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From: name-mce-boun...@nameorg.org [mailto:name-mce-boun...@nameorg.org] On
Behalf Of Bill Howe
Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2008 3:01 AM
To: ***NAME-MCE ***NAME-MCE
Subject: (NAME-MCE) Young Muslims Build a Subculture on an Underground Book



December 23, 2008
Young Muslims Build a Subculture on an Underground Book 
By CHRISTOPHER MAAG


CLEVELAND - Five years ago, young Muslims across the United States began
reading and passing along a blurry, photocopied novel called "The
Taqwacores," about imaginary punk rock Muslims in Buffalo.
 
"This book helped me create my identity," said Naina Syed, 14, a high school
freshman in Coventry, Conn.
 
A Muslim born in Pakistan, Naina said she spent hours on the phone listening
to her older sister read the novel to her. "When I finally read the book for
myself," she said, "it was an amazing experience." 
 
The novel is "The Catcher in the Rye" for young Muslims, said Carl W. Ernst,
a professor of Islamic studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill. Springing from the imagination of Michael Muhammad Knight, it inspired
disaffected young Muslims in the United States to form real Muslim punk
bands and build their own subculture. 
 
Now the underground success of Muslim punk has resulted in a low-budget
independent film based on the book.
 
A group of punk artists living in a communal house in Cleveland called the
Tower of Treason offered the house as the set for the movie. The crumbling
streets and boarded-up storefronts of their neighborhood resemble parts of
Buffalo. Filming took place in October, and the movie will be released next
year, said Eyad Zahra, the director.
 
"To see these characters that used to live only inside my head out here
walking around, and to think of all these kids living out parts of the book,
it's totally surreal," Mr. Muhammad Knight, 31, said as he roamed the movie
set. 
 
As part of the set, a Muslim punk rock musician, Marwan Kamel, 23, painted
"Osama McDonald," a figure with Osama bin Laden's face atop Ronald
McDonald's body. Mr. Kamel said the painting was a protest against
imperialism by American corporations and against Wahhabism, the strictest
form of Islam. 
 
Noureen DeWulf, 24, an actress who plays a rocker in the movie, defended the
film's message. 
 
"I'm a Muslim and I'm 100-percent American," Ms. DeWulf said, "so I can
criticize my faith and my country. Rebellion? Punk? This is totally
American."
 
The novel's title combines "taqwa," the Arabic word for "piety," with
"hardcore," used to describe many genres of angry Western music. 
 
For many young American Muslims, stigmatized by their peers after the Sept.
11 attacks but repelled by both the Bush administration's reaction to the
attacks and the rigid conservatism of many Muslim leaders, the novel became
a blueprint for their lives. 
"Reading the book was totally liberating for me," said Areej Zufari, 34, a
Muslim and a humanities professor at Valencia Community College in Orlando,
Fla.
 
Ms. Zufari said she had listened to punk music growing up in Arkansas and
found "The Taqwacores" four years ago. 
 
"Here was someone as frustrated with Islam as me," she said, "and he
expressed it using bands I love, like the Dead Kennedys. It all came
together." 
 
The novel's Muslim characters include Rabeya, a riot girl who plays guitar
onstage wearing a burqa and leads a group of men and women in prayer. There
is also Fasiq, a pot-smoking skater, and Jehangir, a drunk. 
 
Such acts - playing Western music, women leading prayer, men and women
praying together, drinking, smoking - are considered haram, or forbidden, by
millions of Muslims. 
 
Mr. Muhammad Knight was born an Irish Catholic in upstate New York and
converted to Islam as a teenager. He studied at a mosque in Pakistan but
became disillusioned with Islam after learning about the sectarian battles
after the death of Muhammad. 
 
He said he wrote "The Taqwacores" to mend the rift between his being an
observant Muslim and an angry American youth. He found validation in the
life of Muhammad, who instructed people to ignore their leaders, destroy
their petty deities and follow only Allah. 
 
After reading the novel, many Muslims e-mailed Mr. Muhammad Knight, asking
for directions to the next Muslim punk show. Told that no such bands
existed, some of them created their own, with names like Vote Hezbollah and
Secret Trial Five. 
 
One band, the Kominas, wrote a song called "Suicide Bomb the Gap," which
became Muslim punk rock's first anthem. 
 
"As Muslims, we're not being honest if we criticize the United States
without first criticizing ourselves," said Mr. Kamel, 23, who grew up in a
Syrian family in Chicago. He is lead singer of the band al-Thawra, "the
Revolution" in Arabic. 
 
For many young American Muslims, the merger of Islam and rebellion
resonated. 
 
Hanan Arzay, 15, is a daughter of Muslim immigrants from Morocco who lives
in East Islip, N.Y. In the months after the Sept. 11 attacks, pedestrians
threw eggs and coffee cups at the van that transported her to a Muslim
school, she said, and one person threw a wine bottle, shattering the van's
window. 
 
At school, her Koran teacher threw chalk at her for requesting literal
translations of the holy book, Ms. Arzay said. After she was expelled from
two Muslim schools, her uncle gave her "The Taqwacores." 
 
"This book is my lifeline," Ms. Arzay said. "It saved my faith."


Bill Howe
http://www.necme.org <http://www.necme.org/> 
http://apaact.com/
http://www.billhowe.org <http://www.billhowe.org/> 
http://www.multiculturaldimensions.org
<http://www.multiculturaldimensions.org/> 
 
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