Symposium cum exhibition on Holocaust and Genocide by Saeed Qureshi

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Note: Article not written by Saeed Qureshi

Upright Opinion
January 27,
2014
Symposium cum exhibition on
Holocaust and Genocide
By Saeed Qureshi
Let me first of all warmly compliment Mike
Ghouse and his companions for holding the Seventh Exhibition cum Symposium on a
crucial phenomenon that we all know as holocaust. This august event took place
on January 26 in the spacious hall of the Unity Church of Dallas.

  Holocaust is a dreadful and ghastly dimension
of human civilization that has been happening since the dawn of civilization
and perhaps even earlier than that. Let me quote one important episode from the
known history preserved in Bible and also in the holy Quran. When Prophet Moses
liberated the Jewish nation from centuries old stranglehold of the Pharaohs who
were the mighty emperors of their own time, they marched into the Sinai desert
and settled there for 40 years. Thereafter they perpetrated the first distinctly
documented genocide of the peaceful population in the land of Canaan. They
killed the inhabitants including the infants indiscriminately and with savagery
that is beyond description.

The Jewish nation itself suffered terrible
genocides at least four times in history: one at the hands of Babylon Empire, second
under the Roman Empire, third in Spain and fourth in Nazi Germany. The Muslims
too faced the similar appalling genocides. Apart from other cities of Muslim
rule, the Mongols, laid waste the capital of the Islamic caliphate Baghdad in
1258 and killed 1.6 million Muslims. This mass annihilation of Baghdad is
recorded as the most heinous genocide carried out during the Middle Ages. 
Besides the Muslims suffered terrible
genocides in Jerusalem, Alexandria and Spain at the hands of the victor
Christian crusaders. In Spain where they ruled for seven centuries, they were entirely
massacred and expelled along with the Jews. Those left somehow were finally
deported in 1609. In history the Muslims, the Christians and Jews have been
alternating in killing each other adopting a parched earth drive and ethnic
cleansing policies. England passed through a spell of genocides at the hands of
Romans and Vikings in early times. 
Holocaust and genocide can be treated as
synonyms carrying the diabolic connotation that implies the wholesale massacres
and extermination of a race of segment of human beings. During the last two
centuries several grisly genocides have taken place. 
The British colonial armies in their frantic
onslaught to expand the abominable colonialism marched on the vast continent of
America. Those who arrived first were called pilgrimages. Their beastly
annihilations of the local population have no parallel in history.  They kept on wiping off the local population
called native Indians with such a diabolic obsession that continued till it
culminated into a civil war between the federalists and the co federalist. 
The native inhabitants called red or native Indians
and now American Indians were easy prey to their superior weaponry and fighting
tactics. The natives fought back with primitive arrows, batons and swords against
the merciless pogroms of the invaders who were more like bounty hunters. The
natives’ mainstay of living, cattle and buffaloes were totally wiped off. They
were infested with deadly epidemics of diseases like small pox to die if left
alive from the pointblank shooting of the well armed and disciplined killers.
Even children sucking their mothers’ breasts were not spared. The slogan of the
British generals was that “only good Indian is dead Indian”. Approximately 100
million native Indians perished in this the most macabre genocides in the human
history after Mongols’ curse.
The exhibition of the Indian genocide displayed
extremely heart wrenching and harrowing scenes making the onlookers wonder how
human beings could be as callous and barbaric as to slaughter a helpless,
primitive and defense segment of human race. 
The exhibits and graphics showed huge piles of
dead bodies with killer soldiers standing aside with devilish smiles on their
faces after performing this hideous job. The copies of the scrolls, orders and parchments
issued by the British commanders were also displayed. In those documents reflects
the hate and obsession to kill the local population without any compunction. The
exhibition continued from 3p.m.to 7 p.m. when the whole program came to close.
I was thrilled and rather entranced by the
presentations and speeches’ during the two hours session conducted in the main
hall of the church. The speakers’ spoke about the Native Americans holocaust,
the 2002 Gujarat massacre and the 1984 massacre of Sikhs in India. The Jewish
holocaust at the hands of the Nazis in Germany was portrayed in video clips,
prepared by Christiana Amanpour, the celebrated CNN anchor. Mike Ghouse, the principal
organizer of this phenomenal yearly event told his side of the story about the
genocide. 
The keynote speaker and host of this memorable evening Mary Ann Thompson-Frank
expressed her empirical impressions about the Rwandan genocide in which 800,000
humans were killed. Mary is immensely knowledgeable, highly articulate
with   flair of oration. She was eloquent,
vocal and gave an excellent account and grasp of the subject and kept the
audience riveted to her discourse. I was personally greatly impressed by
fluency and candor in dishing out her thoughts and observations. This highly fruitful
and greatly enlightening session included a peace pledge by Mike Ghouse
followed by a poignantly sad and moving Native American Mourning Song. 
This distinctive and remarkable seminar would add another feather
in the cap of Mike Ghouse and his associates in highlighting and rekindling an
issue for the civilized nations to reflect and ponder how to foster love and harmony
among the people of this planet mother earth. It should serve as a grim
reminder and resounding lesson for the human race that never again any genocide
or holocaust be allowed to happen.

Such seminars and symposiums emit the divine and cardinal message
that the age of barbarians and beast is over and we should all live in harmony
and peace and work in unison for the collective good of the entire human race.
Those who voluminously collaborated and sponsored in this effort among others
were ‘Muslims Together’, ‘American Indian Genocide Museum’, Mnemosyne institute
and Foundation for Pluralism. A sumptuous dinner was served at the end to all,
the speakers and the spectators alike.

Texas Faith: Is it crazy to pray for your team to win the Super Bowl?

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IS IT CRAZY TO PRAY FOR YOUR TEAM TO WIN THE SUPER BOWL?

God does not take sides in Super Bowl, why should he? He, she or it does not
micromanage our lives either, nor does he favor one over the other.  God
is just and merciful and created a world of harmony, and gave us the
free will and emotions to manage the balance within and with what
surrounds us; life and matter.  Mike Ghouse

My weekly take on issues at Dallas Morning News: http://nabsites.net/demo/texas-faith-is-it-crazy-to-pray-for_28/

TEXAS FAITH: Is it crazy to pray for your team to win the Super Bowl?
By Wayne Slater
wslater@dallasnews.com
12:01 pm on January 28, 2014 | Permalink
   
Two
things Americans take seriously are religion and football. With the
Super Bowl set for Sunday, here’s a question: Why do so many people pray
for their favorite sports team to win? Is it just a ritual? An act of
faith? Or a hedge, just in case?

A new survey finds that half of
American sports fans say they believe God or a supernatural force is at
play in the games they watch. That includes Americans who pray for God
to help their team (26 percent), think their team has been cursed (25
percent) or more generally believe God is involved in determining who
wins on the court or in the field (19 percent).

So is God the
12th man on the field at kickoff when the Broncos and Seahawks meet in
the big game this weekend? The Great Odds Maker in the Sky?

The
Public Religion Research Institute finds that football fans are the most
likely to pray for their own teams to win. About one-third say they ask
God to intervene in games. When it comes to whether God rewards
religious athletes with health and success, about half of Americans say
yes, about half say no. The belief that God will help religious athletes
was most prominent among white evangelicals (62 percent) and non-white
Protestants (65 percent). When it comes to the religiously unaffiliated,
only about 20 percent feel that way.

So why do so many Americans pray for God to help their team? Or believe that God rewards religious athletes?

Do
they really think God works this way? Or like Pascal’s wager, do people
figure — hey, I’ve got doubts, but what if it works, what if it’s true?
Why not be on the winning side?

We put that question to our
Texas Faith Panel and the result was a funny, thought-provoking and
thoroughly entertaining set of answers from some of the smartest people
on matters of religion and faith in Texas. It’s not so easy as you might
think. Some of the answers might surprise you.

Herewith a perfect bit of pre-Super Bowl Sunday reading.
MIKE GHOUSE, President, Foundation for Pluralism and speaker on interfaith matters, Dallas
An
old friend fits Pascal’s wager perfectly. He did not believe in God,
but went to church on Easter and Christmas just in case there is a God,
and he would conclude, I want to play it safe. What we cannot earn, we
want it miraculously.

Ghalib, the legendary 19th century Indian Poet is known to have said a couplet on just about every aspect of life, and he wrote:

Ham ko Maloom Hay Jannat Ki Haqeqat Lakin
Dil Kay Khush Rakhnay Ko Ghalib Yeh Khyal Acha Hay

I know the truth about heaven; mere hallucination,
however, it is a good idea to believe in pleasantries for the moment.

In
the Super bowl scenario, we root for our favorite team, and when it
dawns on us that our team is not doing well ‘hope’ takes over.  The
average person goes into the belief-gear and expects a miracle to
happen, like an interception or a fumble.

Indeed, God is the last
resort for those who believe in divine intervention, and we daydream
about a positive change without working for it. It’s a game of chance,
and not a bad idea to believe in the pleasantries.

If neither of
the teams is our favorite, our approach towards the game is different,
we enjoy the competition, and we root or hoot depending on a good play
rather than supporting or praying for a team.  Our sobering attitude
stems from a realization that when two teams go to play, only one wins,
and any team can win any time.

No matter how rational we pretend
to be, emotion rules! That is the reason so many Americans pray for God
to help their team win. We don’t care how much the fans of other teams
are praying, we want ours to win.

When there is an interception,
some of my Muslim friends scream out loud with joy “Allahu Akbar” – God
is great! What should the fans of other team say? God is not great?
Fortunately, we rarely blame God if our team loses.

God does not
take sides, why should he? He, she or it does not micromanage our lives
either, nor does he favor one over the other. God is just and merciful
and created a world of harmony, and gave us the free will and emotions
to manage the balance within and with what surrounds us; life and
matter.

To read the other opinions, please visit Dallas Morning News at : http://dallasmorningviewsblog.dallasnews.com/2014/01/texas-faith-is-it-crazy-to-pray-for-our-team-to-win-the-super-bowl.html/#more-33616

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. He believes in
Standing up for others
and a book with the same title is coming up. Mike has a strong presence on
national and local TV, Radio and Print Media. He is a frequent guest on Sean Hannity show on
Fox TV, and a commentator on national radio networks, he contributes weekly to
the Texas Faith Column at Dallas
Morning News
; fortnightly at Huffington post; and
several other periodicals across the world. His personal site www.MikeGhouse.net indexes all his work
through many links.

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Oped News – Holocaust and Native American’s Genocides event in Dallas organized by a Muslim.

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http://www.opednews.com/articles/Holocaust-and-Native-Ameri-by-Mike-Ghouse-Apprehension_Arrogance_Crusades_Education-140125-349.html

The first Holocaust and Genocides event was
organized by Muslims in Dallas, Texas, after the United Nations unanimously
passed the bill to commemorate Holocaust in their 60th General Assembly meeting
on November 1, 2005. They designated January 27 of each year as Holocaust
Memorial day.

The first event was organized on Sunday, January
29th, and was addressed by the Holocaust survivors, Ms. Rosa Lee Schiff and
the late Mr. William Schiff. This year, we will start with the Holocaust
conversation followed by the Genocides of Native Americans and the Gujarat
Massacre. This is a serious event for us to reflect on the inhumanity within
each one of us, and learn to do our individual share of saying never
again.  

William and Rosa Lee Schiff
(image by Mike Ghouse)

I have always believed, and I read the
assessments of some of the best brains, that if we can resolve the
Jewish-Palestinian conflict, i.e.,  security to Jews and justice to the
Palestinians, most of the world issues will collapse and a period of peace on
earth will begin.
Commemorating Holocaust and Genocides for
seven years is a fulfillment of a lifelong drive to build bridges.

Mike Ghouse addressing the first Holocaust Memorial
(image by Mike Ghouse)

Of all the people on the earth, my mother
would be pleased to know that I am doing what it takes to be a “good
Muslim,” to respect, honor, and protect the sanctity of life.
A healthy society can be defined by how well
it functions together, where no member of the society has to live in
apprehension, discomfort, or fear of the other.

Hate is one of the many sources of disrupting peaceful functioning of a society
and it is our duty, both individually and collectively, to track down the source
of such hate and mitigate it. Indeed, each one of us needs to do our share of
work. This hate takes many avatars including anti-Semitism, racism, misogyny,
homophobia, Islamophobia, and other ailments of the society. Untreated, they
will erupt in violent and hostile expressions like crusades, inquisitions,
9/11, terrorism by individuals and nations, Holocaust, genocides, and massacres.


7th Annual Holocaust and Genocides event
(image by Mike Ghouse)

The Jewish-Christian conflict stems from Jesus’
crucifixion; the Christian-Muslim conflict has origins in how each sees
Jesus, and the Jewish-Muslim
conflict took root in the late 1940s.  Much of the conflict with Native
Americans, native societies, Hindus, pagans, and others stem from forced
conversions by the arrogance of Christian and Muslim missionaries.

Religion came into existence to save mankind; most people get that right and a few don’t. No religion teaches hatred
or encourages hostilities. On the contrary, religions are committed to building
cohesive societies where no one has to live in discomfort or fear of the other. The
bottom line of all religions is based on the golden rule, “Do unto others as
you would wish to have done unto you.”
There is always a room for bringing a
positive change, even if it were a small step. The Foundation for Pluralism,
Memnoysne Institute, and the World Muslim Congress have teamed up to find
solutions, which begin with the acknowledgement of the problem and taking
small healing steps.
We are pleased to invite you to join us for
the 7th Annual Holocaust and Genocides event set for Sunday, January 26,
2014, between 3 and 6 PM at the Unity of Dallas, 6525 Forest Lane, Dallas, TX
75230. Details are at www.HolocaustandGenocides.com
The purpose of this event is education, and
we hope to learn and acknowledge our failings and make a personal commitment to
do our individual share of saying “never again”.

Holocaust pictures
(image by Dallas Holocaust Museum)

The spark of hatred will not disappear
through law and order; it would be temporary off the screen, but will reappear
at every little conflagration.  As civil societies, this has to be worked
out for the long-term good.

What we need is to have a heart-to-heart
dialogue with each community with a goal to acknowledge the differences and
figure out how to live with each other with least conflicts. After all we are
inextricably connected to each other in our day-to-day life.
The goal ought to be respecting the otherness
of others and accepting the God-given uniqueness of each one of us; anything
short of that will leave unattended-sparks ready to flare up at short notice
with the whiff of oxygen.

There is a shameless cruelty in us; either we
shy away or refuse to acknowledge the sufferings of others, worrying that it
will devalue o ur own or somehow it amounts to infidelity to our own
cause.  What a shame it is to believe that the victims deserved or asked
for it.

We sincerely hope the attendees will walk out with the following understanding:

1. Other peoples’ suffering is as legitimate as mine;
2. It is easy to see ourselves as victims,
but we must also see the perpetrator in us;
3.  When we strip the politics out of a
conflict, we see hope;
4. We can value others suffering without lessening our own;
5.  The overriding desire to highlight our
own blinds us from others’ suffering;
6.  A sense of responsibility for creating a
better world is awakened.


Holocaust and Genocides
(image by Mike Ghouse and MaryAnn Thompson-Frenk)

Mike Ghouse is committed to building
cohesive societies where no human has to live in fear of the other.  

Dallas News: Dealing with genocide and Holocaust across religious lines

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14

6

0

1

http://religionblog.dallasnews.com/2014/01/dealing-with-genocide-and-holocaust-across-religious-lines.html/

Mike Ghouse is frequently introduced as ‘the first Muslim guy
to commemorate the Holocaust” with an appeal across broad religious
lines. The idea is to recognize what people have in common, regardless
of their differences as a way of lessening the conflicts, prejudices and
intolerance that have produced genocide. And to go beyond politics to
find common ground. On Sunday, a program attracting disparate groups
around the idea “Never again” is scheduled for Unity Church on Forest
Lane in Dallas, sponsored in part by Ghouse’s organization, the
Foundation for Pluralism. The event is entitled Holocaust, Genocides of Native Americans and Gujart Massacre.The theme: Sparks of hatred and how to extinguish them.

Mike Ghouse, speaker, writer and advocate of pluralism across religious lines

Ghouse says he hopes attendees will walk out better appreciating the
sufferings of others and seeing “the perpetrator in us” as a way of
building trust across social and religious lines.

“I called on my friends with the idea of commemorating the event, and
thus began this journey,” said Ghouse. “Education is the purpose; we
have to learn, acknowledge and reflect upon the terrible things that we
humans have inflicted upon each other, and we have to understand that
our safety hinges on the safety of all others around us.”

Ghouse says the conference is designed as a comprehensive event where
various human failings, massacres, genocides and the murder of 6
million Jews in the Holocaust will be addressed. The conference begins
at 3 pm with an American Indian genocide museum exhibit, then a program
between 4-6 pm.

“I have always believed, and I read the assessments of some of the
best brains, that if we can resolve the Jewish-Palestinian conflict,
i.e., security to Jews and justice to the Palestinians, most of the
world issues will collapse and a period of peace on earth will begin,”
said Ghouse.

“There is a shameless cruelty in us, either we shy away or refuse to
acknowledge the sufferings of others, worrying that it will devalue our
own or somehow it amounts to infidelity to our own cause,” he said.
“Shame on us that we justifying massacres by believing and propagating
that the victims deserved it or asked for it.”

Holocaust, Native American Genocides and the Muslim Guy

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Holocaust and the Muslim Guy

Frequently, I am introduced in the following manner, “He is the
first Muslim guy to commemorate Holocaust, and perhaps the first
non-Jewish person to commemorate the Holocaust as well.”  Of all the people on the earth, my mother would be pleased to know that I am
doing what it takes to be a “good Muslim,” to respect, honor and protect the
sanctity of life.
 

As a Muslim committed to building cohesive societies, it was an honor
to step up to the plate. Quran 3:133, “And vie with one another to
attain to your Sustainer’s forgiveness and to a paradise as vast as the
heavens and the earth, which has been readied for the God-conscious.” I
am not driven by paradise, nor do I seek rewards. But it does mean
building a cohesive world where no one has to live in apprehension or
fear of the other. God-conscious simply means being caring and sensitive
to all of God’s creation; life and matter.

Of all the people on the earth, my mother would be pleased to know I
am doing what it takes to be a “good Muslim,” to respect, honor and
protect the sanctity of life. 

I have always believed, and I read the assessments of some of the
best brains that if we can resolve the Jewish-Palestinian conflict,
i.e., security to Jews and justice to the Palestinians, most of the
world issues will collapse and a period of peace on earth will begin. 

Commemorating Holocaust and Genocides for seven years is a fulfillment of a lifelong desire. 

Continued at Huffington post – http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-ghouse/holocaust-and-the-muslim-_b_4629509.html#es_share_ended

 # # #
 

Texas Faith : Why are religious hostilities on the rise across the world?

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As hostilities rise across much of the world, we need to examine if it
is the religion itself or the human insecurity that drives us to be at
each others’ throats in the avatar of religion, and what can be done
about it.


Texas Faith : Why are religious hostilities on the rise across the world?

By Wayne Slater
wslater@dallasnews.com
3:20 pm on January 21, 2014 | Permalink

A new poll finds that religious hostilities have increased in almost every major region of the world. Perhaps not surprisingly, the sharpest increase was in the Middle East and North Africa, most likely an after effect of the 2010-11 political uprisings known as the Arab Spring. But the Pew Research Center study also found a significant increase in religious hostilities in China and the Asia-Pacific region.

Some numbers in the new report: a third (33%) of the 198 countries and territories included in the study had high religious hostilities in 2012, up from 29% in 2011 and 20% as of mid-2007. Here’s the link: http://www.pewforum.org/2014/01/14/religious-hostilities-reach-six-year-high/

The study looked at efforts by governments to ban particular faiths, prohibit conversations and give preferential treatment to some religious groups at the expense of others. Those haven’t changed significantly. But acts of overt hostility toward religion – religion-related armed conflict or terrorism, mob or sectarian violence, harassment over attire for religious reasons or other religion related intimidation or abuse — have increased.

Incidents of abuse targeting religious minorities seen as offensive or threatening to the majority faith are up. In Libya, for instance, two worshippers were killed in an attack on a Coptic Orthodox church. Harassment of women over religious dress occurred in nearly a third of countries in 2012 (32%), compared to less than one-in-ten (7%) as of mid-2007. And mob violence related to religion occurred in a quarter of countries in 2012 (25%) – double the number from five years earlier.

So what’s happening here? Is this just a cycle, a phase? Or is it something else? The power of religious faith to divide as well as to unite has a long history. But clearly in the last few years, people are increasingly using religion for negative and destructive ends in many places.

Why are religious hostilities on the rise across much of the world? What, if anything, can be done about it? Our Texas Faith panel weighs in:

MIKE GHOUSE, President, Foundation for Pluralism and speaker on interfaith matters, Dallas

As hostilities rise across much of the world, we need to examine if it is the religion itself or the human insecurity that drives us to be at each other’s throats in the avatar of religion, and what can be done about it.

The case against religion is weak, as no religion teaches hatred or encourages hostilities. On the contrary, without the abuse factor religion is a positive experience. Indeed, religions are committed to building cohesive societies where no has to live in discomfort or fear of the other. The bottom line of all religions is based on the Golden Rule, “Do unto others as you would wish to have done unto you; and reject for others what you would reject for yourselves.”

The religious hostilities on the other hand could be less religious in nature than controlling others to buy a fake sense of security.  However, the conflicts are deeply engraved onto our psyche, and untreated they may occasionally erupt in violent and hostile expressions like crusades, inquisitions, 9/11, bombings by individuals and nations, Genocides and Massacres.

The Catholic-Protestant conflict lasted for a long time, now the Shia-Sunni conflict is tearing each other up in Iraq and Syria. A few deeply rooted conflicts among the Muslim-Christian, Christian-Jewish, and Jewish-Muslim, Hindu Muslim or any other combinations need to be addressed. I am working on a proposal to send to Pope Francis to take this further.

The goal ought to be respecting the otherness of others and accepting the God given uniqueness of each one of us, anything short of that will leave unattended-sparks ready to flare up at short notice with the whiff of oxygen.

The Muslim Christian conflict has origins in how each sees Jesus and the Jewish Christian conflict stems from Jesus’ crucifixion. The religious conversions have done a lot of damage between Christian, Hindu, Muslim and Native traditions.
What we need is to have a heart to heart dialogue with each community with a goal to acknowledge the differences and figure out how to live with each other with least conflicts. After all we are inextricably connected to each other in our day to day life.

I am pleased to invite you to attend one such reconciliatory attempt at our 7th annual Holocaust and Genocides event on Sunday, January 26 at 3:00 PM – Unity of Dallas, 6525 Forest Lane, Dallas, TX 75230. Details at www.HolocaustandGenocides.com

To read the opinion of other panelists: http://dallasmorningviewsblog.dallasnews.com/2014/01/texas-faith-why-are-religious-hostilities-on-the-rise-across-the-world.html/#more-33370

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. He believes in
Standing up for others
and a book with the same title is coming up. Mike has a strong presence on
national and local TV, Radio and Print Media. He is a frequent guest on Sean Hannity show on
Fox TV, and a commentator on national radio networks, he contributes weekly to
the Texas Faith Column at Dallas
Morning News
; fortnightly at Huffington post; and
several other periodicals across the world. His personal site www.MikeGhouse.net indexes all his work
through many links.

Martin Luther King Jr., birthday today

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TODAY IS MARTIN LUTHER KING JR’S., BIRTHDAY.

We
the naturalized and born Americans are deeply indebted to Martin Luther Kings
Jr., for it is his struggle to free Americans from the burden of ill-treatment
of fellow man, that brought the civil rights act,
which is the driving reason for the immigration of all of us, yes, none of the
Indians, Pakistanis, Vietnamese, Africans, Bangladeshis, Arabs, Chinese would
have made it, had it not been for the Civil rights act. In behalf of all
immigrants, I say, a big thank you to MLK.

Mike Ghouse,
www.MikeGhouse.net

http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/Martin-Luther-King-Jr-Newly-Discovered-Audio-Recording-Speech-Park-Sheraton-Hotel-Manhattan-241148351.html

Applauding Bohra Muslim Community

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SPIRITUAL LEADER OF BOHRA MUSLIM COMMUNITY NO MORE
URL http://worldmuslimcongress.blogspot.com/2014/01/appluading-bohra-muslim-community.html

I
went to express my condolences to the Bohra Muslim Community for the
loss of their spiritual leader. I had called in a group of Muslims from
each denomination to join us; unfortunately the last minute call did not
produce results. On this occasion, I must applaud the community for
many things, but certainly the Amin aspect.

In
the picture are Tayyab Kundawala, a prominent Indian community leader
who walked toe to toe with me during the 9/11 crisis, he was the
President of India Association at that time. He is currently involved
with the Mahatma Gandhi statue placement in Dallas. The other person in
picture is the imam (Aamil Saheb) in charge as the resident Aamil Saheb
is in Mumbai to join in the funeral services of the Syedna Burhanuddin.

Bohra
Muslims are one of the eight most known denominations of Islam; Sunni,
Shia, Wahhabi, Ahmadiyya, Ismailia, WD Muhammad, Alawite and Bohra. Each
group is headed by a spiritual leader except Sunni and Wahhabi (part of
Sunni) denominations.

Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin was the
spiritual leader of the Bohra Muslim community, and he passed away
yesterday passing the responsibility to his son, a hereditary system of
spiritual leadership.

THE AMIN

The
Bohra Muslim community has done relatively well when it comes to being
the Amins of the Society. It was the first model of Prophet Muhammad.
Amin is being just, truthful and trust worthy.

Did Muslims call
him the Amin? No, there were no Muslims at that time; it was the Pagans,
Jews, Christians and others who called him Amin. We have to earn the
trust among the people we live with, no matter who they are. Indeed that
is the first and foundational Sunnah (practice) to build peaceful
societies.

God informs in Quran (49:13) that he created humanity
from a single couple into multitudes of tribes, communities, nations,
and conflicts were bound to happen with the given differences. Then he
advises, the conflicts persist because we don’t know each other. He
asserts that the best one among you is the one who takes the time to
know the neighbor. When you know each other conflicts fade and solutions
emerge.

A the foundation for pluralism have been conducting the
Unity Day for the last ten years, and as a part of the program we start
the program with American national Anthem, and we always wanted a Hijabi
Muslim Girl to sing the Anthem – guess where she came from twice in ten
years? The Bohra Muslim Community!  Thanks to the education and
teaching imparted in their system to have produced someone to
participate.

I can appreciate this much more after finding out
that the Orlando Muslims could not produce a Muslims girl to sing the
National Anthem at our Unity Day program in Mulberry. 

All I can
say is keep this Amin component alive and active. This is how we build
better societies, to be a part of it, rather than live within.

Dawoodi Bohra  spiritual leader Dr Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin passed away.
—-

PRESS
RELEASE

 

January 17, 2014. Dallas, Texas.  The World Muslim Congress shares the
announcement of the sad demise of the Spiritual leader of the Dawoodi Bohra Muslim 
community
Dr Syedna
Mohammed Burhanuddin Saheb in Mumbai, India on the Morning of Friday the 17th
of January 2014 after cardiac arrest.  He
was 102. Per the tradition, his eldest son Syedna Mufaddal Saifuddin succeeds
leading the community. 

Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji’un (إِنَّا لِلّهِ وَإِنَّـا
إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعونَ)  “Surely we
belong to Allah and to Him shall we return”. The phrase
is recited by Muslims when a person passes away.

At World Muslim Congress, we extend our condolences to the family, friends and
the Dawoodi Bohra community in particular and Muslim Ummah in General.  Syedna provided progressive leadership to the
community and he was here in Irving, Texas to for the Grand opening of their
Masjid. Indeed, the community members are trained to be participants and
contributors in each community they live. I was particularly proud of them for
participating at the Unity Day events, and always have one of their girls ready
to sing the national Anthem in full Hijab. They always participated in India
based events and a lot of interfaith meetings. I hope and pray their
contribution will continue to accelerate.


We thank Times of India for the full report and thank Taiyab Kundawala for
sharing this sad news.

url- http://worldmuslimcongress.blogspot.com/2014/01/dawoodi-bohra-spiritual-leader-dawoodi.html

Mike Ghouse
World Muslim Congress
…………………………………………………………….

MUMBAI: The spiritual leader of Dawoodi Bohra community Dr Syedna
Mohammed Burhanuddin passed away today after a cardiac arrest here. He was 102.

His 70-year old son Syedna Mufaddal Saifuddin has succeeded him, it was
announced here.

Syedna Burhanuddin died this morning at his residence in South Mumbai, a
spokesperson for the community said.

“The 52nd Dai al-Mutlaq of the worldwide Dawoodi Bohra community, His
Holiness Dr Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin expired today at the age of 102 at his
Mumbai residence at Saifee Mahal,” he said.

“Born in Surat, he was the leader of the Dawoodi Bohra community after
succeeding his father Syedna Taher Saifuddin in 1965. Under his leadership, the
community has achieved remarkable social, economic and educational success
across the world.

“Known as ambassador of peace and goodwill, he was highly respected by
world leaders and governments for his endeavours in promoting international
brotherhood and harmony,” the spokesperson said.

He was honoured with highest civilian titles like the Star of Jordan and Order
of the Nile by the respective governments of Jordan and Egypt. Syedna was
conferred Honourary Doctorates for his efforts in social and educational
development by renowned institutes like Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Aligarh
Muslim University and University of Karachi.

In Mumbai, the one of its kind Raudat Tahera mausoleum which has the entire
Quran inscribed in letters of gold and bejewelled with precious stones; the
world class Saifee Hospital; and the on-going ambitious Saifee Burhani
Upliftment project of the redevelopment of Bhendi Bazaar are some of the major
initiatives of Syedna in the city.

In 2011, Syedna had proclaimed Nass (investiture) upon his second son Syedna
Mufaddal Saifuddin in London. The 70-year-old successor is the rector of the
community’s 200-year-old institution Jamea-tus-Saifiah, which has campuses in
Surat, Karachi, Mumbai and Nairobi.

“He was closely associated with the late Syedna and has received much of
his spiritual guidance under the tutelage of his revered father.

Highly respected among the community members, Syedna Mufaddal Saifuddin
travelled widely with his father and met heads of states and other
distinguished personalities across the world, he said.

Among the many projects that Syedna Mufaddal Saifuddin has worked under
Syedna’s directions in the restoration of famous Fatemi Masjids in Egypt and
other edifices in the Arab world, he said.

Syedna Mufaddal Saifuddin will lead the Namaz-e-Janaza of the late Syedna at
Saifee Masjid at Bhendi Bazaar. The late Syedna will be laid to rest at Raudat
Tahera mausoleum in Mumbai.

Thousands of Dawoodi Bohras from all over India and from around 40 nations are
converging to Mumbai to pay their last respects and homage to their beloved
leader Syedna Moahmmed Burhanuddin, he said.

Dawoodi Bohra is a sect of the Shia Muslims spread all over the world.

One of the key principles of the sect is “patriotism as part of the
faith.” It encourages followers to make a positive contribution to the
country they live in.

The word Bohra means trader and traditionally, most members of the sect have
been entrepreneurs.

Last year, thousands of Dawoodi Bohras from across the world flocked to the
city to celebrate Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin’s 102nd birthday.

Times of India – http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Dawoodi-Bohra-community-spiritual-leader-Syedna-passes-away/articleshow/28959032.cms
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a
speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. He believes in
Standing up for others
and a book with the same title is coming up. Mike has a strong presence on
national and local TV, Radio and Print Media. He is a frequent guest on Sean Hannity show on
Fox TV, and a commentator on national radio networks, he contributes weekly to
the Texas Faith Column at Dallas
Morning News
; fortnightly at Huffington post; and
several other periodicals across the world. His personal site www.MikeGhouse.net indexes all his work
through many links.

Narendra Modi and dehumanizing women

      Comments Off on Narendra Modi and dehumanizing women

Modi and dehumanizing women

First of all, I condemn the wife Jokes in India, which are usually derogatory
towards women.  That is the kind of humor
we don’t need to burden our next generation with. You can call me whatever you
want, but in the public spaces, where I am, I will stop you from saying those
jokes.


Here is a debate about Narendra Modi, the Prime ministerial candidate making a
statement,   “50 Crore ki girl friend Dekhi hai” – have you seen a $5Million
dollar girl friend? Referring to Shashi Tharoor’s wife Sunananda Pushkar, Shashi’s
response was apt, “She is priceless! “Instead of saying, what does this man
know about women?  It’s like asking
someone to describe the smell of the roses, whose nostril is desensitized.


Somewhere in the discussion, someone suggests, “All it takes for Modi is to
apologize for the statement or clarify what he meant by it” and it will be over.
Some else jumped and said, “apologize, he never will”.
That took me back to
think if there is a pattern. When the lower court in Ahmadabad rejected the Petition
of Zakia Jafri, against Modi’s involvement in the Gujarat Massacre, someone had
suggested, “If Modi has any respect for human dignity, as a head of the state, he
would go and console that Octogenarian Zakia Jafri, that he will make sure,
justice will be served to her, even if it were against him?”  Someonelese jumped and said, “ Modi may dum
nahin” – Modi does not have the guts to do such a bold thing.

I was looking at the 7 points I had advocated for Modi to consider – to be
humble, to do the praischit and move forward. I was told that he will not do
that.

What will he do then? How will he handle mistakes if he were the Prime
Minister?

Most of you may watch
the Indian soaps; the story is repeated daily, “The husband screams at wife,
what have I not given you – wealth, car, house, servant, designer clothes,
dining in the finest restaurants….what do you want”.  Rarely do they show the response, a woman
wants nothing more than respect and dignity. 

The development is a wholesome plank, not economic development at the cost of
respect and dignity to the millions of Gujaratis out there.

If you have not watched
the following video by NDTV, it is worth watching. There is another revelation;
the “right wing people” will never see another point of view. In the video, Mr. Modi
is represented by Mr. Rao, who simply cannot see the facts.
Between 3:00 to 27:00
Minutes on the tape
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. He believes in
Standing up for others
and a book with the same title is coming up. Mike has a strong presence on
national and local TV, Radio and Print Media. He is a frequent guest on Sean Hannity show on
Fox TV, and a commentator on national radio networks, he contributes weekly to
the Texas Faith Column at Dallas
Morning News
; fortnightly at Huffington post; and
several other periodicals across the world. His personal site www.MikeGhouse.net indexes all his work
through many links.

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….