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Muslims In America Divided On Improving Image 10 Years After 9/11

Muslim In America

First Posted: 08/24/2011 7:01 pm Updated: 10/24/2011 6:12 am

By Omar Sacirbey
Religion News Service

(RNS) After all the books, speeches, seminars, Facebook posts and mosque open houses to teach Americans about Islam in the wake of 9/11, Americans say they now know more about Islam than they did 10 years ago.

The problem, pollsters say, is that Americans don't seem to like what they're learning.

Indeed, the percentage of Americans who say they know some or a great deal about Islam climbed from 38 percent immediately after 9/11 to 44 percent in 2010, according to the Pew Research Center.

At the same time, Pew polls report, the percentage of Americans with favorable views of Islam dropped, from 41 percent to 30 percent in the past five years.

That has left many Muslims exasperated with Islamic advocacy organizations, and sometimes divided over the best ways to use scant resources in hopes of improving American perceptions of Islam. Critics say the numbers prove that education has failed to reduce Islamophobia among Americans.

"The idea that education will lead to a lessoning of bigotry is just factually incorrect," said Reza Aslan, an award-winning author who recently launched a media company, BoomGen Studios, in New York and Los Angeles that focuses on Muslim and Middle Eastern themes.

Americans "don't care about your religion. They don't want to know more about Islam,"

Aslan said Muslim organizations shouldn't eliminate or overlook education, but argues that more resources should be spent on integrating Muslims into all aspects of American society -- politics, business, education, and civic life.

He points to American Jews as a community that was once reviled but is now respected.

"What happened? Did people learn more about Judaism? No, there wasn't a concerted effort to teach people about Jewish life or Jewish religion," said Aslan. "The Jews integrated themselves into American life to the point that the argument that the Jews aren't American sounded so stupid, that people stopped thinking it."

Kamran Memon, a civil rights lawyer in Chicago who also heads the grassroots group Muslims for a Safe America, said education isn't the problem. Rather, it is the subject matter.

While Muslim Americans are good at talking about Islam's appealing aspects, Memon said, they haven't addressed legitimate concerns about Islamic scriptures and beliefs that have been used to justify violence.

"When people are so scared of something, you can't change the subject, you have to address the issue," Memon said. "Talking about peace in Islam is like trying to change the subject, and you can't change the subject when someone asks, 'Why are some Muslims trying to kill us?"'

Muslim groups counter that education does work. Without it, they say, Islamophobia would be much worse.

"From our experience, education works," said Ashfaq Parkar, a coordinator for 1-800-Why-Islam, a hotline sponsored by the Islamic Circle of North America in Queens, N.Y. The hotline fields as many as 600 calls per month. "Many people who call will be confrontational when they start, but when they conclude, they're sympathetic, or at least less aggressive."

Maha ElGenaidi, CEO of the Islamic Networks Group in San Jose, Calif., which trains speakers to talk about Islam in schools, government and law enforcement agencies, corporations and religious institutions, also rejected the idea that education isn't working.

"That's not our experience at all," she said. "Just the opposite, in fact."

ElGenaidi noted that Americans under the age of 30 had more favorable views of Muslims than older Americans, in part because public school systems started teaching about Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism in the 1990s. "Before that, students were not taught anything about Islam or Muslims."

The problem, Muslim educators say, is that attempts to provide what they call "positive" knowledge about Islam are often overwhelmed by a sea of "negative" information that's spread by conservative cable and talk radio hosts, and the right-wing blogosphere.

"The challenge is the onslaught of negative images, negative stereotypes," said Nadia Roumani, director of the American Muslim Civic Leadership Institute at the University of Southern California, "and the resources and manpower these (Muslim) groups have just don't match up."

The newly resurgent anti-Muslim movement makes education more important, not less, Muslim educators say. Some experts agree.

Robert P. Jones, whose Washington-based Public Religion Research Institute has tracked public opinion on Islam, said viewers of Fox News Channel, for example, were among the most likely to say they felt informed about Islam.

"They were also four times more likely than others in the population to have negative views towards Muslims," he said.

Eboo Patel, who directs the Chicago-based Interfaith Youth Core, which focuses on grooming a new generation of interfaith leaders on college campuses, said knowledge about Islam feeds directly into perceptions about Islam.

"If the only thing you know about Islam is Osama bin Laden and the stoning of women in Afghanistan or Iran, then clearly your attitude towards Muslims is going to be bad," he said.

"But if you knew that the most common prayer in Islam is 'In the name of God, the all merciful,' your attitude towards Muslims would probably be a lot better."

CAIN: AMERICANS HAVE RIGHT TO BAN MOSQUES

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By Omar Sacirbey Religion News Service (RNS) After all the books, speeches, seminars, Facebook posts and mosque open houses to teach Americans about Islam in the wake of 9/11, Americans say they n...
By Omar Sacirbey Religion News Service (RNS) After all the books, speeches, seminars, Facebook posts and mosque open houses to teach Americans about Islam in the wake of 9/11, Americans say they n...
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04:00 PM on 09/05/2011
I rather liked the image that was used to hook in readers. It may go further for helping convey the general spirit of the article far more than the article itself.
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Damn Damien
Naturally!
02:19 PM on 08/26/2011
Americans and western Europeans are the most welcoming and tolerant people in the world. So, I reject the proposition that the problem lies with them.

We have had enough of religion (of every kind) and lack the patience to babysit another one until it grows up.

We "tolerate" opinions of all kinds, even disagreeable ones, but cannot be forced to love them.

If anything at all, Americans have been slow to recognize the diabolical nature of this particular ideology. Much of the world has been complaining about it for the last 14 centuries -- as they are doing now. Not to mention that it is easy to surmise that it polled even worse among people living during the time of the grand opening, who were quick to recognize the nature of the beast.
04:44 PM on 08/26/2011
Good one Damn!
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Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
10:49 AM on 08/26/2011
By the way, the very best way to develop an accuracy-based view of Muslims and Islam is: get to know some Muslims.

I have Muslim friends, and they're just regular people. I also have Hindu, Jewish, Buddhist, Christian and Atheist friends, and they're just regular people, too.

Prejudice and fear always dissolve when we get to know people from the target group .. because then we see that all groups are comprised of individuals, and that none of the globalized statements are true, and that the sweeping, negative generalizations don't apply to more than a tiny percentage of the group's members ... because people who hate and fear given groups always focus on the group's very worst examples.

This dynamic has played out with all racial and religious (and other) prejudice throughout history, and will play out the same way with respect to Muslims, too.

Getting to know Muslims (for non-Muslims) and vice-versa (for Muslims) will just help accelerate the process / the return to normalcy.
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Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
10:39 AM on 08/26/2011
This is a brief but potentially important article.

Simply put: a lot of people have negative attitudes about Islam and Muslims because there is a dedicated cadre of professional anti-Muslim / anti-Islam proponents who are exercising an ongoing campaign to get people to hate and fear Muslims and Islam, with no basis in reason or fact.

These anti-Islam professionals make up a lot of stuff about Muslims.

The fact that their information is made up, and/or exaggerated, and/or distorted, and/or applied to "Muslims" when a given assertion may apply only to the tiny (far less than 1%) of Muslims who are extremists ... is something that anyone can verify for themselves, if they're willing to Google around a bit (YouTube search is good, too), and read information from both Muslim sources and credible, independent sources, and compare that to the assertions of anti-Islam proponents.

That's all I did -- and it's why I comment as I do.

For those who have the interest, mainstream books on Islam and the history of Islam are good, too, as points for comparison. All mainstream material from both Muslim and non-Muslim sources, including statements of almost all Muslim leaders and mainstream Muslims themselves , agree with one another .... anti-Islam views are entirely on their own (think: Birthers).

http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-report/browse-all-issues/2011/summer/jihad-against-islam

http://www.publiceye.org/liberty/training/Muslim_Menace_Complete.pdf
02:14 PM on 08/25/2011
So why did the Muslims seal of the Gate to the Holy City that Jesus is supposed to enter?

If he is on their side, their would be no need, don't you think? The Angels of my GOD, don't have to beat the crap out of people to get them to follow.

Capt. America.
11:03 AM on 09/08/2011
Your 'god' is no better than theirs. ALL religious belief is harmful when taken to extremes of any sort. And as much as you may wish to think otherwise, your faith is no exception to that.
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Katia S Wojcik
Not for the faint...
01:16 PM on 08/25/2011
Does this mean that it is ok to ban Churches and Temples in Muslim communities in the US? This man is absurd! Please get your brain checked if you were planning on voting for this looney.
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Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
10:54 AM on 08/26/2011
Well, he has since apologized (for whatever that may be worth), but/and yes -- he was singling out Muslims and mosques as problematic, due to his own ignorance-based prejudices.

Thankfully, the First Amendment protects all religious people from that kind of ignorance, even if/when that ignorance is found in elected officials ... which I'm guessing Herman Cain will never be.

His ignorance-based views about Muslims have caused at least one person I know (not myself; I'm Progressive, politically) to decide not to vote for him, for that reason alone (Cain's poor information-processing skills, and his related, ignorant statements --- not exactly Presidential qualities).
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Katia S Wojcik
Not for the faint...
12:13 PM on 08/26/2011
yea, not worth much - now if he sincerely rebuffed his statement and showed an understanding of why what he said was so wrong then it might be worth something.
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ms schatzi
11:35 AM on 08/25/2011
Liberals just need to remind them that there is no god.
They certainly like to tell Christians that very thing.
Go on, I dare ya.
10:43 AM on 08/25/2011
Three major religions have common hnistory: But one is a fulfilment of one and one is a counterfit.

Islam is the counterfit.

12 Apostles Jesus
Anti Christ Angles
Woman Status Woman Status

The Jesus in Islam is to return to destroy the followers of thecross.

When ever an angle visited an man in christianity they said: "Fear not"
Gabriel worked over Mohamad t the poiint that he was in fear.

So if you want to follow Islam go ahead, but if you study (Jin) Demons you will find that Islam has been deceived by them.

Capt. America
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Katia S Wojcik
Not for the faint...
01:14 PM on 08/25/2011
What are you saying? These are all half completed thoughts.
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sandalwood
songs of the shamans...
01:22 PM on 08/25/2011
I find all this kind of talk laughable too. It is interesting to see how Jesus is seen in Islam though... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_in_Islam
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alkh3myst
Of course you can pay me in gum!
05:29 AM on 08/26/2011
You know, me and the boys were looking for a spot to burn these Qurans we have. Your place sounds PERFECT!
11:14 AM on 08/26/2011
Hobbit I be, trouble to the!

Burn baby burn.
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sandalwood
songs of the shamans...
09:20 AM on 08/25/2011
After 9/11 people found out a lot more about American and Islamic history, and both forms of Imperialism left many cold. Neither history is full of love and light.
10:11 AM on 08/25/2011
People of all faiths or of none can be saints or monsters. It's called human nature.
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sandalwood
songs of the shamans...
10:34 AM on 08/25/2011
Yes of course, all humans have the same potential. But it is not saying too much to articulate that histories are linked to ideologies of various peoples as well. Neither of these self-images have been helpful... "The shining city on the hill" and "The one true religion". Without a deeper analysis than "all humans..." we will fail to understand the past and repeat it.
10:47 AM on 08/25/2011
Yes, I agree. But since the three major religions are conflict (the other don't mater).

I would suggest studing the END TIME proficies. Then make your choice. 2012 is not the end of days, but it could be the beginning of the end.
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gunrunner99
freedom of speech
01:49 PM on 08/28/2011
You are correct in the History of both,however,to this day they one still stones people to death.