Friday, September 27, 2013

Perspective: The irony on who speaks for Islam


... [T]elling you all this won’t do much. You’re not the one blowing up churches and malls, defacing mosques and minarets. It’s the terrorists who need this education.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source/Credit: Daily Times | Pakistan
By Qasim Rashid | September 27, 2013

As survivors painfully clean their bloodstained churches, mosques, and malls, we’re all once again left asking

How ironic.

I stayed up all night writing a rejoinder to an anti-Islam politician who insists that Islam is a violent faith. Instead, I’m met by Al-Shabab who brutally murder 59 non-Muslims in Nairobi, Kenya, the Taliban who blow up a church and kill 85 Christians in Peshawar, Pakistan, and the Pakistan police who deface and destroy three Ahmadi Muslim prayer places in Sialkot, Pakistan.

Each of these terrorists has decided to write his own bigoted narrative on Islam. The terrorists never asked for my opinion — much less approval — but proceeded as heroes in their own cowardly minds. As survivors painfully clean their bloodstained churches, mosques, and malls, we’re all once again left asking the questions: is the narrative these terrorists fight the right one, or is someone willing to right this wrong and write the right narrative on Islam?

I’ll give it a go.

I could tell you about Prophet Muhammad’s (PBUH) written pact with all Christians that said:
“Christians are my citizens and by God I stand against all that displeases them.” I could tell you about the time Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) stood up for a funeral procession, and when someone objected that the deceased was a Jew, Muhammad rebuked, “Was he not human? Did he not have a soul?” I could tell you about Prophet Muhammad’s (PBUH) rules of war in which he forbade offensive attacks, forbade killing women, children, the elderly, priests, male non-combatants, destroying trees, burning anything, or even harming animals.

But telling you all this won’t do much. You’re not the one blowing up churches and malls, defacing mosques and minarets. It’s the terrorists who need this education. So instead, let me show you, and more importantly them, what Islam actually is, especially in response to the violence we’ve seen these past few days.

The fact is I feel no different today than I felt on May 28, 2010 in Lahore, when the Taliban brutally murdered 86 of my fellow Ahmadis and one Christian in broad daylight. Ahmadis face brutal and ongoing persecution. As a result, and as with the Peshawar Church attack, Pakistani police cowardly watched during the May 28 Lahore attack.

You may have heard about that Lahore attack but what you probably didn’t hear is the response of the worldwide head of the Ahmadiyya community, Mirza Masroor Ahmad. He vehemently condemned the attack, but more importantly forbade Ahmadis from any form of retaliation. Rather, as one of the leading religious leaders who promote peace, he admonished the world’s millions of Ahmadis to engage in prayer and to further increase our service to humanity.

So what did we do? We listened and showed what Islam actually is. We showed that Islam’s world record that 200 American Ahmadi youth set last weekend as we funded, purchased, built, and donated 600 food packages to the hungry to affirm our place in the Guinness Book of Records. Islam is the 30,000 plus blood donations, that has saved up to 90,000 lives, that the Muslims for Life blood drive has collected since 2011 to honour 9/11 victims. Islam is the Tahir Heart Institute, a state of the art cardiac centre and hospital in Pakistan that offers free medical aid to any person of any faith, or of no faith. It is one of dozens of free Ahmadi-run hospitals just like it worldwide. Islam is Humanity First, a worldwide disaster relief non-profit, almost entirely volunteer-run.

As the Muslim world traverses one corrupt leader to the next, righteous hearts are naturally inclined to the beautiful message that Mirza Masroor Ahmad espouses. His is a message that champions universal freedom of conscience for all people of all faiths and for all people of no faith. His is a message that spans chapters in over 200 nations worldwide with tens of millions of members. His is a message of an Ahmadi community that has existed for 124 years without a single act of violence. And on May 28 as we painfully cleaned the blood off our mosque walls, not a single Ahmadi retaliated or responded negatively. Instead, we prayed and — as described above — further increased our service to humanity.

This is the true Islam I wish to show you. This is the right narrative we strive to write.

Yet, despite Mirza Masroor Ahmad’s message of peace, tolerance, and pluralism, while he stays up day and night insisting Islam is not a violent faith, he is forbidden under penalty of death from stepping foot in many Muslim-majority nations, Pakistan included. And when I reflect over Pakistan’s dire need for a peaceful religious leader and their outright rejection of the one man who can offer it, the same two words come to mind.

How ironic.


--------------
Qasim Rashid is a national spokesperson for the Ahmadiyya Community - USA and author of The Wrong Kind of Muslim, which chronicles the persecution of Pakistan’s religious minorities. He tweets at @MuslimIQ.


Read original post here: The irony on who speaks for Islam


This content-post is archived for backup and to keep archived records of any news Islam Ahmadiyya. The views expressed by the author and source of this news archive do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of Ahmadiyya Times.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for your comments. Any comments irrelevant to the post's subject matter, containing abuses, and/or vulgar language will not be approved.

Top read stories during last 7 days

Disclaimer!

THE TIMES OF AHMAD is NOT an organ of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, nor in any way associated with any of the community's official websites. Times of Ahmad is an independently run and privately managed news / contents archival website; and does not claim to speak for or represent the official views of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. The Times of Ahmad assumes full responsibility for the contents of its web pages. The views expressed by the authors and sources of the news archives do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Times of Ahmad. All rights associated with any contents archived / stored on this website remain the property of the original owners.