|
American Muslim
Leaders Condemn Terrorism, Defend Muslims' Civil Rights
By Susan Domowitz, Washington File Staff Writer 19 September 2001
Washington -- American Muslim
leaders representing an array of Muslim organizations in the United States said
at a September 18 press conference that they "would like to make it
absolutely clear that we join all other Americans in our unequivocal
condemnation of the attacks as un-Islamic, barbaric, and inhumane."
Speaking at the National Press
Club, the Secretary General of the Muslim Society, Shaker Elsayed said the
Muslim American community is also mourning losses at the World Trade Center.
Terrorist attacks, he said, "can not be condoned or justified under any
circumstances."
Elsayed went on to say that
American Muslims very much appreciate the recent statements by President Bush,
Secretary of State Colin Powell, Attorney General John Ashcroft and others,
warning against the mistreatment of Muslims, Arabs, and others in the wake of
the terrorist attacks.
"The American flag," he
said, "symbolizes all of our Islamic values: freedom, civil liberties, and
respect for human life."
Imam Mehdi Bray, of the Muslim
Public Affairs Council, called on Americans not to sacrifice civil liberties,
enshrined in the Bill of Rights, which "are our real security."
The Executive Director of the
Islamic Institute, Abdulwahab Alkebsi, said the U.S. government has done a good
job of protecting American Muslims from backlash, but that law enforcement
agencies need to see American Muslims as partners in battling terrorism, and not
abrogate their civil rights.
The Council on American-Islamic
Relations, in a separate statement today, thanked President Bush for taking the
initiative to reach out to the American Muslim community during this time of
national crisis. President Bush's "supportive remarks will help set a tone
of tolerance and inclusion for our society," said CAIR Executive Director
Nihad Awad, who attended yesterday's meeting with President Bush at the Islamic
Center of Washington, D.C.
(The Washington File is a product
of the Office of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State.
Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
|