Saturday, October 30, 2010

Religion Must Die..for Us to Live



There is something conceptually irreligious with what is religious today. All religions suffer from segregative nuances albeit from geographic location, origin and even birth-rite. We have 'middle-eastern' religions, 'asian' religions' religions, 'inherited' religions, 'black' churches, 'white' churches, etc. Some claim to be universal and inclusive but are usually universal and inclusive if one is a member. So how is humanity to come together while every religion requires one to 'ride' in their car to heaven.

As a Muslim, I was taught to be familiar with various religious dogmas, information I would use for debating and the promotion of my named religion. As a MuslimSoul, I've opened myself to studying the Creator in various historical contexts and experiences. God has guided humanity throughout human history being revealed to every people and nation. One not superior to the other, for God of today is the same God of ancient, consistent and constant. Yet every spiritual generation and dispensation has claimed ownership of God by prophet or profit. Our desire to be the chosen of God divides us, not moral vs. immoral but divisions based on religious titles and the names we use to call God.

We are told who God is early in life while our environment forms our religious prejudice. Religious prejudice and phobias allow us to demean and condemn other God-faiths called by different names. Christianity of old labeled non-Christians as heathens who were damned for hell. In their damnation, they could be colonized, killed or accept salvation. This obvious God-less concept of religion wasn't unique to Christianity, most religions have suffered from a false sense of supremacy. When people speak for God, they and their objectives tend to get in the way of what God has called us to do.

So this brings us to the real question, what religion is God? Is God Jewish, Christian, Buddhist, Muslim, or something else? This question may seem absurd or even blasphemous but isn't this what every faith subliminally defines as we follow our “true” religions. Few would agree this is true yet the reality of our actions tell a different truth. The rule of non-discussable topics, religion and politics could possibly damn us all to a permanent segregation. If this is true then religion must die for Us to live.

What would happen if we dropped the religious surnames. No longer called Muslim or Christian but following the God-given principles of all faiths; Love God, Love thy neighbor, ya’ll know the rest. Would we be any less? Could we then find equitable appreciation in a gospel choir, a Hasidic community or prostrating muslims? Could we eventually rid ourselves of religious phobias and strive to be God-like as a collective society? A utopian dream, maybe but isn’t this the purpose that all of our ‘Gods’ have challenged us with.

At the core of every religion is a value system that has been the same since the first revelation. Yes, God has spoken to different peoples in different languages in different ages but the purpose and goal of human existence has never changed. If we can get past the titles and focus on what is consistent in all faiths then maybe we create a heaven on earth...if we don't...well, tune in to your local news.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

The Truth can set us Free: Thanks Juan!


As most Muslims in America know by now, Juan Williams was fired from NPR. His so-called inflammatory comments have made him the poster child of the anti-Islam movement in America. Yea OK, maybe not that far but considering the amount of press his comments have garnered and the amount of buzz on the web and in Muslim circles, I can't help but wonder why are we demonizing Juan?

Juan Williams is an analyst that makes his living providing editorials on political and social subjects. Like all of us, his editorials come from his own personal perspective...which by the way I don't always agree. The comment relating the fear he experiences when on a plane and seeing people in Muslim garb is a bold admission. Particularly, in these days of Islamophobia, (which I also don't agree with but that's another blog) are we to believe his firing to be a result of media outlets being more sensitive and careful in how Islam is paired with terror, radical, anti-American, etc? NOT!

Most analyst, particularly, conservatives speak in languages that create fear in the viewers. This fear isn't coming just from conservative outlets such as Fox but even the liberal outlets do little to separate Islam from the radical. It's heard so much one would think Radical-Islam is a new religion. Juan, I believe spoke not only from his heart but also from the view of many Americans who remember 9/11. He spoke of a trauma that has affected many Americans but rarely do we discuss the healing process, which I wonder, in war times is that what the country wants.

We are at war in Muslim countries; Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan. Although we no longer use the war time 'shorts' of WWII to generate "patriotism" and anti-whoeverwefighting sentiment, we do use news outlets and hollywood to create a similar phobic state. So, how can we truly have a discourse separating the crimes of a few from a peaceful religion of many. We are able to separate local acts of terror from the perpetrators such as; the shoe bomber, the IRS bomber, the Hutari, Catholic priests, gang violence, etc. We don't blame a race, community or religion for the acts of a few. What we do is acknowledge the inhumaness of the act, find methods of prevention and for the victim, discuss ways to heal and not displace our anger or anxiety.

Juan started the conversation not in an accusatory manner as O'Reilly, Beck and other fear-mongers but by speaking from a perspective of personal fear and contextualizing that fear at the scene of the crime itself. Honest dialogue isn't always easy, sometimes hearing the truth hurts but from truth, on both sides, we can have a legitimate discourse, begin to heal and free ourselves from the illegitimate fear of a religion.

Let me be the first to tell Mr. Juan Williams that it is okay to fly in a plane with Muslims. 99.9% of Muslims warrant no concern on planes or anywhere, regardless of their dress. But of course, that .1% of Whites, Blacks, Latinos, Asians, Europeans, Christians, Jews, Atheists and yes Muslims, we all need to be nervous about.