Another attack leaves US Muslims fearing backlash

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As word spread that a gunman had opened fire at Fort Hood leaving a trail of carnage, a chilling realization swept across the U.S. Muslim community: He has an Islamic name.

From a professor who just testified in Congress, to a White House adviser appearing before a Jewish group and a former Marine driving home from work, Muslims across the country were shocked, angry and afraid that the attack would erode efforts to erase anti-Islamic stereotypes.

Many Islamic leaders said the Fort Hood tragedy that left 13 dead and 30 wounded including the alleged gunman, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, could likely pose the sternest test for U.S. Muslims since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

"A lot of us work very hard for this country, to make America a better place," said Muqtedar Khan, a progressive Muslim scholar who has just given Congressional testimony on U.S. foreign policy in Afghanistan before Thursday's attack. "And this one nut like Maj. Hasan comes along and in one crazy episode of a few seconds he undermines these years and years of hard work we are doing to make American Muslims part of the mainstream in the community."

Hasan, an Army psychiatrist, is a Muslim who attended his former mosque daily and had an "Allah is Love" bumper sticker on his car. Soldiers reported Friday that the shooter shouted "Allahu Akbar!" — Arabic for "God is great!" — during the rampage.

Other troubling details also emerged, including reports that authorities suspect Hasan posted online messages about suicide bombers and violence, was struggling with a pending deployment to Afghanistan and was being harassed in the Army for being a Muslim.

While a motive remains unclear, the confirmation of Hasan's faith alone prompted major Muslim groups and mosques to issue statements condemning the killings as contrary to Islam and praising the service of the many Muslim Americans in the U.S. military.

Of immediate concern was security at mosques Friday, Islam's main day of communal prayer.

In Washington, Chicago and elsewhere, mosques asked police for extra patrols. In Garden Grove, Calif., officers stood watch outside a mosque as a precaution.

Muslim leaders warned people to be vigilant and avoid exposing themselves unnecessarily — including walking alone, said Hussam Ayloush, director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Southern California.

"This is one of those moments where we have to sit and pray that most Americans will come out stronger, more united, and more tolerant," said Ayloush, adding that Muslim organizations have received dozens of death threats and hate e-mail.

At the Muslim Community Center in Silver Spring, Md., which Hasan attended before moving to Fort Hood, Imam Mohamed Abdullahi urged worshippers Friday to tell their non-Muslim neighbors that Islam was not responsible for the deaths. He also advised them to keep their tempers in check.

"Whenever we hear the name turns out to be Arabic or Muslim we feel a double shock" about such incidents. "And then we worry about backlash," said Imam Mostafa Al-Qazwini of the Islamic Educational Center of Orange County in Costa Mesa, Calif.

U.S. Rep. Andre Carson, an Indiana Democrat who is one of two Muslims serving in Congress, cautioned against focusing on the alleged shooter's religion and instead said the discussion should be about mental health issues.

"This is no way a reflection of Islam any more than Timothy McVeigh's actions are a reflection of Christianity," said Carson, who supervised an anti-terrorism unit in Indiana's Department of Homeland Security and comes from a family of Marines.

Eboo Patel, the executive director of Chicago-based Interfaith Youth Core, had just spoken at a Union of Reform Judaism conference in Toronto on Thursday night when a rabbi told him: "The guy had a Muslim name."

"I had just spoken from the tradition of Islam ... on the importance of interfaith cooperation and building Muslim-Jewish bridges," said Patel, who sits on a White House faith-based advisory board. "I wish that was viewed as reflective of Islam instead of a deranged lunatic who was acting only in the tradition of deranged lunacy, not in the tradition of any faith."

But other Muslims were weary of what has become a routine: a Muslim does something unspeakable, and Islamic organizations issue statements condemning it.

"Truth be told, we're getting a little exhausted because we've done this to death," said Robert Salaam of Maryland, a former Marine who converted to Islam shortly after the 9-11 attacks and now blogs and hosts a radio show on Muslim affairs. "We're apologizing for people we don't know."

Still, driving home from work listening to the news Thursday, Salaam thought: "God, I hope it's not a Muslim."

____

Associated Press writers David Dishneau in Silver Spring, Md.; Amy Taxin in Tustin, Calif.; Sophia Tareen in Chicago; Jeff Karoub in Detroit; and Peter Prengaman in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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{"commentId":10538640,"authorDomain":"bluecollarbytes"}

Not even the slightest hint of admission that there are a significant number of anti-America Muslims living here...not simple 'nut cases', but religious adherents who find no greater glory and personal fulfillment than killing infidels.

If they can't be honest, why open their traps?

{"commentId":10538640,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"bluecollarbytes"}
  • 4 votes
Reply#1 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 7:02 AM EST
{"commentId":10538669,"authorDomain":"141trans"}

Good, i hope there is a blacklash.

{"commentId":10538669,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"141trans"}
  • 2 votes
Reply#2 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 7:09 AM EST
{"commentId":10538722,"authorDomain":"dylan-7"}

Great point Bluecollarbytes.

They, and by "they" I mean "most" muslims would have one believe still that Islam is a religion of peace when there is OVERWHELMING, irrefutable evidence to the contrary. On CNN yesterday they had this other former military doctor, a muslim on Wolf Blitzer. And this guy was making the claim this was simply an incident by a mentally deranged psychopath, nothing more. He made the claim that 9/11 one simply an act of crazy people and had nothing to do with Islam in any way shape or form, that ANY attacks of this are simply isolated incidents and not connected in any way to Islam. Needless to say Wolf Blitzer and the CNN team ripped this guy to shreds.

These types of situations, in my opinion are going to become more and more frequent.

{"commentId":10538722,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"dylan-7"}
  • 6 votes
Reply#3 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 7:20 AM EST
{"commentId":10539868,"authorDomain":"cyoung101"}

I just don't understand why the Leaders of Islam continue to paint themselves as victims of religious discrimination? Instead of coming out and denouncing these attacks against all those who use their religion to commit violence they come out and do the opposite.

Americans, the world has been very tolerant towards Islam considering we all to be treated like criminals now just to ride an airplane. I for one am tired of pretending that this religion is one of peace. I have read some of the religious text and this Prophet Mohammad guy was not all about peace.

If the Muslims communities are not going to side with humanity against these terrorist attacks then they should be prepared be isolated and feared by the rest of the world.

{"commentId":10539868,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"cyoung101"}
  • 4 votes
Reply#4 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 9:45 AM EST
{"commentId":10540875,"authorDomain":"efucci"}
#4: "If the Muslims communities are not going to side with humanity against these terrorist attacks then they should be prepared be isolated and feared by the rest of the world."

You said it so well, but I'm betting they still don't get it. They want their cake and eat it too, but that won't happen.

There is definitely something about that so-called "religion" that encourages its cult members to kill innocents. I don't care how many peaceful muslims are out there, they cannot - no matter what they do or say - wish away the basic teachings of their cult. There is no peace in islam.

There may be some peaceful muslims. Maybe. The less devout, perhaps. Just like not all Christians can quote even a part of the New Testament, and would never even think of bombing an abortion clinic, I'm sure there are muslims who are muslims in name only.

Trouble is, we cannot know who is a killer and who is not. So why should we be blamed for fearing all of them? They started this, so it is up to them to put an end to it.

Or, they can just get used to being hated. It is their choice.

{"commentId":10540875,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"efucci"}
  • 2 votes
#4.1 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 11:07 AM EST
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{"commentId":10540436,"authorDomain":"british-lassy333"}

What I cannot comprehend, is the copious amounts of people on here that are pro-Muslim supporters with ever excuse in the book that isn't being used for Obammer, gets applied for the Majority (so they say) of the peaceful Islam, with the bad ones being only a select few of extremist.

Some other poster had numbers of the total Muslims in world and broke it down, to if ONE >>> 1% of the population were terroristic in nature that would be a mere 16,000 and some..

Feel better anyone?

{"commentId":10540436,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"british-lassy333"}
  • 2 votes
Reply#5 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 10:31 AM EST
{"commentId":10540970,"authorDomain":"hsquared"}
Some other poster had numbers of the total Muslims in world and broke it down, to if ONE >>> 1% of the population were terroristic in nature that would be a mere 16,000 and some..

1% would be 15.7 million, .001% would be 15,700. The number of 1.57 billion is from wiki. Other sources estimate from 700 million to 1.2 billion.

H<sup>2</sup>

{"commentId":10540970,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"hsquared"}
  • 3 votes
#5.1 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 11:14 AM EST
Reply
{"commentId":10541700,"authorDomain":"jebuss"}
"This is no way a reflection of Islam any more than Timothy McVeigh's actions are a reflection of Christianity," said Carson, who supervised an anti-terrorism unit in Indiana's Department of Homeland Security and comes from a family of Marines.

Pretty much says it all.

My heart goes out to the families of the victims and also to the moderate Muslims who are going to have to cope with the backlash.

{"commentId":10541700,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"jebuss"}
  • 1 vote
Reply#6 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 12:10 PM EST
{"commentId":10541726,"authorDomain":"jebuss"}

And no, I don't have statistics to back up how many moderate Muslims there are or whether or not they will actually suffer a backlash. This is my opinion.

{"commentId":10541726,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"jebuss"}
    Reply#7 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 12:11 PM EST
    {"commentId":10547173,"authorDomain":"greatwolf"}

    Perhaps the abject and sick sycophantism of it all that is so steeply galling. As someone who is a University Student telling you the only reason I googled "Eroc Gorski, AP" allegedly "religion writer" is to "tell" him right smack in his eyes - symbolically - that it's one thing that this poorly written pathetic sorry piece's aim essentially is out and out not-so-subtle manipulation and distortions at spinning the story -- apparently its very raison d'etre -- but he is an ignorant and confused, and confusing, "religion writer" as well. Allhu Akbar doesn't mean "God is great" - now Sir, this is factually flawed. It means God is GREATER (compared to the Gods of judaism and Christianity). After this, how much (or nil, zero) credibility this guy and Associated Press has? Who does he want to fool? Why on earth does ha want uis to beieve this crap? The king is naked, Ladies and Gentlemen!

    {"commentId":10547173,"threadId":"718950","contentId":"3471007","authorDomain":"greatwolf"}
      Reply#8 - Sat Nov 7, 2009 6:05 PM EST
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