notable successes in Washington DC.

There is no Arab or Muslim lobby in the sense of a massive, scheming body. However, many of these groups lobby on behalf of a variety of issues, including domestic and international concerns.

One is the Arab American Institute, which supports presidential and congressional candidates who are receptive to Arab-American concerns. Another is the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, a civil rights group.

Arab groups say that they have achieved a lot of success. Muslim American organizations have organized dozens of pro-Arab demonstrations trying to influence the U.S. foreign policy on issues of Palestine, Iraq and Kashmir.

One indication that influence was on the increase, noted Bray, was that Jewish rival groups were noting that Arab leaders are trying to build the Arab American community into a political force.

Arabs have also launched major campaigns including the anti-Israel boycott of the Disney Company’s international millennium exhibit; in protest against Israel unfounded claim that Jerusalem, the host of Al-Aqsa mosque and the place where Prophet Mohammed (SAWS) was ascended to the heavens, as its capital.

In July 1999, Sprint Communications was attacked for using the Dome of the Rock in an ad for cheap telephone rates to Israel. The Muslim groups argued that its status as part of Israel was still under international discussion.

However, although Arab and Muslim voices have been systematically sidelined, they managed to shake the Jewish lobby when President Bill Clinton became the first US president to address a gathering of Arab Americans and by the more recent meetings between presidential candidates and Arab Muslim Americans.

In October 2001, U.S. President George W. Bush held a closed meeting with Arab American leaders in Michigan, most of who went on to endorse him. Al Gore met with Arab American leaders a week later in Michigan, the state with the largest proportion of Arab American voters.

Concerned by the increasing activism of the Arab lobby, one leading U.S. Jewish leader warned American Jews not to drop their guard. “We dare not underestimate the Arab and Muslim lobbies or delude ourselves as to their ultimate objectives,” wrote David A. Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee, in the Jerusalem Report last year.

“The stakes are too high. The call for action by American Jewry, together with Israel, is clear.”

Key Jewish leaders in New York have grumbled to the Clinton administration before about the lack of response by people in the administration to their requests to censure the activities of the Arab-Muslim lobby in the United States.

 

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