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Published In
The Center Newsletter
Winter 2004
Issue 85
Published: January 2004
Muslims in a New World

Posted: Friday, January 2, 2004

American Muslims should reject Islamic extremism, embrace their role in American society, and promote a democratic future throughout the Muslim world, argued Ahmed H. al-Rahim of the American Islamic Congress at the September 24 Center seminar "Muslim American Politics after September 11." Referring to his own experience as an Arab immigrant growing up in Texas, al-Rahim described the anti-American politics that infects—and goes unchallenged in—almost all mosques in the United States. The "dark side" of multicultural doctrine has allowed Muslim "hate speech," he said, and such condescending indulgence must stop. Muslim leaders and organizations should be held to the same standards as their Christian and Jewish counterparts.

Al-Rahim stressed that Islam is not monolithic and that there is no one "Islamic position" on most issues. American Muslims must break free from the radicalism imposed on them by foreign money and foreign imams, and speak with more independent, nuanced voices. They should be satisfied with smaller mosques so that they are free to assert their own convictions, to condemn hate speech, and to create Muslim cultural centers and university chaplaincy programs untarnished by Wahabi or Iranian extremism. Rather than being apologists for human-rights abuses in the Muslim world, Muslim Americans should work to end those abuses. They should, moreover, use their perspective and experience as a religious minority in this country to promote the rights of religious minorities in Islamic countries.

Center president Hillel Fradkin moderated the lively exchange that followed. Among those participating were Roberta Baruch of the American Jewish Committee, Laura Blumenfeld and Caryle Murphy of the Washington Post, Noemie Emery and Claudia Winkler of The Weekly Standard, Robert Leiken of the Nixon Center, Lou Marano of UPI, Paul Rodriguez of Insight, and Ashok Sajjanhar of the Indian Embassy.


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The New Atlantis Issue 23
The New Atlantis
A Journal of Technology and Society

The latest issue of EPPC's journal The New Atlantis includes an editorial on President Obama's approach to science policy, plus articles and essays on the changing face of modern warfare, artificial intelligence, cancer treatment under socialism, the lived experience of mental illness, and much more. Visit TheNewAtlantis.com today! 

Radical-in-Chief

 Read EPPC Senior Fellow Stanley Kurtz's remarkable new political biography of President Obama, Radical-in-Chief: Barack Obama and the Untold Story of American Socialism. The New York Times bestseller, which draws on never-before-seen evidence to reveal the carefully hidden tale of Barack Obama's political past, has already earned praise as "the most important political book of the year" and as "a meticulous work of political archeology, an excavation of Obama's radical roots and socialist affiliations." 

The views expressed by EPPC scholars in their work are their individual views only and are not to be imputed to EPPC as an institution.
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