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American Muslim Police and Rescuers Honored

 

Rescue efforts at ground zero, where the WTC once stood

By Jamshed Bokhari

WASHINGTON, Jan. 27 (IslamOnline) - Muslim American New York City police officers and a fire department officer from Virginia were honored in Washington Saturday for doing their part in rescue efforts at Ground Zero in New York following the September 11 attacks.

At a luncheon ceremony at the Hotel Washington across the street from the White House, New York City police officers Adil Almontaser, Rafet Awad, Faisal Khan and Ahmad Nasser received recognition and awards of excellence for what Ziad J. Asali, president of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), said was their “heroism and common decency” in rescue efforts in the rubble of the attacks.

Fairfax County, Virginia, Fire Department member Ronald J. Kuley also received honors, but was unable to attend the ceremony.

Ralph Boyd, assistant attorney general in the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, said it was proper to “honor these American heroes,” reminding audience members that “Muslims and Arab-Americans were also killed in the attacks,” and that “Muslims and Arab-Americans and Pakistanis were involved in rescue efforts.”

Asali told the award winners, “You can be proud of your own singular contribution.”

But while praising the officers, Asali pointed to hurdles that all Muslims had to overcome, including acts of racial profiling, mentioning the recent incident where a federal law enforcement official, a Secret Service agent, was pulled from an American Airlines flight for what the agent says was for no other reason than that he is Muslim and Arab.

Khan and Awad, however, told IslamOnline that for their part, since September 11, neither one of them had received any sort of backlash incidents from either fellow police officers or New York City residents.

Asali further added that the Secret Service agent’s case was important because, “more than one Arab-American, Muslim American…protect the President.”

And Awad, speaking of the Muslim New York City police officers honored Saturday, said there were many more Muslims on the City’s force than just the four present at the ceremonies.

Speaking on behalf of the New York officers, Almontaser started out by saying, “My deepest condolences go out to the families of the victims,” and later added, with emotion welling up, referring to the events of September 11, “This is not Islam. This is a grotesque attack.”

Almontaser added that he and the three other Muslim officers had tried in vein to find some sort of Muslim American police organization for support in the midst of the crisis, but found none throughout the U.S. They then started one on their own: the American Muslim Law Enforcement Officers Association (AMLEOA).

The officers stressed the proposed association would not only be comprised of New York police officers, but would be a nationwide organization for Muslim law enforcement personnel from local police officers to federal government officials.

Awad pointed out, however, that they were still in the initial planning stages and that the full-fledged organization would be operational in the near future. Once started, AMLEOA would, among other functions, “encourage other Arabs and Muslims to get into law enforcement,” in the U.S., added Awad.

Khalid Saffouri, chairman of the Islamic Institute, echoed these feelings by citing the example of Mohammed Atta’s, one of the alleged hijackers, will. Saffouri commented that both he and Jamal Barzingi translated Atta’s will, but the version ultimately released to the public by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) had numerous problems, mainly those concerning properly translating certain Islamic references within the text.

Saffouri stated that for this exact reason, “We need Muslims there doing this work.”

The awards ceremony was jointly sponsored by the Islamic Institute and ADC, with invited guests from other Muslim organizations, and rising American Muslim political figures.
 

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