Fwd: altmuslim this week - april 25, 2011

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From: altmuslim this week <info@altmuslim.com>

Date: Tue, 3 May 2011 12:11:51 -0400

Subject: altmuslim this week - april 25, 2011

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altmuslim this week - april 25, 2011

BY ZAHED AMANULLAH

LONDON, ENGLAND - Assalamu aleikum and welcome back. The sudden and

shocking news of the death of Osama bin Laden, long the world's most

wanted man, may not change the course of history as much as the

September 11, 2001 attacks he sponsored. Despite the simmering

conflict in Afghanistan, launched in retaliation for 9/11, bin Laden

was found in Abbotabad, an upscale suburb of Islamabad, Pakistan,

where a military base and academy is located. From a tipoff by a

Guantanamo inmate (sure to be used to justify such detainment), a

trail led to bin Laden's courier. By last Friday, President Obama

ordered the raid, staged by two dozen Navy SEALs, that stormed the

huge compound and killed bin Laden before taking his body and other

evidence within 40 minutes. It was a unilateral act. "We shared our

intelligence on this compound with no other country, including

Pakistan," a senior administration official said. While Pakistani

newspapers initially denied this, Pakistan's government and military

eventually admitted no prior knowledge - despite the rather unusual

circumstances of bin Laden's confinement. The news has put Pakistan

under intense scrutiny about the presence of bin Laden deep in its

territory and what protective network supported him. Caught between

cooperation with the US that is both insufficient (by US standards)

and excessive (by the sentiments of many Pakistanis), Pakistan is left

in an unenviable position. But the unease which Pakistanis feel at

unilateral US action should not be confused with blanket support for

bin Laden, al Qaeda, or its objectives. Bin Laden, after all, died in

a million dollar house (not a cave) and apparently used one of his

wives as a human shield during the raid - hardly the stuff his legend

was created from. The retaliatory violence that may follow, if any,

will likely be aimless and half-hearted. Supporters of bin Laden, such

as the Taliban, have already accepted bin Laden's demise and pledged

more attacks, but it's hard not to interpret bin Laden's loss as

irreplaceable, and the beginning of the end of the al Qaeda franchise

itself. A few observers are left quarelling about the Islamic

permissibility of the swift sea burial of bin Laden and others are

beginning to insist the man is not bin Laden without more proof (a

swift DNA test that matched the brain of one of bin Laden's sisters

who died in Boston was all the proof America needed). But the story

and facts are compelling enough for nearly all of bin Laden's friends

and foes alike. The heart of al Qaeda is gone. With it, a long and

tragic chapter in world history closes.

Meanwhile, the threat from al Qaeda-inspired extremism certainly isn't

going away, but how much of it has crumbled under its own fragility

anyway? If polls in recent years of Arabs and Muslims showing a

rejection of al Qaeda ideology were not trustworthy enough, the Arab

Spring removed nearly all doubts. Protestors in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen,

and Syria have explicitly rejected not only bin Laden's ilk, but the

type of theocracy he and others championed. In the Muslim world's

reaction to bin Laden's death, only Hamas has praised bin Laden on his

death as "a holy Muslim warrior." American Muslims have expressed

everything from "abolute delight" to "relief," while reaction

elsewhere overseas more mixed. "After ten years, including two wars,

919,967 deaths and spending over 1.18 trillion dollars, we managed to

kill one person," said Kuwaiti political activist Salem Belal. And

then there's the movement itself. For all the talk about possible

retaliation, there is plenty of uncertainty about who's calling the

shots. Al-Qaeda's theology is "still present but it's weakening," says

David H. Schanzer, a professor at Duke University in Durham, North

Carolina and director of the Triangle Center on Terrorism and Homeland

Security. "The question is who is going to continue to inspire

individuals to take such extreme action?" Ayman al-Zawahiri, who has

often relayed communications on bin Laden's behalf, has little of the

appeal of his deceased leader. Then there's Anwar al-Awlaki, the

American-born cleric in hiding in Yemen who has shown some of the

inspirational ability of bin Laden. But he is still unlikely to have

as much global appeal (or a fear factor for the West) unless he is

able to pull off a 9/11-style act of terror - a long shot, given his

track record of dimwitted accomplices and half-baked plots. The death

of bin Laden will hasten an already swirling downward spiral, until

random acts of violence perpetrated in the name of Islam are seen as

such - merely random. In the meantime, Muslims can look forward to the

gains found in non-violent strategies for change - peaceful

demonstrations in the Arab world and constructive engagement in

Western civil society, both of which give new meanings to the word

sacrifice. "Millions of Arab Muslims rose up and were prepared for

their own martyrdom – not for Islam but for freedom and liberty and

democracy," writes veteran analyst Robert Fisk, who once met bin

Laden. "Bin Laden didn't get rid of the tyrants. The people did. And

they didn't want a caliph."

Finally, what does the death of bin Laden mean for relationships

between Muslim communities and the West? After all, bin Laden was the

father of Islamophobia, a phenomenon that was negligible (though

certainly not non-existent) in comparison to recent years,

particularly in the United States. And for many people of my

generation - Western-born or raised Muslims - bin Laden's attacks on

September 11, 2001 was the day we became less American and more

Muslim. Those of us who were marginally identified by our religion at

the time realized that a time had come when we had to do something

more proactive to define who we are. Sadly, that proved to be an

uphill struggle. Much of the opposition to Park51, the "Ground Zero

Mosque," was rooted in the shadow of bin Laden, with a presumption

that Muslims were obsessed (or, charitably, susceptible) to terrorism

and violence - this despite a near absence of such among mainstream

American Muslims. The death of bin Laden has left a vacuum that can be

filled by more hate, or by more constructive actions by those on both

sides. It may seem normal, if a tad undignified, to see fellow

Americans gathering at Ground Zero to chant patriotic "frat-boy"

slogans. But if you consider it unusual for some Muslims to refrain

from cheering about bin Laden's death, consider that the Vatican

concurred, asking for "prayer more than revelry" in such

circumstances. Along with prayer, we need to reflect on what a decline

in al Qaeda means. Muslims worldwide have overcome huge hurdles to

push back against the bin Laden narrative. Those in the Middle East

and north Africa have pushed for democratic reform and freedom on

their own terms and Muslims living in the West have contributed to the

well being of their neighbours and the betterment of their society as

businessmen, elected officials, and participants in popular culture.

Talking about closure is talking about half the solution. The other

half involves active participation and a fuller commitment to bridging

the gaps of misunderstanding that have been clouded by the War on

Terror for too long.

THIS WEEK ON ALTMUSLIM.COM



DEMISE OF BIN LADEN

Death and deliverance

BY RAFIA ZAKARIA, MAY 3, 2011

As a Muslim American, I cannot help but hope that the closure afforded

by the death of an evil man, can afford some much needed deliverance

to a community unfairly scrutinized and unduly targeted (No comments

and no reactions)



DEATH OF BIN LADEN

The 5 stages of Muslim-American emotion

BY AZIZ POONAWALLA, MAY 2, 2011

A flood of emotion has come over all Americans in the wake of the

demise of Osama bin Laden. Muslim Americans are no exception. Aziz

Poonawalla takes us through five stages of response. (2 comments and

11 reactions)



TERRORISM

A terrorist victim isn't always someone else

BY TAHIR WADOOD MALIK, APRIL 28, 2011

Victims and survivors of terrorism such as Tahir Wadood Malik have

suffered through a loss so traumatic that many others will hopefully

never have to understand or share. (1 comment and 2 reactions)



BOOK: "THE MISSING MARTYRS"

Why are there so few Muslim terrorists?

BY AZIZ HUQ, APRIL 27, 2011

Charles Kurzman's book The Missing Martyrs is an important

contribution to the combating of false stereotypes, pointing to

terrorism as a political rather than religious phenomenon and

demonstrating the relative failure of al Qaeda ideology. (2 comments

and no reactions)



MUSLIM NEIGHBORS

Jihad came to me in its kindest, most gentle form

BY ESTHER CEPEDA, APRIL 25, 2011

Though the media circus Rep. Peter King orchestrated recently did

nothing but stir and, in some cases, reinforce feelings of

Islamophobia and anti-muslim bigotry, none of us has to buy into it.

(No comments and 7 reactions)



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