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Muslims need truth and love

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Muslims need truth and love

OPINION | Mark Durie
Friday 26 September 2014

The past few weeks have been hard ones for Australians, not least for Australian Muslims. Various alleged plots by Islamic State supporters to slaughter Australians has Islam in the news. Even as I write, five out of ten of the “most popular” articles on The Australian’s website are about Islamic jihad and national security.

What are ordinary Australians to make of conspiracy theories aired by Muslims on the ABC’s Q&A program, implying that recent police raids were staged as a cynical act to manipulate public opinion? Are Muslims being unfairly victimised by all these security measures?

How are we to evaluate Senator Jacqui Lambie’s claim that sharia law “obviously involves terrorism”? Or the Prime Minister’s decision to mobilise Australian troops against the Islamic State?

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What about the Islamic State’s grandiose claim that “We will conquer your Rome, break your crosses, and enslave your women.” Or Mr Abbott’s declaration that the balance between freedom and security needs to be adjusted in favour of greater security and less freedom?

Earlier this month, an 18-year-old Melbourne man, Numan Haider, was shot dead by police after he stabbed two officers outside a suburban police station. At the time of writing, news was breaking that authorities believed he intended to behead a police officer and post the photos online.

Prison officers in Goulburn jail have struggled to contain the worst riot in ten years, during which rampaging prisoners were heard to be crying “Allahu Akbar.”

A Christian woman who works in a church close by an Islamic centre has asked her employer to install security measures to protect her and others at the church. Someone else, a convert from Islam to Christianity, reports that his personal sense of being under threat has risen, because he feels that people he knew from his earlier life as a radical Muslim are more likely to be activated to violence after the successes of the Islamic State and their global call to arms. Are such responses reasonable? Or are they Islamophobic?

Many young Muslims have been using the hashtag #NotInMyName on social media. Many are insisting that IS does not speak for them: as Anne Aly put it “This isn’t in my name, this isn’t what Islam is about, I am against it and they don’t have my allegiance, they don’t have my support.” How then can we know the truth about Islam?

What is a Christian response to all this? How can we find our way through these crises: does protecting national security mean we risk losing some part of our soul?

A truly Christian response to the multi-faceted challenge of “Muslims behaving badly” must embrace both truth and love in equal measure.

Truth will acknowledge that the Islamic State ideologues do claim to speak for Islam, and that they justify their actions from the Koran and Muhammad’s example. Truth will acknowledge that IS has recruited tens of thousands of Muslims to fight for their cause, but apparently not a single Christian, Jew or Buddhist. As Brother Rachid, a Moroccan convert to Christianity put it in a widely distributed letter to President Obama “ISIL’s 10,000 members are all Muslims. None of them are from any other religion. They come from different countries and have one common denominator: Islam.”

Truth will recognise that the self-declared “caliph” of the Islamic State, Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi has a PhD in Islamic studies: he is not ignorant of Islam. It will also acknowledge that the very idea of a caliphate – a supra-national Islamic state – is a religious ideal widely shared by many Muslims. However this ideal bodes ill for any non-Muslims who fall under its power.

Truth will accept that there is a price to pay for increased security. Since 9/11 we wait in queues at airports because of the actions of jihadis. As the level of threat increases, it is inevitable that our need for increased security measures will only grow.

Truth will also acknowledge that many Muslims vehemently reject the methods and goals of the Islamic state, and that the #NotInMyName hashtag campaign is genuine and heartfelt. But this begs the question: “What is the real Islam?”

Love on the other hand, will reject stereotyping Muslims or denigrating them with labels of hatred and suspicion. Love will reach out a hand of friendship. It will show grace instead of fear, kindness instead of rejection or indifference. Love demands that we emphatically reject speech which dehumanises Muslims or pins labels on them. It will honour those Muslims who reject the Islamic State’s ideology. Love will find new friends even on the blackest of days.

It can be tempting at times such as this to chose between love and truth. Love without truth can be gullible, opening the door to many threats. I am reminded of a Persian fable. A Fox met a Heron and said “My, what lovely feathers you have, dear Heron. May I have one?” The Heron obliged. The next day they met again. Day after day the Fox’s question was repeated, and day after the day the Heron’s response was the same. One day they met for the last time. The Heron had been plucked bare, so the Fox said “Heron, you look delicious. Now I will eat you. And he did.”

Love without boundaries, at the cost of truth, can wreak incredible havoc on innocent lives. In the end, such love is false, and will prove profoundly unloving. Genuine love does not fear the truth. True love will not deny or obscure the damaging effect of sharia law upon Christians living in Islamic societies, or the atrocities being perpetrated in the name of Islam against Christians and others by the “caliphate”. It will be mindful of the words in Proverbs 24:11-12: “Rescue those being led away to death; hold back those staggering towards slaughter. If you say ‘But we knew nothing about this,’ does not he who weighs the heart perceive it.”

On the other hand, truth without love can become merciless, excluding and cruel. Love counts the cost of aggressive argument and rejects rhetoric. It takes pains to understand the other; it seeks to see the world through another’s eyes and to hear words through another’s ears. Love nurtures life-giving relationships. It reaches out to enmity and answers it with grace. It does not jump to conclusions, but is patient and careful. It delights to partner with and nurture truth and does not fear it.

Professor Peter Leahy, former Army Chief and leading defence strategist has warned Australians that we face a war that is “likely to last for the rest of the century”. If he is right, then the troubles we are facing now as a nation are only the beginning, and dealing with the potential horrors ahead will stretch our humanity to its limits.

As Christians we are called to be salt and light in the world. If this means anything, it means staying true to Jesus’ two great statements “the truth shall set you free” and “love your enemies, and do good to those who hate you”. This is no time for circling the wagons and cowering behind them in fear.

This is a time for Australians to reach out to our Muslim neighbours, to show and receive grace. In the present difficulties many Muslims will agree with Melbourne lawyer Shabnum Cassim who stated that “the everyday Muslim just wants to get on with their day.” As a nation the fact that we need to respond realistically to genuine threats to our peace, and seek a true understanding of the religious beliefs that generate these threats, should not deflect us from the everyday task of getting on with our lives together, graciously, inclusively and generously.

Mark Durie is the pastor of an Anglican church, a Shillman-Ginsburg Writing Fellow at the Middle East Forum, and Founder of the Institute for Spiritual Awareness. His book The Third Choice explains the implications for Christians of living under Islamic rule.

- See more at: Muslims need truth and love
 
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Do you disagree with the author? Do you think Muslims need falsehoods and hatred instead?
Why are you acting like Muslims are one collective body. I am an individual who’s only responsible for my own actions and nobodies else’s, and no you aren't convincing anyone with your patronising posts and articles.
 
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Shouldn't these priests be standing up against the Paedophilia going on in their Churches?
 
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I am an individual who’s only responsible for my own actions and nobodies else’s, and no you aren't convincing anyone with your patronising posts and articles.
Well, that's a problem. When you let others claim to speak for you without publicly contradicting them you are essentially condoning their actions - you're a supporter.
Why are you acting like Muslims are one collective body.
Opinions expressed in the article are those of its author and not necessarily that of the poster.

Now do you get it?
 
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Well, that's a problem. When you let others claim to speak for you without publicly contradicting them you are essentially condoning their actions - you're a supporter.

Time for....
TWITTER HASHTAGS!
#StopBarbaricIS
#NoToOppression
#MuslimsAgainstIS(BecauseThisActuallyMatters)
#ThisIsWrong
#IamMakingAnActiveContributionToSocietyInGeneral
 
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Shouldn't these priests be standing up against the Paedophilia going on in their Churches?
I read this response as, "I am a Pakistani and call myself a Muslim. No foreigner or non-Muslim has the right to criticize me or my fellows because they have or have had their own ills. Our own problems should therefore be swept under the rug while we criticize foreigners and non-Muslims instead."
 
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Australians come together to support their Muslim community


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Source: Australian Breaking News Headlines & World News Online | SMH.com.au
Two Muslim men who have experienced the rising tension in the community since the terrorism threat level was raised said it is affecting everyone, from their wives and children to the elderly.
Steve and Adam from south-west Sydney said they “can feel the tension in the air when you take your kids to the park” and there is also a visibly increased presence of the authorities which was making people feel uneasy.
In the past week, there have been a string of incidents involving Muslim women being verbally abused in the street, cars being vandalised and mosques and religious buildings sprayed with graffiti. Muslim community members have said they feel they are the ones being terrorised.
A 21-year-old man has been arrested and charged with being armed with intent to commit an indictable offence after allegedly entering the Al-Faisal school in Minto armed with a knife and asking if it was a “Muslim School”.
Steve and Adam have said some of the community have responded by taking off the veil, trimming their beards or just staying at home and not going out.
“People on both sides are afraid,” said Steve.
But men had a message for the rest of the community to “stay calm” and don’t react.
They said the Muslim community had been through this before, and it would pass.
“We don’t want something like the Cronulla riots to happen again.
“We just hope that it goes back to how it was before. We don’t want anything to implode, we love this country, we just want to live in this great country,” they said.
Their comments come as Australians have banded together to demonstrate their support for the Muslim community by organising solidarity marches, setting up social media accounts and donning the hijab in public.
Thousands of people have joined efforts to promote social harmony, including a social media campaign called Women in Solidarity with Hijabis (WISH).
The campaign, which was started by a non-Muslim woman named Ruth who put on a hijab and posted her photo online, took off last week and within three days the Facebook page had more than 7000 likes.
Muslim women commenting on the page were grateful for the gesture saying it was appreciated especially given that women wearing the hijab are bearing the brunt of public anti-Muslim sentiment.
In other initiatives a new Facebook page called
, which began last week, already has almost 6000 members. The organisers said the “Islamophobia and discrimination encountered every day by Muslims living in Australia is unacceptable”.
Sally Balkan, a Buddhist, is co-ordinating a solidarity march to take place in each state early next month where people from different faiths and backgrounds can march in support of the Muslim community.
“We refuse to hate each other,” she told Fairfax Media.
Community Relations Commission chief executive Hakan Harman said people “need to stand by each other, speak out against hate and violence and report any incidents of harassment, intimidation or vilification”.
Mr Harman said the actions of a few dangerous individuals should not prevent people from treating each other with respect and humanity.
His comments come as 250 mosques around the country delivered a united message through their Imams.
Organised by the Australian National Imams Council, the message to the congregations was that the “protection of human life is one of the five basic rights in Islam and as a Muslim we have a duty to protect humanity”.
ANIC general manager Samir Bennegadi said the sermons denounced the so-called fatwa from overseas targeting Australia, saying it has no religious authority and reiterating that the horrors conducted overseas in the name of religion are crimes against humanity and sins against God.
 
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Well, that's a problem. When you let others claim to speak for you without publicly contradicting them you are essentially condoning their actions - you're a supporter.
Opinions expressed in the article are those of its author and not necessarily that of the poster.

Now do you get it?

BS. if we accept your logic then the US has your express backing in committing torture and extra judicial killings. I expect a full apology letter, a press conference and a 5 million people rally with Americans saying they don't agree with the unjust acts that the US does. Until then, don't hold me or any other individual responsible for the actions of criminall minded terrorists.
 
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BS. if we accept your logic then the US has your express backing in committing torture and extra judicial killings. I expect a full apology letter, a press conference and a 5 million people rally with Americans saying they don't agree with the unjust acts that the US does. Until then, don't hold me or any other individual responsible for the actions of criminall minded terrorists.
You seem to be behind the times, Exile. The Abu Gharib torturer was prosecuted and sent to military prison, the U.S. doesn't condone Pakistani law enforcement's extra judicial killings, and millions of Americans have expressed themselves in anti-war demonstrations since 2001.

So yes, I do hold you responsible. Especially since as an exile in Britain you have more freedom to act and organize than your fellows back home.
 
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You seem to be behind the times, Exile. The Abu Gharib torturer was prosecuted and sent to military prison, the U.S. doesn't condone Pakistani law enforcement's extra judicial killings, and millions of Americans have expressed themselves in anti-war demonstrations since 2001.

So yes, I do hold you responsible. Especially since as an exile in Britain you have more freedom to act and organize than your fellows back home.

What? I wasnt even talking about Pakistani law enforcement's extra judicial killings. I'm talking about the extra judicial killings committed by 'drones'.

Millions of americans are active supporters of wars in Muslim nations, I have never seen a million anti war demonstration in America. Are you sure your not getting confused with the British protests?

So let me get this straight, I am responsible for the crimes of people who do not consider me muslim, and neither do I consider them muslim, why am I still responsible for their crimes? For me they are not even muslim, I have no responsibility for whatever they are doing.

As for being in Britain and freedoms here, then you obviously don't know anything about what the Ahmadiyya Youth Association, of which I am a member does. So let me give you a few things to think about before you go on about accusing me of doing nothing against extremists.

Stand against extremism: Manchester Muslims join thousands across UK to denounce ISIS terror | Mancunian Matters

UK Muslims gather to promote tolerance - Europe - Al Jazeera English

Islamic Caliph condemns ISIS’ act of ‘Un-Islamic terror’

Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian

UK Event to see 30,000 Muslims Denounce Extremism and Rally for... -- LONDON, August 27, 2014 /PR Newswire UK/ --

No, I am not responsible for their actions.
 
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