As a Muslim who grew up with many Christian relatives, friends, and neighbors, I was always surrounded by Christmas and its festivities. At the many private and Christian schools that I attended, I remember, like all my peers, enjoying the candy and mostly the presents. Though it was not a Muslim holiday, Muslims that I knew appreciated the festive, generous and caring spirit that came with that holiday.
As I grew up, I learned that the holiday is a commemoration and celebration of the birth of Jesus (peace be upon). Yes, I know that historians agree that Jesus was definitely not born on that specific date. And I know that this specific date and some of its traditional practices are actually rooted in a Roman pagan holiday. And I realize that today's Christmas has been so commercialized and mostly devoid of its spiritual meaning. And for Muslims in specific, I know that we strongly disagree with our Christian brothers and sisters on the deity of Jesus. However, to me Christmas is about remembering the great blessing sent by God to mankind: Jesus the son of Mary.
As a Muslim, this day serves to remind me about the miraculous birth of Jesus Christ, his teachings, his sacrifices, and his believing and persevering mother. It is a day to thank Allah (God) for sending us Jesus and all other prophets before and after him. To Muslims, Jesus is one of the most important prophets sent by the Almighty, he is the Messiah/Christ who was mentioned and praised throughout the Quran. Like Christians, Muslims await his second coming after which he will lead a struggle to bring peace and justice to our suffering world.
I might not have a Christmas tree (btw, that's one of the leftover pagan aspects of the holiday), I might not host a Christmas dinner or exchange Christmas gifts, and I will not attend a Christmas mass; however, I will certainly pray in gratefulness to God for sending us Jesus. I will join my Christian friends and relatives in celebrating Jesus's birth by recommitting myself to his true teachings of faith in God, and justice, care, mercy, and love for fellow human beings.
Have a safe, blessed, and merry Christmas.
Speak. Write. Educate. Make a statement in your life. Make your life a statement. Disclaimer: Views and articles posted on this website are those of their authors and do not necessarily represent the views of CAIR or blog owner.
About Me
- Hussam Ayloush
- Hussam has been a lifelong human rights activist who is passionate about promoting democratic societies, in the US and worldwide, in which all people, including immigrants, workers, minorities, and the poor enjoy freedom, justice, economic justice, respect, and equality. Mr. Ayloush frequently lectures on Islam, media relations, civil rights, hate crimes and international affairs. He has consistently appeared in local, national, and international media. Full biography at: http://hussamayloush.blogspot.com/2006/08/biography-of-hussam-ayloush.html
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Friday, November 30, 2012
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Explaining First Amendment to Muslims outraged by video
Explaining First Amendment to Muslims outraged by video
Posted on | September 18, 2012
Press Enterprise
David Olson
David Olson
It’s an event that the Greater Los Angeles chapter of CAIR puts together every year to link reporters with Muslim sources, offer information on Islam and discuss issues in the news.
Of course, Islam has been in the news a lot lately, as Muslims in more than 20 countries have protested an anti-Muslim video produced in Southern California. Steven Klein, a consultant for the film and an anti-Muslim activist for years, lives in Hemet.
CAIR has repeatedly condemned the violent reaction to the video.
But Hussam Ayloush, executive director of the local CAIR chapter and a Corona resident, and Mohammed Faqih, imam of the Islamic Institute of Orange County, said American Muslims could do more.
Faqih said Muslims in the United States can act as “a bridge between east and west,” so Americans better understand Muslims and Muslims around the world better understand American culture and laws.
Ayloush said one reason for the violent reaction to the video was a lack of understanding of the First Amendment.
“We have not explained what the First Amendment means,” he said.
In much of the world, insulting or denigrating a religion is illegal. Many Muslims in other countries wonder why the U.S. government doesn’t ban the video.
Even Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi asked why the U.S. government didn’t punish the filmmakers.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton last week explained free-speech protections by stating, “We do not stop individual citizens from expressing their views no matter how distasteful they may be.”
Ayloush said that in the past few days, he has been explaining the First Amendment to Muslims abroad.
He said Muslims from the Middle East have told him that the United States has a double standard. Surely the U.S. government punishes people who criticize Israel, deny the Holocaust occurred or insult Jesus, they say.
But Ayloush explains to them that Americans are allowed to criticize Israel and that – no matter how repugnant the beliefs are – people are allowed to deny the Holocaust existed or to insult Jesus (who is a prophet for Muslims).
“People are shocked,” Ayloush said. “They didn’t know that.”
Ayloush also explains that the same First Amendment that protects the hateful video allows Muslims and others to worship freely.
“That helps,” he said. “They understand.”
Coptic Christians, Muslims and Steven Klein
Coptic Christians, Muslims and Steven Klein
Posted on | September 17, 2012
Press Enterprise
David Olson
As the bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of Los Angeles and an
official with the Muslim Public Affairs Council were holding a joint news conference
in Los Angeles Monday to condemn the anti-Muslim film “Innocence of
Muslims” and the violence that has surrounded it, I was meeting with
Hussam Ayloush, the Corona resident who is executive director of the
Greater Los Angeles chapter of the Council on American-Islamic
Relations.Ayloush said he hoped that one positive effect of the uproar over the video, and of extremist Copts’ involvement in it, would be more interfaith efforts between Coptic Christians and Muslims.
Ayloush said when he saw media coverage of the Copts over the weekend, he flashed back to the days following 9/11.
Just as many Americans had little familiarity with Islam before 9/11, most Americans knew little or nothing about Coptic Christians until the past week.
And as with Islam, what they saw was extremists, not the beliefs and lives of the majority of Copts, Ayloush said.
“This is not what the Coptic people and religion stand for,” he said.
Television viewers also saw people who, like some Muslims, appear very different from most Americans: Copts with long beards, foreign accents and long black robes. That can create a view among Americans that Copts aren’t Americans as others.
Ayloush said he has worked for years with Arab Christians and enjoys warm relations with them. The Syrian-born Ayloush grew up in Lebanon and attended a Christian school there.
He was buoyed by the joint news conference Monday and hopes there will be more interfaith efforts among Copts and Muslims.
Ayloush and I have chatted a few times about the video and the violent reaction to it. He and CAIR have strongly condemned the violence.
Ayloush said he has long been familiar with Steven Klein, the Hemet insurance agent who was a consultant on the video.
Klein has a satellite-television show in which he has discussed his disdain for Islam.
“I hate Islam,” Klein said in an Aug. 30 broadcast of his “Wake up America” show on The Way TV, an Arab Christian station based in the San Gabriel Valley city of Duarte. “I don’t ever want to see it (Islam) again.”
In the show, Klein said, “The Lord Jesus Christ has caused me to be a terrorist to the terrorists.”
He introduced a video clip of a man singing about guns and then shooting off guns by saying, “This is going to be the ultimate solution to the Muslims.”
Klein and his supporters have distributed virulently anti-Islam leaflets outside mosques throughout California – including Ayloush’s Corona mosque – and at dozens of Southern California high schools, including campuses in Temecula, Murrieta, Corona, Norco and Menifee. Ayloush’s own daughter received one of the leaflets at Corona’s Santiago High School.
The handouts say Mohammad had sex with children, committed incest and participated in genocide. One of the leaflets had Ayloush’s photo on it.
Ayloush said CAIR had deliberately avoided calling attention to Klein’s leafleting campaign.
“Our dilemma is there are a lot of crazy people out there and we don’t want to give them publicity,” he said.
Klein said one reason for his anti-Islam leafleting is so Muslims find out the “truth” about Islam and leave the faith.
But Ayloush believes the leafleting at mosques was meant to provoke Muslims to react violently, to confirm the stereotype of Muslims as violent people. Even though Klein leafleted mosques throughout Southern California, Ayloush said he is unaware of any violent reaction to the handouts.
Ayloush said if Klein had really wanted to convert Muslims, he would not have insulted the very people he was allegedly trying to reach.
Ayloush said it’s not uncommon for evangelical Christians to stand outside his and other mosques with leaflets and with signs that say something along the lines of “Visit our Church.” They’re clearly hoping to convert Muslims.
“I think it’s kind of out of place to do that,” Ayloush said. “But I have to say, they do it in the most respectful way. They don’t offend me. It’s not the right place to market your religion. But that’s fine.”
Ayloush said those Christians smile and carry materials that are focused on what they see as the positive aspects of Christianity.
The leaflets that Klein and his supporters handed out were different.
“It described the Prophet Mohammad and the religion of Islam in the most vulgar and offensive manner,” Ayloush said. “I have not a shred of doubt in my mind that what this was about was not to teach people who are Muslim about Islam or make people who are Muslim Christians. He is being driven by pure hatred and disdain for all Muslims.”
Thursday, September 13, 2012
My commens on politicians exploiting the tragic deaths in Libya
Local Leaders Speak Out On Death of U.S. Ambassador
J. Christopher Stevens and three embassy staffers died in assault on American consulate in Libya Wednesday.
- By John Crandall
- Email the author
- September 12, 2012
Local Muslim leaders Wednesday condemned the slaying of the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three others,
while Rep. Dana Rohrabacher joined Republican presidential nominee Mitt
Romney in criticizing President Barack Obama and the way State
Department officials handled the attacks in Cairo and Benghazi.
"We strongly condemn the disgraceful killings of the American ambassador (Christopher Stevens) and his staff in Libya," Hussam Ayloush, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said.
Ayloush joined other Muslim leaders at a news conference in Anaheim in denouncing the slayings of Stevens, foreign service officer Sean Smith and two others.
"We condemn it in the strongest terms possible," Ayloush said. "There is absolutely no justification whatsoever to engage in such behavior."
Ayloush also condemned the online movie suspected of sparking the outrage and demonstrations that turned violent in Cairo and Libya Tuesday, the 11th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
"It is certainly not a random act," Ayloush said of the movie, which he said was deeply offensive to Muslims. "The timing is certainly suspect, releasing it on the anniversary of 9/11."
The movie "lacks any intellectual basis," Ayloush said.
"It only includes vulgar and offensive scenes to incite and provoke such behavior from those who lack rationality in dealing with hate messages," Ayloush said. "The extremists who produced the movie threw bait and the extremist Muslims took the bait."
The movie and the reaction to it show "a conflict (between) people who believe religion unites us versus those who use and abuse religion to promote their narrow agendas of hate and extremism," Ayloush said.
Meanwhile, Rohrabacher, R-Huntington Beach, echoed Romney's criticism that Obama has appeased extremists and denounced a statement posted on Twitter before the attacks in Cairo that called for religious tolerance and criticized the movie.
"Today's White House response to the violent attacks in Libya and Egypt was totally unacceptable, as was the disgraceful statement issued by the embassy in Cairo," Rohrabacher said.
"Ill-advisedly included in the response to the killing of an American diplomat was an expression of understanding of the Muslim outrage over what they considered to be denigration of Islam.
"This was not the place, nor the appropriate context, for the White House to demonstrate sensitivity to Muslims around the world. Even mentioning that in any way is a projection of weakness. Placating radical intolerance will not deter further attacks on our diplomats or facilities overseas."
Rohrabacher said the State Department should “issue an immediate apology to the American people and fire those officials responsible for the initial statement."
In an interview with CBS, Obama shot back at Romney's criticism.
"Gov. Romney seems to have a tendency to shoot first and aim later, and as president, one of the things I've learned is you can't do that," Obama said. "It's important for you to make sure that the statements that you make are backed up by the facts and that you've thought through the ramifications before you make them."
Ayloush also slammed Rohrabacher's and Romney's criticism of the president.
"What a disgraceful and shameful attempt, a cheap attempt, by certain politicians to exploit this tragedy to score a few political points against the president, who, so far, has shown tremendous leadership in containing this mayhem, which was neither started by our country nor the good people of Libya or Egypt," Ayloush said.
"At this point, we're all American. We have to stop acting as Democrats and Republicans when there is such a tragedy or a risk of a wider conflict."
Ayloush said he was "disappointed" in Romney's comments as well.
"I was very disappointed with Romney's statement. This is not the time to play politics," Ayloush said. "Four innocent people lost their loves."
Ayloush said Muslims around the world have reacted with outrage at the killings, and he noted Stevens was popular among Libyans because of his role in last year's rebellion.
"I'm watching Arabic news, I'm on Facebook, reading the Tweets, and people in the Muslim world are as outraged as we are," Ayloush said.
Rep. Loretta Sanchez, D-Garden Grove, who serves on the House Armed Services Committee, said the news of the attacks was "heart breaking."
"I was deeply saddened to learn of the tragic deaths of Ambassador Christopher Stevens, Foreign Service Officer Sean Smith and two other Americans in Libya this morning," Sanchez said. "These violent attacks on our American diplomats are heartbreaking and unacceptable, and I extend my deepest condolences to the families of these diplomats, who have loyally served our nation and have represented America abroad with excellence."
The attacks "reverse the progress Libya has made toward a more open society," Sanchez said.
Rep. Ed Royce, R-Orange, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation and Trade, said he was "saddened and angered" by the attacks.
"U.S. diplomats are working around the world to protect and promote U.S. interests," Royce said. "In the case of Ambassador Stevens, he played a ritical role in helping Libyans rid themselves of a tyrant."
Royce added that "nothing can ever justify such violence. Those responsible for these deaths, and those who have incited this violence, must pay a price."
Santa Clarita Republican Rep. Howard "Buck" McKeon, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said, "This morning we were reminded once more of what a dangerous world we live in, and the risk many Americans take to serve our country abroad. My thoughts and prayers -- together with those of this committee -- are with the families of those we've lost in Libya."
Gov. Jerry Brown said, "All Californians mourn the loss of Ambassador Christopher Stevens and the other three Americans killed in Libya on Sept. 11.
"As a graduate of Piedmont High School and UC Berkeley, Ambassador Stevens represented the very best that California and the United States have to offer.
"His dedicated service to our country and our world will never be forgotten.”
--City News Service
"We strongly condemn the disgraceful killings of the American ambassador (Christopher Stevens) and his staff in Libya," Hussam Ayloush, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said.
Ayloush joined other Muslim leaders at a news conference in Anaheim in denouncing the slayings of Stevens, foreign service officer Sean Smith and two others.
"We condemn it in the strongest terms possible," Ayloush said. "There is absolutely no justification whatsoever to engage in such behavior."
Ayloush also condemned the online movie suspected of sparking the outrage and demonstrations that turned violent in Cairo and Libya Tuesday, the 11th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
"It is certainly not a random act," Ayloush said of the movie, which he said was deeply offensive to Muslims. "The timing is certainly suspect, releasing it on the anniversary of 9/11."
The movie "lacks any intellectual basis," Ayloush said.
"It only includes vulgar and offensive scenes to incite and provoke such behavior from those who lack rationality in dealing with hate messages," Ayloush said. "The extremists who produced the movie threw bait and the extremist Muslims took the bait."
The movie and the reaction to it show "a conflict (between) people who believe religion unites us versus those who use and abuse religion to promote their narrow agendas of hate and extremism," Ayloush said.
Meanwhile, Rohrabacher, R-Huntington Beach, echoed Romney's criticism that Obama has appeased extremists and denounced a statement posted on Twitter before the attacks in Cairo that called for religious tolerance and criticized the movie.
"Today's White House response to the violent attacks in Libya and Egypt was totally unacceptable, as was the disgraceful statement issued by the embassy in Cairo," Rohrabacher said.
"Ill-advisedly included in the response to the killing of an American diplomat was an expression of understanding of the Muslim outrage over what they considered to be denigration of Islam.
"This was not the place, nor the appropriate context, for the White House to demonstrate sensitivity to Muslims around the world. Even mentioning that in any way is a projection of weakness. Placating radical intolerance will not deter further attacks on our diplomats or facilities overseas."
Rohrabacher said the State Department should “issue an immediate apology to the American people and fire those officials responsible for the initial statement."
In an interview with CBS, Obama shot back at Romney's criticism.
"Gov. Romney seems to have a tendency to shoot first and aim later, and as president, one of the things I've learned is you can't do that," Obama said. "It's important for you to make sure that the statements that you make are backed up by the facts and that you've thought through the ramifications before you make them."
Ayloush also slammed Rohrabacher's and Romney's criticism of the president.
"What a disgraceful and shameful attempt, a cheap attempt, by certain politicians to exploit this tragedy to score a few political points against the president, who, so far, has shown tremendous leadership in containing this mayhem, which was neither started by our country nor the good people of Libya or Egypt," Ayloush said.
"At this point, we're all American. We have to stop acting as Democrats and Republicans when there is such a tragedy or a risk of a wider conflict."
Ayloush said he was "disappointed" in Romney's comments as well.
"I was very disappointed with Romney's statement. This is not the time to play politics," Ayloush said. "Four innocent people lost their loves."
Ayloush said Muslims around the world have reacted with outrage at the killings, and he noted Stevens was popular among Libyans because of his role in last year's rebellion.
"I'm watching Arabic news, I'm on Facebook, reading the Tweets, and people in the Muslim world are as outraged as we are," Ayloush said.
Rep. Loretta Sanchez, D-Garden Grove, who serves on the House Armed Services Committee, said the news of the attacks was "heart breaking."
"I was deeply saddened to learn of the tragic deaths of Ambassador Christopher Stevens, Foreign Service Officer Sean Smith and two other Americans in Libya this morning," Sanchez said. "These violent attacks on our American diplomats are heartbreaking and unacceptable, and I extend my deepest condolences to the families of these diplomats, who have loyally served our nation and have represented America abroad with excellence."
The attacks "reverse the progress Libya has made toward a more open society," Sanchez said.
Rep. Ed Royce, R-Orange, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation and Trade, said he was "saddened and angered" by the attacks.
"U.S. diplomats are working around the world to protect and promote U.S. interests," Royce said. "In the case of Ambassador Stevens, he played a ritical role in helping Libyans rid themselves of a tyrant."
Royce added that "nothing can ever justify such violence. Those responsible for these deaths, and those who have incited this violence, must pay a price."
Santa Clarita Republican Rep. Howard "Buck" McKeon, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said, "This morning we were reminded once more of what a dangerous world we live in, and the risk many Americans take to serve our country abroad. My thoughts and prayers -- together with those of this committee -- are with the families of those we've lost in Libya."
Gov. Jerry Brown said, "All Californians mourn the loss of Ambassador Christopher Stevens and the other three Americans killed in Libya on Sept. 11.
"As a graduate of Piedmont High School and UC Berkeley, Ambassador Stevens represented the very best that California and the United States have to offer.
"His dedicated service to our country and our world will never be forgotten.”
--City News Service
John McCain releases statement on murder of American ambassador
John McCain releases statement on murder of American ambassador
"It is with a heavy heart that I rise today to speak about the horrific attack yesterday on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi that killed four Americans. The two confirmed thus far to be among the dead are Sean Smith, an Air Force veteran turned State Department Information Management Officer - and Ambassador Chris Stevens, one of America's finest and bravest Foreign Service Officers.
"I did not know Sean Smith, but I had gotten to know Chris Stevens quite well. And in Chris's death, the Libyan people have lost a great champion and believer in the peaceful aspirations of their democratic revolution. The American people have lost a selfless and dedicated servant of our interests and values. And I have lost a friend. My thoughts and prayers today are with Chris's family and the loved ones of his fallen colleagues. May God grant them comfort in their time of grief.
"Our most urgent order of business now is to make sure that our citizens still living and serving in Libya, and Egypt, and elsewhere across the region and the world are safe. Americans look to the governments in Libya and Egypt and elsewhere to meet their responsibilities in this regard. We also look to the Libyan government to ensure that those responsible for yesterday's attack in Benghazi are swiftly brought to justice. In all of these critical tasks, we are confident that our government will provide all necessary assistance and support. Yesterday's attacks are an important reminder that so many of America's civilians, and diplomats, and development professionals are risking everything to advance our nation's interests and values abroad. We must do everything in our power to ensure their security.
"At the same time, our thoughts turn to broader concerns - the mourning of our fallen friends, and how we as a nation should respond to these tragic events.
"One of my most memorable meetings with Chris Stevens was last April in Benghazi. As the U.S. envoy to the Libyan opposition, Chris had traveled to Benghazi at great personal risk to represent the country he loved so much while Libya was still gripped in a brutal fight for freedom. It was clear there was nowhere that Chris would rather have been than Libya. We spent the day together, meeting Libyan opposition leaders and many ordinary citizens, who spoke movingly about how much the opportunity to finally live in freedom meant to them, and how grateful they were for America's support. Chris embodied that support, and his passion for his mission was infectious.
"I kept in touch with Chris after my visit, and I was very happy when President Obama nominated him to be America's Ambassador to the new Libya. The last time I saw Chris was shortly after he had taken up his post, during my most recent visit to Tripoli. I especially remember the lighter moments we spent together, including when Chris insisted on personally making me a cappuccino, a task that he carried out with as much pride and proficiency as his diplomatic mission.
"That was on the morning of July 7 - the day Libyans voted in their first election in half a century. Chris and I spent the day together again, traveling around Tripoli, visiting polling places, and speaking with Libyan voters. We met a man whose father had been murdered by Qaddafi's henchmen. We met a woman whose brothers had recently given their lives fighting for their country's liberation. We met countless others, including many older Libyans, who were voting for the first time in their lives. And everywhere we went, we were greeted by crowds of cheering Libyans, bursting with pride and eager to shake our hands and express their gratitude for America's support. It was one of the most moving experiences of my life, and it was only made better by the fact that I got to share it with Chris.
"What we saw together on that day was the real Libya - the peaceful desire of millions of people to live in freedom and democracy, the immense gratitude they felt for America's support for them, and their strong desire to build a new partnership between our nations. That is why I am not surprised that senior Libyan leaders were among the first to condemn the horrific attack that killed Chris and his colleagues. And that is why I was not surprised to learn from our Secretary of State that many Libyans fought to defend our people and our consulate in Benghazi when they came under attack, that some were wounded while doing so, and that it was Libyans who sought to get Chris and his colleagues to the hospital. This is the spirit of the Libyan people that I have come to know and admire. And that is why we cannot afford to view the despicable acts of violence perpetrated yesterday by a small group of fanatics as in any way representative of the country and the people of Libya. They are not the real Libya - the Libya that Chris Stevens knew so well.
"After such a heartbreaking loss for our nation, I know many Americans are asking whether the United States was naive or mistaken to support the vast movement for change known as the Arab Spring. I know many Americans may feel a temptation, especially with so many domestic and economic challenges facing us here at home, to distance ourselves from people and events in Libya, and Egypt, and elsewhere in the Middle East. We cannot afford to go down that path.
"Yesterday's attack in Benghazi was the work of a small group of violent extremists, whose goals and actions could not be more at odds with those of the people and government of Libya. The Libyan revolution began peacefully and was dedicated throughout to the ideals of freedom, and justice, and democratic change. And when Libyans turned out by the millions to elect a new government in July, they gave the plurality of their vote not to religious fanatics, but to a political party led by a moderate technocrat and committed friend of the United States.
"Libyans rose up last year to free themselves from exactly the kinds of murderers and terrorists who killed our people yesterday in Benghazi. Their enemies are our enemies, and they remain as committed as ever to imposing their evil ideology through violence on people in Libya and the Middle East, and ultimately on us. They want to hijack the Arab Spring for their own insidious purposes. And if we turn our backs now on the millions of people in Libya, and Egypt, and Syria, and other countries across the Middle East - people who share so many of our values and interests, people who are true authors of the Arab Spring - we will hand our common enemies, the terrorists and extremists, the very victory they seek.
"We were right to take the side of the Libyan people, and others in the region who share their peaceful aspirations. And we would be gravely mistaken to walk away from them now. To do so would only be a betrayal of everything that Chris Stevens and his colleagues believed in and ultimately gave their lives for, but it would also be a betrayal of America's highest values and our own enduring national interest in supporting people in the Middle East who want to live in peace and freedom."
"It is with a heavy heart that I rise today to speak about the horrific attack yesterday on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi that killed four Americans. The two confirmed thus far to be among the dead are Sean Smith, an Air Force veteran turned State Department Information Management Officer - and Ambassador Chris Stevens, one of America's finest and bravest Foreign Service Officers.
"I did not know Sean Smith, but I had gotten to know Chris Stevens quite well. And in Chris's death, the Libyan people have lost a great champion and believer in the peaceful aspirations of their democratic revolution. The American people have lost a selfless and dedicated servant of our interests and values. And I have lost a friend. My thoughts and prayers today are with Chris's family and the loved ones of his fallen colleagues. May God grant them comfort in their time of grief.
"Our most urgent order of business now is to make sure that our citizens still living and serving in Libya, and Egypt, and elsewhere across the region and the world are safe. Americans look to the governments in Libya and Egypt and elsewhere to meet their responsibilities in this regard. We also look to the Libyan government to ensure that those responsible for yesterday's attack in Benghazi are swiftly brought to justice. In all of these critical tasks, we are confident that our government will provide all necessary assistance and support. Yesterday's attacks are an important reminder that so many of America's civilians, and diplomats, and development professionals are risking everything to advance our nation's interests and values abroad. We must do everything in our power to ensure their security.
"At the same time, our thoughts turn to broader concerns - the mourning of our fallen friends, and how we as a nation should respond to these tragic events.
"One of my most memorable meetings with Chris Stevens was last April in Benghazi. As the U.S. envoy to the Libyan opposition, Chris had traveled to Benghazi at great personal risk to represent the country he loved so much while Libya was still gripped in a brutal fight for freedom. It was clear there was nowhere that Chris would rather have been than Libya. We spent the day together, meeting Libyan opposition leaders and many ordinary citizens, who spoke movingly about how much the opportunity to finally live in freedom meant to them, and how grateful they were for America's support. Chris embodied that support, and his passion for his mission was infectious.
"I kept in touch with Chris after my visit, and I was very happy when President Obama nominated him to be America's Ambassador to the new Libya. The last time I saw Chris was shortly after he had taken up his post, during my most recent visit to Tripoli. I especially remember the lighter moments we spent together, including when Chris insisted on personally making me a cappuccino, a task that he carried out with as much pride and proficiency as his diplomatic mission.
"That was on the morning of July 7 - the day Libyans voted in their first election in half a century. Chris and I spent the day together again, traveling around Tripoli, visiting polling places, and speaking with Libyan voters. We met a man whose father had been murdered by Qaddafi's henchmen. We met a woman whose brothers had recently given their lives fighting for their country's liberation. We met countless others, including many older Libyans, who were voting for the first time in their lives. And everywhere we went, we were greeted by crowds of cheering Libyans, bursting with pride and eager to shake our hands and express their gratitude for America's support. It was one of the most moving experiences of my life, and it was only made better by the fact that I got to share it with Chris.
"What we saw together on that day was the real Libya - the peaceful desire of millions of people to live in freedom and democracy, the immense gratitude they felt for America's support for them, and their strong desire to build a new partnership between our nations. That is why I am not surprised that senior Libyan leaders were among the first to condemn the horrific attack that killed Chris and his colleagues. And that is why I was not surprised to learn from our Secretary of State that many Libyans fought to defend our people and our consulate in Benghazi when they came under attack, that some were wounded while doing so, and that it was Libyans who sought to get Chris and his colleagues to the hospital. This is the spirit of the Libyan people that I have come to know and admire. And that is why we cannot afford to view the despicable acts of violence perpetrated yesterday by a small group of fanatics as in any way representative of the country and the people of Libya. They are not the real Libya - the Libya that Chris Stevens knew so well.
"After such a heartbreaking loss for our nation, I know many Americans are asking whether the United States was naive or mistaken to support the vast movement for change known as the Arab Spring. I know many Americans may feel a temptation, especially with so many domestic and economic challenges facing us here at home, to distance ourselves from people and events in Libya, and Egypt, and elsewhere in the Middle East. We cannot afford to go down that path.
"Yesterday's attack in Benghazi was the work of a small group of violent extremists, whose goals and actions could not be more at odds with those of the people and government of Libya. The Libyan revolution began peacefully and was dedicated throughout to the ideals of freedom, and justice, and democratic change. And when Libyans turned out by the millions to elect a new government in July, they gave the plurality of their vote not to religious fanatics, but to a political party led by a moderate technocrat and committed friend of the United States.
"Libyans rose up last year to free themselves from exactly the kinds of murderers and terrorists who killed our people yesterday in Benghazi. Their enemies are our enemies, and they remain as committed as ever to imposing their evil ideology through violence on people in Libya and the Middle East, and ultimately on us. They want to hijack the Arab Spring for their own insidious purposes. And if we turn our backs now on the millions of people in Libya, and Egypt, and Syria, and other countries across the Middle East - people who share so many of our values and interests, people who are true authors of the Arab Spring - we will hand our common enemies, the terrorists and extremists, the very victory they seek.
"We were right to take the side of the Libyan people, and others in the region who share their peaceful aspirations. And we would be gravely mistaken to walk away from them now. To do so would only be a betrayal of everything that Chris Stevens and his colleagues believed in and ultimately gave their lives for, but it would also be a betrayal of America's highest values and our own enduring national interest in supporting people in the Middle East who want to live in peace and freedom."
Reacting to To Deadly Libya Attack (KTLA News)
Local Reaction To Deadly Libya Attack
Chris
Stevens, an American who risked his life to help Libyans overthrow
dictator Moammar Gadhafi, was killed overnight in the former rebel
capital of Benghazi.
KTLA News - September 12, 2012
Islamic Leaders: Libyan Attacks "Deplorable"
View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.
Islamic civil rights leaders say the death of
Christopher Stevens in Libya intended to create chaos and blame a group
that actually holds U.S. ambassadors in high regard. Muzammil Siddiqi
with the Islamic Society of Orange County says in Islamic law,
ambassadors have immunity from violence no whether they are agreed with
or not. Vikki Vargas reports from Anaheim’s Little Arabia for the NBC4
News at 5 p.m. on Sept. 12, 2012.
By Vikki Vargas |
Sep 12, 2012
Wednesday, July 04, 2012
Jimmy Carter on US Human Rights Record: A Cruel and Unusual Record
A Cruel and Unusual Record
By JIMMY CARTER
Published: June 24, 2012, The New York Times
THE United States is abandoning its role as the global champion of human rights.
Revelations
that top officials are targeting people to be assassinated abroad,
including American citizens, are only the most recent, disturbing proof
of how far our nation’s violation of human rights has extended. This
development began after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and has
been sanctioned and escalated by bipartisan executive and legislative
actions, without dissent from the general public. As a result, our
country can no longer speak with moral authority on these critical
issues.
While the country has made mistakes in the past, the widespread abuse of
human rights over the last decade has been a dramatic change from the
past. With leadership from the United States, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
was adopted in 1948 as “the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in
the world.” This was a bold and clear commitment that power would no
longer serve as a cover to oppress or injure people, and it established
equal rights of all people to life, liberty, security of person, equal
protection of the law and freedom from torture, arbitrary detention or
forced exile...
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Video footage emerges of Assad forces' massacre in Houla
Video footage emerges of Syrian battle that killed more than 100 as Hague warns country is facing all-out civil war
PUBLISHED: 21:56 EST, 28 May 2012 | UPDATED: 01:47 EST, 29 May 2012
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2151420/Syria-facing-civil-war-warns-Hague-amid-fresh-reports-civilian-massacre-Assad-regime.htmlhttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2151420/Syria-facing-civil-war-warns-Hague-amid-fresh-reports-civilian-massacre-Assad-regime.html
A video purporting to show scenes of the massacre in which 100 people were killed has been released by Syrian opposition activists.
The gruesome scenes show people running along a street, apparently just after the beginning of the attack on the town of Houla on Friday.
Smoke fills the air and the bloodied, lifeless bodies of youngsters can be seen on the ground in the video grabs, the authenticity of which have not yet been verified.
Panic: This frame grab made from an amateur
video provided by Syrian activists yesterday purports to show scenes
from the massacre in Houla on May 25 that killed more than 100 people,
many of them children
Chaos: A youngster runs for his life in the video, the authenticity of which has not yet been independently verified
Tragic: The dead bodies of youngsters can be seen lying on the floor as violence erupts around them
Last night William Hague warned that Syria is on the brink of ‘all-out civil war’ - as reports emerged of a fresh massacre of civilians by the brutal regime.
The Foreign Secretary and David Cameron both launched high-level diplomatic talks aimed at ramping up pressure on dictator Bashar al-Assad.
Mr Hague flew to Moscow for talks with his counterpart Sergei Lavrov in the hope of securing Russian support for a tough new United Nations resolution.
'All out civil war': William Hague, the Foreign
Secretary, meets his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov in Moscow
yesterday to try to build a consensus for action over the violence in
Syria
United front:
Prime Minister David Cameron spoke with French president Francois
Hollande by telephone to discuss the growing crisis in the Middle
Eastern country
The Security Council will discuss Syria again today, ahead of a report tomorrow from former UN secretary general Kofi Annan, who is acting as the international community’s envoy on Syria.
In London, Syria’s charge d’affaires was summoned to the Foreign Office for a dressing down over the slaughter of dozens of women and children at Houla last week, which has sparked international outrage.
Foreign Office political director Sir Geoffrey Adams described the attack as ‘a sickening and evil crime’. He told the Syrian diplomat that Britain wanted all those responsible to be identified and held accountable and warned of ‘further quick and robust action’ from the international community unless all military operations ceased immediately.
The Houla massacre, in which more than 100 men, women and children were killed, was condemned by the UN Security Council in a rare show of unity on Sunday night.
Last night the Syrian Foreign Ministry claimed ‘hundreds of armed men’ took part in the atrocity.
But the condemnation appeared to have little impact on the hardline Damascus regime, with reports emerging of a fresh massacre in the town of Hama. Activists said at least 41 people had been killed during an artillery attack on the town by Assad’s forces.
Massacre: This citizen journalism image provided by Syrian opposition's Shaam News Network shows shrouded dead bodies in Houla
He called on the regime to halt violence and urged ‘every individual with a gun’ to lay down their arms.
Speaking at a press conference in Moscow, Mr Hague acknowledged that Britain and Russia had not always seen eye-to-eye on Syria, but characterised the discussions with Mr Lavrov as ‘good and frank and honest’.
He said both countries were agreed that Mr Annan’s plan for a ceasefire followed by talks between the two sides, was the best hope currently on offer for Syria.
International attention: UN observers view bodies at a hospital morgue before the burial of the Houla dead
But Britain also believes Assad’s departure is a precondition to any long-term solution to the 14-month uprising.
He warned that the only alternative was ‘ever-increasing chaos in Syria and a descent closer and closer to all-out civil war and collapse’.
Mr Lavrov voiced Moscow’s support for the Annan plan, but made clear that Russia is not seeking Assad’s removal, saying: ‘For us it’s not the most important thing who is in power in Syria. For us the main thing is to provide for the end of all violence.’
Russia, which has an important naval base in Syria, has repeatedly shielded Damascus from action by the United Nations Security Council during the year-long uprising which has cost up to 15,000 lives.
Speaking alongside Mr Hague, Mr Lavrov said Moscow wanted Syria to sort out its problems ‘without foreign interference’ and stressed the need to ‘respect the territorial integrity and sovereignty’ of the country.
Find this story at
www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2151420/Syria-facing-civil-war-warns-Hague-amid-fresh-reports-civilian-massacre-Assad-regime.html
Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group
© Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
How different nations act before a presidential election
- In the US: Americans are anxious to know if a Democrat or a Republican will win.(or if Obama is really Muslim!)
- In old Egypt: Egyptians are anxious to know if Hosni Mubarak or his son Jamal will be the next president
- In new Egypt: Egyptians judge the candidate by the length of his beard
- In Syria: Syrians are anxious to know if Bashar Assad will win by 97% support or 99% (like his father)
- In Lebanon: Lebanese are anxious what suit style and color the winner will wear and if the president's wife can speak French and if she is cute or not.
- In most other Arab countries: citizens are asking each other: what's a presidential election?
- In Pakistan: Pakistanis are anxious to know which of the candidates will survive assassination or prison so they can vote for him or her
- In old Egypt: Egyptians are anxious to know if Hosni Mubarak or his son Jamal will be the next president
- In new Egypt: Egyptians judge the candidate by the length of his beard
- In Syria: Syrians are anxious to know if Bashar Assad will win by 97% support or 99% (like his father)
- In Lebanon: Lebanese are anxious what suit style and color the winner will wear and if the president's wife can speak French and if she is cute or not.
- In most other Arab countries: citizens are asking each other: what's a presidential election?
- In Pakistan: Pakistanis are anxious to know which of the candidates will survive assassination or prison so they can vote for him or her
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Khutba/sermon: "Don't Forget Palestine"
Khutba by Hussam Ayloush on May 11, 2012 at IIOC in Anaheim, titled: "Don't Forget Palestine".
Tuesday, May 08, 2012
Video: CAIR 'Muslim Day' at Calif. Capitol Promotes Civic Engagement
Members of the California Muslim community are taking part in the 1st annual "Muslim Day at the Capitol" in Sacramento. This first-of-its-kind event seeks to promote community engagement in local politics and to discuss issues of interest to the Muslim community with legislators.
----
Press TV, May 8, 2012
Muslims have gathered from across the state to take part in the first-ever Muslim Day at the Capitol.
The day is meant to engage Muslim voters on a state and federal level.
A report released by the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding shows that Muslim voters could play a decisive role in swing states in the presidential election this November.
It follows the launch of the Council on American-Islamic Relations 2012 "Muslims Vote" campaign, which encourages American Muslims to increase their presence in politics and elections.
Zahra Billoo Is the executive director for CAIR San Francisco.
Billoo says the day at the capitol is modeled after the work of a number of other minority communities
The day gives Muslims the chance to make a personal connection to their legislators.
CAIR officials say this connection is important because some people are attempting to diminish the role that Muslims play in American politics.
Hussam Ayloush is the executive director for CAIR Los Angeles.
Ayloush says the day will give Muslims the tools they need to have their say in the political process.
CAIR offices are holding similar events in state capitols across America.
They're hopeful that the outreach efforts will result in a more involved and influential voting population.
Tuesday, May 01, 2012
Muslims from O.C. see meaning in Manzanar (OC Register)
Read the complete story at: Muslims from O.C. see meaning in Manzanar
This Islamic mutual fund is a 1-percenter even Occupy Wall Street would love
Following Shariah law — and thus steering clear of bank stocks — the Amana Trust Income Fund has been a stellar performer
By
Jason Kephart
April 30, 2012InvestmentNews
What do a Muslim-guided mutual fund and the Occupy Wall Street movement have in common? A strict aversion to financials, among other things. In the fund's case, this aversion has led it to the top 1% of returns amongst large-cap mutual funds over the past 10 years.
The $1.4 billion Amana Trust Income Fund Ticker:(AMANX) has an annualized return of 8.92% over the last 10 years, which ranks it in the top 1% of large-cap-blend mutual funds, according to Morningstar Inc.
Part of the secret of the fund's success: It does not invest in financials or any businesses that generate interest from loans. That prohibition is based on Shariah law, which guides the business principals of Islam. The Quran, the basis of the Islamic faith, prohibits Muslims from paying or receiving interest for lending money, which is of course the basis of the banking system today. The fund also avoids businesses that profit from alcohol, pornography or gambling.
By not being invested in financials, the fund was able to avoid the worst of the stock market's drop in 2008. As the S&P 500 was dragged down 37% such firms as Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns & Co. Inc., the fund's net asset value fell 23.4%, the best showing among large-cap funds that year.
Though the fund is based on Islamic principals, the fund is open to all investors. The Occupy Wall Street movement is returning Tuesday, and some advisers are attributing the protests to an increase of interest in socially conscious investing.
As with last year's protests, big banks again are expected to be a focal point.
“Four years after the financial crisis, not a single of the too-big-to-fail banks is smaller; in fact, they all continue to grow in size and risk,” the Occupy Wall Street press office wrote to Bloomberg News in an e-mail.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Thirteen Ways Government Tracks Us | Common Dreams
Published on Monday, April 9, 2012 by Common Dreams
Thirteen Ways Government Tracks Us | Common Dreams
Thirteen Ways Government Tracks Us
by Bill Quigley
Thirteen Ways Government Tracks Us | Common Dreams
Monday, April 09, 2012
The ex-FBI informant with a change of heart
Craig Monteilh describes how he pretended to be a radical Muslim in order to root out potential threats, shining a light on some of the bureau's more ethically murky practices
Paul Harris in Irvine, California
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 20 March 2012
Craig Monteilh says he did not balk when his FBI handlers gave him the OK to have sex with the Muslim women his undercover operation was targeting. Nor, at the time, did he shy away from recording their pillow talk.
"They said, if it would enhance the intelligence, go ahead and have sex. So I did," Monteilh told the Guardian as he described his year as a confidential FBI informant sent on a secret mission to infiltrate southern Californian mosques.
It is an astonishing admission that goes to the heart of the intelligence surveillance of Muslim communities in America in the years after 9/11. While police and FBI leaders have insisted they are acting to defend America from a terrorist attack, civil liberties groups have insisted they have repeatedly gone too far and treated an entire religious group as suspicious...
Read Full Article
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 20 March 2012
Craig Monteilh says he did not balk when his FBI handlers gave him the OK to have sex with the Muslim women his undercover operation was targeting. Nor, at the time, did he shy away from recording their pillow talk.
"They said, if it would enhance the intelligence, go ahead and have sex. So I did," Monteilh told the Guardian as he described his year as a confidential FBI informant sent on a secret mission to infiltrate southern Californian mosques.
It is an astonishing admission that goes to the heart of the intelligence surveillance of Muslim communities in America in the years after 9/11. While police and FBI leaders have insisted they are acting to defend America from a terrorist attack, civil liberties groups have insisted they have repeatedly gone too far and treated an entire religious group as suspicious...
Read Full Article
FBI Infiltrator Who Spied on Muslims Reveals Techniques
RT, 4/6/2012 -- While the FBI insists they are acting to defend the US from potential terrorist attacks, a former informant says it treats an entire religious group as suspicious. He told RT about some of the bureau's ethically murky practices.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Ayloush on Panorama Show on Russia Today TV - "Russia, the UN and Arabs" (On Syria)
Syrian American Council (SAC) Board Member Hussam Ayloush discussing Russia's relations with the Arab World in the aftermath of its veto of the UN Security Council draft resolution in Syria. The show is entitled "Panorama" on Russia Today Arabic Television. The other guest is Evgeny Satanovsky, President of the Institute of Middle Eastern Studies.
February 15, 2012.
For more info: www.sacouncil.com
http://arabic.rt.com/prg/telecast/657082/
Ayloush on Russia Today TV - Commenting on Russian support of Syria's As...
Syrian American Council (SAC) Board Member Hussam Ayloush commenting on the Russian veto of the UN Security Council draft resolution on Syria.
February 6, 2012
For more info: www.sacouncil.com
http://arabic.rt.com/news_all_news/news/577818/
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Thank you, Malcolm!
(Photo credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images) |
47 years ago, Malcolm X, also known as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, was assassinated in Harlem, NY.
May Allah (God Almighty) bless your soul and grant you the highest place in Paradise. The martyr Malcolm/Malik was not merely a Black leader, a Muslim leader, or even an American civil rights leader. Malcolm was a universal leader who made our world a better place. His speeches, humility, love, courage and sacrifice continue to inspire millions of people around the world.
Thank you Malcolm.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
The video that got me banned from the "ArabCalendar" group. Who fears the truth?
In response to an email sent by an Arab American to the
ArabCalendar about the recent rally held by Assad and his supporters in
Damascus in which it was claimed that about a million supporters were in
attendance, I sent an email with a video link showing the exact image of the whole rally which
could not have included more than a couple thousand people. The video was shot and leaked by an eyewitness.
Obviously, to those who do not believe in the importance of the
truth and freedom of speech, the message was deemed unacceptable. The "ArabCalendar" group’s pro-Assad moderator censored the email and removed me from entire the
group list.
It is in response to this widespread culture of control and censorship that
the Arab Spring has started in the Arab World and it is for that reason it is being opposed by a
few who share such dictatorial mindset.
The purpose of sending the video link was to educate
those who are being misinformed by Assad’s propaganda machine, including his shameful
supporters here in the US. Such misinformation cannot continue
forever.
Truth, democracy and freedom are going to prevail in the Arab World and within the Arab community, very soon.
Truth, democracy and freedom are going to prevail in the Arab World and within the Arab community, very soon.
Below is the actual email
------------------------
From: Hussam Ayloush
Sent: Thursday, January 12, 2012 9:36 AM
To: 'ArabCalendar@yahoogroups.com'
Subject: Re: Pres. Assad & his people
Sent: Thursday, January 12, 2012 9:36 AM
To: 'ArabCalendar@yahoogroups.com'
Subject: Re: Pres. Assad & his people
In response to Ghassan’s email about Assad addressing a
million Syrian supporter.
Pres. Assad & his people
Posted by: "Ghassan H. Elias" ibn3akkar@yahoo.com
Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:23 pm (PST)
الرئيس
الأسد يلتقي السوريين في ساحة الأمويين ..وعائلته كانت بين الجماهير
الصورة تتكلم
11/01/2012
شوكوماكو - خاص
قال الرئيس الأسد مخاطبا مئات أكثر من مليون شخص احتشدوا في ساحة الأمويين دعما لمسيرة الاصلاح التي يقودها .
أردت ان اكون معكم الأن لأنني انتمي لهذا الشارع وعلى من يريد ان يخاطب الشارع عليه أن ينزل الى الشارع ويخاطب الشارع من الشارع،
الصورة تتكلم
11/01/2012
شوكوماكو - خاص
قال الرئيس الأسد مخاطبا مئات أكثر من مليون شخص احتشدوا في ساحة الأمويين دعما لمسيرة الاصلاح التي يقودها .
أردت ان اكون معكم الأن لأنني انتمي لهذا الشارع وعلى من يريد ان يخاطب الشارع عليه أن ينزل الى الشارع ويخاطب الشارع من الشارع،
See for yourself the real
“million” of Butcher Assad’s supporters.
فضيحة المسيرة المؤيدة الحاشدة المليونية في ساحة الأمويين والمجرم بشار الأسد يلقي كلمته 11 1 2012
Shame on anyone who still supports this despicable murderous
despot.
--------
ArabCalendar instantaneously links 1,602 Arab Americans & friends. Membership is FREE but POSTING IS RESTRICTED to ONLY the SUBSCRIBERS of The Independent Monitor newspaper. To join ArabCalendar, click http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ArabCalendar or contact Sami Mashney at 714-612-0157 or Trust@MashneyLaw.com. To subscribe to The Independent Monitor, write to Info@TIMonitor.com or click here: http://www.TheIndependentMonitor.com/products-page/
--------
ArabCalendar instantaneously links 1,602 Arab Americans & friends. Membership is FREE but POSTING IS RESTRICTED to ONLY the SUBSCRIBERS of The Independent Monitor newspaper. To join ArabCalendar, click http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ArabCalendar or contact Sami Mashney at 714-612-0157 or Trust@MashneyLaw.com. To subscribe to The Independent Monitor, write to Info@TIMonitor.com or click here: http://www.TheIndependentMonitor.com/products-page/
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