essaysbysean.blogspot.com
Given that my visitor traffic dips every year at the start of
school, I know my readership includes many students learning about life, and I
feel responsible towards them …
Just like folks in
the New Age movement, I like achieving professional development and personal
growth, and then helping others achieve too. That’s why I’ve been thinking
about the status of local Muslims today. I like spiraling around that onion.
Of course my
readers are not into “New Age weirdness.” Nevertheless I would urge you, if you
doubt such woo-woo things as “positive thinking” or “a positive mental
attitude” to go ask someone you think is successful whether he or she believes
in positive thinking—and then go and do likewise.
And if you are a
Muslim reader, I might urge you to find a successful Muslim and ask if he
believes in being a victim—and then likewise stop being in “victim mode.” You can’t be very successful at
management, sales or life unless, between your ears, you are positive,
realistic and not a victim.
I say this not to
be New Age but because I sometimes read in the newspapers that Muslims see
Islam worldwide, and themselves, as victims. They see Islam as being unknown
and “everywhere under siege.” Actually, Islam is better known than ever. When
Syrian refugees pour into Europe they are not referred to by the usual 20th
century term, “Arabs,” but with the new Muslim-preferred term, “Muslims.” It’s
nice for Muslims to see the world acknowledging how Muslims feel brotherhood; it’s
not nice for me to read about “brothers in victimhood.”
You may recall how
around the time of 9/11, like a country singer sang about himself, most people
did not know Iraq from Iran. “Most people” would include students at
university. Naturally students are scholars, but only about things that concern
them. Before 9/11 undergraduates had no reason for concern about desert
geography on the far side of the world. No reason to be concerned about
Muslims.
Meanwhile, for
things of interest, naturally university students learn to document and
footnote, as they learn to value substance over opinion. For example, in my
health class I might raise my hand to say, “According to (location) (title)
(name) at a Canadian palliative care conference, held here at the university, ‘after
their child has died of cancer, X percent of parents will get divorced.’” This
controversial percentage, then, would not be stated as being solely my opinion.
As I participated in class I would be showing good academic conduct.
Another sort of
good conduct would be how, on campus, a student won’t say anything
controversial about Iraq, or about Iran, unless he knows for sure which is
which. No guessing. Not unless he wants his fellow academics to lose respect
for him.
One evening I truly
lost respect: I was dumbfounded, as our fighter-bombers were doing their bombing
runs in Yugoslavia, to hear what “Farrah” said. An active student, Farrah was
pretty, liberal and Muslim. At a meeting in student council chambers she said, “They are bombing my people.” Of South Asian heritage, she didn’t wear a nun-style
religious head covering, or hijab. As
I recall, back in the nineties people didn't know that word, and nobody ever
dressed that way except for a few old ladies in tubular coats.
This was before
9/11; and no, Farrah's people weren’t Serbians. How could she not know which was
which, not know that Canadians were bombing Serbians, not Muslims, defending
Muslims, not Serbians? I think she guessed because she assumed: She was looking
through a lens of victimhood, even though normally she was a good student. At
the time I didn’t understand; I filed it away, and years later when I read
about Muslim victim-mode I said, “Now I get it!”
By the way, (BTW)
if you are an eager student on a campus full of eager people, you may want to go
around asking, “If there was a payoff for seeing Muslims as victims, then what
might that payoff be?” Don’t expect an instant answer: Even students of
psychology will understand their white rats better than they understand
themselves. And be careful when you ask Muslim church officials: They are
successful, of course, but not in a “management” sense. They have more in
common with serene professors of Religious Studies than with scrambling entrepreneurs,
business executives or naval officers.
It was a Muslim
ex-U.S. navy officer and head of a Muslim organization, Dr. Zuhdi Jasser, who
characterized another Muslim organization as “stoking the flames and raising
funds off the exaggerated narrative that Muslims are under siege…” (Note: I am
not giving you an easy answer to the above question—He is not saying that money
is the most important reason for the victim narrative)
Jasser is quoted
in the Calgary Sun newspaper column before me. It’s by a middle-aged, suit-and-tie
Canadian Muslim writer, Tarek Fatah. On December
23, 2015, page 15, Fatah notes that two Muslim organizations formed a third,
and then met in Washington D.C. to hold a two-day Muslim leadership conference.
Last Sunday they condemned terror, but they
“…did not renounce
the doctrine of armed jihad that feeds Islamic terrorism nor call for taking
politics out of American mosques.
… There was no
call to cleanse the American Muslim house of all jihadi literature.”
Reading between
the lines, I sense that victimhood is somehow connected to keeping a belief in
jihad, as a tool for the weak… even though “everybody knows” Islam means peace.
At least, that’s how
it seems to me right now.
If a Muslim friend
tells you “anybody who’s a Muslim knows
Islam is under siege” then I have an answer for you. Don’t ask him about the army
of kidnappers moving through Africa, or the infiltrators with rubber boats who snuck
into India and shot up the financial district, or the killers who drove to Paris.
Instead ask, “Did somebody say so? Who’s he? How does he know? —Can he document and footnote?”
And if your friend
gets annoyed at you for being so confoundedly scientific, then you can lighten the
atmosphere with a humor-story about President Abraham Lincoln during the civil
war:
You may recall poor
Lincoln had to keep firing his newest top general, and then appointing a new
one, desperately hoping each time to find a general, at last, who was adequate.
This agony went on for years before
he finally found his General Grant. At one point, when Lincoln was gently giving
another top general another chance, someone complained bitterly to Lincoln “You
have to replace General X!”
Lincoln kept his
temper, asking mildly, “With whom?”
“With anybody!”
“Who?”
“Anybody!”
“Well, anybody
might do for you, but I must have somebody.”
Sean Crawford
Calgary
December
2015
Footnotes:
~ I noted how
Farrah wore no head cover in everyday life, which seemed so natural to us at
the time. (I don’t know what she wore to her mosque) Fatah’s column ends with
two Muslim women recently writing in the Washington
Post to plead with liberals who were trying to be politically correct. “Please do this instead: Do not wear a
headscarf in ‘solidarity’ with the ideology that mostly silences us, equating
our bodies with ‘honor.’ Stand with us instead … against the ideology of
Islamism that demands we cover our hair.”
~Lots of initials from Fatah’s column:
The Islamic Circle
of North America (IGNA),
along with other
American Islamic organizations such as
the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)
formed the US
Council of Muslim Organizations (USCMO)
that hosted a National
Muslim Leadership Summit on Sunday in Washington, D.C.
Dr. Jasser founded
and heads the American Islamic Forum for Democracy.
~Fatah’s final
line: But is anyone listening to the
voices of reason among North American Muslims?
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