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Will right-wing warriors like Michelle Malkin, Robert Spencer and Michael Savage who have made careers out of the Muslim bogeyman ever change their thinking?
For perspective, I talked with Tahir Anwar, imam of the South Bay Islamic Association of San Jose, Calif. "No, I don't think we Muslims can do anything to change their minds," said Tahir. "They have an agenda and they are sticking with it. They see us as barbarians out to destroy America. We should be happy that the Pew poll has affirmed that we are normal people, with dreams and aspirations like other Americans. I hope most of our fellow Americans will understand that and not be swayed by such people."
"What about one-in-four Muslim youth voicing varying degrees of support for suicide bombings?" I asked. "How do you explain that?"
"I am not sure how so many young people can be so misguided, if the poll, in fact, reflects reality," he said. It may have something to do with our Middle East policy, the cruel war in Iraq, the plight of the Palestinians. It may be that many of them were harassed and intimidated in schools and workplaces. But nothing can justify this mindset. We have an obligation to find the root cause of such thinking and do something about it. I would be concerned if even a single Muslim in America thought that suicide bombing could be justified in any way. It is wrong, period."
"What are you personally going to do about it?" I asked.
"My next few Friday sermons will be on this topic," Tahir said. "I will make it clear to my congregation Ð and I hope they will spread the message Ð that suicide bombing has no sanctity in Islam whatsoever. I will also engage the youth of our community in frank discussions."
Poll results become more meaningful in context. One finding that also got airtime was that while 49 percent of Muslim Americans believed in the separation of mosque and state, 43 percent believed that mosques should express their views on social and political questions. Yet a Pew survey in 2006 found that while 43 percent of Christians believed in the separation of church and state, a majority of Christians (54 percent) felt that church and other houses of worship should express their political and social views.
Likewise, while 80 percent of American Muslims oppose attacks on civilians according to the latest Pew poll, 13 percent said some circumstances may justify such attacks. Yet, in a poll conducted by the University of Maryland in December 2006, 24 percent of Americans thought that such attacks were justified "often" or "sometimes" while another 27 percent thought they were justified in rare cases.
For now, right-wing talking heads continue to fan the flames of anti-Muslim hysteria by invoking the Pew survey. Listening to them uncritically could lead one to think that young Muslims are lurking on every street corner of America to terminate themselves and passers-by with crude contraptions.
Comments? Send a letter to the editor.Albion Monitor May
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