Archive for September, 2011

Factbox on Anwar al-Awlaki, U.S.-born al Qaeda cleric killed in air strike

Friday, September 30th, 2011

(Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S.-born cleric linked to al Qaeda's Yemen-based wing, gives a religious lecture in an unknown location in this still image taken from video released by Intelwire.com on September 30, 2011/Intelwire.com)

Yemen’s Defence Ministry said on Friday that Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S.-born Muslim preacher linked to al Qaeda’s Yemen-based wing, had been killed, in what a security official said was an air strike. Awlaki had been implicated in a botched attempt by al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) to bomb a U.S.-bound plane in 2009 and had contacts with a U.S. Army psychiatrist who killed 13 people at a U.S. military base the same year.

U.S. authorities have branded him a “global terrorist” but Sanaa had previously appeared reluctant to act against him. It was not immediately clear if Awlaki had been killed in a Yemeni air raid or a U.S. drone strike. A U.S. drone aircraft targeted but missed him in May. Yemeni officials had previously reported that Awlaki had been killed in late 2009.

Here is some background about Awlaki:

LIFE HISTORY

* Born in New Mexico in the United States in 1971, Awlaki is a U.S. citizen. He graduated in civil engineering from Colorado State University and holds a master’s degree in educational leadership from San Diego State University.

* Awlaki’s family is well-known in Yemen. His father is a former agriculture minister, Nasser al-Awlaki.

* Awlaki is a former imam of mosques in Denver, San Diego and Falls Church, Virginia. Two of those mosques were attended by some of the September 11, 2001, hijackers.

* He travelled to Yemen in 2004, where he taught at a university before he was arrested and imprisoned in 2006 for suspected links to al Qaeda and involvement in attacks.

* He was released in December 2007 because he said he had repented, a Yemeni security official said. But he was later charged again on similar counts and went into hiding.

* Last year the U.S. administration authorised operations to capture or kill Awlaki. “Awlaki is a proven threat,” said a U.S. official at the time. “He’s being targeted.”

LINKS TO AQAP

* Intelligence agencies had viewed Awlaki as chiefly an al Qaeda sympathizer and recruiter for Islamist causes with possible ties to some of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers.

* That assessment changed in late 2009 with revelations about his contacts with a Nigerian suspect in the attempted bombing of an airliner approaching Detroit on Dec. 25, claimed by AQAP, and with a U.S. Army psychiatrist accused of shooting dead 13 people at Fort Hood military base in Texas on Nov. 5.

* After the Christmas Day airliner plot, U.S. and Yemeni officials said they learned that Awlaki had met the would-be bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab.

* Major Nidal Malik Hasan, the Army psychiatrist, had sent emails to Awlaki, which were intercepted by U.S. intelligence agencies and examined by U.S. joint terrorism task forces.

* Hassan was “a hero,” Awlaki wrote in a blog post after the attack. “He is a man of conscience who could not bear living the contradiction of being a Muslim and serving in an army that is fighting against his own people,” he wrote. Awlaki’s website was closed down after the Fort Hood killings.

IMPORTANCE TO AQAP

* Internet-savvy and eloquent in English and Arabic, Awlaki encouraged attacks on the United States and was seen as a man who could draw in more al Qaeda recruits from Western countries.

* Britain’s intelligence chief John Sawers singled out Awlaki as a major threat in a speech last October, saying: “From his remote base in Yemen, al Qaeda leader and U.S. national Anwar al-Awlaki broadcasts propaganda and terrorist instruction in fluent English, over the Internet.”

* Awlaki is not a very senior Islamic cleric. Nor is he the leader of AQAP — that is Nasser al-Wuhayshi — but he ranks as the group’s most gifted English-language propagandist.

via FACTBOX – Anwar al-Awlaki, U.S.-born al Qaeda cleric.

See also CIA drone kills U.S.-born al Qaeda cleric in Yemen.

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Kazakh Senate passes tougher religion law, ignores criticism from abroad

Friday, September 30th, 2011

(A plane flies above a church during an Epiphany service, some 45 km ( 28 miles) east of Almaty, January 18, 2011/Shamil Zhumatov)

Kazakhstan’s Senate approved on Thursday tougher laws on religious activity in the Central Asian state, ignoring Western criticism of its response to what it calls the growing threat of extremism. The new law, which will ban prayer rooms in state institutions, will have to be signed into law by President Nursultan Nazarbayev. Kazakhstan’s veteran leader proposed tough new laws to his compliant legislature a month ago.

Kazakhstan, where 70 percent of the 16.5-million population is Muslim, has only recently witnessed outbursts of militant Islam experienced by other former Soviet states in the vast region bordering Afghanistan. Last month’s detention of a group of religious extremists planning “acts of terror” unsettled many in Kazakhstan, an oil-rich country ruled by Nazarbayev for more than two decades.

Kazakhstan also last month temporarily blocked access to a number of foreign Internet sites after a court ruled they were propagating terrorism and inciting religious hatred. A suicide bomber blew himself up in the city of Aktobe in May.

The new law, which has stirred debate in officially secular Kazakhstan, stresses “the historic role of the Hanafi school of Islam and of the Christian Orthodox faith in the cultural and spiritual development of the Kazakh nation.” The vast majority of Kazakhstan’s Muslims are followers of the Hanafi school of law, considered to be the oldest and most liberal within the Sunni Muslim tradition.

Read the full story by Raushan Nurshayeva here.

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Turkish Days Street-Fest NYC (9-25-11)

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

Thoughts on a busy day in search of Muslim Culture in Manhattan.  

It began at 41st street and 7th avenue, as I walked to the 26th Annual Muslim Day Parade (around 11:00 AM). Had to pass through Times Square and came upon ANOTHER street closure for ANOTHER Street Festival.

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But this one had a unique theme: Turkish Days Street-Fest (Taste the Turkish Hospitality)by celebrating the Great Seljuq Empire

The Empirewas a medieval Turko-Persian /Sunni Muslim empire originating from the Qynyq branch of Oghuz Turks from 1037–1194. According to the Seljuqs, they brought to the Muslims “fighting spirit and fanatical aggression”.[33]

The Seljuqs also played an important role in the development of the Turko-Persian tradition,[23] even exporting Persian culture to Anatolia.[24][25] The Seljuq rule gave impetus to the Turkification of Iran[26] The Seljuqs Turkified Azerbaijan between the 11th century and 12th century.[27]

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Since I was on my way to observe my 5th (of 26) Annual Muslim Day Parades, at 38th and Madison Ave,  I thought it odd that this Turkish Street Fest was happening on the same day as  Parade. Perhaps all is not well between the Turks and the rest of the Muslim Community.

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FYI: My post on the Muslim Day Parade (here) revealed a much  smaller parade, attended by a few schools and families who came mostly from Indonesia, the NY Black Muslim Community and the Russian-Muslim countries like Azerbaijan. Other than the obvious  “Flag of Fakestine”, the other flags were often a mystery, even to the parade participants. When asked, many were unable to tell me what country the flag they carried was from. 

Also, there seemed to be a lot of the main-stream Muslim-players missing (City and National). Low-key for sure but, even so, the families seemed to enjoy themselves; AS did those at the Turkish Days Street Fest.

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Returning to the Turkish Days Street Fest, it seemed like all the Turks (Muslim at least) were at this Festival. It was nicely done. Refreshing, compared to the usual food-fests that go up and down the avenues of NY. There were costumes and Turks with smiles, smiles, smiles for everyone and history…

The History of Turkey 

 the expansion of the Turkic peoples across most of Central Asia into Europe and the Middle East between the 6th and 11th centuries AD (the Early Middle Ages). Tribes less certainly identified as Turkic began their expansion centuries earlier as the predominant element of the Huns… by the 6th century and by the 10th century most of Central Asia was settled by Turkic tribes. The Seljuk Turks from the 11th century invaded Anatolia, ultimately resulting in permanent Turkic settlement there and the establishment of the nation of Turkey.

The “history” of Turkey seemed to imply that Turkey ‘owns’ the ancient history of the region by skating around the Muslim conquest.  

They had a number of very attractive walls through out the Street Fest, beginning with The Lydia Kingdom.

[The ancient kingdom in Anatolia from (1200-546 BC) Lydia arose as a Neo-Hittite kingdom following the collapse of the Hittite Empire in the 12th century BC. Lydia finally fell to Turkish beyliks, which were all absorbed by the Ottoman state in 1390 AD. The area became part of the Ottoman Aydın Province (vilayet), ending up as the westernmost part of the modern republic of Turkey.]

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But, whose history is this? Persian, Greek, Christian, Jewish, Armenian. Whose? 

Is this really Muslim history? You might presume Muslim, with that Star and Crescent emblazoned  on The Big Apple….

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Continuing with Turkish Days Fest Theme is The Trojan Civilization

The IX City of Troy, was the last city on this site, Hellenistic Ilium, was founded by Romans during the reign of the emperor Augustus and was an important trading city until the establishment of Constantinople in the 4th century as the eastern capital of the Roman Empire. In Byzantine times the city declined gradually, and eventually disappeared.

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 The Hittite Empire

 The Hittites established a kingdom centred at Hattusa in north-central Anatolia c. the 18th century BC. The Hittite empire reached its height c. the 14th century BC…the  Hittite language was a member of the Anatolian branch of the Indo-European language family.

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The Roman Empire(Byzantine)

In the centuries before 600 CE, the Roman Empire was the most influential power in many regions that would later become Islamic.  Within 30 years of Muhammad claiming he had received his first revelation from God, these three civilisations – the Byzantine, Persian, and Arab – would collide as the Muslim Arabs brought down the Sassanid Empire and took a large swath of Byzantine territories in North Africa and Mesopotamia.  In 1453 the Muslims would finally defeat the Byzantine Empire with the sack of Constantinople.

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The Ottoman Empire

A Turkish ( Muslim) empire that lasted from 27 July 1299[8] to 29 October 1923. At the height of its power, in the 16th and 17th centuries, it controlled territory in southeastern Europe, southwestern Asia, and North Africa (see List of Ottoman Empire dominated territories).[9] 

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The booths had displays of women’s handscrafts, calligraphy, Tughra Books (Tughra publishes books on Islam as a religion, Islamic history and art, Islamic spirituality and traditions. Formerly The Light Publishing, Tughra Books is dedicated to high-quality publications that contribute to the proliferation of peace and common understanding throughout the world.) an ANT store ( no it’s not a typo) Antstores is your one stop shop for all book needs about Islam, Muslims, Islamic Art and Turkish.

When I returned after the Muslim day Parade, this Fest was going strong.

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You could check out the food(kebab, pastry, meatballs) and a coffee lounge (men and women had separate lounges); a school, a disaster relief charity, a newspaper, an airline and the Cultural Center.  They all had booths. Also, Arts and Crafts ( copper, marble, silver) All packed in to one city block. ( pictures are in the slide show below)

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With some ethnic costumed flare from this man as well as a fez

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Didn’t realize until I took these pictures that the Turkish Muslim women have such a distinct look by how they wear their head-scarves (do they call  them hijabs?)

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It was all very pleasant,very family (and tourist) friendly. 

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Though these characters  seemed a bit imposing…

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This group was quite friendly and seemed to be popular for photo-ops

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A nice place to hang for the afternoon

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YET, from the day I learned of Turkey’s persistent denial of the Thracian Genocide I became aware that this genocide denial is no little ‘thing’. They have erased inconvenient elements by sugar-coating Turkey’s Islamist history. The wounds of the Muslim Conquests run deep but the Turkish Cultural Center was here to promote a pretty peaceful region for tourism.

In  April 2010 , after leaving left a Memorial Ceremony to the victims of the Thracian Genocide, a genocide  committed by the Turks, I first discovered (only a block and a half north) the Turkish Cultural Center. That year they seemed to ignore the memorial . No apologies. Just didn’t happen.

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However, in 2011, with the memorial ceremony was once again a block and a half from the Turkish Cultural Center ,”someone” wasn’t too happy about the ceremony. I saw a man steal these two pictures (in the center) of the Genocidal Turks ( Enlarged photos of “Enver’ Pasha and Mustafa Kemal.)

Steal the pictures. Erase the history

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Anyone who passed through the Turkish Days Street Fest, took with them the puffery and joys of the Islamic State of Turkey. “Fly Turkish Airlines, The Wings of Champions.

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The Slide Show of Turkish Days Street Fest




No Mosques At Ground Zero

Besieged & Branded: The Burden Of Being A Muslim

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

By Mahtab Alam

“Serial Bomb Blasts in Delhi. Where are you, Are you safe?” read a text message on my Mobile, by Sonali Garg, a friend of mine from Delhi.

It was late in the evening of September 13th, 2008. “Oh My God! That’s really horrible. I am fine though and in Bihar. Hope you, your family members are all right,” I replied before forwarding this message to other friends in Delhi.
During those days, I was in Bihar, surveying the aftermath of the flood that had struck the Kosi region of the state in the second week of August that same year. Village after village had vanished in the flood. It was reportedly the worst flood ever seen by the people of that area. Most of them were left with no other alternative but to shift to the rehabilitation camps.
On 13th September 2008, the sun went down to serial bomb blasts in Delhi, killing 26 persons and injuring many more. In all, five bomb blasts within the time span of 30 minutes created havoc amongst the Delhiites. I heaved a sigh of relief as all the messages I received in reply to my forwarded message were positive.
My friends were all fine. The last reply I received was around midnight by a senior colleague of mine, A R Agwan, a former assistant Professor of Environment Sciences with whom I had conducted many workshops for Human Rights’ Activists in different parts of India, saying that he was all right and had been sleeping, thus the delay in replying. 
Do we want fear or hope in these eyes!
Still shaken by the news, I tried moving on with my work, thinking that the worst was over. But I was to be proved wrong. Around noon the next day, I received a frantic call from the Secretary of the Association for the Protection of Civil Rights (APCR), a Delhi based civil rights’ group I was working with then as a Coordinator.
He sounded tense and the poor network added to the problem. All I was able to make out, in interrupted tones, was that the situation in Delhi, especially Jamia Nagar, a Muslim populated area of South Delhi, was very bad. A pall of fear pervaded all in the area. The police had been randomly picking up Muslims from the area. I was asked to come to Delhi as soon as I possibly could.
Not satisfied with the details, I tried ringing A R Agwan, as he was based in that area. I grew worried when around twenty calls made to his mobile through the day went unanswered. Knowing him, it was quite unusual of him to react in this manner. Immediately after Iftar (since it was the month of Ramadhan), I proceeded to the nearest Cyber Cafe to book my ticket for Delhi.
An e-mail I received struck me numb with horror and rendered me incapable of any action for a few minutes. It was hard to believe that A R Agwan was under arrest! He had been picked up by Delhi Police’s Special Cell, equivalent to the Anti-Terror Squad or Special Task Force of other states.
A R Agwan, is a prominent social activist and has been attached with many social and human rights’ group. With a clear record, and an even clearer conscience, his arrerst sent shockwaves in the community. The leaders of the Muslim community were completely outraged by the arrest. His neighbours did not know how to react.

Anxiety, Fear, Paranoia…

Enquiries to other activists of the situation revealed that apart from Agwan, three other people had been detained from the area. After much pressure from community leaders, social and religious organizations, Agwan was released, along with Adnan Fahad, a DTP operator in his late twenties, who was also into some small Publishing business.

They were arrested around 11 AM in the morning and freed in the late evening around 7:30 P M.  Illegal detention would have been prolonged hadn’t the community leaders and activists pressurized the Delhi police for their release. On 17th September, immediately after coming back to Delhi, I went to meet Agwan. He was still recovering from the shock, having been forcibly subjected to the worst hours of his life. He completely failed to understand why he had been picked up.
“They asked me about my whereabouts on the day of the blasts, my activity in the evening that day. I told them I was at home meeting two non-muslim friends from Hyderabad. They had come over to discussing the opening up of an NGO. Then they questioned me about the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) and its people. 
We are also like you, Does topi make us different!
They pressed me to give names of some SIMI people in my locality, and I told them that I didn’t know anything, but they kept insisting”. 
The interrogators also asked him about Abul Bashar, a Madarsa graduate, who was arrested from Azamgarh the month before and was later projected as the mastermind of the Ahmedabad serial blasts. “I told them I knew not more about Abul Bashar than what had appeared in the media”, Agwan recalled.
Not content with this response, they further alleged that Bashar had his cell number and that he had stayed at his home. Agwan flatly denied the charges. “But they did not believe me and wanted to put words in my mouth.  They just wanted me to confess to something with which I had absolutely no connection”.
“It was like there was no rule of law and the Police had become a Law unto themselves,” he told me, still unable to reconcile himself to what he had undergone. “When they realized that it would be too difficult to further my custody, as pressure was mounting from different sections of society to release me, they offered to drop me to my home. I refused to go with them.” “I told them that I was afraid that they would take me to some other place and torture me severely so that I confess to their charges, as had been done to hundreds of Muslims across the country”. “I asked them to ask my family to come and collect me”.

The fear that Agwan underwent reminded me of the stories that I had heard at the Impendent People’s Tribunal on the ‘Atrocities Committed against Minorities (read Muslims) in the Name of Fighting Terrorism’ at Hyderabad in August the same year (2008). We were told spine chilling stories of arbitrary detention and torture by the victims of ‘war on terror’, families of the accused who were in jails and human rights activists across the country barring Kashmir and North-eastern states of India.

The common complaints were that they were punched, kicked, beaten very badly. In order to humiliate them so that they break down, the interrogators made them stand for long hours and hung them upside down. In custody, they were denied all basic amenities and were forced to drink water from the toilets. Moreover, they were subjected to electric shocks by the police officials and made to repeat what the police were saying.
One of them recounted,”The interrogators repeatedly used name calling, sexually profane abusive language with me. The torture continued from about midnight/one o’clock until morning.” In most of the cases, the first question that they were asked was, “Why have you people become anti-nationals? You all are bloody Pakistanis.”
And the torture wasn’t limited to those arrested. The police made sure to use every trick to make those arrested confess to their will. The family members too were subject to similar torture. The police ensured that the most inhuman torture was meted out to them. Ataur Rahman, in his mid-sixties, lived in Mumbai with his family which included an engineer son who was an accused in the July 2006 Mumbai blasts.
Prove your patriotism every moment
At the tribunal, he had told us, “My house was raided in the night and I was taken to an unknown destination. After keeping me in illegal custody for several days, I was formally shown to be arrested on July 27, 2006, and an FIR was lodged against me.  Me, my wife, my daughter and daughter-in-law were paraded before my arrested sons while being abused by the police officers continuously. My sons and I were beaten up in front of each other.
The women of the family were called up by the ATS daily and were asked to drop their burqah (veil) before my arrested sons. Adding to their humiliation, my sons were abused in front of the women folk. An officer beat me up and threatened me that the women of my family were outside and they would be stripped naked if I did not remove my clothes before my children and other police officers. They brought in other arrested accused and I was stripped naked in their presence…”
The witch hunting of Muslims only intensified after the blasts on September 13th, which was followed by the infamous ‘encounter’ at Batla House of Jamia Nagar area of South Delhi. On September 23rd, a meeting had been organized in Delhi to discuss the police excess and the communal witch hunt, which was attended by well known lawyers, activists, journalists, academicians and community leaders.
When Cops Go On A Witchhunt
While the meeting continued, we received the disturbing news of the picking up of a 17 year old boy, Saqib. The men who had taken the boy were unknown and hence we decided to lodge a complaint with the local police station. Initially reluctant to entertain us, the presence of senior lawyers, Jamia teachers and journalists pressured them into register our complaint. We were later informed that the Delhi Police special cell had picked him up for questioning. When Supreme Court lawyer Colin Gonzalves and the boy’s relatives approached the Special Cell, they had another surprise in store.
The cops said -”hand over his brother and take him!” Saqib’s is not a unique case. People are picked up indiscriminately everyday and are harassed, some of them reportedly brutally tortured. Like Saqib, there are some victims in the area, but most of them prefer to remain quiet to avoid further harassment. Moreover, they fear about who would employ or give a house on rent to a ‘suspected person’.
Today, even after three years of the Delhi bomb blasts and the Batla House ‘encounter’, the residents live in fear. A situation has been created wherein every Muslim is seen as a terror suspect, if not a terrorist. The infamous SMS which reads thus, “Every Muslim is not a terrorist, but all terrorists are Muslims,” had first made several rounds after July 2006 Blasts in Mumbai.
This has always been believed as nothing but the gospel truth. The implicit message among a major section of the public is that every Muslim is a potential terrorist, regardless of whether he is a believer, an agnostic or an atheist.  Take the case of Shaina K K, a journalist and a declared agnostic, while receiving an award recently had to comment with the following words, “See, I happen to be a Muslim, but I am not a terrorist”.
The clarification was given because of the feeling that if one belonged to the minority community, they would but be profiled. Shahina has a personal experience of it, so she would know. She has been falsely framed for ‘intimidating’ witnesses in the Abdul Nasir Madani case. Her only ‘crime’ was that she investigated the case of Kerala People’s Democratic Party (PDP)  leader Abdul Nasir Madani, who is an accused in the infamous Bangalore blasts case, and asked the question, “Why is this man is still in Prison,” in the form of an article which appeared in Tehelka, based on the facts.
Madani had already spent 10 years in prison as an under-trail in the Coimbatore blast case of 1997 and who was later acquitted in 2007. It was only last month that Shahina managed to get an anticipatory bail, which put an end to her ‘underground’ life. Another Muslim journalist from Bangalore, working with a leading news-weekly was grilled several times in the same case.
In fact, this writer also had a similar personal experience but thankfully, to a lesser degree of threat to his life during a fact finding visit of Giridih Jail in the state of Jharkhand, in July 2008. I was branded a Maoist along with two other friends, and illegally detained for five hours by Giridih Superintendent of Police, Murari Lal Meena who is now being promoted to the rank of DIG, Special Branch of the Jharkhand Police.
Later I was informed by the PUCL Secretary of Jharkhand, Shashi Bhusan Pathak, who was the local organiser of the visit and had contacted officials concerned for our release, that Mr. Meena had told him, “Since the guy (meaning me) comes from a frontier area of Bihar which borders Nepal and has studied at Jamia Millia Islamia New Delhi, he is a Pucca Aatankwadi (Hardcore Terrorist)!”  He had also threatened to put us behind bars in the same prison without any hope of being bailed out for at least a year.
Implicating the Innocents
In the month of July this year, just a few days before the recent Mumbai blast, a Muslim photo-journalist of Mid Group, Sayed Sameer Abedi, was detained for taking innocuous photographs of a traffic junction and an airplane. He was threatened, roughed up and even called a terrorist because of his Muslim name.
Indian Muslims against Terrorism
According to a report in Mid Day, at the police station, when Sub-Inspector Ashok Parthi, the investigating officer in his case, asked him about the incident and he explained everything, emphasizing that he had done no wrong, he was told by the inspector, “Don’t talk too much, just shut up and listen to what we are saying. Your name is Sayed, you could be a terrorist and a Pakistani”.
The inspector also told him that he (the inspector) was asked by the seniors to inform the Special Branch and file all kinds of charges, including those of terrorism, against him (Sayed).
Unfortunately this is not limited to police and security agencies. The common men also somehow believe that Muslims are responsible for the all the terror strikes. They are the real culprits! This is not a new phenomenon.
In fact, it is deepening day by day. In 2001, I was on my way to Patna by train. I noticed an old man consistently asking a bearded Muslim youth in his teens for an English magazine that the youth was reading with much concentration. He politely asked the old man to wait till he finished reading the article. Unmoved by the politeness and angered at this rebuttal, he abused the youth by calling him and other Muslims terrorists, who were destroying India’s sanctity after having destroyed America.
He further voiced his prejudice by commenting that all Muslims belong to Pakistan and should leave for that place. I was a kid of fifteen and didn’t want to be identified as a Muslim, so thought it unwise to comment. Moreover, the matter had subsided when the youth gave over the magazine to the old man (which the old returned proclaiming unashamedly that he wasn’t literate in English).
I took this to be a matter in isolation, and tried not to give much attention. However, at home, I was faced with questions of a similar nature from a non-Muslim friend who enquired me about my whereabouts. He was surprised on hearing that I was studying at Jamia Millia Islamia in Delhi, which he had thought to be a madarsa. Quelling his doubts, I told him it was just like any other University (Delhi University as example).     
I still face this question, time and again. It is almost like under living under constant suspicion. Thanks to our media and security agencies, which leave no stone unturned to prove this wrong despite the fact that over the years, it has been proved that Muslims have no monopoly over terrorism. In the last three years, I often ask myself the ask question, ‘Am I Safe?’ To be frank and honest, I doubt it.
The Climate Of Fear
I am not confident about whether I am safe or not.  However, my biggest worry is that the ordinary Muslim youth, who doesn’t have the network of people like Agwan or me, as they are in real danger. After every blast every Muslim youth fears that he could be next. They can be, in fact, are, easily picked up, tortured, packed and thrown into jails, sometimes even killed in cold blood.
In India today, to be a Muslim is to be encounter-able, to be constantly suspected of being a terrorist, to be illegally detainable and severely tortured, to have the possibility of being killed without being questioned, no matter whether one is a believer, agnostic or an atheist. Recent communal witch hunt in the wake of Mumbai blasts only proves that. And if that is not the case, why hasn’t a single non Muslim person, as named voluntarily by Swami Aseemanad, in his confession, detailing role of Hidutva outfits in several blasts?
Why have two of the prime accused, belonging to Hindutva outfits, of Malegaon blasts been granted bail while bails of the Muslims accused in the same case are refused time and again. How long will the Muslims of India have to bear the Burden of being a Muslim? People have started considering this (sense of insecurity) as a part and parcel of their lives.
I still have no answer to the question, ‘Will this never end?’ , once asked by a teacher of mine, when I informed her about the illegal detention of Mohammed Arshad, an Engineering student from Azamgarh who was later released. I can only wish my answer would soon turn affirmative!
[Mahtab Alam is a Civil Rights’ Activist and Independent Journalist based in Delhi. He can be contacted at activist dot journalist at gmail.com]          




An Indian Muslim’s Blog: News, Views & Urdu Poetry Website

Invocation Prayers at AFDI/SIOA 911 Freedom Rally (2011)

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

Prayers were offered by William J. Murray is the chairman of the Religious Freedom Coalition, an organization dedicated to aiding Christians in Islamic and Communist nations. He is the author of several books including Let Us Pray and The Church Is Not For Perfect People; his most recent book is The Pledge: One Nation Under God.

Bhupinder Singh Bhurji is Chairman and CEO of Namdhari Sikh Foundation and a Sikh Priest AND

Dr. M. G. Prasad teaches recitation of Sanskrit prayers, Vedic chanting, Hindu scriptures and worship practices for children, youth and adults. He has written four books on Hinduism. He is a director in the board of directors of Hindu University of America in Orlando, Florida. He is joined in the prayer by his associates Nanda Gorur and Vivek Vasanth.

On 9-11-11, the then anniversary of the attacks against America by Muslim terrorists, AFDI and its Stop Islamization of America (SIOA) program encouraged all Americans to stand against the Islamic supremacist mega-mosque at Ground Zero and the anti-Semitic Durban III conference that will be held in New York City at the same time. It is time to stand for American values on the tenth anniversary of the worst attack ever on American soil.

Next: Final video post from 911 Freedom Rally


No Mosques At Ground Zero

Israel grants residency to Jerusalem’s Anglican bishop, a Palestinian

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011

(A general view of The Dome of the Rock is seen from the Christian quarter in Jerusalem's Old City January 12, 2011/Baz Ratner)

Israeli authorities have granted a residency permit to Jerusalem’s Anglican bishop, Palestinian Suheil Dawani, after months of legal wrangling, the clergyman said in a message to his supporters on Tuesday. Dawani was elected Bishop of the Diocese of Jerusalem in 2007, and as a non-Israeli is required by Israeli authorities to obtain a temporary residence permit. This was granted in 2008 and 2009, but he was turned down in 2010.

“It is with great pleasure, and with God’s help, that I and my family have received our ‘Residency Permits’,” Dawani said in his e-mail message to followers.

A church official told Reuters the bishop and his family had received their permits on Monday and that they would have to be renewed when they expire, but declined to give further details. During the period Dawani was refused residency, Israel’s Interior Ministry had written to him accusing him of improper land dealings on behalf of the church and the Palestinian Authority, a ministry official said.

The bishop, who continued to live in Arab East Jerusalem during the period, had denied the allegations. Dawani, born in Nablus in the occupied West Bank, lives with his family in East Jerusalem. Both areas were captured by Israel in a 1967 war. Israel annexed East Jerusalem after the conflict in a step that is not internationally recognized.

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26th Annual Muslim Day Parade 2011

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011

The pictures are Before the Parade, The Prayers, The (very familiar) Parade ….we’ve observed for 5 years…. and then the Street Fair at Madison Sq Park (the final destination of the parade.) It’s the same parade every year. Same floats. Same Banners. Basically the same people IN the parade with hardly anybody watching from the sidewalks …. as it goes downtown. and….the parade seemed noticeably smaller this year.

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The theme was “Proud To Be a Muslim-American “. Hosted by Bridges TV. Their Press Release said that, The channel has come under new ownership”, with no mention of course, that this is the very same  TV Station whose founder  murdered his wife by decapitation. (a most inconvenient example of Sharia)

BEFORE THE PRAYERS … as Families and Schools arrived, while they waited for the prayers to begin,everyone took some pictures…

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Signs, flags and banners:

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With a concerted effort to stick with the theme, American Patriotism blended with their Proud display of Islam

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THE PRAYERS: The prayers on Madison Ave were very low key this year. Very little hoop-la surrounding the set up of the tarps and the Imam saying prayers at the mic was surrounded (not easily seen) I understand, in the past, they were upset when female photogs got too close to the Imam. Guess they took care of that!

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The Men

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The ‘Great Divide” between the men and women

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The Women

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I discovered one poster of protest on a pole at 38th and Madison (I understand there had been more.) But, by parade-time they had been removed  all except this one)

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THE PARADE: It began (as always)with the NYPD Mounted Police and the NYPD Police band playing “This Is My Country” (I always find that a bit heavy-handed)

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The Parade’s Main Banner

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Followed by this group of young men who always yell “Takbir, Takbir” all the way downtown (Non-Stop)

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Followed closely by this:

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And this group of young women proclaiming they are not oppressed.

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And of course, the little children marching with their families. No yelling, just being lovely little children….

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THE GRAND MARSHALLS (from their Press Release ” Grand Marshals for this year’s parade will be Ilyasah Shabazz, daughter of Malcolm Shabazz, and Imam Souleimane Konate, Secretary General of the Council of African Imams. The theme for the 2011 event is “Proud to be a Muslim-American.”

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Robert Jackson in the blue shirt (Muslim Convert and the NYC Council’s only Muslim) announced to  a previous Muslim Day Parade crowd how great it was that Harlem is the MECCA of NYC.

AND finally, at then end of the parade, the kids on the “Bridges TV ” Float yelling “Allah Akbar” (as did other groups of kids in their age-group)

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We then walk in to the blocked-off street next to Madison Sq Park. Clearly, this is where they should have started. Everyone is here. Just have a Street Fair!

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DAWA (practically the first table)

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The Farrakan OUT REACH table, where I found a few of the uniformed (presumably) Muslim Police talking with a very friendly Farrakan-type. After they left, when I approached to take my pictures, the now not-so-friendly Farrakan-fellow, ordered me to stop taking pictures of the books.

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Muslim Converts Table….

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Hijabs-R-Us

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And then the staged area

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Personal Observation: Why must the NYPD stand guard on Madison Ave (starting at since 4 AM I was told) ‘guarding’ everything til 6 PM??  when  there are no crowds….NO one is watching this parade. In the 5 years I’ve watched the parade: NO Crowds. The Parade participants seem to love gathering at the Park so, why not start there? Have a Street Fair. (And put the NYPD to better use )

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Next post will be pictures from a Turkish Fair that was off Times Sq. Perhaps this had an impact on the parade this year since all of the Turkish Muslims seemed to be at that Fair.

Slide show:

And their Press Release/Promo:

NEW YORK, N.Y., Sept. 21, 2011 (SEND2PRESS NEWSWIRE) — One of the oldest Muslim-American organizations in the USA, the Muslim Foundation of America, in conjunction with multi-cultural television channel Bridges TV, has announced details for the 26th annual United American Muslim Day Parade, taking place in New York City at 12:30 p.m. on Sunday, September 25, 2011.

Highlighted by a 15-block parade, live entertainment and speeches from members of the Muslim community, the parade will start at 37th Street and Madison Avenue in Manhattan and proceed downtown to 23rd Street for the live show, bazaar and a variety of ethnic foods. International TV distributor SoundView Broadcasting of Long Island City, NY will televise the entire event throughout America via Bridges TV on Verizon FIOS, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Buckeye, Cox and Selco.

Grand Marshals for this year’s parade will be Ilyasah Shabazz, daughter of Malcolm Shabazz, and Imam Souleimane Konate, Secretary General of the Council of African Imams. The theme for the 2011 event is “Proud to be a Muslim-American.”

The live stage show will feature Palestinian-Jordanian comedian Said Durrah, celebrated composer/vocalist Amir Vahab, various Nasheed artists and a performance by characters from the popular educational video series “Cam Ali.”

About The Muslim Foundation of America:
For twenty-five years, the non-profit Muslim Foundation of America (MFA), has organized the United American Muslim Day Parade in Manhattan on the last Sunday of September. Each year, the parade has grown in scope and significance, fulfilling its stated purpose of celebrating pride in a shared Muslim heritage, bringing together all ethnic and religious groups to promote a clearer understanding of Islam and establish interfaith cooperation between all Muslims and other religious and community groups.

About Bridges TV:
Bridges TV is an established American multi-ethnic English-language TV channel offering a broad range of lifestyle programming aimed at fostering greater understanding between all religions and cultures. The channel has come under new ownership, having recently been acquired by SoundView Broadcasting. SoundView is a provider of media and broadcast services for over 25 international television channels from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Africa, Egypt and the US to audiences in the United States, Canada, Europe and the UK
More information online: www.muslimdayparade.com.

NEWS SOURCE:  Bridges TV


No Mosques At Ground Zero

Warren Buffet Is Wrong About Millionaires and Taxes

Sunday, September 25th, 2011

Warren Buffett says he pays 18 percent of his salary to the IRS while the rest of his staff pays 33 percent and because of that he wants millionaires to pay more in taxes. It happens that because he gets most of his income from capital gains and dividends – money earned from money that was already taxed – he pays a lower tax rate.

However, as for his staff paying 33%, Warren Buffett is a liar. There is no way his staff pays the rate he says they do. But even if it were true, and it certainly is not – the example he gives would be an extreme anomaly – the truth is millionaires pay more than their fair share of taxes. If anything, everyone else is paying far too little and that is what is not fair.

According to the Tax Policy Center (a joint venture of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution) millionaires pay a higher tax rate than anyone else. Anyone who says that millionaires in general pay less than secretaries is either an idiot ignorant of tax policy or a liar with an agenda.

Tax Policy Center, Distribution of Cash Income and Federal Taxes Under Current Law

Distribution of Cash Income and Federal Taxes Under Current Law

President Obama has access to these very same statistics and therefore is not ignorant of the facts – so when he says that millionaires are not paying their fair share in taxes, he is lying through his socialist teeth.




Planck’s Constant

A picture of greatness

Sunday, September 25th, 2011

This picture arrived in my inbox few days ago. Amazing to see some of the biggest names of literature and intellectuals all in one group picture. I didn’t have the chance to find out where and…


Indian Muslims

Excerpts from the AFDI/SIOA 911 Freedom Rally (2011)

Saturday, September 24th, 2011

FINAL video post from the 911 Freedom Rally.

This is a view of the crowd that attended this very powerful Rally of Remembrance. Opening Remarks are by Pamela Geller, followed by the National Anthem. Then jumps to the Conclusion. Harpist , Shelli Jones Baker Manuel, sang God Bless America. then Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer brought the nearly two hour Freedom Rally to a close.

On 9-11-11, the then anniversary of the attacks against America by Muslim terrorists, AFDI and its Stop Islamization of America (SIOA) program encouraged all Americans to stand against the Islamic supremacist mega-mosque at Ground Zero and the anti-Semitic Durban III conference that will be held in New York City at the same time. It is time to stand for American values on the tenth anniversary of the worst attack ever on American soil.


No Mosques At Ground Zero