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Showing posts with label Akbar Ahmed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Akbar Ahmed. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

‪Why does terrorism dominate ‬ ‪the headlines?‬ Saudi Gazette

This site is strictly about my writings or writings about me. Thanks to Tariq Al-Maeena for mentioning me in his write up. I really appreciate that.

Mike Ghouse
www.TheGhouseDiary.com


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Courtesy - Saudi Gazette
Why does terrorism dominate ‬ ‪the headlines?‬



 
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Tariq A. Al-Maeena
Yet another despicable act occurred a few days ago when the Rida Mosque in Mahasen neighborhood of Al-Ahsa in the Eastern Province was bombed by those following a takfiri ideology.  Four people who had been there offering prayers lost their lives to yet another act of terrorism, while another 18 were badly injured. The mosque is frequented by those following the Shia branch of Islam.
The media in the following days was full of condemnation of the latest series of attacks based on sectarian lines, and news of other terrorists who had been captured or are on the run.  But it is not just our own homegrown terrorists who dominate the news.  There are marauding bands such as Daesh (the self-proclaimed IS), Al-Qaeda and other fringe groups who have been thrust onto the front pages or the airwaves with their brutality, all the while chanting religious verses. All that this has succeeded in doing has been to promote a very violent image of Islam to those who are not Muslims.
So is this what Islam and Muslims are all about? The mayhem, murders, and bombings of the innocent?  Is there no other face of Islam?  You would have to dig deep between the pages to read of the other face of Muslims, a people who have dedicated their life to the proper teachings of this great religion and who by virtue of their piety are not seeking headlines.
There are Muslim individuals such as Dr. Mike Ghouse from the US who is a community consultant, social scientist, thinker, writer, news maker, and a speaker on a wide range of issues concerning Islam and the Western world. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions on issues of the day and building bridges between the faiths.
There is also Akbar Ahmed, the world renowned Muslim anthropologist whose various projects have contributed to and shaped contemporary thinking on the relations between the Muslim and the Western worlds. Professor Akbar Ahmed is the Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies in the School of International Service at American University in Washington, DC. He has served as a Nonresident Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution and was the First Distinguished Chair of Middle East and Islamic Studies at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, MD.
The list of such distinguished individuals and their positive contributions to society is long but inevitably obscured by the dastardly deeds of Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, the Daesh leader, and his kind.  And yet there are other relatively unknown Muslims who are shunted to the sidelines and deserve to have their story told.  They do not carry impressive credentials, but through their selfless acts they can indeed be a proud beacon to Muslims everywhere.
One such individual is Ali Banat, a Sydney born and bred Muslim who very recently discovered that he had cancer and only seven months to live.  A successful entrepreneur, Ali had everything he wanted, a fleet of high performance cars including a Ferrari Spider, luxury watches, mansions and just about everything else.  Facing his inevitable fate, Ali began disposing of all his assets and made a determination to make a difference in the lives of many who needed a helping hand.
For one of his projects, Ali travelled to Togo, Africa where he felt he could help without too much red tape.  He founded the MATW Africa Project which aims to build a village which will be home to over 200 widows, a school, and a residential dorm to house 600 orphans. A mini hospital/medical center and businesses to support the local community are also going to be established.  Half of the money required has been collected through goodwill donors. Ali explains: “After someone tells you, or you find out that you are sick or haven’t got much time in this life, wealth is the last thing you want to chase and this is how we should be living our life every day.  These people are going for the wrong goals; you will realize that when you get sick when someone tells you, you haven’t got long to live. You will realize all this stuff doesn’t benefit you in any way.
“It all started when I went to the cemetery to attend a funeral and I was thinking to myself after you go there’s nothing, there’s no one there for you, no mother, no father, no brother, and no sister except for your good deeds.  At this point in my life, Alhamdulillah I have been gifted by Allah with cancer throughout my body and I have changed my whole life to helping people.  It is a gift because Allah has given me a chance and some time to change.”
Ali’s days on the earth have decreased as the cancer has begun tearing through his body.  Yet it is his dream to make things happen, and the project in Togo is one of them.  He is a Muslim and he is not a terrorist.  Perhaps that doesn’t command him headline space but his deeds toward humanity should.
 — The author can be reached at talmaeena@aol.com. Follow him on Twitter@talmaeena

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Dr. Akbar Ahmed's Poetry- Suspended Somehwere Between

DR. AKBAR AHMED’S BOOK SUSPENDED SOMEWHERE BETWEEN
Poems by Dr. Akbar Ahmed

Suspended Somewhere Between, a book by Dr. Akbar Ahmed.

One of the qualities of a great book is its ability to transport you into a world of your imagination, into your own islands of life where you visit and dwell in a period that is sacred to you, undistributed, private, secret and untouched for years, it’s your reverie. A home stacked away in memories where the mere recall of your loved ones gives you a sense of security, peace and safety. As you read through Dr. Ahmed’s poems, you may find an anchor for your own expressions.

The book, “Suspended somewhere between” is a collection of poetry by Dr. Akbar Ahmed who is aptly called “the world’s leading authority on contemporary Islam” by the BBC News. Dr. Ahmed seeks what a majority of us seek; to live in harmony with what surrounds us, life and matter.

The essence of one of the poems “What I seek” is primarily what each one of us seeks.  I found a deep resonance with him in this poem. It lights up the spark of the universal embrace of Jesus, Muhammad’s desire to imbue a sense of equality through humility, Mahatma Gandhi’s jihad against oppression and temptations to revenge and Martin Luther King’s firm belief in human dignity. They were the models of excellence on the earth that he invokes to put us on the pathways of peace. It is indeed a poem for men and women who have an open heart and an open mind towards fellow beings.

I was tense reading the title of another poem, “The Train to Pakistan”. Years ago, I had differed with Dr. Ahmed’s take on Jawaharlal Nehru in his movie “Jinnah” which he had gracefully acknowledged without agreeing. Being a Subcontinentian, I am equally committed to peace and prosperity of the region and have come to admire Dr. Ahmed’s efforts in prose and now in the form of poetry. As the poem moves forward, I paused at the Killing fields of Punjab and visited Sunder Lal in Bangalore who had came in the other train to Delhi and witnessed the slaughter of his family members in the same Punjab but on the other side of the divide. It was painful but the wise man was not hateful.

Dr. Ahmed puts me at ease about  the carnage, instead he expresses his gratitude to his mother who had asked to take the next train, and blames none for what happened to his would have been train where no one survived. It is the statesman in him that seeks solutions rather than blame, just as my father taught me one of the important lessons of life to build cohesive societies.  During the communal riots in Jabalpur in the sixties both Muslims and Hindus were killed in the mayhem, he was clear and named the individuals without emphasizing their religion to be blamed, he said you cannot blame the blameless intangible religion and expect justice, we must blame the individuals who caused it and punish them accordingly for disturbing the peace and thus bring a resolution to the conflict by serving justice.  I see that value jumping out of Dr. Ahmed in that poem and that is the definition of an ideal Muslim; one who seeks to mitigate conflicts and nurtures goodwill.
The poem Khyber Pass” moves you again; especially those who are seeking to create a cohesive America where no one has to be apprehensive of the other. It is the not the pass, it is how one responds that affects the equation. The Nuclear Power in the right hands is beneficent while destructive in the other, same as the story of religion.

Dr. Ahmed has dedicated a beautiful poem for his mother and this stanza expresses the sentiments of most of the humanity. 

“When I know that at midnight
she sits up praying to her God 
to keep me warm and whole,”

Suspended Somewhere is a reflection of a life that has experienced  it all from the near obliterating journey in the train to a new land of hope, idolizing the founder of that nation Muhammad Ali Jinnah to passionately working to restore the dream of one nation. Pensive at Khyber, a PhD from London University, an Ambassador to United Kingdom and author of one of the most successful books on contemporary Islam in America, Dr. Akbar Ahmed appeals to those who can bring about a positive change. It’s a beautiful journey of hopes and aspirations.

Mike Ghouse is committed to building a cohesive America and offers pluralistic solutions on issues of the day. He is a speaker, thinker, writer and a frequent guest on Hannity show and nationally syndicated Radio shows and Dallas TV, Radio and Print Media. Over 1000 articles have been published on Pluralism, Interfaith, Islam, India and cohesive societies. His work is encapsulated in 27 blogs, four websites and several forums indexed at www.MikeGhouse.net
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Mike Ghouse
Foundation for Pluralism | World Muslim Congress
2665 Villa Creek Dr, Suite 206
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(214) 325-1916
www.MikeGhouse.net
MikeGhouse@aol.com