I
was dumbstruck as I watched CNN reveal the events of the day. Like
dominos, the World Trade Center fell, the Pentagon was hit, and
another plane was hijacked. I couldn’t believe how this was
happening and why. Naturally, the main question in my mind as well
as everyone else’s mind was who was responsible. As the media
began to piece the elements of the story together, I learned that
the identity of the terrorists was Middle Eastern and their faith
was Islam. I watched the media attach the perpetrators faith,
Islam, to horrible words such as terrorism and violence. I knew
that such connections would not only distort the image of Islam
and Muslims, but would also alienate the West from the East.
As a
Muslim woman, I knew right then and there, that these men defied
what Islam upheld and deemed sacred. I knew that the very word
Islam in Arabic means peace, purity, submission and obedience. I
knew that the inherent message of Islam was communal and
individual peace in all parts of the world. I also knew that Islam
respects the freedom of belief and guarantees the safety and
independence of followers of other faiths. In fact, during the
Islamic Empire, non-Muslims were not coerced to convert to Islam.
They had the freedom of choice and if they chose to remain
non-Muslims, they had to pay a higher rate of taxation. By virtue
of this taxation, they were classified as dhimmi (protected)
communities and were allowed to regulate their internal affairs.
This is what I knew as a Muslim and as a student of Islamic
classes.
My
definition of Islam was reinforced when I attended the Friday
jumaa prayer at a Guianese mosque in Queens and the words of the
imam resonated throughout the mosque and throughout our hearts. He
alluded to the 35th Quranic verse of Surat Al Ma’ida
or the Table Spread saying that “if anyone slew a person-unless
that person was charged for murder or for spreading mischief in
the land-it would be as if he slew the whole people: and if any
one saved a life it would be as if he saved the life of the whole
people. He also referred to a hadith delivered by the Prophet
Mohammed, peace be upon him, saying that “anyone who kills a
person from among the people with whom there is a treaty…will
not smell the fragrance of Paradise, although its fragrance
reaches to a walking distance of forty years i.e. will never enter
it (Reported by Al-Bukhari). I also remember the imam telling us
that if anyone of us thinks that the acts of September 11th
were justifiable, then we were not true believers. We did a
prayer, salat el janasa, for the Muslims that died at the World
Trade Center.
I
was so moved by the imam and I wished he could address the entire
nation. I wanted every American who thought that Muslims were
rejoicing at this event, as the media had so proclaimed, to hear
his words and to hear his condemnation of the entire attack. I
also wanted them to hear his condemnation of the terrorists,
suicide bombers, whom he believed were going straight to hell for
taking their lives, an act that only our Creator, Allah, is
responsible for.
The
imam had so eloquently described the feelings and sentiments of
thousands of Muslims in the United States and throughout the
world. I left the mosque that day at ease and although I felt the
disapproving stares of people as I was walking home, I felt proud
to be a Muslim.
I
felt horrible for all the families that had to face the horrible
news of having lost a loved one. I felt for the mothers that would
no longer see their sons and daughters, the husbands and wives
that would no longer be with one another, and most of all for the
children that would never and will never understand why they lost
their parents. The events of September 11th were to
forever change the lives of many people.
I
also thought of those who were suffering the horrible fate of not
knowing whether their loved ones were dead or alive. Shortly after
the event, I remember walking through the avenues of New York City
and feeling as though I was walking in a cemetery. Photographs of
deceased or missing persons, candles, and flowers draped the city.
The mood was dismal and bleak.
Everybody
was talking about the events of September 11th, and
telling their own personal accounts of the date. I engaged in many
conversations with people, some that had lost loved ones, and
others that had lost hope. I truly sympathized with each and every
one of them. However, many of the conversations turned hateful
towards Islam and the Middle East. I remember one person telling
me that the “United States ought to blow up the entire Middle
East.” I will never forget that comment for as long as I live. I
was outraged and automatically began defending my faith and my
native land. “Do you honestly think Islam condones such an act
of violence?” “Do you think all Arabs should pay the price of
what a handful of criminals were responsible for?” The responses
to my questions were repulsive and were loaded with hate rather
than logical answers.
And
it was then that I realized that the main issue at hand was
ignorance. People were ignorant of Islam as well as the political,
cultural, and social context of the Middle East. People
needed to be educated and I decided to take that issue into my own
hands whenever possible. I tried to defend my faith and my people
using a rational approach and although I was shut out on several
occasions, I was still raising important issues and making
relevant points. I also decided to donate blood to
demonstrate my support for the United States and my discontent
towards the whole situation.
However,
the events following the horrific attacks of September 11th
were truly disturbing for the Muslim community and I am sure for
other supportive communities as well. I read about a Muslim
man that was brutally assaulted simply because he had a beard and
was walking about in a Muslim neighborhood. I read about the
Muslim shops that were being vandalized, mosques being bombed, and
the Muslim women that were being attacked. Some women had their
scarves snatched off of their heads while others were being
physically attacked. Still yet others, had to suffer verbal
attacks, defaming and slandering comments, and looks of disgust.
Once
again, the imam of the mosque addressed this issue and cautioned
veiled women to take their precautions by trying to avoid being
alone. But taking their precautions would mean a downright attack
on their freedom to practice their religion, a right guaranteed to
every American citizen in the Bill of Rights. Why couldn’t
Muslim women continue to lead normal lives, without the fear of
being attacked, and why should they be denied their basic rights?
I was angered but nonetheless agreed that certain precautionary
measures had to be taken by our communities. Much like the
measures that had to be taken by our country to defend our land.
It
was the first time that I felt unwelcome in the country of my
birth. And as the days started to pass, I felt uneasy speaking
Arabic with my sister and other friends but I kept reminding
myself that I had nothing to fear because Allah was watching over
me.
I
started working a month after the terrorist attacks and upon being
asked about my native country, I said Egypt. One of my co-workers,
started to yell about how Arabs threatened the stability of a life
she had so eagerly wanted to give her son. She yelled at me as
though I was somehow responsible or involved. I promptly reminded
her that as a resident in New York, my Islamism and my Arabism,
did not protect me from that lack of stability. I reminded her
that my life was also in jeopardy because such an attack knows
neither innocent from evil nor justice from injustice. She coward
at my response and although she did not know what else to say, she
had said enough. She had angered me and again I was feeling the
racism and bigotry being harbored in the minds of ignorant people.
When
the anthrax scare spread over the United States and the media
maliciously covered the topic in all of its national and local
newspapers, again I started to feel the racist comments. A
co-worker gave me a belligerent look when she said “and now the
Arabs are starting up with this anthrax thing.” I quickly
reminded her that the anthrax scare was a domestic problem and
that there were hundreds of terrorist groups in America that could
be responsible. But again, I was angered at why she hastily
decided that the Muslim world was responsible. Why was our
religion under attack? Why was the media reinforcing this attack
and causing the American public to hate Islam?
The
answers to those questions are still in the process of being
answered and various discourses will lend various theories.
I
learned a few things this year. I learned that ignorance and hate
are the root of all evil and the only way that they can be
eradicated is through education. I learned that bigotry and racism
can displace certain ethnic groups, but they must go on living in
the manner that they have been. But most of all, I learned that I
must be able to confront ignorant and racist comments and
situations, to defend my faith and to defend my way of life