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FRONT-PAGEMuslim bodies bombarded with hate mail: Mosques in US seek protection

By Anwar Iqbal


Sunday, 08 Nov, 2009 | 03:26 AM PST |













 

 

WASHINGTON, Nov 7: President Barack Obama stressed on Saturday that people of 
all faiths, including Muslims, served the US military, as mosques across 
America sought police protection.

On Thursday, a Muslim psychiatrist in the US Army, Maj Nidal Malik Hasan, 
killed 13 and wounded 30 people at the Fort Hood military base. And on 
Saturday, the US media warned that the shootings could likely post the sternest 
test for US Muslims since the Sept 11 terrorist attacks.

Officials at the White House told reporters that the shootings had deeply 
troubled President Obama who had made repairing US relations with the Islamic 
world an important element of his foreign policy. US policy makers now fear 
that a possible public backlash against Muslims may further complicate an 
already difficult task.

In his weekly address on Saturday, President Obama focussed on an immediate 
concern: preventing religious tensions within the US armed forces, emphasising 
that the military employed people of all races and creeds.

“They are Americans of every race, faith, and station. They are Christians and 
Muslims, Jews and Hindus and non-believers,” said Mr Obama as media reports 
indicated that US armed forces employed as many as 10,000 Muslims.

“They are descendents of immigrants and immigrants themselves. They reflect the 
diversity that makes this America,” the US president noted.

“What they share is a patriotism like no other. What they share is a commitment 
to the country that has been tested and proved worthy.”

In Washington, Virginia, Maryland, Illinois, Indiana, North and South 
Carolinas, New York and in several other states, mosques asked police for extra 
patrols. Some made their own security arrangements.

“I went for Juma prayers today and was shocked that the masjid doors were 
locked from the inside and they had a camera pointed at the door to monitor the 
visitors,” a Los Angeles resident, Sabahat Tanvir, told Dawn.

At some places in California, authorities have already deployed police officers 
outside mosques as a precaution.

Congressman Andre Carson, one of two Muslims in the US Congress, warned 
Americans at a news conference in Washington not to focus on the gunman’s 
religion.

“This is no way a reflection of Islam any more than Timothy McVeigh’s actions 
are a reflection of Christianity,” said Carson, who supervised an 
anti-terrorism unit in Indiana’s Department of Homeland Security and comes from 
a family of Marines.

Yet Muslim organisations complained that they had received dozens of death 
threats and hate e-mails since Saturday.

“We do fear a backlash every time an Arab or a Muslim is found involved in an 
incident like this,” said Imam Mohammed Abdullahi, of the Muslim Community 
Centre in Silver Spring, Maryland. Major Hasan attended this mosque before 
moving to Fort Hood.

In his Friday sermon, Imam Abdullahi urged worshippers to tell their non-Muslim 
neighbours that what happened was the act of an individual, not of a community.

Yet Bruce Hoffman, professor of security studies at Georgetown University, saw 
a pattern behind such attacks. “I’m not saying it’s part of an organised 
campaign or a systematic strategy, but we’re seeing a sea change when we have 
once a month a plot that is related somehow to Afghanistan, Iraq, or what these 
people see is a war against Islam,” he told the Washington Post. “It’s too easy 
to dismiss them as unstable individuals when they have expressed strong 
religious beliefs with politics.”

Robert Salaam, a blogger and former US Marine who converted to Islam shortly 
after 9/11, warned that one man’s actions would affect all Muslims.

“The actions of this mad man cost us, the many Muslims who have served this 
country honourably over the years, so much,” he wrote. “Already our military 
loyalties, our honour, and our integrity are being questioned.”

He noted that some non-Muslims still believed that “an entire religious 
community shares responsibility for the actions of one guy that we didn’t even 
know existed until Thursday.”

All major US Muslim organisations urged Americans Muslims to be vigilant, both 
at home and at mosques.

The Council on American Islamic Relations, the Muslim American Society, the 
Muslim Public Affairs Council-DC, the Islamic Society of North America Office 
for Interfaith and Community Alliances and the American Muslim Armed Forces and 
Veterans Affairs Council and many others denounced the shooting as “a barbaric 
act of violence” and urged other Americans not to blame an entire religion for 
the actions of one individual.



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