"The Best Speech is
the Speech of Allah,
And the Best Guidance is the Guidance of Muhammad"
by Jameel William Aalim-Johnson*
http://www.pbs.org/muhammad/essays/johnson.html
I was in junior high school in 1977. My family and I were
watching the first episode of what would become the most watched television
miniseries in American history, "Roots." I remember the words of the Levar
Burton character Kunta Kinte in the belly of the slave ship on his way to
captivity in America: "Allah the Beneficent, Allah the Merciful." As a
thirteen-year-old I had no idea how much those words would eventually guide the
rest of my life and become the focus of my greatest hopes and fears.
Raised in a church-going Christian household, I was always a believer in God and
organized religion. Even after watching "Roots," I still believed that the
religion of God was Christianity and I fully expected that one day I would be
baptized and join the Church. However, television had opened my mind to the
realization that other people believed as strongly in their religion as my
family believed in its own. I also had to consider the circumstances that
resulted in my Afro-American family residing in America in the first place: the
transcontinental slave trade of Africans. On my mother's side of the family we
can trace my great grandparents to their time as Virginia slaves. As we are well
aware, Africans brought here to become chattel slaves were not allowed to speak
their native tongue, maintain their family names, engage in their native
customs, or practice their native religions. They were forcibly converted to
Christianity, although the converted did not achieve an improved status of
spiritual brotherhood with his converter. This historical situation raised an
unanswerable question I would ponder often in years to come: If Kunta Kinte's
tribe was Muslim, was mine also? Had the slave trade never happened, would we be
practicing Muslims in Africa? Still believing in Christianity, I asked Allah (by
college I began using that term for God) to guide me to the truth whatever it
may be.
After graduating from college, I became more serious about religion. My days as
a full time student were over and I would now have to support myself. It was
time to begin taking more responsibility for my moral behavior, too. I remember
the evening after I graduated from college. I had just left my family at their
hotel and my best friend for four years, Kevin Edwards, and I were alone in my
apartment. My other graduating roommate Roger had already left the campus with
his family, leaving me a goodbye note. Kevin, who was going to be finishing up
in another semester, said to me, "Now you have to go get a job. Then you'll get
married, have some kids. Hey man, you'll be dead soon." As morbid a joke as that
may have been, I had to accept the reality of the swift passage of time. Whether
I was given a long life or a short one, I would one day have to face judgment.
That summer, perhaps because I missed being in school, I went on a reading
frenzy. Two works I read that summer were The New Testament and The
Autobiography of Malcolm X. Malcolm's autobiography was completely
captivating. I found myself reading it when I woke up in the morning, on the
train going back and forth to the city, when I came home in the evening, and
before going to bed at night. I, like many others, was intrigued by Malcolm's
transformations from street criminal to Black Muslim minister to orthodox Muslim
and international figure.
I also spent a lot of time reading the New Testament of the Bible. I had taken
Old Testament classes in high school and college and had become very familiar
with The Torah. I now wanted to get a better understanding of this "new
covenant" that God had made with people.
During that same period my two closest neighborhood friends were also studying
Religion, including Islam. At that time a "Muslim" (I use the term loosely)
organization known as the Ansar Allah community was well known in New York.
Their leader had a weekly radio program that focused on comparative religion,
and particularly on Islam and Christianity. As someone raised in the Christian
faith this was of great interest to me, since my primary understanding of
religion was based on the Bible. By this time I had been working the past
several months for Rev. Congressman Floyd H. Flake, pastor of the Allen A.M.E.
Church in St. Albans, Queens. I had met Rev. Flake by working on his initial
campaign for Congress in 1986. Shortly after winning the November election, the
Chairman of the democratic club I belonged to, Gregory Meeks, set up an
interview for me with Flake's chief of staff, and they offered me a position.
What is significant about these circumstances is that working for a pastor
during this time that I was seeking more spiritual guidance began pushing me
closer and closer toward the Christian church and becoming baptized. However, my
continued studies into comparative religion kept holding me back. I am sure that
many in the Christian faith will say that the devil was standing in my way,
especially when you consider that the leader of the Ansar Allah community was
exposed, by orthodox Muslims, as a fraud. Nevertheless, my religious studies and
conclusions were not based on some charismatic personality the way many others
are swayed. Nor were they based on a need to understand my "divine nature as a
black man" like the Nation of Islam or the Five Percent Nation might say. They
were based on an intelligent inspection of the Judeo-Christian doctrine and
Allah knows best, a sincere call to the one God to guide me to the straight
path.
The more I began to study the Christian doctrine, the more I began to see a
divergence between it and the Bible. On the other hand, the more I began to
study the way of the prophets, from Adam to Jesus (peace be upon them all), I
found it coincided with the doctrine and the way of life espoused by Islam. In
the Bible, the first commandment is, "Thou shalt have no other gods before me."
When his disciples asked Jesus "what is the most important commandment?" he
responded, "The Lord thy God is one God. You shall worship Him and Him alone."
Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) likewise taught, "There is no god but Allah." Both
the Old and New Testaments acknowledge the necessity of following the laws of
God. Both also referred to the coming of another prophet who would be from
amongst the Ishmaelites, who would be unlettered (illiterate) and who would come
after Jesus. All signs these seemed to me to point to the Prophethood of
Muhammad.
This was by no means a joyful epiphany for me. It would mean turning away from
the religion I had grown up with, a religion that was the cornerstone of my
family's faith, and that, I knew, would be painful.
More and more, my conversations turned toward religion, particularly among my
friends and colleagues. I was not, however, ready to discuss my Islamic leanings
with family members. All that changed on February 15, 1988 with what has so far
been the saddest day of my life: the day my father died.
Six days before, as I was leaving home to go to work, the telephone rang. It was
a friend of my father's informing us that my father had been admitted to the
hospital in Astoria, Queens with chest pains and that he was in intensive care.
When I went to see him with my mother, it appeared that he was going to be in
the hospital for at least a few weeks. Over that week, his condition improved
dramatically, and the doctor said that he could come home the following Monday.
Just as we were waking that Monday morning, the telephone rang again. I could
hear my mother crying as she called out to me that my father had just died. The
doctor said that my father had had a massive heart attack that morning. As I
stood in the kitchen holding and comforting my mother while trying to mentally
accept this new reality of ours, I kept thinking about Allah, the way that I
knew him, and the way I was getting to know him. I kept thinking to myself,
This is a test, a test that others go through, and now it's your turn. As I
would learn later the Qur'an addresses this very circumstance: "Do you imagine
that you shall be left alone saying that you believe, and you shall not be
tested as I have tested those before you?"
With all the arrangements to be made and with a large number of extended family
members around, I experienced some difficulty accepting my father's death. Then,
a friend suggested that I go to the funeral home where my father's body was
being prepared and spend some time alone with him. I chose to do so and went by
in the evening. I said goodbye to my father William, from whom I derived my
middle name and nickname, and I promised him, (or promised me, or promised
Allah, I am not sure who, perhaps all), that I would stop wasting time, I would
soon accept Islam as my way of life, and I would pray for my father's soul.
Over the next three month's I began to take what I thought of as additional
steps toward accepting Al-Islam. Some of these 'steps' were more superficial
than others, such as wearing a kufi (prayer cap) from time to time along
with certain buttons that were symbolic of various Muslim and cultural groups.
I
began to identify more with Muslims that I saw in the street, in stores, or on
the subway, including those from questionable, unorthodox organizations. Even
before taking shahada, the public declaration of one's belief in Allah
and Muhammad as his prophet, I fasted for the first time during the month of
Ramadan. That first year of fasting had to be one of the most difficult
disciplines I had ever undertaken. It wouldn't realize until later years that
refraining from eating and drinking was actually the easy part. My two closest
friends, then known as Curtis and David, were also making this transformation
with me. David we saw only rarely that year as he was then busy repaying a debt
that had come due from his pre-Islamic business activities- if you get my
meaning.
Shortly after Ramadan ended, Curtis came by the house and told me that he had
visited a masjid (mosque) called Masjid At-Taqwa in Bedford Stuyvesant,
Brooklyn with a Muslim that he worked with. While he was there he chose to take
shahada. I told him that at some point I would like to go visit with him
to see what the mosque was like.
One Saturday, we went by Masjid At-Taqwa for Curtis (now Saifudiyn) to take care
of some business with the assistant imam. Because the assistant imam
was not there when we arrived, we spent some time at a restaurant next door
eating and chatting with some brothers from the mosque. I always remember them
making jokes whose punch lines had Islamic references. Saifudiyn and I both
laughed, not because we understood the joke, but because of our mutual
confusion. An African American brother named Abdul Kariem seemed to give
particular attention to us. Just as we were about to leave someone started to
call the adhan, the call to prayer, at the mosque. Abdul Kariem informed
us that this late noon prayer was very important and that we should stay and
perform it with them. After demonstrating how to wash before prayer, he turned
to me and said that it seemed like I was ready to take shahada. I agreed
that I was. After the prayer Imam Siraj Wahaj conducted my shahada. Just
afterwards, a brother in the mosque asked me what my name was and when I said
James, he began to call me Jameel. Leaving the house that day I'd had no
intention of taking shahada yet; I only intended to visit a mosque for
the first time in my life. By the time I left that mosque, however, I had
entered the fold of Islam and all my previous sins had been washed away. As the
Prophet Muhammad taught us from the Qur'an, "Men plan, but Allah is the best of
planners."
Now came the time to learn life anew. The only problem turned out to be that I
was accustomed to my old life. As a new Muslim you tend to believe that every
other Muslim is completely comfortable and well educated in the faith. It takes
a while to realize that everyone has internal struggles just like you. I always
felt fortunate that I had studied and accepted Islam with my two closest
friends. At the same time it also created a feeling of unease because it made me
question whether I had taken shahada for myself or as part of the group.
Then I considered the fact that I had often done things differently from my
friends, such as playing sports in high school, and going away to college. As
much as I enjoyed their company, I always did what I felt was best for me. I
realized that my acceptance of Islam was not an exercise in Group-Think. It was
my own decision, based on my belief. The grouping of the three of us was a
blessing from Allah, for as I was told at Masjid At-Taqwa that day, the Prophet
taught people to do things in threes. We were a comfort and a source of courage
for each other.
As I look back on those early days just before and just after taking shahada,
and when I consider my most significant shortcomings at that time, I am reminded
again of my arrogant attitude toward non-Muslims. As I began to change and see
the world through different eyes, focusing more on the spiritual and less on the
material, I had difficulty understanding why others didn't see what I saw. I
became more argumentative about religion, and too often my remarks to my
non-Muslim peers grew unnecessarily harsh. This was an arrogance brought out of
prideful ignorance, not Islamic enlightenment. For as the Prophet Muhammad said,
"All of you were on the brink of the fire until I pulled you back." I always
think of those days when I read in the Qur'an Allah's statement to His Messenger
Muhammad: "Had you been harsh on the people, they would not have listened to
you." Arrogance is a satanic trait. May Allah forgive me and save me from that.
Later that year I began a new position with a not-for-profit local development
corporation. I worked there as the administrator of a New York State program
that the corporation had contracted to manage. It was at this point that I first
found myself needing to establish my way of life as a Muslim in relation to my
work. Although I had taken shahada while I was working in the office of
Congressman Flake, (which incidentally was the place I would meet Cheryl Hart,
the woman who would one day become my wife) I was just learning to make my
prayers, and had not yet begun attending Jummah services, the Friday
congregational prayer. I hadn't begun attending Jummah while working for
Congressman Flake because I was not aware of any mosques nearby. Now that I had
taken this new position and had recently met some Muslim brothers in Harlem who
directed me to a mosque near my work, I was compelled to expand the breadth of
my religious practice. I felt that the best way to do that was to set the tone
from the very first day.
While my new supervisor was orienting me to the way the office ran, I informed
him, in a friendly way, that I was Muslim and would need to take time on Friday,
mostly during my lunch break, to attend service. I would also need to find a
private place to pray once or twice a day since I didn't have a closed office.
He told me that neither request posed a problem. On Friday, I would just need to
sign out saying where I was going and when I expected to be back, just like a
lunch break or any other appointment. He was also sure that I could borrow
someone's office from time to time when the need arose. During the five years
that I worked for that organization, I never had a problem attending Jummah,
finding accommodations for prayer, wearing a kufi, or taking the day off
for Muslim holidays. Even my colleagues from city and state government
understood that they shouldn't schedule meetings that required my attendance on
Friday afternoons. As a matter of fact, I found that many people will take the
opportunity to engage someone they are comfortable with in discussions on Islam
and ask questions on issues they are curious about. This is all very different
from the much more uncomfortable circumstances faced by the Prophet Muhammad
(peace be upon him) and his companions who were persecuted and even killed for
espousing their belief in the One God.
Around the time that I first started this new job, I had acquired the Malcolm X,
"By Any Means Necessary" poster. This is a well-known image of Malcolm holding a
rifle and peering cautiously out of the window. Without much thought, I put this
poster up in my office my first week on the job. In my view, this was a popular
poster of a famous African American champion of human rights. I found out a few
years later from one of my colleagues that some of the staff, particularly those
with the least exposure to African American culture, had no idea how to approach
this young Black Muslim with the radical poster. She joked with me that once
they got to know me they realized that I was just a softie. I facetiously
replied that I was sorry to have let the mystique wear off.
In my next position at a similar type of local development corporation, this
time in my own neighborhood of Far Rockaway, I held the positions of deputy
executive director and then executive director, which allowed me to provide
opportunities to other Muslims seeking employment. One Friday afternoon as I was
headed to Jummah, at a mosque that I had helped establish in Far Rockaway, I
asked a Muslim brother who was working in our employment division if he was
ready to go with me. He said, "You mean, it's okay for us to go to Jummah?" I
replied, "Well, first of all, I am the boss. So, of course it's okay. Secondly,
you get a lunch hour, so it wouldn't be a problem anyway. Lastly, if you ever go
to work at a job, and I have already worked there, rest assured that the whole
matter will already have been taken care of."
As the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) has taught us, those who go before are not like
those who come after, meaning that those who strike out ahead to establish the
good are superior to those who come after them and benefit from what has already
been established. This is but one of the reasons the early companions of the
Prophet are superior to all the following generations of Muslims. As Allah's
words translated from the Qur'an say, "Not equal among you are those who spent
and fought before the Victory (with those who did so later). Those are higher in
rank than those who spent and fought afterward." (Qur'an 57:10) My struggles in
this day and place pale by comparison when set beside the struggles of the
Prophet and his companions during the early years of Islam. This is true even in
the job that followed my work in Far Rockaway- the most interesting and
challenging professional position I have ever held, as Chief of Staff to a U.S.
Congressman.
Taking up this work would mean a moving from New York to Washington D.C. As I
would be starting a new life in a new state, I decided it would be a good time
to legally change my name to coincide with what the Muslim community had been
calling me all these years: Jameel William Aalim-Johnson. By this time, Cheryl
and I had already given our three children, Kaif, Khalieq, and Naadira, the
surname Aalim-Johnson when they were born. Since I would be dealing with a whole
new population of people, this would be a good opportunity for them to know me
by one name only, rather than continuing the confusion of going by two different
names, depending upon whether I was being addressed by a Muslim or a non-Muslim.
I had been christened with the name James William Johnson. I decided to keep
William because that was my father's first name. I made certain that I
maintained Johnson as my last name because, contrary to what had become popular
in the African American community, which is to lose your so-called "slave name,"
it was the tradition of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) that you retain your family
name for the purposes of heritage and ancestry. In Islam, even when women get
married, they maintain their father's family name as opposed to taking on their
husband's surname. Many American women consider this a modern trend of
independence, not realizing that Muslims began practicing it fourteen centuries
ago.
During my first few weeks in the Capitol I thought I was the only Muslim on the
Hill. Neither hijab nor kufi was something you typically see in
the halls of Congress. After working there for about a month, the Congressman I
worked for accepted an invitation to a dinner being sponsored on the Hill by an
organization known as the American Muslim Council (AMC). As the resident Muslim,
I of course accompanied him to the function. Meeting the staff of AMC would
subsequently open many doors for me to the larger, more international Muslim
community both on and off the Hill. In a subsequent visit with AMC, the officers
there provided me with a list of other Muslim staffers on the Hill and in the
White House. I had the opportunity to meet many of these people when the Islamic
Supreme Council based in California came to town for their convention and asked
me to participate. Through them I learned that Muslim staffers had begun holding
Jummah services in one of the legislative office buildings. Up until then, I had
been attending Jummah at the Islamic Center on Massachusetts Avenue, which
proved somewhat inconvenient in the Friday lunch-hour traffic of Washington, DC.
I was pleased to know that there were other Muslims working on Capitol Hill,
brothers and sisters, who were practicing their faith and striving to improve
conditions for Muslims. During that summer, we began to realize that it was not
just a convenience for the staff but a statement as well of the inroads Muslims
were making into the halls of political power. Through the Jummah prayers, where
from time to time I would give the kutba (sermon), I began to meet other
Muslims who worked in the area, either for the Executive branch or for Muslim
advocacy or political organizations that up until now I hadn't known existed. I
immediately acquired a novelty status as the first and only Muslim chief of
staff in Congress.
My experiences on the Hill have been a great test of my faith. It has been
tested by the new domestic relationships I have developed with Muslims of other
cultures, the international trips I have taken to Muslim countries, and of
course, the in-depth reality of beltway politics.
The Qur'an says: "O mankind! We created you from a single pair of a male and a
female, and made you into nations and tribes that you might get to know one
another. Surely the noblest of you in the sight of Allah is he who is the most
righteous. Allah is All-Knowing, All-Aware." (Qur'an 49:13) Although many
mosques in New York have inter-racial and inter-cultural communities, I had not
experienced much interaction with Muslims who were not indigenous Americans or
from the Caribbean. Now, working in DC, I began to meet and work more regularly
with Muslim professionals from the Asian subcontinent and the Middle East -
fellow staffers, executive branch employees, civil rights advocates, and local
businesspersons. And I came to know them not only as colleagues but my beloved
brothers and sisters in faith. However, I often found their approach to the
sunnah (example, traditions) of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) a bit
unsettling.
My education in the practice of Islam, especially when it comes to acts of
worship and social interaction is somewhat, but not extremely, conservative. I
endeavor to take my understanding of the practice of Islam from the community
that was most successful at it, the companions of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh).
As the Messenger of Allah taught us, the best generations to follow were his
generation, the one after that and the one after that (three generations in
all). The command for a woman to cover her hair, the preference for men to grow
a beard of some sort, the avoidance of physical contact between non-related men
and women, and even the rights, though not necessity, of polygamy are
traditional practices in Islam I thought everyone accepted as fact, even if they
choose not to implement them in their own lives. Many of my colleagues, male and
female, felt that these practices were optional, or in the case of polygamy, no
longer legal. I had long since lost the naiveté of my early days as a Muslim in
believing that Muslims were monolithic in their beliefs and practices. But now I
began to realize how different we could be in interpreting various aspects of
the sunnah that once seemed basic to me.
I also found what seemed to be a difference in objectives when it came to our
efforts to improve the condition of the Muslim community. Many of the immigrant
Muslims or those who came from immigrant families seemed to be more concerned
with assimilation into the American society. In terms of my own life experience,
goals seemed similar to the goals of the Civil Rights movement that African
American were seeking during the 1960s. My goals and those of many African
American Muslims that I have associated seemed to place more emphasis on
establishing Muslim communities, complete with the many institutions and
facilities necessary to live our chosen way of life. Perhaps our varied
objectives are due to our status as indigenous or immigrant Muslims. As new or
first generation Americans, immigrant Muslims are trying to be accepted as
Americans, much as immigrants in the past have done. As an indigenous American
whose family has been in America for perhaps centuries, with the perspective of
an African American who has watched his people's constant struggle for equality
with the majority, I am less concerned about garnering "their acceptance." I
want to live my life the way I see fit, in a manner that is pleasing to my Lord.
I want an environment where I can practice Islam and spread it to all others who
will accept it.
One example of my attempt to spread the knowledge of Islam on Capitol Hill was
during the beginning of Ramadan, the Holy month of fasting, in December of 1998.
This was one of those rare years when Ramadan happened to coincide with Hanukah
and Christmas. With a House-wide email system at my disposal, I decided that
this would be a good way to gently introduce my fellow staffers to the five
pillars of Islam. I wrote a brief email memo informing other staffers of the
fact that all three Abrahamic religions would be observing their major holidays
at the same time and that some of their colleagues would be fasting as the
fourth of the five pillars of Islam. I went on to explain the other four
pillars. My premise was that this would be a good time to strengthen our
understanding of each other. I proceeded to send this email message out to
several hundred staffers. Some of the responses I received were positive and
encouraging, expressing how they appreciated the attempt to increase knowledge
of cultural and religious differences. Others gave simple thanks for the
information. Yet a few others responded negatively, a couple spewing hateful
references to the religion of Islam. As disturbing as this seemed at the time, I
realized that when the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) began preaching in Mecca, the
retaliation he and his companions received was far harsher than a few negative
emails.
One of the great benefits of this job is the opportunity to travel domestically
and internationally. When you are a Chief of Staff, especially one who works for
a Member of the Committee on International Relations, the invitations to travel
are abundant. Prior to working on Capitol Hill, I had only left the continental
U.S. a handful of times, usually to vacation in the Caribbean with my wife. In
the past four years my position has taken me to 13 new countries on five
continents. Seven of them have been Muslim countries.
The most trying aspect of my job is dealing with the politics. I have always
said that politics is the bane of good government. It would be unfair of me to
say that Members of Congress are not guided by personal moral beliefs. Yet so
often it seems that those morals are set aside in the face of vocal
constituencies and influential lobbying organizations. I have had many
conversations with congressional members and staff about voting for what is
morally right or fundamentally fair versus voting to appease a particular lobby
that may affect the outcome of a Member's next election. Members often use the
logic that one may have to vote against their better judgment to keep their
seat, so they can work for the public good on other issues. My logic is that if
you continue to vote against your better judgment you are already not doing any
good. The Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) taught us that the person who seeks a
position of leadership should not have it. Mutual consultation, democracy, and
cooperation require individuals to compromise on various issues. However, when
an individual's desire to be an elected leader causes them to compromise their
morals they have already sacrificed too much.
The political infancy of the Muslim community in America only heightens my
frustration as a Muslim congressional staffer when issues of particular concern
to Muslims, such as the use of secret evidence against immigrants, or the
Palestinian/Israeli conflict, come before the House of Representatives. A recent
example of this occurred when I sent an email to other staffers who work for
Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Members detailing my boss's efforts to support
a peace plan for the Middle East. By the next afternoon my boss was calling me
from New York frantic about my email because it had been turned over by a CBC
staffer to a pro-Israeli lobby group whose New York Members, including elected
officials, they were deriding for supporting a plan for peace. Of course all
issues of concern to Muslims have been magnified since September 11, 2001.
September 10, 2001 - After sitting on the runway at Washington National
for over an hour due to unfavorable whether conditions I decide to get off the
plane when the pilot provides the option and returns to the terminal. I contact
our office in New York and they say since I would arrive so late I might as well
wait until tomorrow. I decide I'll get up early and catch the 7:00 AM shuttle to
LaGuardia.
September 11, 2001 - I decide not to catch the 7:00 AM shuttle so I can
drive my kids to school first. After I drop them off at school I return home to
change my clothes intending to get on the first DC-NYC shuttle I can find. I
turn on the news as I begin to change clothes and learn that an airplane has
struck Tower One of the World Trade Center in Manhattan. After watching for a
while and hearing the commentators speculate on whether this is an accident or a
terrorist attack, I step into the bathroom. A moment later, I heard the
television announce that, "A second plane has just struck Tower Two. This is
definitely a terrorist attack."
I can't reach Washington National Airport by telephone. I foolishly head for the
airport anyway. I begin noticing emergency vehicles and police cars speeding by
me as I enter Washington DC. I have been trying to reach my office by cell
phone, but I can't get through, and there is no response even when it does ring.
I see smoke in the distance but can't tell where it's coming from. Have they hit
the Capitol Building? No, the smoke is a distance from the Capitol. My cell
phone rings as I approach the Pentagon on my way to National Airport. My wife is
on the phone. She says, "Don't bother going to the airport, it's shut down. They
just hit the Pentagon." I say, "I know, I'm looking right at it."
I turn around and head to my office building. Police are everywhere and all the
staffers are outside looking up. I park my car a few blocks away and walk toward
the building. Outside, things are chaotic: no directions, no clear orders for
congressional Members or staff other than evacuate. I run into my Muslim brother
Khalil Ali who works for another congressman. I tell him, "Everything we have
been trying to do just got ten times harder."
The past eight months have been a great test for the Muslim community, both a
challenge and an opportunity to build character for everyone. Like the rest my
brothers and sisters in Islam, I have had to choose between faith and fear. In
the days and weeks following 9/11 we have seen the best and worst of America.
There have been indiscriminate attacks on Muslims, Arabs and Indians, and great
acts of kindness and charity towards these same groups. The U.S. Congress has
passed a resolution respecting the Muslim faith and condemning random acts of
violence, while also passing legislation making it easier to take away the
rights of Muslims. The President has met with Muslim organizations and spoken
well of the faith while his Attorney General shuts down our charities and locks
up extraordinary numbers of Muslims and Arabs without charges or evidence. I
remember receiving a call from a Republican staffer with whom I once had
traveled to Morocco. He informed me that the Congressman he served, who was from
Louisiana and running for the Senate, had made some very ignorant remarks about
Muslims, referring to their dress and how it was permissible to profile them. He
wanted me to know that he had nothing to do with those remarks and that he was
ashamed of the man who would make them. I also received CDs from Members of
Congress that belittle Islam and the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). Even in our own
Jummah prayer in the Capitol Building, a controversial, local, African American
Imam gave a kutba on recent events here and in the Middle East that had people
in attendance either commending or criticizing.
"Men plan and Allah plans, and Allah is the best of planners." (Qur'an) Since
September 11, much has been done to limit the number of men seeking to enter
America from Muslim countries. Nevertheless, over the past eight months more
than 20,000 Americans have reportedly become Muslims. After September 11, the
Congressman I serve, who sits on the Financial Services Committee, was concerned
that our efforts to support the development of Islamic Finance in America would
be stymied for a time. Yet Freddie Mac has just developed its second
relationship with a shariah-compliant financial institution to purchase its
mortgages. In addition, HSBC Bank is planning to unveil a shariah-compliant
home mortgage product, and the U.S. Treasury recently held a workshop in
conjunction with Harvard called, Islamic Finance 101.
I have written above that in these difficult times Muslims have to choose
between faith and fear. I choose faith. The Prophet Muhammad asked, "When will
come the help of Allah?" Allah replied to him, "The help of Allah is always
near."
*Jameel
Aalim–Johnson , is Chief of Staff for Congressman
Gregory Meeks of New York. Raised as a Christian, he converted to Islam in his
early 20s. He now organizes the weekly Muslim congregational Friday prayer on
Capitol Hill.
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