Only Good Muslim Is the Anti-Muslim
by M. Junaid Levesque-Alam / August 25th, 2008

For some, Barack Obama's stature as a man of the left has fallen precipitously, 
like late autumn leaves shed by branches bowing to the will of winter.

Disappointment has often been self-inflicted. Supporters have dipped their pens 
deeply into the inkwell of Obama's inspiring story and written their own lines 
on Afghanistan, oil drilling, or the death penalty — only to see these wishful 
words unceremoniously erased by presidential politics or the senator's own 
views.

But for American Muslims and progressive allies, both eager to see an end to 
the vilification of Arabs and Muslims in the United States, Obama's mantra of 
hope and change barely set in before it expired.

First we witnessed the embarrassing spectacle of micro-level ethnic cleansing 
when two Arab women with headscarves were whisked offstage ahead of a campaign 
photo-op in Detroit. Then we heard Obama call false claims about his 
purportedly Muslim identity "smears" — as if he was accused not of belonging to 
an Abrahamic faith observed by more than 1.2 billion people, but of slinking 
out of Congress to visit a brothel. Soon after we saw the senator genuflect 
before AIPAC and call for a permanently Israeli Jerusalem — a vision the Jewish 
state has assiduously tried to realize by macro-level ethnic cleansing, purging 
its Arab residents.

A more recent political maneuver also turned out to be a purge: the Obama 
campaign's Muslim outreach coordinator, Mazen Asbahi, "resigned" this month 
after a brief stint of several days. The event went almost unnoticed.

But two sharply different responses to this episode — and the standing afforded 
to the authors of these responses — reveal that the senator is not alone in 
failing to stanch America's anti-Islamic miasma. Rather, the shortcoming is a 
collective one, shared by many liberals whose prejudice against Muslims and 
Arab-Americans is surpassed only by an apparent disinterest in correcting it.

One response to the resignation came from James Zogby. An Arab-American 
Christian, Zogby's credentials as a man rooted in his community are matchless. 
He helped found the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. He led 
non-sectarian campaigns to assist war victims in Palestine and Lebanon. And he 
serves as president of the Arab American Institute, a Washington, D.C. think 
tank.

Yet despite 30 years of community advocacy and experience, his views on Arab 
and Muslim issues appear in just two popular non-ethnic publications. One is 
the Huffington Post. The other is in Egypt.

Commenting on Asbahi's short tenure, Zogby writes, "In the brief time he held 
his position we spoke almost daily. He learned so much and did so much to make 
Arab Americans and American Muslims feel included in the campaign."

"Then," Zogby observes, "it happened." One of the many websites "monitoring" 
Muslims in America discovered that eight years ago Asbahi served on a board 
which included a controversial imam. Asbahi resigned from the board after two 
weeks.

Like vultures eyeing a wounded gazelle, the usual assortment of right-wing 
bloggers descended on Asbahi. They vilified him as a closet fundamentalist for 
once belonging to the Muslim Student Association, a well-established mainstream 
group with branches on dozens of college campuses across the U.S. and Canada.

Not to be outdone, the Wall Street Journal threatened to amplify the echo 
chamber, the walls of which reverberate with the hysterics of its associates in 
the right-wing "blogosphere."

Faced with mounting pressure and bereft of support from any quarter, Asbahi and 
the campaign "agreed" he would relinquish his post.

This sequence of events comes as no surprise to anyone familiar with 
neoconservative methods. It is but a reenactment of previous attacks: the 
mendacious 2005 campaign to oust Columbia University professors who used 
Israel's own archives to dismantle pleasant fictions about its history; the 
dissemination of e-mails containing crude anti-Semitic nonsense sent out in 
professors' names to destroy their credibility; and the ongoing efforts to 
publicly intimidate universities into denying academics employment or tenure.

But amid the past few years of attacks, outrages, and, yes, smears, hurled at 
Muslims and Arabs in this country, one Muslim figure stands curiously 
unsullied: Irshad Manji. She, too, wrote about Asbahi's dismissal, though we 
would do well to acquaint ourselves with the author first.

Unlike most of her coreligionists, Manji has been lavished with attention and 
awards by mainstream and liberal America. She garnered Oprah Winfrey's first 
"Chutzpah" award, Ms. Magazine's "Feminist for the 21st Century" seal of 
approval, New York University's Wagner School "Moral Courage Project," a column 
in the Huffington Post, production of a PBS documentary, and the list goes on.

In an era when Muslims find themselves boxed in by political attacks here and 
military assaults abroad, one wonders: what is Manji's secret to success?

She wrote a book — and not just any book. Titled The Trouble With Islam Today, 
hers won applause not only from liberals but other, more interesting quarters. 
The Wall Street Journal praised it as "refreshingly provocative" and 
"deserv[ing] of the attention it is receiving." Daniel Pipes declared, "Manji — 
a practicing Muslim — brings real insight to her subject." Phyillis Chesler 
beamed, "Manji has written a bold, sane, passionate, compelling book." And Alan 
Dershowitz announced, "Manji is a fresh, new and intriguing voice of Islamic 
reform."

A fine example of damning with loud praise.

What could a Muslim have written that would delight supporters of bombing and 
torturing Muslims? What sweet words could have moved Daniel Pipes — who 
specializes in hyping anti-Islamic hysteria on Fox News and elsewhere — to 
welcome into his generous bosom the ideas of a "practicing Muslim?" What might 
motivate Alan Dershowitz, better known for backing the torture of Muslims than 
for reading their books, to plug Manji's effort?

The answer lies in the content. The Trouble With Islam Today is an unhinged 
polemic that derides Muslims and demeans their faith. Examining a few of the 
book's points should reveal what has caught the fancy of neoconservatives and 
liberals alike.

The author devotes two pages to comparing Osama bin Laden to Prophet Muhammad. 
"Is it mere happenstance," Manji rhetorically asks, "that bin Laden spends so 
much time in caves, like the meditating [Prophet] did?" With penetrating and 
piercing logic — in the sense that one must penetrate one's skull and pierce 
the cortex to succumb to it — she goes on in this vein, declaring "camel 
saddles" and "online transactions" twin evils. The "parallels" between Osama, 
the man who blesses the murder of innocent people, and Muhammad, the man who 
forgave the murderers of his closest companions, "continue to proliferate," 
Manji insists, much to the delight of the Muslim-haters behind the curtains.

A good portion of the book is also dedicated to attacking the Quran (and the 
Quran alone), which the intrepid author does without any background in 
religious studies or a single footnote. But no matter. This book, Manji 
intones, is "profoundly at war with itself." Religious texts should apparently 
read like do-it-yourself plumbing guides, bereft of subtlety or layers of 
meaning, particularly if you are trying to flush the whole thing down the 
toilet to boost your celebrity status among Islamophobes.

Manji's fans must especially enjoy her excoriation of Muslims as fake victims. 
Muslims wallow in their "screaming self-pity," she snickers, as though one 
ought to see the fuselage of cruise missiles as half-full rather than 
half-empty as they fly en route to the nearest wedding celebration or apartment 
building.

Manji's attacks on Muslims appear almost kind next to the beating she doles out 
to logic itself. She surmises that since Muslims have been more harmed by 
Muslims than non-Muslims (based on what data or criteria, we dare not guess), 
there is little reason to complain about atrocities authored under the "war on 
terror." She does not add whether she also ordered families of Sept. 11th 
victims to get over themselves when the casualties were surpassed by that 
year's domestic homicides — a case of "Americans having been more harmed by 
Americans than non-Americans."

Finally, Manji enjoys ridiculing dispossessed Palestinians. Ignoring over two 
decades of work by Jewish scholars and human rights groups on Israeli ethnic 
cleansing and massacres, she neatly eliminates the Palestinians altogether by 
dubbing them Jordanians and hails Israel for its "compassion." It must have 
been precisely this "compassion" that moved 23 ANC veterans, several of them 
Jewish, to compare the Israeli occupation with South African apartheid during a 
recent visit.

Now well-acquainted with America's favorite Muslim, let us turn to her article 
on the departure of Obama's former coordinator, Mazen Asbahi.

In a Huffington Post piece, she demonstrates no concern about the vilification 
that enabled Asbahi's dismissal. Indeed, she fails to mention it even once. Is 
this because Manji is too busy contributing to the problem to pause and 
reflect? Or is it because this would upset her core base — the neoconservatives 
who mount these smear campaigns?

Whatever the case, Manji performs her predictable pre-programmed attack 
routine, observing contemptuously, "…Mazen Asbahi has just resigned. I can't 
say I'm disheartened. He'd been embraced by groups like the Muslim Public 
Affairs Council and the Islamic Society of North America, renowned for their 
conservative politics and 'moderate' double-speak."

Writing a piece occasioned by attacks on one Muslim, Manji manages to magnify 
the insult by attacking thousands of other Muslims.

According to her politics, anyone who does not dance to the detonation of 
cluster bombs is already suspect. So her invective aimed at groups representing 
thousands of American Muslims, which she never bothers to back up with 
arguments, is understandable.

Not yet satisfied with herself, she goes on to pant about "most" American 
Muslims being stuck in a 7th century — or perhaps 10th century, depending on 
her mood — "time warp." Serving as 21st century America's doctors, teachers, 
engineers, shopkeepers, and plant workers, Muslims have been too busy to notice 
this worrisome defect.

Concluding with a few shopworn words about "moral courage" and "revolutionary 
ethos," Manji polishes off her attacks on the community by invoking vague 
platitudes about Muslim "reform."

This is Manji's sole gimmick: disingenuous calls for Muslims to move forward 
belied by support for those pulling America backward.

What does the liberal adulation of a professional Islamophobe — one openly 
adored by neoconservatives, no less — say about the state of American 
liberalism? Will liberals come to respect and support genuine Muslim and Arab 
voices, like Zogby and countless unrecognized figures? Or will they continue to 
lazily rely on self-professed stand-ins like Irshad Manji?

If liberalism persists on its present path, it will not only alienate a 
targeted community in America but pave the way for further persecution.

Perfectly illustrating this point is the New York Times' fawning 
characterization of Manji as "Osama bin Laden's worst nightmare." This is very 
far from the truth.

For years, many Muslim and non-Muslim voices have said bin Laden's ideology is 
a freak phenomenon, fashioned in the ghoulish laboratory of Cold War politics 
and fed on a steady diet of American-Israeli assaults in the Middle East. At 
odds with more than 1,300 years of Muslim thought and history, these voices 
have insisted, bin Laden is a perversion of genuine Islam.

But Manji argues the opposite: bin Laden is a genuine product of Islam, which 
is itself perverted. Osama, we will recall, is for Manji the new Muhammad.

In showering attention and accolades on Manji, many liberals thus validate and 
promote the idea that extremist Islam is Islam itself. Could bin Laden dream of 
a greater gift? Could the neoconservatives?

Perhaps liberals find Manji's message appealing because ascribing extremism to 
some innate feature of Islam "disappears" from view the consequences of 
American foreign policy. Invasion and occupation disappear. Torture and abuse 
disappear. Corpses of slaughtered civilians and carrions of neutralized nations 
disappear.

The desire to own a clear conscience, even one obtained through the muddiest 
logic, should never be underestimated.

There may be other answers: a fear of questioning the dominant narrative; of 
criticizing Israel; of discovering Islamic perspectives; of engaging the Other, 
who is often harangued but rarely heard.

Whatever the reason, American liberals would do well to stop glorifying 
anti-Muslim celebrities and start building relationships with honest Arab and 
Muslim voices.

We are waiting.

M. Junaid Levesque-Alam blogs about America and Islam at Crossing the Crescent 
and writes about American Muslim identity for WireTap magazine. Co-founder of 
Left Hook, a youth journal that ran from Nov. 2003 to March 2006, he works as a 
communications coordinator for an anti-domestic violence agency in the NYC 
area. He can be reached at: junaidal...@gmail.com


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