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Group aims to dispel Muslim stereotypes

Jennifer Kouakeu-Campbell/Contributing Writer

Issue date: 9/7/08 Section: Divine Intervention
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Media Credit: Howard University

Howard University Professor Sulayman Nyang is clear about the true tenets of Islam. Militant extremism is not one of them, he said, even though ultra-conservative Republican Rush Limbaugh and his followers have tried hard to scare voters away from Democratic Party Presidential nominee, Barack Hussein Obama, by tying the two together.

Limbaugh's reasoning is that Obama was born to a Muslim father, Barack Hussein Obama Sr. It doesn't matter that Obama was not raised by his Kenyan Muslim father. It doesn't matter that Obama identifies himself as a practicing Christian.  Islamic law states that if your father is a Muslim, so are you, Limbaugh and Obama's other detractors insist.  He is a Muslim and therefore a militant extremist.

But Prof. Nyang, a Muslim from Gambia who has written three books about religion, said that Limbaugh followers are displaying the kind of Islamphobia that has been going on in Europe for nearly 110 years. That hostility toward the religion of Islam is based on misconceptions about the tenets of Islam.

"The Five Pillars of Islam are widely known to scholars and individuals trying to understand what Islam is," Professor Nyang explains. "In order for you to be a Muslim, you must declare, you must testify that there is only one God, and the Prophet Muhammad was His messenger. You can't be a Muslim unless you believe in this invisible God who is the source of everything that you experience in this world."

Prayer five times a day, pilgrimage to Mecca, and zakat, which is likened to a Christian tithe, are three other pillars, he added.  "Every Muslim, man or woman, must pay zakat, an obligatory act of charity that you must make," Prof. Nyang said. 

Another pillar, Ramadan, the fasting period, began Monday and will last throughout September.

But violence is not a basic tenet of Islam teaching, he insists. A big debate going on now in the Muslim community is how we can dissuade Muslims who are not happy about the state of the world, politically or economically, from engaging in any kind of violent actions.  Violence is not welcome, he explains, because those who wish to see peace within the household of Islam and beyond would discourage people from using violence.

"You just cannot inflict pain on another human being simply because they are different from you," he said.

Like Prof. Nynang, four young men in Grand Rapids, Michigan, are trying to get the word out about true Islam to non-Muslims and other Muslims. They aim to do so through Sunnah Publishing, an educational nonprofit they formed four years ago.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 2 of 2

Jim Burton

posted 9/08/08 @ 2:49 PM EST

Have you ever listened to rush Limbaugh? I listen to him quite often and not once have I heard him remotely suggest that Senator Obama is a militant Islamist. (Continued…)

John Phil

posted 9/08/08 @ 9:07 PM EST

99 per cent of terrorists today are muslims. Eight of the 10 failed states in the world are muslim majority countries. Says a lot about Islam doesn't it. (Continued…)

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