Salah saurang anggota Kongres Amerika (DPR lamun diurang mah), Keith 
Ellison, Agamana Islam. Manehna Muslim munggaran nu jadi anggota 
Kongres Amerika. Tah kumaha dongeng manehna salaku Muslim di 
Amerika, nyanggakeun artikelna meunang copy-paste ti millis 
sabeulah :   


http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/muslims_speak_out/2007/07/
born_and_raised_in_the_us_a.html

Muslims Speak Out
Born and Raised in the U.S.A.

I didn't need to watch the PBS series "America at a Crossroads" or
read the recent Pew Research Center survey on American Muslims, to
know that the Muslim community is under intense scrutiny.

The day I won the Democratic Farmer Labor (DFL) endorsement for the
Fifth Congressional District of Minnesota, it was the first question
out of the shoot.

"Aren't you a Muslim?" "Will you be the first one in Congress if you
win?" "Will you swear your oath on the Qur'an?" "Do you oppose
terrorism?"

I've heard them all. But although I've been asked a few intrusive,
repetitive, and even silly questions about my faith, life has been
good.

First, a fairly small number of conversations revolve around 
religion. Whole days – even weeks – have gone by without me being 
asked to speak on behalf of the 1.3 billion Muslims in the world. 
But more importantly, I've been able to pursue my work on behalf of 
my constituents. I have been effective on issues such as peace, 
ending the war in Iraq, credit justice, and environmental 
sustainability. My colleagues have been tolerant and inclusive. I 
have not had a single unpleasant face-to-face encounter with a 
member of congress over religion. Individual leaders in the Bush 
Administration have been open and inclusive. I accompanied Speaker 
Pelosi on her trip to the Middle East, and I'll never forget the 
warm reception she received from the women who poured out of the 
Omayyad Mosque in Damascus just to shake her hand or take a picture.

Of course, there have been a few bumps.

For example, officers in a training class reported that a Minneapolis
police lieutenant made comments that implied that I was a terrorist.
The comments were rebuked by the Mayor and Police Chief, and the
incident is currently under investigation. Commentator Glenn Beck
asked me to "prove" him that I was not working with "enemies". 

Another conservative commentator opined that I should be barred from 
serving in Congress if I swear to uphold the U.S. Constitution on 
the Qur'an.

Of course, there's more, but those incidents prove my main point:
there is much reason for hope. I did win the election. I am making
progress on a broad swath of progressive issues. I continue to be
inspired by the courage of people standing up for peace, for
shared-prosperity, and health care reform.

While some Muslim friends and acquaintances have recounted shabby
treatment in post 9/11 America, in the next breath they have told me
about how they are opening up businesses, sending kids to college, or
prospering in some other way. It's common for some bright young 
Muslim person to tell me about their own political ambitions. "You 
might have been first, but I'm gonna be in Congress too."

Some have pledged to get more politically engaged or to support
candidates who have the backbone to speak up for civil and human
rights for all. But every prescription I have heard has been solidly
within the heartland of American civil redress and our democratic
political process.

This should not be surprising, given that 71 percent of Muslim
Americans report that they believe that you can make it in America if
you work hard, according to a recent Pew Research Center poll. Only 
64 percent of Americans on average reported the same level of 
confidence in American economic and social mobility. For Muslim 
Americans, the United States is the land of opportunity.

I don't want to diminish those occasions, however, where Muslim
Americans have been persecuted or mistreated. These cases exist. Just
ask James Yee, former United States Army chaplain and captain, who 
was threatened with the death penalty, kept in solitary confinement 
for seventy-six days, and forced to undergo sensory deprivation 
because he voiced concerns about the treatment about Guantanamo 
detainees. All charges were later dropped and he was cleared to 
resume duties.

Instead, he accepted an honorable discharge. Today he lectures widely
about the importance of upholding our constitutional heritage even in
the face of a terrorist threat. Or ask Brandon Mayfield, a lawyer, 
who received a rare public apology from the FBI, when it admitted 
that his fingerprints were mistakenly linked to one found near the 
scene of a terrorist bombing in Spain. The blunder led to his 
imprisonment for two weeks, and eventually a settlement of $2 
million. There are other cases as well.

Though rare, these cases are not unimportant. They are widely known
incidents, and could overshadow the more typical story of
participation and prosperity. As the injury is widely known, the
remedies and apologies must be also widely known. But the more
important lesson is that tragedies like 9/11 can cause us to react 
out of fear and rage against our neighbors and fellow loyal 
Americans.

American Muslims are an asset to the country, not a threat. Unfair
suspicion and profiling does not serve the national interest or honor
our hard earned reputation as the beacon for civil and human rights
around the world.

I can't speak for every Muslim, but I remain confident and hopeful
about the prospects for America's Muslims because, in the end, 
America is about religious tolerance, inclusion, and fairness.

Keith Ellison became the first Muslim elected to the United States
Congress when he won the open seat for Minnesota's 5th congressional
district in 2006. 
 


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