God, Faith, and a Pen

Living in the Light of God's Love

Hesham A. Hassaballa

Hesham A. Hassaballa
Location
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Birthday
July 08
Bio
Hesham A. Hassaballa is a Chicago doctor and writer. He has written extensively on a freelance basis, being published in newspapers across the country and around the world. His articles have been distributed world wide by Agence Global as well. He has been a Beliefnet columnist since 2001, and has written for the Religion News Service. He is also a guest blogger for The Chicago Tribune. Dr. Hassaballa is author of the essay "Why I Love the Ten Commandments," published in the award-winning book Taking Back Islam (Rodale). He is also co-author of The Beliefnet Guide to Islam (Doubleday). His latest book of poetry about the Prophet Muhammad, Noble Brother, has been published by Faithful Word Press. In 2007, his blog, God, Faith, and a Pen, was nominated for a Brass Crescent Award for a blog that is "the most stimulating, insightful, and philosophical, providing the best rebuttals to extremist ideology and making an impact whenever they post."

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JANUARY 17, 2012 12:00PM

Election 2012: A Rough Ride for American Muslims

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This was published in my Patheos column.  

The 2012 election year has finally come, and as already seen in Iowa, the presidential campaign is in full swing. On the Democratic side, there is no contest (but lots of concerns). But the Republican primary process has already given us a chilling glimpse into what is to come for American Muslims. Our faith and our status as Americans look to become an important part of the election.

Former Senator Rick Santorum, thrust into the spotlight by his surprise finish in Iowa, was asked in a debate about who should be profiled in this country: "Well, the folks who are most likely to be committing these crimes. If you look at—I mean, obviously, it was—obviously, Muslims would be—would be someone you'd look at, absolutely. Those are the folks who are—the radical Muslims are the people that are committing these crimes, as we've—by and large, as well as younger males." And that's just one example of what some Republican candidates are inferring and saying about Muslims. I would also be remiss if I did not mention Newt Gingrich and his incessant claims about the "threat" of "Sharia law" to our country.

These criticisms will only intensify as the months pass on the way to the November elections. Islam will be demonized, and Muslims will be more and more "otherized" and scapegoated. Just recently, state Rep. Judy Manning (R-GA) said of Mitt Romney, "I think Mitt Romney is a nice man, but I'm afraid of his Mormon faith. It's better than a Muslim."

Yup . . . hold on to your seats, folks, it's going to be a rough ride for American Muslims.

I never cease to be baffled by comments like these. The truth about Islam and Muslims is so different than what is presented in the media to the minds of many Americans. The season of Jesus and his birth has just finished. Don't our fellow Christian Americans realize how much Muslims love Jesus? Don't they know how much of the Quran extols the virtues of Christ? Don't they know the number of times Jesus (and his mother Mary) is mentioned in the Quran? I penned a piece about the Virgin Mary last December and gave it to a devout Catholic colleague. She was stunned at the beauty of the Quranic description of the both the birth of Mary and her son, Jesus. My brother-in-law gave it to his co-worker, and the reaction was the same.

It seems like our fellow Americans do not know how much our faith honors all of the Abrahamic prophets. Whether it is Moses, Abraham, Isaac, Joseph, Jacob, David, or Solomon, they are all revered, and respected, and honored in our faith. It seems incredulous that I must re-state the fact that we Muslims worship the same God of the other Abrahamic faiths. "Allah" is simply the Arabic version of "God." And, if Jesus were alive today, he would also call God "Allah." Moreover, open up an Arabic Bible, the word for "God" is none other than "Allah."

Most American Muslims are just like most other Americans: patriotic, country-loving citizens who work hard every single day to contribute to the greatness of this country. As the TLC show "All-American Muslim" showed, we are normal people like everyone else. We are teachers, doctors, lawyers, football coaches, police officers, firefighters, and nurses. One of my closest friends, whom I consider to be a brother, was on the ground on 9/11 as a first-responder helping the injured on that horrible day.

Now, that fact doesn't sit well with some Americans, as the Lowe's advertising controversy with "All-American Muslim" showed. They would like to have everyone believe that the actions of criminals acting in Islam's name speak for the whole of Islam and Muslims. But that doesn't change the truth: Muslims are not the monsters that some make us out to be. Islam is the not the "evil" that some make it out to be.

And, to be fair, there are some in the GOP who have acknowledged as much. The most shining example is New Jersey Governor Chris Christie (another Republican), who defended his appointment of a Muslim judge and called the hysteria about Sharia law "crap." And New York's Mayor Michael Bloomberg is another politician (not a Republican) who has refused to join in the demonization of Muslims for political gain.

Since the forces of division will not stop trying to demonize Islam and Muslims, we must not stop telling the truth about our faith and our people. The election season may be rough for American Muslims, but in the end, all will be right and good. The forces of hatred will not win. That is because our country is a great nation, and our people are a great people.

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Comments

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i think the average american is troubled by events such as the world trade center bombings, the fort hood massacre, the shoelace bomber, the diaper bomber, the times square weed and feed bomber, the mumbai massacres, and the constant exhortations by imams and other islamic radicals to kill all the jews and americans on planet earth.

more moderate muslims should speak up and denounce these crimes and violent exhortations, in order to help bring understand to the rest of us.
there's certainly a lot to overcome, it won't be easy, but there are some sane people still left around who haven't bought into the islamophobia and weirdness of the american political system, just as there are many, many people in europe who have not succumbed to the rampant bigotry spread in large part by politicians on the right. yeah.

rated.
Islam and Muslims is the 'flavor of the day' in America.

Pre-Carter/Reagan era, most Americans could care less about Muslims. The enemy was, and will always be, the black people; before that it was the Japanese & Communists; before that the Native Americans. Who knows what group will be the new enemy in twenty years from now.

It does not matter how much Christian Americans see the similarities of Abrahamic religions. They need someone to blame, besides themselves, for the problems of the world.

We had Ted Bundy; John Wayne Gacy; Timothy McVeigh; the Unibomber; Clyde Barrow; Al Capone - all murderers- Christian Americans.

No one made an all out cry to condemn Christianity because of the insane acts of these, and many more, psychopaths.

But if a maniacal Muslim does something just as heinous, then down with Islam. Such hypocrisy.