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Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts

Thursday, July 2, 2009

More MUST READS

These articles are well-written and deserve to be read...

1. The Man In the Mirror: The Double Consciousness of Michael Jackson

2. Shaykh Allamah al Hajj Tawfiq al Azhari: Revisiting The Neglected Legacy of Indigenous Imams In America

3. Black In America 2: Early Reviews ... Not Good

4. Jermaine: ‘Michael is a gift from Allah’

Thursday, June 18, 2009

CAIR-NY Welcomes City Council Vote on Muslim Holidays in Schools

(NEW YORK, NY, 6/18/09) - The New York chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY) today joined a coalition of community organizations in welcoming the passage of a resolution by a committee of the city council that calls for adding Muslim holidays to the school calendar.

Resolution 1281, passed overwhelmingly by the New York City Council Education Committee, calls on the “New York City Department of Education to incorporate the Muslim holidays of Eid Ul-Fitr and Eid Ul-Adha as observed school holidays in the school calendar for the city school district of the city of New York” and also asks that the state legislature “pass, and the Governor to sign into law, A.8108/S.5837, an Act to amend the education law, in relation to requiring that Eid Ul-Fitr and Eid Ul-Adha be school holidays in the city school district of the city of New York.”

SEE: Proposed Res. No. 1281-A
http://tinyurl.com/no9tto

The Coalition for Muslim School Holidays - a broad interfaith, inter-ethnic coalition of labor, community, civil rights, and religious organizations – also urged the entire city council to support including Muslim holidays in the school calendar.

“Today marks a positive step forward in the effort to provide a more inclusive educational
environment for all students,” said CAIR-NY Community Affairs Director Faiza N. Ali, who sits
on the steering committee of the Coalition for Muslim School Holidays. “This resolution advances religious liberty, recognizes the growing Muslim population in New York and promotes our great city's values of diversity and inclusion.”

She noted that the New York City area is home to some 1 million Muslims, one of the fastest
growing and most diverse religious populations in the city. More than 90 percent of Muslim students attend public schools and one in eight public school students is Muslim.

CAIR offers a booklet, called “An Educator’s Guide to Islamic Religious Practices,” designed
to promote diversity and accommodate Muslims students in educational institutions.

SEE: An Educator’s Guide to Islamic Religious Practices
http://www.cair.com/Portals/0/pdf/education_guide.pdf

Ali also urged Speaker Christine Quinn and the entire city council to pass Resolution 1281: “Our
community continues to face issues of harassment and discrimination in schools. The city now has an opportunity to help foster a better understanding of Islam and re-affirm that Muslims are a valued part of this city.”

In a similar effort to promote religious inclusion in New York, CAIR-NY yesterday joined
the Sikh Coalition in its request to end a Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) uniform
policy that requires Sikh and Muslim transit workers to brand their religious head covering with MTA logos.

SEE: CAIR-NY Supports Sikh Call for Change in MTA Uniform Policy
http://tinyurl.com/ktl9sv

Follow CAIR on Twitter
http://twitter.com/cair_usa
Become a Fan of CAIR on Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/pages/CAIR/42590232694

CAIR, America’s largest Islamic civil liberties group, has 35 offices and chapters nationwide and
in Canada. Its mission is to enhance the understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties, empower American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and mutual understanding.

-END-

CONTACT: CAIR-NY Community Affairs Director Faiza N. Ali, 212-870-2002, 718-724-3041, E-Mail: fali@cair.com; CAIR-NY Civil Rights Director Aliya Latif, 212-870-2002, 732-429-4268, E-Mail: alatif@cair.com; CAIR National Communications Director Ibrahim Hooper, 202-488-8787, 202-744-7726, E-Mail: ihooper@cair.com; CAIR Communications Coordinator Amina Rubin, 202-488-8787, 202-341-4171, E-Mail: arubin@cair.com

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Insight on Islam

My good friend Ibrahim AbdulMatin representing an American Muslim view to Fox. Good job brotha. May Allah continue to bless you and facilitate your good endeavors.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Merciful storekeeper changes robber's mind, religion

NEW YORK (CNN) -- A potential victim became a compassionate counselor during a recent robbery attempt, changing the would-be criminal's mind -- and apparently his religion.


Surveillance video shows storekeeper Mohammad Sohail holding a robber at bay with a shotgun.
Surveillance video shows storekeeper Mohammad Sohail holding a robber at bay with a shotgun.


Storekeeper Mohammad Sohail was closing up his Long Island convenience store just after midnight on May 21 when -- as shown on the store's surveillance video -- a man came in wielding a baseball bat and demanding money.

"He said, 'Hurry up and give me the money, give me the money!' and I said, 'Hold on'," Sohail recalled in a phone interview with CNN on Tuesday, after the store video and his story was carried on local TV.
Sohail said he reached under the counter, grabbed his gun and told the robber to drop the bat and get down on his knees.

"He's crying like a baby," Sohail said. "He says, 'Don't call police, don't shoot me, I have no money, I have no food in my house.' "

Amidst the man's apologies and pleas, Sohail said he felt a surge of compassion.

He made the man promise never to rob anyone again and when he agreed, Sohail gave him $40 and a loaf of bread.

"When he gets $40, he's very impressed, he says, 'I want to be a Muslim just like you,' " Sohail said, adding he had the would-be criminal recite an Islamic oath.

"I said 'Congratulations. You are now a Muslim and your name is Nawaz Sharif Zardari.'"

When asked why he chose the hybrid of two Pakistani presidents' names, the Pakistani immigrant laughed and said he had been watching a South Asian news channel moments before the confrontation.

Sohail said the man fled the store when he turned away to get the man some free milk.

He said police might still be looking for the suspect but he doesn't intend to press charges.

"The guy, you know, everybody has a hard time right now, it's too bad for everybody right now in this economy," said the storekeeper.

Monday, April 13, 2009

RE: Cultivating an Indigenous Muslim culture

Thanks to Brother Dash for the recording. Search "Shuruk 2009" on youtube for more videos...

"Muslims of the past were thoroughly capable of making the distinction between Non-Muslim and UnIslamic."

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

My thoughts: Cultivating an Indigenous Muslim culture

Last Friday, I attended an excellent panel discussion at NYU on "How to cultivate an Indigenous Muslim culture: Defining Roles and Responsibilities"

I included the following speakers (with bio's at the end):
Dr. Sherman Jackson
Dr. Martin Nguyen
Imam Khalid Latif
Madeeha Mir
Su'ad Abdul Khabeer

I think many good points were made at this event. Some of them (what I remember) I will try to relay (mixed in with my own thoughts)...

1.  My first point is just one of my own views and I apologize for my brashness but I never even thought twice about "how to be Muslims + American" until I came to NYU.  Inadvertently, I never really interacted with Muslims outside my own ethnicity until I came to NYU either.  But that leads to my point...I don't think I'm alone in thinking that many Black Muslims never had to deal with the struggle of being Muslim and being American in the same way that many Muslims who are of "immigrant" families have.

Now there's alot of loop holes in that last statement...that is why I point out the words "in the same way".  Most African-American Muslims have never associated themselves with any other country other than America.  In fact, many held (and now hold) an Anti-American view.  My point is that I never had a problem with understanding what country I belonged to or what religion I was practicing (even after 9/11) and I think many brothers of my ethnicity can share in this view.

Now like I said before, there are many loop holes in that statement because of course many "American" practices are in fact, un-Islamic and have lead all Muslims, including Black Muslims to struggle with the two identities.  And this has even led many African-American Muslims into identity crises. But we will save that discussion for later.

If you gathered nothing else from the convoluted generalizations that I just made, just know that I never thought that hard about being American and Muslim...I just did it.

2. In criticism to the title Sis. Su'ad made some good points.  The title (How to cultivate an Indigenous Muslim culture) suggests that we don't have one now! It also suggests that there is a solution to this "problem" that can be placed in a pamphlet and handed out after Jummah. She noted that government really "cultivated" the ideal of culture in order to place people in boundaries for the advancement of power and control (ie. the effects of slavery and race).

She said that culture is the value/meaning that people place on themselves. We should resist the attitude toward the "HOW TO" of culture...and appreciate what we already have.

That is to say that many would feel that what we do have is not what we want or its not good enough.  To speak plainly, indigenous Muslim culture has been established in America for some time now.  But many Muslims don't want to CLAIM it. And it may not be anything necessarily "wrong" with that.  Wearing timberland boots with a thobe is indigenous Muslim culture, but everyone may not want to do that.  BUT, we should ACKNOWLEDGE that it exists. Respect it. Value it.

3. Imam Khalid mentioned one thing that applied to me and many others: Many of us have NEVER engaged a Muslim outside of our own ethnicity until college (until we were forced to).  And I'll leave that statement as it is.

4. Dr. Jackson, being the scholar that he is, made a few comments that worth pondering.  He said that we don't feel we have the authority to make the decision about our culture.  In other words, our culture (here in America) has to be validated by those we hold in authority.  But the problem that we run into is that the traditional Mathabs and the top Islamic scholars don't explicitly address much of the cultural decisions that we face everyday.  The issue boils down to cultural authority and authenticity.

5. I believe that there will never be just one single American Muslim culture.  We won't have just a single Muslim expression in American, both regionally and socially. We come into this religion through different ways and experiences and ultimately can practice our beautiful religion in different ways that are still all "Islamic" in the general definition/understanding of the term. And that's fine.  But, in all different ways, we still struggle to some extent with being a Muslim American.

What we should focus on is the Islamic spirit and the Islamic way of life.  This should be infused into our daily life.  Living as an American but staying true to your Islam.
As Imam Mohammed has put it:
"The focus is community life: (1) That means Masjid; (2) That means schools; (3) That means cultural centers; (4) That means we should be trying to provide cultural outlets for Muslims; (5) That means we should have Muslim theaters; (6) We should have Muslim art; (7) We need a different music, a new music and a new expression; (8) We must also have strong business. We need to concentrate on business; (9) let's push the wilderness out of ourselves, out of our homes, out of our neighborhoods. Lets push the wilderness out of the Muslim community; (10) we have to have a Muslim Teachers College, we have to support the Muslim Teachers College. We have to see growth and expansion for the Muslim Teachers College." ("Growth For A Model Community In America"--Imam WDM)

________________________________________

Confirmed Panelists Bios:

Dr. Abd al-Hakim Jackson, a native of Philadelphia, received his Ph.D from the University of Pennsylvania in Oriental Studies –Islamic Near East in 1990. Presently, he is Professor of Arabic and Islamic Studies, Visiting Professor of Law, and Professor of Afro-American Studies at the University of Michigan. From 1987-89, he served as Executive Director for the Center of Arabic Study Abroad (CASA) in Cairo, Egypt.

Dr. Abd al-Hakim Jackson has taught at the University of Texas at Austin, Indiana University and Wayne State University. In addition to numerous articles on Islamic law, theology and history, he is author of Islamic Law and the State: The Constitutional Jurisprudence of Shihâb al-Dîn al-Qarâfî (E.J. Brill, 1996), On the Boundaries of Theological Tolerance in Islam: Abû Hâmid al-Ghazâlî’s Faysal al-Tafriqa (Oxford, 2002) and, most recently, the controversial Islam and the Blackamerican: Looking Towards the Third Resurrection (Oxford, 2005).

Dr. Abd al-Hakim Jackson is co-founder of the American Learning Institute for Muslims (ALIM), a primary instructor at its programs, and a member of its Board of Trustees. Jackson is also a former member of the Fiqh Council of North America, past president of the Sharî‘ah Scholars’ Association of North America (SSANA) and a past trustee of the North American Islamic Trust (NAIT). He is a sought-after speaker and has lectured throughout the US and in numerous countries abroad.
_________________________________________

Martin Nguyen is currently a PhD candidate in Islamic History at Harvard University. He has served as graduate advisor to the Harvard Islamic Society and was one of the founders of Shura: Islamic Forum at the Harvard Divinity School. He will be joining Fairfield University this fall as Assistant Professor in Islamic Religious Traditions.
__________________________________________

Imam Khalid Latif was appointed the first Muslim chaplain at NYU in 2005 where he began to initiate his vision for a pluralistic future on and off campus for American Muslims. He was also appointed the first Muslim chaplain at Princeton University in 2006. Spending a year commuting between these two excellent institutions, he finally decided to commit full-time to New York University’s Islamic Center where his position was officially institutionalized in the spring of 2007. Under his leadership, the Islamic Center at NYU became the first ever established Muslim student center at an institution of higher education in the United States. Imam Latif’s exceptional dedication and ability to cross interfaith and cultural lines on a daily basis brought him recognition throughout the city, so much so that in 2007 Mayor Michael Bloomberg nominated Imam Latif to become the youngest chaplain in history of the New York City Police Department at the age of 24.

Imam Latif has not only managed to solidify the basis of a strong Muslim community at NYU that seeks to emphasize inclusiveness and understanding of others without compromise, but has also worked tirelessly to foster dialogue with people of other faiths in order to clarify misconceptions and encourage mutual education. Through his work Imam Latif has demonstrated not only an exceptional dedication to gaining and disseminating religious knowledge and values, but has begun to carve out a much-needed space for young American Muslims to celebrate their unique identity and have their voices heard in the larger public sphere.
_________________________________________

Madeeha Mir is a fourth year Counseling Psychology doctoral student at New York University, volunteering time on a regular basis to provide counseling services through the Islamic Center at NYU. She currently externs at Barnard College Counseling Center and has completed externship training at Bellevue Hospital Center and CUNY Baruch College Counseling Center. She has worked with young adults and children in both outpatient and inpatient settings and has an emphasis on providing counseling to college-aged students on a variety of areas, including relationships, marriage, identity, family conflicts, substance use, and other mental health issues.
_________________________________________

Suad Abdul Khabeer is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Anthropology at Princeton University. Suad's dissertation explores the ways Chicago Muslim youth negotiate religious, racial and cultural identities through hip hop. Suad is also a research affiliate with the Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Studies at Princeton University. Suad has spoken and presented papers at Yale University, Haverford College, University of Massachusetts - Amherst and the University of California – Berkeley. Her publications include *Rep that Islam: the Rhyme and Reason of American Muslim Hip Hop *in the January 2007 issue of The Muslim World, *Black Arabic: Some Notes on African American Muslims and the Arabic Language *(forthcoming in edited volume “Black Routes to Islam”, Palgrave Macmillan), and *A Day in the Life*, poetry which appeared* *in the anthology “Living Islam Out Loud: American Muslim Women Speak”.

Prior to her graduate work, Suad received a Bachelors in Foreign Service from the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown. During her senior year at Georgetown, she interned at the President’s Interagency Council on Women at the Department of State. There she worked specifically on State Department initiatives to engage the broader American Muslim community. After graduating, Suad spent at year in Damascus, Syria where she was a student at the Islamic Studies Institute of Abu Nour University. While at the institute she studied Islamic Studies and Arabic language, building on her many years of Arabic language training. She also gave a presentation at the American Cultural Center of the US Embassy in Damascus on the relationship between Hip Hop and Islam.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

SHURUQ 2009: THE MANY FACES OF AMERICAN ISLAM

For Immediate Release

SHURUQ 2009: THE MANY FACES OF AMERICAN ISLAM

March 23rd April 5th, 2009

(New York - 3/21/09) For seven years now, Shuruq (Arabic for Sunrise) has been a celebration of Islam's rich diversity. Shuruq raises awareness of Islam and Muslims in an experiential way, through emphasis on lived realities and artistic expressions, working to build an attitude of harmony and mutual understanding within the New York City community. For two weeks every year, Shuruq puts together a series of increasingly popular events on NYUs campus to highlight the breadth of culture, music, literature, religion and politics throughout the Muslim world -- including America's millions of Muslims.

Shuruq 2009 kicks off on Monday, March 23rd, at the Kimmel Center, with Cultural Passport: Explore the Taste of the Muslim Palate, an opening banquet featuring cuisine from across the Muslim world. Shuruq 2009 will host a number of events across campus, bringing to the University and to the City a chance to hear from, learn and engage with noted activists, academics, performers and American Muslims leaders. This represents for many New Yorkers an excellent opportunity to understand American Islam, where it has come from and where it is going.

"We started Shuruq in 2002," says Haroon Moghul (NYU CAS '02), the Islamic Center Director of Public Relations. "Islam is so many different places, languages and peoples. Islam was adopted by so many people, in so many places, that it is never just one thing. And we in America are building an Islam that inspires our reality and reflects our experience."

Shermeen Rahman, Chair of Shuruq 2009, says We hope that through this series of entertaining and educational events people will see that Islam manifests itself in many different ways. Shuruqs goal is to shed light on these facets of Islam that are often ignored in todays society and encourage a much lacking communication between American Muslims and the broader society we are part of.

American Muslims have to proactively engage the communities that we are connected to, says Imam Khalid Latif, Director and Chaplain of the Islamic Center at NYU. We are working to engage our fellow New Yorkers, communicating through many different ways, through music and movies, food and festivals, teach-ins and workshops, that Islam is a big tent, and there is a lot of room in that tent for a lot of experiences.

For a complete listing of this years events, please visit www.icnyu.org/shuruq

All events are free and open to the public. Members of the University and New York City residents are especially encouraged to attend.

The Islamic Center at NYU serves the Muslim population at New York University, a private institution of higher education and research located in lower Manhattan. The Islamic Center at NYU is overseen by the Office of the Muslim Chaplain, established in April 2007 to meet the needs of a growing Muslim community.

Inspired by the idea that Americas Muslim community will best develop in a supportive environment, the Islamic Center has not only seen tremendous increase in membership but has motivated its student population to find new ways of harnessing their resources and expanding their relationships with the wider community.

Todays Islamic Center caters to a wide and growing audience, reaching not only Muslims in New York City but also individuals from other communities. The Islamic Center at NYU is dedicated to fostering a sense of awareness, activism and scholarship amongst the Muslim community both on and off campus

For More information please contact:
The Islamic Center at NYU at 212.998.4712
Khalid Latif: Director/Chaplain, ICNYU at kl442@nyu.edu.
Haroon Moghul: PR Coordinator, ICNYU at moghul@gmail.com
Shermeen Rahman: Chair, Shuruq 2009 at nyushuruq@gmail.com

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Living the Culture...

2:19 am

As I sit hear re-listening to Mos Def's Black on Both sides...I step outside of my own box (body) and realize how much I am subconsciously connecting with a New York City lifestyle.

I am literally submerging myself into this new/old culture. Its no new thing for me. I've been here for 2 years now but I can see myself struggling to connect with why people LOVE Brooklyn so much?? As cliche as it sounds, I went to watch the movie Notorious. I've been re-discovering Mos Def's first solo album which I kinda-sorta-am-shamed-to-say I passed over at a younger age. ( I guess I wasn't ready for it yet.) I mean this album is it. I was always looking for something to continue my thirst after Blackstar. This is it. I'll be good til another year or so.

But outside of the music genre, I notice that I almost ....almost love riding the NYC train. The experience that so many take lightly, and tourists over-exaggerate, I have grown to love in a curious-George kind of way. Crowded, dirty, dark, uninviting...but sooo New York.

Sooo New York. And thats what its all about.

I find myself (like the hadith) a traveler in this world. I don't want to be a New Yorker. (believe me I don't). But, you have to respect it. You have to study and respect the culture. And you can't just come and TAKE. You have to GIVE something as well. This is the essence of a travler. You can't come and take without giving something of yourself.

What I noticed about me, wherever I go....I love studying and learning about new cultures. Be it Cincinnati, Atlanta, DC, Egypt, Ethiopia, Bermuda, Jamaica... I love to submerge myself as much as religiously possible (when in Rome...). That is the only way to see Rome. You have to become a Roman. To really understand and respect a culture...you can't view it from the airplane ...and books will only take you so far....

YOU HAVE TO LIVE IT.

Ironically, I woke up this morning watching "The Proud Family". You know that Disney Channel show of the black family. This episode was called, "culture shock" and all the kids switched families with those of other cultures....Chinese, Puerto Rican, Black, Jamaican, one rich guy, and the highlight of the show: a Muslim Pakistani family.

They did a decent job of explaining about Islamic concepts like Ramadan and Hijab by showing the little girl's adjustment to the new family. (The Simpsons had a similiar episode where they addressed Islamophobia. )

The point being...culture has to be experienced and lived. This gives the best appreciation. ANd I think you gain a much broader view of the world when you gain that type of experience. It essentially makes you who you are.

Thank you world for shaping my development. Thank you NYC for the part that you play. I'll be giving back very soon now...

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Airplane crash-lands into Hudson River; all aboard reported safe

Airplane crash-lands into Hudson River; all aboard reported safe



Wow...right in my back yard...glad everyone is ok.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Oxymoron: Little Akhi

My barber is an Albanian Muslim but was born here in the US.  If you ask him, he's from Jersey (son).  He's a young brother who stays on his hustle and gives me the best razor-sharp line-up in Manhattan.  As with most barbers our relationship is more business than friendship, but we always claim to hangout one day.

As he finished shaping up my beard the other day, he said, "Ohhhh, you a little akhi now!"

I said huh? Whats that supposed to mean?  And why I got to be little? I said, jokingly, "Oh cuz my beard is not hanging to the floor?"

He started laughing.  He said, "Most of the akhi's I know ...is big," motioning his hands way outside of his own big frame.

[uh oh, here comes another stereotype...]

"Akhi's be coming straight from prison wit the thobes and the beards..."

me: "Maaannn, what?"

barber: "Yea, you know alot of people become Muslim in prison."

[like that's something new to me...]

me: "And they all come out BIG and with beards and thobes huh?"

barber: "Yeeaaaaaaaaaa, I'ma take you to Jersey one day."

Monday, September 1, 2008

Calculations vs. MoonSighting



2:183 O YOU who have attained to faith! Fasting is ordained for you as it was ordained for those before you, so that you might remain conscious of God:
Alhamdulillah! We are close to beginning our Holy Month of Ramadan, and for some it has already begun today (last night). It is reported the Messenger of Allah (saw) addressed his companions on the last day of Sha`ban, saying,
"O people! A great month has come over you; a blessed month; a month in which is a night better than a thousand months; month in which Allah has made it compulsory upon you to fast by day, and voluntary to pray by night. Whoever draws nearer (to Allah) by performing any of the (optional) good deeds in (this month) shall receive the same reward as performing an obligatory deed at any other time, and whoever discharges an obligatory deed in (this month) shall receive the reward of performing seventy obligations at any other time. It is the month of patience, and the reward of patience is Heaven. It is the month of charity, and a month in which a believer's sustenance is increased. Whoever gives food to a fasting person to break his fast, shall have his sins forgiven, and he will be saved from the Fire of Hell, and he shall have the same reward as the fasting person, without his reward being diminished at all." [Narrated by Ibn Khuzaymah]
So, Ramadan is such a blessing and I am sooooo excited to take part in it. People all over the world are anticipating this month and preparing to fast for the sake of Allah. And as Muslims we have a clear methodology for determining the beginning of Ramadan. To put it simply, the Messenger of Allah, peace upon him, has said: “Begin your fast upon sighting [the crescent moon] and end your fast upon sighting [the subsequent crescent].” Allah also says in the Qur'an, "They ask thee concerning the New Moons. Say: They are but signs to mark fixed periods of time in (the affairs of) men, and for Pilgrimage...(2:189)".

However, in the year 2006, the Fiqh Council of North America took the position that the scientifically authenticated astronomical calculations are a valid Islamic source of confirming or negating a lunar Islamic month. They claim that the physical sighting of the moon is not a form of Ibaadah (usually translated as "worship"). They also mention that the Qur'an only obligates the witnessing of the month, not the physical sighting. They follow their decision with a request to unite the ummah with a "more objective and accurate standard".

Shaikh Hamza Yusuf has really been a forerunner among those who negate the new method. In his writing, Hamza Yusuf insinuated that such a position was nothing short of deliberately opposing the “infallible” (mutawatir) commandments of the Holy Prophet (PBUH) and was equal to following the pitfall of the Children of Israel all the way to their lizard hole. His articles are well worth the read and can be found here:

Article 1

Article 2


My Islamic Perspective:

In a nutshell, I say follow your local Imam or leadership. I think this is the best advice and is unanimous among both perspectives. Personally, Ramadan for me will begin tonight (Sept. 1st) and my first day of fasting will begin tomorrow (Sept. 2). I consider myself apart of the community at the Islamic Center at NYU. So, they have made the ruling:
there were no credible reports of a local moonsighting in the United States. The Islamic Center at NYU, in conjunction with various masajid and organizations in the New York City area and around the country, will be observing Tuesday, September 2nd as the first day of fasting for the month of Ramadan.
Also, as a student of Imam W. D. Mohammed, I follow the belief that the physical moonsighting takes precedence over scientific calculations. No one can deny that the practice of the Prophet, saw, was to physically sight the Hilaal (crescent). And we know The Prophet (saw) stated, “I have left you two things; as long as you hold to them, you will never stray: the Book of God and my Sunnah.”

I think that Islam was designed for all times and all circumstances. Islam is perfect and complete. Therefore the best example, the safest way to go, is to just follow the Prophet. Especially if its known exactly what we should do as an ummah. I don't think there is anything wrong with calculations*, but they should not be the SOLE FACTOR in our decision of when Ramadan begins. This sunnah of the Prophet (moonsighting) forces man to engage himself with creation. It forces man to follow his leadership and unite with his own community. We should seek to understand our religion and we may better understand al-furqaan (the criterion between right and wrong).

"Surely in the creation and the heavens and the earth, and the alternation of the night and the day are signs for people…."



*According to Imam al-Qarafi: Why is it that we can determine prayer times by calculation and the use of instruments, yet in the case of crescent moons for the determination of our Ramadans, it is not permissible to use [instruments and calculation] according to the accepted position? The difference is that God has stipulated in our devotional practice [of fasting] the sighting of the crescent moon and if that is not possible then the completion of thirty days of Sha'ban, and He did not stipulate the astronomical new moon. On the other hand, in the case of prayer times, He stipulated simply the entrance of the times and their self-determining times. Hence, we are able to determine them by any means possible. For instance, a prayer is conditional upon the occurrence of the sun’s postmeridian phase. [With Ramadan] however, it was not linked with the conjunction’s separation but with its physical sighting. And should the crescent be obscured, we complete thirty days.

Monday, August 18, 2008

CAIR-NY Rep Takes Part in Forum on Race, Religion and Politics

--FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE--
CAIR-NY Rep Takes Part in Forum on Race, Religion and Politics
(NEW YORK, NY, 8/15/08) "A representative of the New York chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY) yesterday participated in a panel discussion entitled "Race, Religion and Politics: The New Political Landscape" at New York University.
The panel discussion, which included CAIR-NY Community Affairs Director Faiza N. Ali, Shabazz Center Board Member Dr. Amir Al-Islam and President of the NY office of the NAACP Hazel Dukes, aimed to educate community members about the importance of grassroots activism and coalition-building for minority groups in the backdrop of the elections process.
“Since the onset of the presidential election, religion and race have been repeatedly used as a tool for political gain by candidates and their surrogates alike� said Community Affairs Director Faiza N. Ali. “Coalition-building will assure that our voices are politically relevant even after the ballots are casted.�
CAIR-NY and chapters nationwide continue to encourage political participation of American Muslims through voter registration drives, civic participation trainings and educational forums.
To volunteer in CAIR-NY’s political empowerment campaign, contact fali@cair.com.

CAIR, America’s largest Islamic civil liberties group, has 35 offices and chapters nationwide and in Canada. Its mission is to enhance the understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties, empower American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and mutual understanding.
--END--

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Islam ads to be placed in NYC subway trians

"NEW YORK (CNN) -- Ads promoting Islam are to be placed on New York subway cars in September, but a U.S. congressman finds people sponsoring the messages unacceptable."

Now first, I think this is GREAT! This seems like a great way to dispel ignorance and myths about certain words connected with Islam. It urges people to inform themselves with the truth about the meaning of these words and seeks to battle NEGATIVE images of Islam.

The problem is, however, it has ALREADY sparked the wrong message! Because Imam Siraj Wahaj is promoting the ads, they have not only linked this campaign to an effort to convert people to Islam (which scares people), they are tying the Imam to the 9/11 bombings (which undermines the credibility of this effort). The Post says he is an "Unconvicted Co-Conspirator". Don't slander the man's name. Furthermore, Fox is having a ball with these headlines:

"Radical Imam launches ads urging conversion to Islam" (FOX)

"Islamic group behind ad blitz has terrorists ties" (FOX)

The news, but especially FOX, has a particular way of twisting things. Something that was designed to dispel the fear and ignorance associated with Islam is doing the exact opposite. Here's a compiled clip of how they twist the intentions of this effort:



LETS SUPPORT GOOD EFFORTS, don't let the news succeed in scaring and misinforming the people. STAND UP FOR YOUR ISLAM.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Obama ‘slave’ shirt sparks lawsuit threat


My wife pointed out THIS ARTICLE (thanks baby) about a girl getting beat up for wearing a shirt that says, Obama is my slave”. Now, she is seeking to sue the designer. Well, let me correct myself. She didn't get "beat up". Just picked with. But did she expect anything less?

I mean really. To be so bold as to wear one of this guys shirts (who believes Obama is a Muslim), you have to expect at least a few disgusted looks if not verbal and/or physical assault. People LOVE Obama. And apparently some people hate him too.

But people always say that America is not READY for a Black president. What does race have to do with the man's ability to perform his job? The rest of the world is ready. The economy is ready. Health care is ready. And the guy doesn't do a half bad job of uniting people for his cause, either (raising 52 million last month, almost twice as much as McCain).

And apparently, whats worst than being Black, is being a MUSLIM. The designer of the shirts said, "he couldn't stand Obama..." not because he was black, but "...because he's Muslim" (which Obama has denied repeatedly)!! People will find any excuse to hate Obama. I'm going to walk around with a T-shirt that says "MUSLIM" and see if I get assaulted in New York City.

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