Archive for October 2007
Rascism in Ummah hurts
Muslim Apple notes that racism hurts and it especially hurts when your ‘own people’ do it to you. The story that she narrates has been repeated countless times but the difference is that it in this instance it does have a positive ending. From the Muslim Apple blog.
A few years ago, several sisters and I volunteered to help set up before a fundraiser at a school during Ramadan. As we were preparing the table settings, one sister asked a sister that had moved away from the community what was the best difference in her new school and neighborhood.
Three words: No black people.
What?
She (nbp) said it again with stronger emphasis: No black people.
Ok, so sitting at table are mostly indo-pakistani (i-p including nbp) sisters, one sister of mixed ethnicity (m-e), and one black sister (muslim apple).
The i-p’s didn’t say anything not that they necessarily agreed as it was a really awkward silence as if they did not know what to say. The m-e rebuked her and said, “It’s Ramadan, you’re fasting, and you’re Muslim”. Muslim Apple lowered her gaze to avoid getting angry.
The good thing is that the sister positive attitude and forgiveness made the other person reconsider their views.
Over the next few months the sister and I begin working on projects together and then we both go on trips and don’t see each other for months. When we meet again, there are genuine warm salaams excahnged and to my surprise the biggest and longest bear hug, I’ve had in years. Dua answered, there is no rancour at all, only love. Alhamdulillah.
There is a lesson for all of us to learn here. Positive thinking and positive actions that make other people rethink their racist stance, especially since equality of people is such an important part of Islam.
Arab Culture does not Equal Islamic Culture

People usually talk about the negative influence of local cultures on the practice of Islam, however one element which is usually not taken into account is the negative effect of some elements in the Arab culture to Islam. All cultures have beneficial as well as detrimental elements. It would also help if we defined culture so that everyone is on the same page regarding culture, so here is a definition of culture from Wikipedia.
Culture’ (from the Latin cultura stemming from colere, meaning “to cultivate,”) generally refers to patterns of human activity and the symbolic structures that give such activity significant importance.
Thus for example, singers like Haifa Wehbe (image above) may be part of the Arab culture but not part of the Islamic culture. The reason that I am pointing this out is because many people, including some Muslims, have the mis-perception that Arab culture equals Islamic culture. The negative consequence of this mis-perception is that some people think that acting like Arabs will make them more Islamic. Especially when some Arab Muslims perpetuate this misperception then it makes one wonder, “What’s another name for Imperialism?”
The World of Ibn Garcia
In Islam all Muslims are like brothers and sisters and thus equal. Unfortunately sometimes there are Muslims who do not live up to this ideal. One of the things that Muslims especially take pride is equality amongst the people and thus it is hurtful for a Muslim to see other Muslims not practicing this sense of equality. It is one thing reading about such events but the lesson comes home when one is treated as a second-class citizen by one’s “brothers.”
Historically whenever a Muslim state has tried to discriminate other Muslim groups, the discriminated groups sought to restore the sense of equality and justice. This blog has its genesis in a number of factors. One factor was this non-recognition of this discrimination in the Muslim community, even though Islam explicitly and strongly prohibits discrimination on the basis of race or culture. Time and again I have encountered people who affirm the superiority of Arab Muslims over non-Arab Muslims. This statement is not a generalization since there are a lot of good Arab Muslims who are the nicest people in the world and embody the spirit of equality and brotherhood enshired in Islam. Also the discrimination other other cultures and ethnicities is not an excursively Arab Muslim phenomenon. It is found in other groups as well.
On the name Ibn Garcia, let me state that I do not agree with many of the things that Ibn Garcia said since he went to the other extreme regarding Arab and non-Arab cultures. Ibn Garcia was a Basque Muslim and is usually taken as the representative of the shoubiya movement in Spain. He condemned the discrimination of non-Arab Muslims by Arab Muslims. To restate I do not agree with his negative sentiments regarding the Arab culture but I am using the name Ibn Garcia to highlight his first point about equality of people in Islam and the development of Islam in the Western context.
Regardless of how Muslims behave, the great thing about Islam is that whenever there is time for prayer the high and the low, rich and the poor, people of all ethnicities and cultures can stand in the same line and pray before god. It is stated in the Quran (Al-Hujurat, verse 13), that “O Mankind! We have created you from a male and female, and made you into nations and tribes, that you may know one another. Verily, the most honorable of you in the sight of Allah is he who has most taqwa among of you. Verily, Allah is All-Knowing, All-Aware.”
I am not the only person who has observed this phenomenon in the Muslim community. Tariq Nelson, who is a good commentator on the state of the ummah, recently wrote a piece in AltMuslim What happened to good Islam?, which served as another motivation for this blog. What happened to good Islam indeed? The truth is that it is out there, practiced by tens and millions of Muslims.
Oh and by the way, that thing about all human beings being equal except by righteousness? Cancel that! The Arabs are superior to all men. They now tell me that Islam is firmly grounded in a medieval social order where Arabs are on top and I (as a black) am on the bottom.
The aim of this blog is thus to point out the cases where we Muslim do not live up to the ideals of Islam and to examine why this is the case and how we should strive to do so. Before I end, let me reaffirm the sense of brotherhood and sisterhood in Islam by quoting the prophet (pbuh) “O people! Your God is one and your forefather (Adam) is one. An Arab is not better than a non-Arab and a non-Arab is not better than an Arab, and a red (i.e. white tinged with red) person is not better than a black person and a black person is not better than a red person, except in piety.”