By Nadrat Siddique
Last Friday, I visited Dar ul-Hijrah for juma'ah prayer. The mosque is a very large establishment mosque, frequented by a good mix of Indo-Pak, Arab, African, and American worshippers. The khutbah was by one Br. Ahmed Hassan, and the topic was "The Importance of Salah" ("salah" is the formal Muslim prayer). The youthful khateeb expressed himself well in both English and Arabic, and the khutbah was, at surface level, a beautiful one. Unlike some others I’ve heard, it was easy to follow and not at all soporific. He spoke on how the prophets (A.S.) throughout time were commanded to pray, and that while other pillars of Islamic faith, such as hajj, or zakat, could be forgiven at times, salah was an absolute requirement. However, the khutbah remained very academic, as Hassan did not tie it in to anything real, practical, or relevant, instead quoting beautiful, flowery Qur’anic verses instructing each Prophet to pray. He did this masterfully in Arabic and in English.
He did not address prayer's role in organizing the community, its role in shaping the Muslim identity, or most importantly, its affirmation of the Oneness of God. It is not trivial that one bows down in the prayer to one’s Maker. This is a physical affirmation of “Innal Hokmo Illah Lillah” (“Authority belongs to Allah alone”), and as such, a negation of all other authority, including human authority. Hence the very act of prayer can be a challenge to the prevailing power structure.
At the same time, the prayer strengthens the Muslim for all possible trials and tribulations which may arise in daily life, as well as in the course of confronting human authority. “Thee alone do we worship; Thee alone do we ask for help,” is the oft-repeated refrain of the Fatiha.
Following the juma’ah prayer, some friends and I went to Bamian, an Afghan restaurant near the mosque. To my amazement, Imam Hassan, whose “pie-in-the-sky” khutbah I’d just heard, was seated at a table very near us, along with three cohorts. I longed to ask him: Did he know of the recent U.S. bombing of his country? (I guessed that he was from Somalia.) And—was he aware of the U.S. bombing/ intervention/ neo-colonial occupation of numerous other African and Muslim countries? Further, did he know that in 2016, the U.S. dropped 26,172 bombs on Muslim countries including Yemen and Libya? Out of respect for another imam whom I greatly respect, who was seated at my table, I elected to play the good little quiet Muslim girl, and didn't accost the imam with these burning questions.
“If you know, why do you keep quiet about it, and fail to use a single second of your khutbah to speak the truth on these matters, given the command to the Muslim to do ‘amr bil mauroof’ and ‘nahi unal munkari’ (enjoining the right and forbidding the wrong)?” I longed to ask him.
“It is too political, sister. And the masjid doesn’t get involved in politics,” is the standard answer I get to similar questions. On the Last Day, is that what they will tell their Creator, that their brothers and sisters were being bombed, killed, raped, imprisoned, tortured, starved—but they kept quiet about it, because it was too political? And Allah ho alam.
Monday, October 16, 2017
Saturday, September 16, 2017
Muslims Run for Gaza
By Nadrat Siddique
Special
to the New Trend
Washington,
DC
September
16, 2017
Under
beautiful sunny skies, hundreds of runners ran along the Anacostia Riverwalk
Trail. The heat rose to 78 degrees that morning, and some participants wore
tank tops, short sleeved tees, and shorts. But a large number wore kaffiyahs or
tee shirts bearing the Palestinian flag. Many of the female athletes wore
hijab. A few of the young men donned Palestinian flags, which flew behind them
in cape-like fashion. The run was the Gaza 5K, which is held annually in five
major U.S. cities, including Washington, DC. It is sponsored by the United
Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) USA, and raises funds for UNRWA’s Community
Mental Health Programme (CMHP) for Palestinian children in Gaza.
Why a 5K run for Gaza?
There
have been three major Israeli offensives against Gaza. Each had a devastating
impact, and illustrated Israel’s utter disregard for international law. During
the 2014 offensive—the last major offensive, 2,139 Palestinians were killed. Of
these, 490 were children. Eleven thousand (11,000) Palestinians were wounded. Of
that number, 3,000 were children. In addition, Israel destroyed 20,000
Palestinian homes in Gaza, and up to 500,000 Gaza residents were displaced. By
comparison, in the same (2014) conflict, 64 Israeli soldiers were killed; 6
Israeli civilians were killed; and 1 Israeli child was killed. (Statistics: The Independent, August 27, 2014)
According
to the race organizer’s (UNRWA USA) web site, “Children and adults alike
continue to experience high levels of stress and distress as result of a decade
of recurrent Israeli military assaults, deepening poverty, increased
gender-based violence, isolation, and movement restrictions because of the
illegal blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt.”
The
UNRWA USA web page continues, “The stress of these issues has produced:
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety, depression, intense fear,
bed-wetting, poor concentration, eating disorders, sleeping disorders,
irritability, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).”
So
the Gaza 5K was for the innocent children of Gaza, and to this writer, who has
done dozens of 5Ks, it felt right being there.
Teaming up at the Gaza 5K
Runners
and walkers participating in the Gaza 5K have the option of running as
individuals, or as part of a team. The teams participating were diverse, and
illustrated the world community’s deep love for the Palestinian people and a
broad commitment to human rights in Gaza. A total of 60 teams participated in
the 2017 Gaza 5K.
The
team U.S. Campaign for Palestinian
Rights, which included many non-Muslim friends of the Palestinian cause,
raised the most money for the refugees, at $4,875. The team’s self-description
was “Jogging for Justice.”
Team Al-Hanooti included family
members of the late imam of Dar ul-Hijra fame. Imam Muhammad Hanooti was born
in Haifa, Palestine, and the family evidently does the race every year,
including shortly after their patriarch’s passing in 2015. The team raised
close to $1,777 among their seven members. Hanooti’s 29-year old daughter Shayma al-Hanooti finished the race in
39:54.
Another
team was that of Albert Mokhiber and his family: Team Mokhiber. The former Arab American Anti-Discrimination
Committee (ADC) head, now an attorney at a high profile law firm in DC, led one
of the top fundraising teams, raising $4,772 for Gazan refugees. Mokhiber’s daughter
Laila is Director of Communications for UNRWA USA, and the Mokhibers said the
team was their way of helping Palestinian refugees. The 69-year old Albert Mokhiber walked the race,
finishing in 1:02 (1 hour 2 minutes). His wife Hindy, 10 years his junior, finished
in 48:50.
A Tribe Called Hibster was the fifth
ranked team in fundraising, raising $3,309. The team included several members
of the Dajani family, which has centuries’ old roots in Palestine. The team’s
captain, Hiba Ismeail, fundraised
with great fervor, but did not walk or run the event.
MAS (Muslim American Society) Maryland’s four member
team raised $1,767. Their team member Marwan
Oweis held an impressive pace of 7:29 min/miles throughout the race,
finishing in 23:14.
DMV (District-Maryland-Virginia) Muslim Youth’s team was
dominated by women, including team captain and longtime pro-Palestine activist
Aneesah Abdul-Fattaah. The team’s Nathan
Nesbitt, of Cambridge, MA, took first place overall, finishing in 18:25. He
held an astounding 5:56 min/mile pace for the duration of the 3.1 mile course.
The team raised $116.
The
top female runner, 25-year old Cherie
Bennett, did not appear registered with any team. With short cropped blond
hair, shorts, and tank top, she blazed the field, finishing in 20:24. She was doing
6:34 min/miles! In the awards ceremony which followed the event, Bennett said she
had been to Palestine, and supported the Palestinian cause.
Then
there was Wadi Run, a team of
Georgetown University students. They raised $1,061. Wadi Run team member Lauren
Stricker was the 2nd fastest of all women, finishing in 22:39. (She
held a 7:18 min/ mile pace.) Her team mate, Keith McKay, finished just before
her, completing the course in 22:34.
PLO Delegation, a team in
itself, consisted of only three people, and raised exactly $79. One woman from
that team, 31-year old Janeen Rashmawi
almost took me, running 7:32 min/miles. (I was doing 7:25 min/miles, but more
on this later.)
Islamic Relief, a team with 12
members, raised only $211. But IRUSA team members, mostly young, compensated by
blazing the field. They were fast, most of them finishing in less than 30
minutes. Twenty-five year old Ibrahim
Zafar, of Arlington, VA, was the fastest of them, finishing in 24:15 (he
was doing 7:49 minute miles).
Jews for Gaza, a team with 9
members, raised $1,055. The team’s self-description was “Jews stand in
solidarity with Palestinian refugees to support freedom and dignity for all.”
Their
team mate, 23-year old Adam Beardsley, was the fourth fastest of all runners,
finishing the course in 19:07. (He held a 6:09 min/ mile pace).
Team Jamaat al-Muslimeen
This
was the first year that Jamaat al-Muslimeen participated as a team, called Team Jamaat Al-Muslimeen. Among others,
the diverse team included Kalim Umran, a Muslim historian who is the narrator
of a PBS video series on Barry Farms (a project in SE Washington, DC, and the
subject of major gentrification attempts); Shakoorah El, an activist sister
from Baltimore, who is also practiced in traditional African dance; and New Trend editor/ imam Dr. Kaukab
Siddique.
Imam Dr. Kaukab Siddique of Masjid
Jamaat al-Muslimeen-Baltimore, who is 74, completed the walk in 1:22 (1 hour 22
minutes). By all appearances, he was the only imam to physically participate in
the Gaza 5K. Dr. Siddique, who used to run with his mother years ago, and then
later with his daughter (this writer), did the course without stopping or
feeling overly drained. He said he walked continuously for at least half an
hour every day, and expressed the hope that his participation might encourage
other Muslims to follow the Prophet’s example of physical fitness and staying
active into their later years.
The
Gaza 5K was Shakoorah El’s first
race. She completed the course in 57:46. As awards were announced, she was
astonished to hear her name being announced: She was awarded the “Fastest
Masters Female Award” (the Gaza 5K’s masters award is granted to the fastest
65+ year old runner).
I
was team captain for Team Jamaat
al-Muslimeen, my first time ever as captain of anything. It was a
liberating feeling, running the Anacostia Riverwalk Trail, in Southeast Washington,
DC, an area which, to me, held many parallels to the Gaza struggle. The run was
an out-and-back run, so that after one reached the half way mark and doubled
back, one could see other runners approaching from the opposite direction. Some
of the runners I saw as I doubled back carried the Palestinian flag. When I saw
them, I yelled “Free free Palestine!” to which they responded in kind. Many of
the runners and walkers expressed appreciation for my shirt during the race, as
well as afterwards. (I wore a long-sleeve black tee, bearing the words “Free
Palestine” above the red, black, white, and green Palestinian flag.)
After
I’d been running for a while, I chanced upon Shakoorah El. She was speedwalking while talking animatedly with
two other sisters in hijab. All three
of them cheered me on, and I did similarly. Shortly after that, I saw Dr. Kaukab Siddique (Ameer of Jamaat
al-Muslimeen). He was accompanied by Abdur
Rahman Hasib (Masjid Jamaat al-Muslimeen custodian, and a dear brother and
friend). They were walking in relaxed fashion, holding a steady pace. We
exchanged chants of “Allah ho Akbar!” and fist pumps, after which it seemed to
me that we all moved a little bit faster.
The
crowd support propelled me to finish #1 in my division. I completed the race in
23:01, holding on for dear life to my 7:24 min/mile pace. And— I was the 4th
fastest female finisher out of the 312 women who ran the race. Only three women
were faster than me, and they were 25, 21, and 30 years old (1st, 2nd,
and 3rd place respectively). I was #23 out of everyone including men
(so out of a total of 545 participants).
I
am 49-years old, and did not get into serious running until age 39 (prior to
that, I engaged only in casual and sporadic running since my teen years). Aside
from the personal sense of accomplishment in doing a race for a cause very dear
to my heart—Palestine, the experience reaffirmed for me the notion that neither
age nor gender necessarily define ability, and that some limitations are human-/
self-imposed. And— the hadith tell us that our beloved Prophet (SAW) engaged in
very physically arduous military campaigns against the kuffar which required him to traverse long distances on horseback
across the deserts of Arabia until the age of 65. If he is our role model, we,
as a community need to up the ante on physical fitness. How many of us can run
a mile comfortably? The Rasool (SAW) could, and did, with his wife, Ayesha Siddiqa
(RA).
Alhamdulillah,
our team, Team Jamaat al-Muslimeen, raised $743 in its first year of
participating in the race.
In
all, 540 people ran the Gaza 5K: 228 men and 312 women. There were Afghans,
Libyans, Palestinians, Bengalis, Pakistanis, American-born Blacks, and others. There
was a woman in a wheelchair, an evidently pregnant woman, and many who ran or
walked with baby strollers. At race’s end, an elderly man who had walked the
3.1 mile course was taken away in an ambulance. From the ambulance he called
out that he would be doing the race again next year.
At
least for one day, at the Gaza 5K, the aphorism “The believers are but one
brotherhood/ sisterhood” was evident.
©2017 by Nadrat Siddique
Friday, June 9, 2017
Spirit of Ramadan
By
Nadrat Siddique
I had the most incredible iftar the
other night at Cheesecake Factory (Inner Harbor) with my friend, N. She is a
beautiful, young, Pakistani-American who wears hijab, even living and working
in a very red neck area. Very earnest and honest in everything she does, she
has been going through some trials and tribulations in her life. It was quite
late, and we were seated outside, sipping our hot chocolates/ iced coffees,
admiring the Baltimore skyline silouetted against the harbor, and catching up
on events in our respective lives. The service was very slow, and the waitress
seemed determined to ignore us, after our day-long fast.
People who were not patrons of the
restaurant occasionally passed close to our table. One of these was a homeless
Caucasian man. Emaciated and bedraggled, he walked with some effort. He mumbled
something as he passed our table, but did not ask us for anything. My friend
and I discussed for a moment the sorrowful condition of the man, and pondered
how to help him. I lamented that I had only $3 cash on me, relying instead on
my debit card. N said we should buy him dinner.
Then, before I could blink, she left the
dinner table. First, she chased down our elusive waitress, and ordered a basic
meal for the homeless man. Then, she ran after the homeless man (he had moved quite
a distance away) to find out how else we might help him. She returned shortly
with surprising news: The man declined the Cheesecake Factory meal. They
treated him badly there, he said. And- he was very cold and needed to go
indoors somewhere and get warm. A cool breeze was blowing over the water. It
felt lovely to us, who were well nourished. But- I could see why it might feel
unpleasantly cold to someone who had not eaten a proper meal for days, and had
been sleeping on the streets.
N quickly caught up with the waitress
again, and cancelled the order. She and I both apologized profusely to the
waitress. Given the hour, and the fact that most restaurants in Baltimore close
ridiculously early on weeknights, we were at a loss of what to do. "You did
the best you could. Allah knows your intent was to help him," I told my
friend.
By now, the two White women at the
neighboring table were intrigued. They complimented N on her efforts, and
expressed surprise at the homeless man’s unwillingness to accept the profferred
meal. Even the waitress, who had been quite cold toward us previously, was
bubbling with compliments for my friend's generosity and caring.
I leaned over and whispered to N: “It
looks like you just did some da’awah inadvertently. Alhamdulillah.”
A short while later, the homeless man
reappeared. This time, we invited him to sit at the table with us. Under N’s
questioning, he shared his story with us. His name was Michael, and he was a
Muslim, although his family was not. He wasn’t from Baltimore. He had come here
to do some construction work, but his work partner had scammed him, and taken
off with his few belongings. He had asked numerous mosques and churches for
help, but none of these were forthcoming.
N asked Michael if he had a home. He
did, in West Virginia, where he’d lived with his mother prior to coming to
Baltimore.
“Maybe your mother could help get you
home?” asked N.
“She is paralyzed. So she can’t really
work,” said Michael.
“Well you shouldn’t have to sleep on the
street, if you have a home,” said N. “We will try to get you home.”
We paid our bill. The rest of our iftar
evening was spent trying to buy Michael a bus ticket home, a bit of a chore,
since he didn’t have ID (everything had been stolen from him by the partner),
and we couldn’t simply pay for his ticket on line..
Labels:
dawa'ah,
homelessness,
Islam,
Ramadan,
social message of Islam
Sunday, April 23, 2017
Running the Boston Marathon for Pakistani Women’s Rights
(Or in particular, for the rights of an
outstanding Pakistani woman political prisoner)
April
22, 2017
Letters
to the Editor
The
Boston Globe
PO
Box 55819
Boston,
MA 02205-5819
Dear
editor,
Dr.
Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist, once attended MIT on full scholarship.
She completed studies in biological sciences, and went on to do her PhD in
cognitive neuroscience at Brandeis University, successfully completing it
despite being in an abusive marriage (with a Pakistani from whom she later
divorced). Her PhD focused on helping dyslexic and otherwise learning disabled
children. Today she languishes in a U.S. federal penitentiary, a political prisoner
for whom tens of thousands of Pakistanis demonstrate regularly on the streets
of London, Karachi, Islamabad, and Peshawar.
I
am a Pakistani woman athlete who has run 31 marathons in nine years (including
seventeen sub-4 hour marathons). The case of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, who had adopted
Boston as her home for over a decade, was so compelling that I could not run America’s
oldest marathon except in her name. So, on Patriots Day 2017, I ran my first
Boston Marathon in an attempt to draw attention to the egregious human rights
violations against this innocent Pakistani Muslim woman.
As
I stood in the Boston Commons on race morning, waiting with other runners to
board the bus to the race start in Hopkinton, I could picture the slight and
slender Aafia among the other doctors, scientists, and health professionals who
were among the 27,000 athletes running Boston this year. Instead, Aafia occupied
a tiny holding cell at the United States Penitentiary at Fort Worth, completely
cut off from her family and community, her health gravely impugned by 14 years
of political imprisonment.
She
was arrested in Islamabad in a joint U.S.-Pakistani intelligence operation in
2003, one of many innocents caught up in a broad net of politically-motivated, arbitrary,
or misplaced arrests during the “War on Terror.” At first, Aafia’s captivity
was kept a secret by her captors. This lasted about five years. In flagrant
violation of the Geneva Convention, Aafia’s captors refused to acknowledge her
presence within the prison system, allowing them to act with complete impunity
towards her. She spent part of her captivity at the U.S. Air Force Base in Baghram,
Afghanistan, where she was known as “Prisoner 650.” During this time, Aafia was
denied proper medical treatment, and repeatedly tortured and raped.
Two
of Aafia’s young children, Ahmed and Mariam, were arrested and imprisoned along
with her in violation of Geneva Convention stipulations on the detention of
children. Like Aafia, they were not entered in any prison registry. Much later,
Ahmed and Mariam were released and ordered not to reveal anything about their
captivity.
In
2008, Aafia’s captors finally acknowledged that they were holding her, and she
was sent to the U.S. to face charges. Her trial was held in a Manhattan
courtroom beset by fears of terrorism. She appeared in a wheelchair, displaying
signs of having been tortured. Bizarrely, the 110-pound, 5’2’’ Pakistani
neuroscientist was charged with the assault and attempted murder of seven U.S.
servicemen in Afghanistan.
Despite
grave contradictions in the prosecution’s case, and clearly exculpatory
evidence in Aafia’s favor, she was convicted and sentenced to 86 years.
On
Monday, I ran the Boston Marathon in honor of Aafia, who did so many great
things while in Boston. The front of my race tee-shirt bore her image with the
words “Free Dr. Aafia.” The back of the tee read “Prisoner 650,” a reference to
the early period of Aafia’s captivity when she was held secretly in Baghram.
Throughout the race, I met many wonderful race volunteers and runners who were
students at MIT. I wondered how many of them knew of their government’s abuse of
a Pakistani woman scientist who had sat in the same classroom as them.
Aafia’s
case is a glaring example of the government’s disregard for due process, human
rights, women’s rights, civil rights, prisoners’ rights, and children’s rights.
It is my hope that women’s rights groups and civil libertarians in the U.S. will
call for her release. These groups have vociferously and consistently opposed
the oppression of Muslim women and girls in cases like that of Malalai
Yousufzai, the Chibok girls in Nigeria; and in cases of honor killings. If they
are act on principle and not politics, they must speak out for Dr. Aafia
Siddiqui.
-Nadrat
Siddique
We Did it for Aafia
By Nadrat Siddique
Training for a marathon (26.2 mile race) is a months-long process, very different from casual running for fitness.
Training for a marathon (26.2 mile race) is a months-long process, very different from casual running for fitness.
In the lengthy preparation for a marathon, many
things can happen to derail one’s training:
With 8 weeks left before the 2017 Boston Marathon (held in April), I
developed a looming shin splint. I addressed it immediately, switching over to
walking and low impact workouts at the gym for about three weeks.
Then, with 7 weeks left before Boston, I woke up one
morning with shingles (I had chicken pox as a child). This lasted about two
weeks.
Then, about 5 weeks before the marathon, my 26-year
old stepbrother passed away. His sudden and tragic death deeply affected the
family, and for me, brought back many memories of the death of my child, Hanzela,
who died a SIDS death in his second month. At that point, I decided I really
did not feel up to running Boston, either mentally or physically.
A week passed, then two, and I saw the mother of my
dead stepbrother (my stepmum) heroically carrying on the motions of life,
despite the passing of her beloved son, and I toyed again with the idea of
running the illustrious marathon.
At this point, I’d run 31 prior marathons, and
qualified for Boston many times. At the risk of sounding cocky, I had little to
prove! The original—really the only—reason I’d wanted to run the race was to
bring attention to the plight of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, the Pakistani
neuroscientist nabbed in a joint U.S./Pakistani operation in Pakistan, raped
and tortured by her captors, and ultimately sentenced to 86-years by a kangaroo
court for a crime she clearly could not have committed. It particularly
sickened me that neither the Pakistani government, nor any of the major Muslim
organizations in the U.S. were actively seeking her release from what was a
clearly politically-motivated and flagrantly unjust imprisonment. If I ran the
Boston Marathon—held in the city where Aafia, a top scholar at MIT and Brandeis
University—had excelled both scholastically and spiritually—it would have to be
in her name. Once again thoughts of running Boston entered my head.
There were only two weeks left before the Boston
Marathon when a tiny lump I’d had for three years on the side of my neck
suddenly became inflamed. It turned out to be an inclusion cyst which developed
an abscess. I tried ignoring it until after the marathon, but it only got
larger and more inflamed. Then on Monday of the week prior to the marathon, I
had a minor surgery for the cyst. Three days later (Thursday), I did a 15-mile
run on a favorite tree-lined trail, with the gash on the side of my neck from
the surgery, to see if I was up to the task of a marathon. I felt fine
afterwards, and was egged on further to attain the seemingly unattainable.
On Saturday, I jumped in my car, packing little but
my marathon outfit and some food items (I am a picky eater), and took off for
Boston, arriving around 1:00 AM. The next day was Sunday, and I took the Boston
subway to the mandatory bib number pickup at the John Hynes Convention Center,
prayed a lot, and did little else.
Then, on Monday—Patriots Day in Boston—I ran the
Boston Marathon wearing my long-sleeved black “Free Dr. Aafia Siddiqui” tee
(prepared for me by brothers from Masjid Al-Islam in SE Washington, DC). I was
the only Pakistani woman in the field of approximately 37,000 runners, and
finished the very hilly course in 4 hours 4 minutes, despite high temperatures
during the mid-afternoon race (Marathons are ordinarily held in the early
morning to decrease the possibility of heat injury among the athletes. But in
Boston, the runners in my “wave” did not start running until about 11:00 AM,
and we did not finish until about 3:00 PM. I saw many runners being carried off
in stretchers, likely as a result of the very warm weather. According to the
organizers’ website, 810 people were unable to finish the race; the Boston
Globe reported that 2,000 required medical treatment during or after the race.)
About an hour after finishing the race, I was in my
car, and on the way back to Maryland, composing letters to the Boston Globe on
Dr. Aafia Siddiqui in my head as I drove. I reached Maryland safely at 3:00 AM.
God is Great.
Sunday, February 19, 2017
Jamaat al-Muslimeen Decries Dr. Omar Abdel Rahman’s Political Imprisonment and Death in Captivity
Press Statement
Nadrat
Siddique
Jamaat al-Muslimeen National
Majlis-e-Shura member
February 18, 2017
February 18, 2017, is a dismal day in the history of the United States, even by its own genocidal standards. On this day, Islamic scholar Dr. Omar Abdel Rahman, also known as “the Blind Sheikh,” died a political prisoner of the U.S. government. To multitudes of Muslims the world over, he will be viewed as a martyr of Islam. The American mainstream might better understand Muslim sentiment if they considered how they might feel if Pope Francis—or another beloved religious figure— was imprisoned in a Muslim country, allowed virtually no contact with constituents, followers, and family, and then left to die a slow painful death from untreated (but treatable) medical conditions.
A visionary, Dr. Abdel Rahman articulately and consistently spoke out against the U.S.-backed Egyptian dictatorship of Hosni Mubarak decades prior to the Arab Spring, insisting that the resources of Muslim countries, including Egypt, be used for the betterment of those countries--and not be pilfered by Western Powers or multinational corporations. These basic and seemingly logical demands were rewarded with imprisonment and torture by the Egyptian regime.
Fleeing the Egyptian regime’s torture, Dr. Abdel Rahman sought political asylum in the U.S., which he viewed as a land of freedom of expression, and whose laws he repeatedly emphasized must, in accordance with Islamic rules on guest-host relations, be respected by all Muslims who sought asylum therein, including himself.
Far from being accorded freedom of expression, he was brought up on trumped up charges, tried in a climate of utter fear and emotion, and, in 1995, convicted of conspiracy to bomb New York landmarks, almost entirely on the word of an informant who was paid over a million dollars.
Although he undoubtedly knew he was facing decades of jail time, he stood before the Court, unafraid of all but the Creator. His final words before being marched off into the American Gulag were a telling: “Fuzto Be Rab-e-Ka’aba” (“By the Lord of the Ka’aba, I have succeeded”).
The blind, elderly, diabetic scholar of Islam was detained and held for over 20 years under what can only be described as conditions of “Cruel and Unusual” punishment. Since he could neither see nor speak to his captors (he was blind and spoke no English); was barely allowed a monthly phone call to his family in Egypt; and was held in solitary confinement, he no doubt suffered all of the psychological trauma associated with long-term solitary captivity. On top of that, his advanced stage diabetes went untreated for months on end, until its effects, including gangrene, were irreversible, and he was finally relocated to the Butner Medical Center in North Carolina, where he would ultimately die. His family’s hunger strikes and appeals to the (post-Arab Spring Egyptian) regime of Muhammad Morsi for his repatriation to Egypt were fruitless, and Dr. Omar Abdel Rahman—loved throughout much of Egypt and the Islamic world—died alone, a slow painful death from diabetes.
The long-term political imprisonment and death in captivity of Dr. Omar Abdel Rahman seems part of a trend by the U.S. and its proxies to silence all independent, vocal, and effective Muslim leadership, and in particularly those who hold the title of imam, a position of high honor and respect in the Muslim community. It seems that the only imams of major mosques permitted to operate freely are those who kowtow to the government; bandy American flags on Muslim religious institutions; welcome video monitoring of their mosques; and encourage or allow censorship of their own words and those of their constituents by the authorities—clearly compromising their faith, as well as American principles of: "Separation of Church and State.”
The death of a renowned and respected Islamic scholar under such circumstances is an abomination. Dr. Omar Abdel Rahman’s treatment in captivity clearly violated both American laws on the treatment of prisoners (set out in the Bureau of Prison regulations), as well as numerous international laws. Jamaat al-Muslimeen decries Dr. Omar Abdel Rahman’s political imprisonment on trumped up charges, and laments his tragic death under clearly dehumanizing conditions.
END
Monday, September 12, 2016
Thoughts of Leonard Peltier on Eid
By Nadrat Siddique
In addition to being Eid ul-Adha, September 12 is Leonard Peltier’s 72nd birthday. Even though he’s not a Muslim, he made an Abraham-esque sacrifice for the oppressed Lakota (Sioux) people in 1975. His sacrifice stems from his participation in the American Indian Movement (AIM) camp on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.
Peltier is Anishinabe (Ojibway), and not of the Lakota tribe or Pine Ridge. Hence his actions could be considered rather self-less and internationalist (or at least intertribal). AIM was an national organization fighting for the rights of indigenous people throughout North America. In this context, it came up against both corporate greed and the corrupt local tribal councils which did the dirty work of the corporations. Like many movements which fight for self-determination, human rights, and against the seizure of their peoples’ resources by U.S. and European multinational corporations, AIM was quickly labeled a “terrorist” organization by the authorities.
The camp on Pine Ridge was established to protect the local population from the reign of terror being enacted on them by the puppet tribal council of Dick Wilson. (Indian reservations typically have neither city council nor mayor; instead tribal chair and tribal council are the nearest equivalent). As a Pakistani, I would compare Dick Wilson’s reign of terror to that conducted by the Pakistan Army in Waziristan. As in Waziristan, many Pine Ridge residents were driven out of the area, while others lived in daily fear of the regime over an extended period of time. Many of Dick Wilson’s opponents wound up dead, and it was believed they were murdered by Wilson’s goon squad. Day-to-day life was totally disrupted in Pine Ridge (as was life in Waziristan by the Pakistan army incursions), hence AIM was called in to protect the local people.
It was only as a result of his presence on Pine Ridge that Peltier could be charged with the murder of two FBI agents--a crime which all the evidence, including undisputable ballistic evidence, shows he did not commit. And so Peltier, nearing 40 years of incarceration, continues to languish in an American prison.
This Eid Day, please pray for Peltier, and for all other victims of the American system of Injustice.
© 2016 By Nadrat Siddique
Friday, May 20, 2016
The Passing of a Community Mother—Muneera Afifa
By Nadrat Siddique
May
20, 2016
Burtonsville,
MD
Today
I attended the janaza of a very old
and dear friend, Muneera Afifa. Idara-e-Jaferia (mosque) very kindly hosted the
services. Immediately after juma’ah
prayers, the janaza (funeral) prayer
was held. The scene at Idara resembled a reunion of Jamaat al-Muslimeen
members, former members, and associates. I ran across Sr. Yasmine Abdul-Jalil; Sr.
Fatimah Abdullah and Sr. Hamdiyah, both from Philadelphia; Sr. Amatullah; Sr. Safiyyah
Abdullah; and Sr. Sumayah Nahidian and her daughter. Then there was Sr. Najah; Sr.
Zainab Kareem; and Zainab’s son Natheer Kareem. There were others who looked
familiar but whom I could not immediately place. Br. Mauri Saalakhan of the
Aafia Foundation had cancelled a speaking engagement in New Jersey to be there.
Br. Saifuddin Waliullah of Masjid Al-Islam and Br. Khalid Griggs from North
Carolina were there. Jamaat al-Muslimeen Ameer Dr. Kaukab Siddique, a long-time
friend of Muneera, was not physically present as he had a juma’ah khutbah to deliver at Masjid Jamaat
al-Muslimeen in Baltimore, but had sent condolences with his daughter (this
writer).
We
met, wept, and commiserated with each other, and then left in a miles long
funeral procession for the cemetery. The interment was held at the Maryland
National Memorial Park in Laurel, MD, where Idara-e-Jaferia holds a section
specifically for Muslim burials.
Muneera
was a leading member of the DC chapter of Jamaat al-Muslimeen c.1978 – 1985. I
remembered her being at every Jamaat meeting, along with her close friend Yasmine
Abdul-Jalil, whom she knew from the Islamic Party. Yasmine—along with her then
husband, Mustafa Abdul-Jalil—hosted many of the meetings in their Silver Spring
home. She had given Muneera shahada,
and the bond between them was tight.
Muneera
was lively, outspoken, and down-to-earth, attending Jamaat al-Muslimeen meetings
with her three small children, Sulaiman, Nafeesa, and Atiya, whom she did not
hesitate to breast-feed during the meetings. The organization’s platform
included racial and gender equality; permissibility of women’s leadership over
men (contingent on their respective taqwa-levels);
anti-imperialism; and internationalism. Muneera encompassed all of these
tenets. A Black Washington DC, native, she appeared regularly at Jamaat
al-Muslimeen protests at the Egyptian Embassy (against the regime of Hosni
Mubarak, known for his torture of political opponents); at marches through poverty-ridden
DC projects (carrying the revolutionary message of Islam to local communities);
at pickets of the Saudi Embassy (calling for an end to the monarchy there); and
at Jamaat al-Muslimeen local and national conferences, which relied heavily on
her organizing skills.
“Patience
and perseverance,” qualities of a Muslim mentioned throughout the Qur’an, were
regularly mentioned at DC Jamaat meetings. And Muneera exemplified these
traits, despite going through many trials and tribulations at various points in
her life.
To
me, she was a tower of strength, unflinching in faith. It was the era before
political correctness, and I was then attending Annandale High School, a mostly
White school in affluent Fairfax County (just outside Washington, DC). There
were no other evidently practicing Muslims at Annandale High at the time, and I
met major harassment for my adaption of the hijab.
At the time, hijab was not the norm
in my family—my mother wore it nominally; my sister, my aunt, and my
grandmother wore it not at all—and support for my decision to publicly identify
as a Muslim was nowhere to be found. As daily persecution against me at
Annandale High, including physical attacks by ignorant, corporate-media
informed youth, increased, I looked to Muneera. She gave me unconditional
support for the path I had chosen, and an affirmation far beyond that of a
mother. Somehow, she found the time and energy to be there for me, even while
being the young mother of three small children. And- as I heard repeatedly at
the janaza, I was not the only one for
whom she did this. As a fellow janaza
attendee told me, Muneera was the mother to an entire community.
As
I stood in the cemetery thinking of the pivotal role Muneera had played during
my teen years, and the selflessness with which she’d given of herself, tears
rolled down my cheeks. The Iranian clergyman conducting the graveside ceremony
went on at considerable length in Arabic—which most of the attendees clearly
could not understand. He offered durood
as-salaam to the Prophet Muhammad’s (SAW) family, including the twelve
imams. Oddly, he could not remember or pronounce the name of Muneera’s father (Glover
Collins), in his opening statement.
By
this time, Muneera’s daughter Nafeesa and son Sulaiman were completely inside
the (open) grave with their mother’s body. They adjusted and re-adjusted their
mother’s body, until Muneera lay on her right, with head towards the ka’aba. (In an Islamic burial, the body
is buried directly in the ground enshrouded in a white sheet, and no coffin is
needed, other than perhaps for transport. Family members are encouraged to
perform last rites themselves, rather than relying on an undertaker.)
Upon
completing the task, Nafeesa emerged from the grave with shovel in hand, and
asked the women to move forward, as they were to approach the grave first, to
offer prayers, or to symbolically throw dirt on the body. A pile of dirt had
been placed on a nearby cart by cemetery workers. After heaping several shovel-fulls
of dirt over her mother’s body, she offered the shovel to the women watching.
Several of the women, including the stylishly-dressed Fatimah Abdullah from
Philadelphia, were grabbing up handfuls of dirt from the pile, and placing them
in the grave. However, none stepped forward immediately to take the shovel from
Nafeesa, perhaps because it was rather large and unwieldy. I stepped forward,
and took it, placing several shovel-fulls of dirt over my beloved friend’s body,
memories of the years in Jamaat al-Muslimeen with Muneera flooding my
consciousness. I would have continued in my reverie, but Nafeesa reclaimed the
shovel from me, and offered it to the other women, before turning it over to
the men. The men then completed the job of covering the body with dirt.
Nafeesa
was the heroine of the day. The burial ritual over, she stood before the crowd,
speaking with grace, clarity, and without breaking down. She thanked the
attendees for the outpouring of love shown her mother, and for their support of
her and her family. I remembered Nafeesa as a small child, dressed by her
mother in dark-colored hijab similar to the one she wore now. She had flowered
into a poised, self-confident, and beautiful young woman. I knew that her mother
would be proud of the manner in which she presided over this, most difficult of
ceremonies.
Imam
Khalid Griggs, of the Community Mosque of Winston-Salem, poignantly detailed his
life-long friendship with Muneera. He mentioned how she would energize any
Islamic project with which she was involved, and how it was hard for her to
refrain from becoming involved any time she heard of positive Islamic work
being done.
The
last time I saw Muneera was at a gathering for Palestine (Quds Day) in
Washington, DC. It was Ramadan and well into the fast, and everyone was feeling
its effects. Traversing the crowd to get to me, Muneera greeted me with her
characteristic loving embrace. From the time frame described by family members,
she may have already seen the onset of the disease which ultimately took her
life. But there she was, undaunted, by heat, fatigue, and hunger, a Black woman
standing up for Palestine. May Allah forgive her sins and grant her Paradise.
©
2016 Nadrat Siddique
Saturday, March 26, 2016
Letter to Dawn (Pakistani Daily Newspaper) on Dr. Aafia Siddiqui
March 26, 2016
The Editor
The Editor
Dawn
Karachi, Pakistan
Dear Editor,
I am a Pakistani Muslim woman marathoner, living in the Washington, DC area. Since 2009, I have run 26 marathons in ten different states of the U.S. (A marathon, by definition, is 26.2 miles.) In at least five of these 26 competitions, I have qualified for the Boston Marathon. (The Boston marathon is an elite and exclusive race, for which one must first meet the rigorous qualifying standards set by the Boston Athletic Association in another marathon.)
On March 12, I ran the Washington DC Marathon to call attention to the plight of another Pakistani woman: Dr. Aafia Siddiqui.
Dr. Siddiqui holds a bioscience degree from the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a PhD in neuroscience from Brandeis University. Although I have never met her, I can say with some certainty that she is highly intelligent, articulate, deeply Islamic, and cares about Muslim suffering in faraway lands. As such, she is a hero to me, as to many other Pakistani woman (and men).
March 31 will mark 13 years since Aafia was kidnapped from Karachi with evident collusion between the Musharraf regime and U.S. intelligence services operating on Pakistani soil. Her three minor children were captured along with her. Despite clear prohibitions on the imprisonment of children in the U.N. Declaration of Human Rights—to which Pakistan is a signatory—two of Aafia’s children were imprisoned along with her. The third, an infant, appears to have been killed in the course of the rendition.
Running 26.2 miles without stopping is not easy. It can hurt. It can make one feel hopeless, very minute in the overall scheme of things. Many people never complete the race. Exhausted, they commence walking part way through.
There can be other complications like the one I had the night before the marathon. Due to some complication, the custom-made black and white “Free Dr. Aafia Siddiqui” tee shirt I had ordered to wear during the race did not arrive. So I took it upon myself to make one. The excitement of the race and painting the homemade “Free Dr Aafia” shirt kept me up the night before, and I slept only four hours. Around 20,000 people would be running the race, so parking near the starting line was out of the question. I got up before fajr, grabbed my gear, and boarded the Washington DC subway to the race start near the Washington Monument.
The race started at 7:30 AM sharp. As I ran up a steep hill near DC’s famed Dupont Circle, the lack of sleep caught up with me and my muscles ached. I wondered how I would complete the race. For some reason, as I ran along DC’s picturesque Southwest Waterfront, the picture of Aafia’s angelic face in hijab came clearly to my mind. I thought about the horrors she had endured. Aafia, mother of three, who loved children so much that her PhD thesis centered upon them—watching helplessly as her baby Suleman slipped from her arms and fell to the ground, his skull fractured, as Pakistani police roughly arrested the young mother. Innocent, sweet Aafia, with the face of a flower, repeatedly raped and tortured in a remote U.S. military base in Baghram, Afghanistan. What kind of sick bastards could do that to a Muslim woman? My physical pain melted away, to be replaced by psychic pain, and I ran faster, finishing the marathon in 3 hours, 57 minutes.
After five years of being held without charge, and denied even official recognition that she was a prisoner (her name did not appear in any prison, police, or military registry during this time), Aafia was officially handed over to U.S. authorities, and tried in a New York court. The trial was presided over by Judge Richard M. Berman, a Zionist who was clearly biased against Muslims. Not surprisingly, she was convicted and sentenced to 86 years in U.S. prison.
What is surprising—and indeed was the reason I felt compelled to run the Washington DC marathon in Aafia’s name—is that she remains in prison. She is in extremely poor health, has been denied proper medical attention, and can die in U.S. prison—without ever having seen her children and other family members.
The ordinarily vociferous feminist groups, quick to deplore the violations of women’s rights by “those horrible Talibans” have been completely silent on her case. In fact, it is noteworthy that feminists on both sides of the Atlantic, including those who embraced Malalai Yousafzai, have said not a word about Aafia and the very long range torture she endured. Similarly, the liberal U.S. media, such as the Daily Beast, Salon.com, and others, who are ordinarily extremely vigilant about the violations of Pakistani—and in general—Muslim women’s rights because they love us so much [sarcasm intended], have uttered not one word about Aafia.
The Pakistani government has taken no effective steps toward her release. “Israel,” when its citizens are captured, sends commandos to free them. The U.S. government, under President Jimmy Carter, sent a military mission to free American hostages then held by Iran. Other nations have interceded either militarily or diplomatically (eg, via prisoner exchange) when one of its citizens is wrongly held by a foreign government. General Musharraf, under whose reign Aafia was captured, is long gone, and largely discredited at least among some sectors. But- Pakistan, a nation headed by Muslim men—with Qur’an and hadith as their Guiding Light—continue to sit idly by while a Muslim woman is held captive, tortured, and raped for over a decade.
The Pakistani press, too, appear to have written her off.
Aafia is a political prisoner, being held not for any wrong doing, but for the crime of being a Muslim and in the wrong place at the wrong time. What is wrong with us, that we can’t stand up even in this most clear cut case of injustice?
As a Pakistani Muslim woman athlete, I urge the immediate release of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, and a cessation of illegal and unmandated (by the Pakistani populace) U.S. intelligence activities on Pakistani soil which lead to tragedies such Aafia’s.
Sincerely,
Nadrat Siddique
Maryland
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Juma'ah Reflections on Masaud Khan
I visited the Islamic Center of Maryland (Gaithersburg) for juma'ah prayers today. Political prisoner Masaud Khan and his mother, Elizabeth Khan attended here. She still visits time and again. I thought of them, as I stood distributing the New Trend (anti-imperialist Muslim newsmagazine), about how he, incarcerated as a young man, and now in his thirties, lost his youth to an incredibly unjust System. And- I thought about her, a mother, fighting desperately to get her son out of the clutches of that System.
In the last four weeks, I've visited four different masajid in the Baltimore-Washington area) for juma'ah. Three of the four masajid had political prisoner associations to them. That is, either a Muslim locked up on political (bogus) charges attends/ attended there, or the family of a political prisoner attends/ attended there. I realized what a tragic commentary this was on the state of affairs and suffering of the Muslim community: Many, many communities have been devastated by the targeting of political dissidents, or at least operate in fear. They dare not exercise basic First Amendment protected freedoms, not even in the House of Allah. Muslim-on-Muslim snitching is pumped as a solution to the "extremist problem," all speakers/ imams, other than government-approved ones, are excluded from most masajid; even imams on the government's "approved" list must sign agreements not to speak on certain topics, or to approach topics in ways objectionable to the authorities. While local and national government officials and candidates are welcomed into the mosque, dissident Muslim speakers are excluded. Literature from Democratic and Republican candidates for office is welcomed, while Islamic literature is frequently banned (or rules greatly impugning its distribution are enacted).In the course of the FBI's "War on Terror," completely innocent men and women from communities across the U.S. have been locked up on the words of informants, or harassed and hounded by federal agents, often to justify intelligence budgets. All of this is meant to keep the public in fear of approaching "Muslim Hoard," which have replaced the "Reds Under the Beds," or to justify support for Israel and various dictators ruling Muslim lands.
Under such a climate, we have the choice of becoming apolitical, mindless drones, who question nothing, and swallow any nonsense directed at our people. Or we can speak, write, and go forth for that which we know to be just- at the peril of becoming political prisoners ourselves.
We then cannot afford to be silent. I encourage everyone to help the families of those unjustly detained; to write to Muslim political prisoners (as well as other political prisoners) so that they know they are not forgotten; to join a committee to free a political prisoner; and to educate others on the reality of political imprisonment in this country.
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