You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Culture Wars
This isn't prejudice
2007-02-11
By Zuhdi Jasser

American Muslim organizations again have come out in full force to object to something unobjectionable. This time they're angry about 24, the popular TV drama on Fox. When a recent episode ended with a terrorist network detonating a nuclear device in a Los Angeles suburb, the Council on American Islamic Relations announced its fear that "this would serve to increase anti-Muslim prejudice in American society." This season's premiere follows an 11-week run of suicide bombings, apparently by radical Islamist terror cells, in cities across the country.

It's time for Muslims to stop blaming the messenger and stoking the flames of victimization. Instead of blaming Hollywood for depicting what many New Yorkers, Spaniards and Londoners have already horrifically experienced first hand, we should thank 24's producers for giving us an opportunity to experience within the protection of fiction the grim realities of what we need to wake up to.

What actually harms our current predicament as American Muslims more – television like the fictional 24 or recent factual events across the globe? Arrests in the past few years of known Muslim radicals in Seattle, Lodi, Toronto, Lackawanna, Miami and London seem to spur less activity from leading Muslim organizations than a fictional drama like 24.

As an American and as a Muslim, I find 24 to be a profoundly engaging program. Its plotline ignites the most genuine sense of American Muslim fury within me against the radicals who attack our citizens and malign our faith with their political barbarism.

24's portrayal of Muslims is actually quite fair. In the show, the president's sister works for a leading Muslim civil rights organization in D.C.; she is portrayed as a protector of constitutional freedoms. The head of this Muslim organization, who is in detention, actually risks his life in order to report to authorities on other Muslim prisoners and terrorism-related conversations that have alarmed him.

The show also shows the darker, extremist side of political Islam, or Islamism. For example, an Arab Muslim youth, a previously beloved neighbor in suburban LA, turns out to be a terrorist thug who provides a key part of the nuclear device.

Many heroic Muslims have certainly privately aided our security in finding and dismantling such networks behind the scenes. But, as a faith community we have done virtually nothing publicly to fight the core political religious ideology that breeds terror.

For American Muslims, 24 offers an opportunity to address a key question: To the extent Muslims have a bad image on TV and in American culture, what can we do to change that? We need to provide a new and very public American Muslim reality that can then be written into future Hollywood scripts.

The public face of American Muslim activity against terror – and against the ideology that feeds it – has so far been inadequate. Other than press-release condemnations, there has been virtually no palpable concerted public effort from the greater Muslim community in this regard. If that public American Muslim movement against Islamism and its radical offshoots existed, 24's writers would have included it in the story line.

So if this drama hits too close to home, perhaps offended Muslims should use that fear as a visceral stimulus for change. It's time for hundreds of thousands of Muslims to be not only private but public in their outrage – and to commit themselves to specific open engagement of the militants and their Islamism.

We, as American Muslims, should be training and encouraging our Muslim youths to become the future Jack Bauers of America. What better way to dispel stereotypes than to create hundreds of new, real images of Muslims who are publicly leading this war on the battlefield and in the domestic and foreign media against the militant Islamists.

We need to create organizations – high-profile, well-funded national organizations and think tanks – that are not afraid to identify al-Qaeda, Hamas, Hezbollah or the Muslim Brotherhood by name and by their mission, as the enemies of America.

Political Islam cannot be defeated by non-Muslims. It can only be defeated from the position of a spiritual love for our own faith, which needs to be liberated from theocracy.

To regain our credibility, this movement will need to specifically launch the following:

• Public Muslim analysis and criticism of Islamist sermons and their exclusivist ideologies.

• Public debate over the rightful place of sharia (literal religious laws) at home, not in government.

• Public effective encouragement of our youth to enlist in the military, homeland security and other frontline security agencies.

• Public deconstruction of the so-called Islamic goal of a caliphate and the political nature of the ummah (the Muslim community), which threatens national sovereignty.

• Public and specific identification of the enemies of America and the enemies of a pluralistic Islam.

That is just a start. We should also remember to never give any one Muslim organization or any single Muslim too much credit on behalf of the entire faith community.

The reality remains that if Muslims, our organizations and various Muslim leaders publicly created just such a national and generational plan to fight Islamism – rather than searching for reasons to claim victimization – the issues and complaints surrounding such TV shows as 24 would disappear.

M. Zuhdi Jasser is the chairman of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy. He is a former U.S. Navy lieutenant commander.
Posted by:ryuge

#15  TW,

I use that name because it is, well, my name. No problem.
Posted by: Eric Jablow   2007-02-11 22:11  

#14  With pleasure, Eric, now that you've said. :-)
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-02-11 20:24  

#13  I stand corrected, TW.

I think we can use first names here, by the way.
Posted by: Eric Jablow   2007-02-11 20:11  

#12  Doesn't quite count, Eric Jablow. I'm pretty sure Mr. Hitchens is an atheist.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-02-11 19:15  

#11  Gromgoru,

Christopher Hitchens did!
Posted by: Eric Jablow   2007-02-11 19:13  

#10  Ya know... every time I fly and have to go through all those irritating security stuff...

Its really time that we either don't permit muslims to fly or make them fly and special planes at special remote sections of airports.

Every citizen should send CAIR a bill for the time and embarrassment at airports they have experience. Something they would not have had to endure if Islam did not exist.

Posted by: 3dc   2007-02-11 14:54  

#9  I'm waiting for:

"He's not a Muslim!"
"He's stoking flames of hatred agains Muslims!"

etc. . .
Posted by: PlanetDan   2007-02-11 14:11  

#8  Jihad is as much part of Islam as compassion is of Christianity, SteveS.
Posted by: gromgoru   2007-02-11 14:09  

#7  What about more Catholics coming forward and denouncing Mother Teresa?

Mother Teresa is beheading infidels and blowing up pizza parlors now? What is this world comming to?!
Posted by: SteveS   2007-02-11 13:58  

#6  What about more Muslims coming forward and denouncing the jihadists?

What about more Catholics coming forward and denouncing Mother Teresa?
Posted by: gromgoru   2007-02-11 13:08  

#5  Jasser is a fairly lonely voice out there. What about more Muslims coming forward and denouncing the jihadists?
Posted by: JohnQC   2007-02-11 10:12  

#4  Every time CAIR opens its yap, it should have something like the following statement read to it:

"For an organization like CAIR to have any credibility, it must strongly condemn, and not just by equivocated and mumbled partial agreement, but in its own words, and loudly, those who it claims to represent who are repulsive, primitive, misogynistic, cruel, tyrannical and uncivilized. both as individuals and as groups.

"In fact, it must be at the very forefront of the condemnation of the vile and barbaric practices of the minority of people they claim to represent before it can, with any credibility, speak out against real or imagined slights against the majority of those it claims to represent, most of whom are indeed respectable, and behave appropriately around others.

"If CAIR fails to distinguish in its own people between the honorable and the dishonorable, between the criminal and the civil, between the righteous and the riotous, between the civil and the vandal, between the ignorant and the learned, and between the warlike and the peaceful; then by what right do they demand that all of these people be treated with fairness and honesty by others?

"If CAIR cannot distinguish between good and evil, and defends the unjust and the just alike as equals, then CAIR creates the very bigotry that they rail against. If you lie down with pigs, then you rise up covered in pig filth."
Posted by: Anonymoose   2007-02-11 09:42  

#3  Link fixed.
Posted by: Dave D.   2007-02-11 09:33  

#2   M. Zuhdi Jasser is the chairman of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy. He is a former U.S. Navy lieutenant commander.

Whew! And in the Dallas News, no less. Good for the retired Lt. Commander. He's saying things that need to be said.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-02-11 08:42  

#1  Here is the proper link.
Posted by: ryuge   2007-02-11 08:22  

00:00