Ghouse on Hannity Show on Fox News Tonite

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Sean Hannity offers the conservative perspective, and I will be on his show tonight to offer pluralistic solution on issues of the day. A moderate’s point of view for our friends on the right as well as the left, to see the bigger world. I may not talk a whole lot, but I will precisely make a few points.  This must be my 40th or 50th appearance on the show,
I don’t keep track of it nor do I save it any more.

TONIGHT ON HANNITY SHOW @ FOX TV
8:30 PM EST | Monday, February 11, 2013

In the last few weeks, Sean Hannity has been called names on my forums and the Facebook, what we need to realize is that Hannity is a patriotic American who keep our government in check. I am glad Hannity does not give a pass to
Obama or any one. Had he grilled President Bush, we would not have
been in the mess we were. Obama should not be spared either, no matter how good
he is. 
We don’t have to agree on anything, but we have to talk, even
if it is unpleasant. My favorite media heroes are those who nail the respective
governments down, and keep them on their toes. Imagine an America without
criticism, but without it, our democracy will not be
fully functional.  

Mike Ghouse, President,
America Together Foundation

…….. 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 has done that throughout his life as
an activist. Mike has a 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.

Indian American's committment to Pluralism.

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Tracing the roots of my quest for Pluralism.
I am an
Indian American, and take immense pride in the pluralistic ethos of India.  Indeed, I have made a commitment to nurturing
those values, and share them with fellow Americans in my talks, articles and media appearances.   Let me be clear; everything is not hunky dory,  India has deep scars and wounds that need healing, these wounds** if not treated, will continue to be a drain on nation’s spiritual health. At times, the frustrations can reach the tipping point leading into riots, massacres and Genocides, in the process hurting every one.

Collectively, as Indian Americans, we contribute to the richness of America in the fields of medicine, science, engineering, biology, politics, religion, information technology and smart corporate management. However, the time has come for us to give fullness to our participation by contributing in social sciences.
As a social scientist, my contribution would be sharing my motherland’s pluralistic heritage with my homeland as a gift to America.  By the way, India was one of the first three nations on the earth to recognize American independence in 1776, it was Tippu Sultan, the head of the state of Mysore (Karnataka) then along with Morocco and France.

Two decades of research work on Pluralism

In the last twenty years, through Asian News Magazine (1993-2001), Asian News Radio (1996-2001), Desi TV (1996), Yahoogroups (2003 -now), and various blogs like Mike Ghouse for India, Sulekha (1999 – now) and several (30) sites for each topic, I have shared our pluralistic heritage.

The Asian News Magazine featured the essence of every religion, and the multi-cultural aspect of India and its inclusiveness, the Asian News Radio featured weekly hour dedicated to presenting the essence of religious festivals so we can learn about each other. We also produced more than 500 hours of talk show radio on religion, every beautiful religion, Pundits, Pastors, Imams, Rabbis, Shamans and Religious clergy from each faith joined me daily to share the wisdom of his or her religion, indeed, Atheism and pluralism had its own slot.

There is not a public forum where I have not been inclusive. A few years ago, one of the business radio stations (AM 1360) in Dallas was doing a show about ‘giving’ during Christmas season. They invited a Rabbi and a Pastor and wanted me to fill in for Islam, and I did with a condition that I am allowed to acknowledge and mention charity in every faith including Hinduism, Baha’i, Sikhism, Jainism, Buddhism and other traditions.

For two years we conducted two sets of workshops called Understanding Religion, all the beautiful religions (Atheism was part of the learning). We had a Rabbi, Pastor, Pundit, Imam, Shaman and respective religious ministers joined  in presenting a three hour workshop – on each faith. Funds permitting, I hope to recommence the workshops, and create a replicable model. The idea was to demystify the myths about each faith. Two of the most misunderstood faiths are Hinduism and Islam, and we cannot let people rot in mis-information, we have to do our share of the work in creating a bettter world. Of course, finding the truth is our own individual responsibility.

Each one of us is capable of standing up for others, when we do that; all of us would be safe. We cannot demand peace, when we are not peaceful within, we cannot ask others to be hateful, when we are full of it.

Media Presence

As President of the Foundation for Pluralism, I contribute an article a week to the Texas Faith column at Dallas Morning News for over two years, and just about every piece weaves through several religions. The articles appear regularly at Huffington Post, and occasionally at Washington post. Heck, when I wrote a tribute about my late wife, father and mother, I found them reflecting the values of most religions, if not all.

The TV, Radio, Print, Web and Social Media has been good to me, giving me a strong national and local presence including Sean Hannity’s Show on Fox News (over 50 appearances), and many nationally syndicated Radio shows.

Over 1500 articles on the topic of Pluralism, Interfaith, Politics, India, Israel, Middle East, Islam, Human rights and conflict mitigation have been published. Major news papers in the United States and across the world, including Iran, Somalia, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, European and other Asian Nations have carried them. I have not checked if Timbuktu news papers have carried them as well.

The international forums including the Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions in Melbourne, Australia; the Middle East Peace Initiative in Jerusalem; and the International Leadership Conference in Hawaii, Chicago and Washington have also provided me the platform to speak about Pluralism.

It is a blessing to have served as a commissioner for the City of Carrollton and president of many a organizations including Home Owners Association, North Texas Cricket Association, and a board member of several non-profits such as the Dallas Peace Center.

No matter where I go, my identity is Indian.

Indian democracy

We are the original Pluralistic Democracy in the world, and can serve as a model to nations where they are experiencing co-emergence of multiple religious people in work place, schools, dining, playground and different aspects of living. They all can look up to India about moving forward despite the difficulties, India’s diverse population has successfully co-existed for centuries in relative harmony. Thanks to the founding fathers for embracing that tradition and opting for a Secular democracy upon Indepedence in 1947. Where else on the earth, can you have personal conflicts resolved through your own religious guidance? Hindus, Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Zoroastrians, Buddhists, Jains and others have their personal laws to square with the personal and family issues as an option. America can benefit from such practices.

Unresolved Issues

I am glad; we are a pluralistic democracy rather than an autocratic, monarchic or dictatorial system where critical issues take time to resolve through consensus, rather than imposition.  Because of the nature of our governance, we have piled up unresolved conflicts that will take time to heal. Among them are; Sikh Massacre, Babri Masjid-Ram JanamBhoomi, Kashmiri Pundits, Gujarat Massacre, misogyny,  and discrimination against the minorities. There are other issues, but my focus is social issues.

We should not dump these issues onto the next generation, we are conquering the space, we can conquer our prejudices too, that is the greater Jihad (inner struggle) Lord Krishna and Prophet Muhammad had called for. The nation is moving forward despite the issues, and we need to take the initiative and bring closure to them in our life time. They will not go away by burying our heads in the sand.
Standing up for others

Standing up for others is the right thing to do, every human goes through a period of invincibility to vulnerability, if we don’t stand up for those who are vulnerable, then who will stand up for us when we are vulnerable?

The idea of alms, charity, taking care of the elderly, weak, sick and the children is a common theme in every religious tradition. It is indeed the insurance for every one’s well being. I cannot be at peace when others around me aren’t, and hence it behooves me to take care of the ones who need assistance. 

It’s been my life time honor to stand up for everyone from Atheists to Zoroastrians and every one in between (www.StandingupforOthers.com ). 

Inclusive
attitudes are cultivated

Our sense of
responsibility is akin to wearing the seat belt. If you live in America, and
don’t wear the seat belt in the car while you drive, not only you feel guilty, but certainly
uncomfortable. It was not the case before the seat belt was made mandatory for the
driver and the front seat passenger. It is indeed a consciously learned behavior.
I feel the same sense of discomfort, when I get to the podium and not mention
or include different religions in the speech. My only fear is excluding others
in the public square even by mistake.  To
allay that fear; I have learned to start my speeches with Pluralism greetings
and prayers that are inclusive of every one including my Atheist friends (Pluralism
Speaker
).

Thanks to my
father, mother, and grandfather who lived their lives as an example inculcating
Islamic pluralism in my brothers and the sister, like millions of Muslim
parents whom you may have not met.  In my
talks, I share small examples and incidents where small things do matter. We
learned the Islamic version of Vasudaiva Kutumbukum; the whole world is one
family.  

Indeed, Pluralism flows in my veins, and that is respecting the otherness of others and accepting the God-given uniqueness of each one of the 7 billion of us.

Boldly changing the course of history

My father was a Mayor of the town of Yelahanka in the fifties, and we always had construction work at our apartments or remodeling at our historic house, originally owned by the founder of Bangalore, Hon. Kempe Gowda in the 16th century. My father was a maverick, and dared challenging the abusive but prevalent norms of the society, he had the Dalits (shameful word: Untouchables) work at our place, my mother would make them tea or give them food in the plates and cups we used, it was a big no-no in the society at that time, you ‘kept them’ away from your house, just as it was for the Blacks in America then. I am proud of my father, and my mother for supporting him in breaking the uncouth norms. He was constantly called on to quit, and at times threatened, but the dare devil held on to his ground firmly and the town loved him dearly and gradually followed his example.

I saw humiliation in the eyes of men, women and children, who came to collect water from the public tap on each corner of the street, the upper caste person would wash the tap three times before he or she collected the water. It was difficult for me, and I played out my share of the drama and mumbling in protest. Despite the significant progress made, we have a long way to go in the housing discrimination, indeed, even in America we have ways to go, but we are all going forward.

As I am writing this, I grudgingly acknowledge that I have learned nothing new; my father did everything that I am doing now, Gee, a drop of tear rolls down my cheek in reverence to Mahatma Gandhi for becoming a catalyst in uplifting the down trodden and restoring their God-given dignity to them. I just have to pray for the Mahatma for saving the Indian souls by getting rid of guilt from ours minds, by having us open our hearts and minds toward the fellow beings, just as MLK did in America. 

Early influences of Pluralism

Early on in my life, even though I had chosen to be an atheist, and I stayed the course for the next thirty years, but never looked down on any faith like a few of my fanatic Atheist friends do. I have had the opportunity to know and learn about different faiths and sub-cultures. I went to Mahabodhi (Buddhist) Society on Thursdays, Mosque (Muslim) on Fridays, and Bhajan Mandir (Hindu) on Saturday nights. The Interaction with my Jain neighbors and friends, and my mother’s Zoroastrian friend was productive.

The Saturday afternoon discourse between the Shia Scholar and my Sunni maternal Grandfather and my father laid the foundation of civil dialogue for me. Then, I enjoyed the interaction with Sikhs, Adivasis, Tribals, Khandaris and Banjarans at our mill where we grounded their grain in to flour. The Sikhs were in the Air force and the Tribals were breaking the nearby hills into crushed stone manually, I felt connected with all of them, and did not feel a barrier between me and them.

In the first few years of my childhood I spent Christmas evenings with our neighbors, and I was also dressed up as Krishna with the Makhan (butter) when I was a baby. In my college days, I had serious dialogue with my English Teacher Ramachandran, a Saibaba devotee and my weaver friend Mohamed Fakhru, an Islamic scholar in his own right.

The only religious group I did not interact in India was the Jewish community, but learned about Eishman, the killer of six million Jews, the book was in Urdu language, and my mother prevented me from reading, as she was concerned about her child’s well being, but it created a sense of incompleteness in me for not reading the forbidden book. The completeness to my life came when I organized the first Holocaust commemoration event in 2006 in Dallas. It was the first such event in history, by non-Jewish people. It is our moral duty to understand the atrocities we humans have inflicted upon each other and educate others to say no to such tragic events from even seeding.

I have spent a lot of time reading, I was always in the library and I enjoy going to the Libaray to this day. Some of my early influencers were Mahatma Gandhi, Jiddu Krishnamurthy, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, Swami Vivekananda, Allama Iqbal, Buddha, Abraham Kavoor, Dale Carnegie and a German Scholar who wrote about comparative religions.

It is a blessing to have seen Mahatma Gandhi twice in my dreams in the early 70’s with Bangalore University’s Vice Chancellor Narsimaiah, and the next time in early part of 2000. In both instances, all he said was, son you have work to do and patted on my back, and that has been my inspiration all along to commit to pluralism. It was Gandhi for me.

Gender Pluralism
 
We grew up with Gender equality, the four brothers and the sister were equals in every aspect of life. My father never treated my mother any less, he always consulted her and regretted when he did not. I would have been a farmer or a politician in India, had my mother not insisted, and my father listened to her, here I am today. The images we grew up with were of gender equality, treating men and women the same. The four of us brothers and our sister have all agreed to share the proceeds of the sale of the property of our parents equally. We never questioned it and never thought there could be difference in inheritance laws.

In the early sixties, we had our first woman mayor Mrs. Puttama (she had a little restaurant) in my town Yelahanka, and nearly twenty years later when I visited San Francisco, celebrations were on for electing the first woman mayor in America; Diane Feinstein! I said wow! 

Communal riots

My father is my hero and opened the doors of wisdom to us. Pluralism indeed runs in my family. He taught us one of the biggest lessons of my life in social cohesiveness and dealing with extremism that I continue to reflect in my talks, acts and write ups.

During the communal riots in Jabalpur (India) in the early sixties, both Muslims and Hindus were killed in the mayhem, as it happens every time. I wish every father in India, America and elsewhere teaches this lesson to his kids. He was crystal clear on his take; He told us the “individuals” are responsible for the bloodshed and not the religions. If we get the guy who started the conflict and punish him for disturbing peace, rather than calling it a religious issue for the communities to jump in and aggravate it further, we would have saved many lives. He would emphasize that you cannot blame the intangible religion and expect justice, we must blame the individuals who caused it and punish them accordingly for disturbing the peace and thus bring a resolution to the conflict by serving justice. He said you cannot annihilate, kill, hang or beat the religion, then why bark at it?

What is pluralism?

Simply put, it is respecting the otherness of the other and accepting the uniqueness of each one of us. In cultural terms, it is recognizing your culture as a beautiful expression of life to you, as my own is to me. When it comes to food, it is appreciating the Rice you enjoy over the Naan I delight, or vice-versa. For Americans, it is medium rare stake versus the well done. In religious terms, it is learning to honor the way your worship or bow to the creator in gratitude, is as divine as my own.

Our future is Pluralism.

By the end of 2020, there will not be a major work place America or India and other places, where you will not find people of different faiths, cultures, ethnicities, races, nationalities and social backgrounds working, eating, playing, marrying, and doing things together.

We need to prepare ourselves for those eventualities to prevent possible conflicts and lay a good foundation for nurturing goodwill and effective functioning of the societies.  Exclusive communities will become a thing of the past. (Foundation for Pluralism, Pluralism Center)

Being a Muslim, I am deeply committed to nurturing the pluralistic values embedded in Islam (World Muslim congress). The role of a Muslim is to mitigate conflicts and nurture goodwill, most people get that, a few don’t, just as with any other religious group.

Pluralism is our future, and as a futurist, based on the trends, I foresee, that two generations from now, we would be comfortable in saying, my religion, culture or life style is one of the many choices, and further down the road, a significant number will proclaim that my way of life is not superior or inferior to any.

They will consider ‘claiming superiority’ would be sheer arrogance and religion (a major part of life to many) is believed to imbue humility that builds societies, communities and nations in creating that elusive kingdom of heaven where all of us can live  without apprehension or fear of the other.

We are one nation

We are one nation under God, indivisible with liberty and justice for all. We are represented by every race, nationality, ethnicity, language, culture and religion. We see God as one, none and many and in every form; male, female, genderless and non-existent, being and non-being, nameless and with innumerable names. Indeed, we must preserve the pluralistic heritage of America.

About India
We are Adivasis, Atheists, Baha’is, Bos, Buddhists, Christians, Dalits, Hindus, Jains, Jewish, Muslim, Sikhs, Tribals, Zoroastrians and every possible grouping. We are Brown, Black, White, Yellow and green with envy and phir bhi dil hai Hindustani (My heart is Indian).

Our Motherland is represented by every race, nationality, ethnicity, language, culture and religion. We see God as one, none and many; and in every form; male, female, genderless and non-existent, being and non-being, nameless and with innumerable names.

We are proud of our heritage – a multi-faith, multi-cultural, multi-regional and multi-linguistic society, where we have come to accept and respect every which way people have lived their lives. For over 5000 years, India has been a beacon of pluralism – it has embraced Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Baha’i and Zoroastrianism to include in the array of the indigenous religions; Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism and Sikhism. 

What we need to do

We may want to consciously start thinking and acting as one people, one people within a nation and a community and one people globally. It’s like home when we are conflict free.  I do hope each one of us purges any bias towards the other, there is joy in being free from ill-will. Try to be free from it this day forward… free from anything that prevents you from being a part of the parts or the whole. 

Our combined philosophies believe in one world ; Hinduism describes the world as Vasudaiva Kutumbukum, the whole world is one family, the idea of Ek Onkar(one) in Sikhism, you are all created from the same couple as Quraan puts it and Jesus embraced every one regardless of who any one is… similar philosophies are grounded in all our religions. 

The book and the Movie

Insha Allah, my book, The American Pluralist will be released shortly, it is a chronicle of how things work in bringing the communities together, it is dedicated to India’s pluralistic heritage; India’s gift to America.  

The movie is about building a cohesive America, where no American has to live with anxiety, apprehension, discomfort or fear of the other. One must be free to live his or her life to the fullest in pursuit of happiness.

I believe the civility of a nation is determined by how it treats its weak, economically backward, the men and women in ditches, the voiceless, its women and the minorities.

A few links referred to in the writing are:

  1. The Ghouse diary . www.TheGhouseDiary.com
  2. Curriculum Vitae – http://www.mikeghouse.net/MikeGhouse-CV-09192012.pdf
  3. My profile –  http://www.mikeghouse.net/Profile.asp
  4. Mike Ghouse for India – http://MikeGhouseforIndia.blogspot.com
  5. My Real name – http://nabsites.net/demo/my-name-is-mike-ghouse/
  6. Pluralism Speaker – http://www.mikeghouse.net/InterfaithSpeaker_MikeGhouse.asp
  7. Muslim Speaker – http://mikeghouse.net/MuslimSpeaker.MikeGhouse.asp
  8. Linked in profile –  http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=3451402&trk=tab_pro
  9. Foundation for Pluralism – www.FoundationforPluralism.com
  10. World Muslim Congress – www.WorldMuslimCongress.com
  11. Quraan Conference – www.QuraanConference.com
  12. America together Foundation
    www.AmericaTogetherFoundation.com
  13. Standing up for others – www.Standingupforothers.com
  14. Reflections Annual Holocaust
    and Genocides – www.HolocaustandGenocides.com
  15. Unity Day USA – www.UnitydayUSA.com 
  16. 30 Blogs – http://nabsites.net/demo/mike-ghouse-list-of-sites-and-blogs/
  17. Video- Trailer Americans Together – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YMXsTo4VYh8
  18. Video- My story, Part I
    –  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLiQeOo9oEs
  19. Video- My story, Part II – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLiQeOo9oEs
  20. Video – My latest talk at
    Gurdwara – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNxrf8fFU0I
  21. Video-  July4th Tippu Sultan – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AXNS365UEw4
  22. Video – Quraan Translation/Bhagvad
    Gita – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ZOFLQSAOhA
  23. Video – Immigration Rally – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrjU0KULv-Y
  24. Video- Pluralism Prayers – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mc9D9guPMY
  25. Video- Pluralism greetings,
    Chicago – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eo3a8wX6SXQ
  26. Video – There are over 200
    links on the YouTube.

** There are many such issues, that no one has dared to bring a resolution, for example; the atrocities committed by some of the kings from the Mughal era have deeply wounded the psyche of our Population, Hindus among us are hurt and are subconsciously enslaved to the idea of getting even with Muslims, who have nothing to do with what those kings did, and Muslims on the other hand have not washed their hands completely off the Moghuls, as if they were our relatives. The Sikh Genocide of 1984, the Gujarat Genocide of Muslims, the abusive treatment of Dalits (the misclassified lower rung of the society), and the unchecked reservations system has boomeranged discriminating the well qualified because they are not classified in the lower rung. These will not go away, the simmer inside and act out in denying simple opportunties of life to another Indian. Shame on all of us, that we have not let a fellow Indian feel secure in the pursuit of his or her happiness.We should not let economic problems

Jai Hind

Mike Ghouse
In Summary;

———-
Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work place and standing up for others as an activist. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. Mike has a 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 everything you want to know about him.

Ghouse knocks down Pamela Geller on Hannity Show

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Indeed,
it was a knock down drag out with dissembler Pamela Geller. Sean
Hannity asked me to cut down on expletives, an unusual for me.

I
just read Pamela Geller’s note on her blog, “I will be on the Sean
Hannity radio show at the top of the hour (4pm) for a knock down drag
out with dissembler Michael Ghouse.
http://www.wsbradio.com/s/inside/seanhannity/  and
http://www.hannity.com/show/2013/02/07

We
argued over the word Jihad. The word was used for the first time when
Prophet Muhammad’s army came home from a victorious war.  The associates
asked him, what next? The prophet said, the greater Jihad begins now.
The “greater jihad” is the inner struggle to hold on to the temptations
to take revenge, or oppress the captured. Instead, he taught one to be
humble, and be charitable and kind to them. However the meaning of the
Jihad was screwed up around the 10th century to mean war on non-Muslims.

Pamela
was belligerent and going on and on, that’s when I got to her. I guess
this must be a first time on Hannity show. I told her “Pamela, first,
you did not listen to what I said – that is the screwed up meaning of
Jihad, that was an add on, and not Qur’anic or Islamic, you did not hear
me, that it was in the middle ages that it was added, and unfortunately
it is believed by many Muslims.”

Secondly, we are having a
dialogue here, you tell a point and cut it out and I will do the same,
you got this non-sense memorized and rolling it on, breath in between
your sentences, let it be a dialogue… there was a dead moment, and I
realized, that was the right thing for me to do. Thanks Hannity for
letting it pass, I am glad he did, otherwise neither will make the
points.

Then I laid it on her that she is robbing the American
public by not telling the whole truth. In Islam, there is no offensive
war, per Islam no Muslim can wage a war, unless in self-defense, all
else about Jihad is non-sense.

An another point, although I do
not like Ahmedinejad’s loose mouth, he did not say to wipe out Israel,
he said to wipe out Zionism and not Israel… of course; it was over loud
conversation between Pamela and I.

I am against supplying F-16
fighter planes to Egypt.  What is it for? The only possible enemy Egypt
has is Israel, and Masri has said he will continue to honor the peace
accord. This is the dumbest thing we are doing to supply them with arms.

Hagel should be confirmed for Secretary of Defense, for a change we need someone who is not a damn war monger.

John
Brennan – He needs to clarify about the operations of drone, we are
creating more ill-will through our indiscriminate killing of the
innocents.

Reference points

http://www.hannity.com/show/2013/02/07

http://frontpagemag.com/2013/joseph-klein/the-emerging-egyptian-iranian-strategic-alliance/

Ahmadinejad
warned, “The Iranian people are ready to march on Israel to destroy it
if it launches an attack adventure against Iran.”

and feeling
encircled by hostile governments in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and other Gulf
states, the Iranian regime is looking for a new dance partner.

Moreover,
Egypt has to walk a tightrope in its relationship with the United
States if it wants to receive billions of dollars in financial aid and
advanced weapons such as F-16s to build up its military. On the other
hand, Morsi sees some leverage in hedging his bets and keeping the U.S.
on edge as to just how far Egypt is willing to go in pursuing deeper
ties with Iran.

Second, while Egypt may not formally break
diplomatic relations with Israel and withdraw from the Camp David peace
treaty in the foreseeable future, it can revert to a cold peace and
allow Iranian arms to transit the Sinai on the way to Hamas in Gaza.

Ayotallah Khameini

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/08/world/middleeast/irans-supreme-leader-ayatollah-ali-khameini-rejects-direct-talks-with-us.html?_r=0

The ayatollah’s objection is an edict to which other Iranian officials, including President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, must adhere,

“The
Iranian nation will not negotiate under pressure,” he said. Noting the
international sanctions against Iran, Ayatollah Khamenei said: “The U.S.
is pointing a gun at Iran and wants us to talk to them. The Iranian
nation will not be intimidated by these actions.”

http://www.politico.com/story/2013/02/fischer-a-no-on-hagel-he-fell-short-87310.html

Sen.
Deb Fischer will not support her fellow Nebraskan, former Sen. Chuck
Hagel, for Defense Secretary, she wrote in an op-ed published Thursday.

“Sen.
Hagel had a chance to clear the record and address bipartisan,
well-intentioned concerns,” Fischer (R-Neb.) wrote for the Omaha
World-Herald, referencing the former Republican senator’s performance in
confirmation hearings last week. “He fell short, consequently failing
to reach the heightened standard to which nominees to this position are
held. I cannot support his nomination.”

John Brennan

 Brennan,
57, was expected to be examined closely about U.S. spy activities from
waterboarding to the use of drones at the Senate Intelligence Committee
hearing, scheduled for 2:30 p.m. EST/1930 GMT.

Even so, there has
been no groundswell of objection to Brennan’s nomination, and he was
expected to win confirmation from both the panel and, later by the full
U.S. Senate.

Brennan is Obama’s counterterrorism adviser and was a top CIA official under former President George W. Bush.

The
biggest concerns about the nominee have come from liberal Democrats,
not the conservative Republicans whose reservations about Obama’s
nominee to head the Pentagon, Chuck Hagel, prompted a delay in the vote
to confirm the former Republican senator.

Senator Ron Wyden, a
Democratic member of the intelligence committee who has pledged to press
Brennan on drones, said in television interviews on Thursday he was
encouraged by Obama’s to provide classified documents, but that more
action is needed.

Senate Committee Postpones Vote on Hagel Nomination

The
Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) decided to postpone its
tentatively planned markup of Chuck Hagel’s nomination to be Secretary
of Defense.

SASC was planning to vote on the nomination today,
but committee chairman Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI) decided to delay action
saying that the committee’s review was not complete.

Although he
did not reference it, several media sources report that more than two
dozen Republicans wrote Levin calling for more time to review Hagel’s
financial records, which they argue are incomplete.  Politico quotes a
passage from the letter where questions are raised by the Republicans
about whether Hagel was paid “directly or indirectly, from foreign
sources” in relation to speeches or consulting work.  Hagel reportedly
had been asked about this previously and replied that the financial
information requested “regarding private corporate and non-profit
entities … is not mine to provide. …I do not believe I have any of
the information requested,” according to Politico.

....
Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place and standing up for
others
as an activist. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. 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 everything you
want to know about him.

Surreal Dreams turned out to be real

      Comments Off on Surreal Dreams turned out to be real

There is a world out there that is
not physical; it is imaginary but real at times. Inspired by my facebook
friends Joyi, Kush, Cathie and my two Nephews Tanveer and Zeeshan, I embarked on sharing
some of the unreal dreams, and I am sure each one of you had such
a dream. It took me a good
one hour of writing – from 2:32 through 3:30 PM on February 6, 2013 .
When I get a chance, I will fine tune it and add details; right now it
is merely skeletal and dates are approximate. I am sure I can find the closest dates.

1995
– Kundan Sharma, my friend who is like an older brother to me was hurt
in my dream; I called him up in the morning to find if everything was
alright. He asked me to tell him what I saw, and I told him that there
was some stupid accident.  He said he was flying to India that day, and
decided to cancel it. That evening he totaled his Cadillac but thank God
nothing happened, he called me to thank me.

2004 – Again Kundan
Sharma and I were driving a car somewhere in Florida, the causeway just
broke off, and our car hung in the middle, half dangling over the ocean
below and the other half on the raised up road, either way it would be a steep fall.  I woke up restless, called him up the next morning, he said,
he was going through some difficult times at that time and appreciated
the dream, so he can take an alternative.

2007 – Sudesh bhabi
(Kundan’s wife) was in pain, I called her up. She was in the hospital,
the previous evening her car had rolled over her from the garage drive
way when she went to pick up the mail. She had a severe fractured leg.

Kundan
and I shared offices in the same building and we became good friends,
he is more like a big brother to me. Both of us have gotten busy and
have not seen each other for a while, we saw each other frequently when
DJ Sharma, my office partner was alive. I always wondered what was the connection? We both ended up with the song – Tera Mujh say hai pehle ka naata kahin.

By the way, I sang that song when Mina was born, and that’s how her Middle name was named Dilshad, I saw my sister Dilshad in her and felt the connection was there from an earlier life, like in previous birth ( I don’t believe in it though). Years later I had a conversation with Alka Yagnik, singer of the original song,  and in the middle of lobby of the auditorium with hundreds of people around,  she sang that song for Mina on my little tape recorder. Lala Laala, lalla la..lalla la la lalaa. Mina this is for you. I never saw the movie but the song had grown on me. ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vO35DVm_5ts

2008 – Arun Vittala and I
had not seen each other for nearly 5 years, he was standing in
the middle of the street, all worried. That was not him, a positive man,
so I called him up – his brother had passed away in India and he was
figuring how to get there and he was surprised too that I called and I was amazed with that connection. 

Arun
and I became friends through Cricket, when I organized a major cricket
tournament in Dallas in 1996; he was a key partner in organizing the
game, and for many years after that. He organized the North Texas
Cricket Association and became its first president. I remained involved
for many years and was a president for two terms.

0000 – Phillip
Ramsaroop looked tensed up to me in pain, so I called Vidya his wife. Phillip
was undergoing surgery on his leg in the hospital in Arlington. Phillip has since moved to Florida.
He was instrumental in explaining the difference between acceptance and
tolerance while defining Pluralism years ago. He was President of
the D/FW Hindu temple and considered honoring me a title of “Honorary
Hindu” as I spoke up for Hinduism where ever it was misunderstood. FYI, I
do that with faiths and cultures including Atheistic tradition. He is a
great singer of Hindu devotional songs and I have played some of his songs on my
Religious radio shows way back in 2003.

1971 – Dr. Narsimaiah,
The Vice Chancellor of Bangalore University, Mahatma Gandhi and I were
sitting around a dining table. Gandhi put his hand on my back, and said
“Son, you have a lot of work to do” I understood, it was the work around
building communal harmony in India at that time.

2003 – Mahatma
Gandhi was in a halo, and did the same thing again, patted on my back
and said, “Son, you continue the work” and I must say that I found
myself deeply committed to the Pluralism work, the closet events were
death of my mother and the Gujarat Genocides that had 
deeply affected me.

1970’s – Whenever my sister Dilshad was hurt, I felt the pain and I would see her in my dream. Damn me, I am feeling tender now. At that time, she was in
Rai Bareilly,  India with Noorda, her husband. Invariably I would see
her in my dreams.

60’s – When we were kids, it was a routine for me and my brothers
and sister to pile up on our father, first thing in the morning, and we
all used to share our little dreams and he would his. They were some of
the most beautiful moments of my life. One Sunday morning, my father
told us that he saw his Uncle dying and had summoned him to appraise him
about the situation, and he told my father where he wanted to be
buried, after all it was a dream he shared.

Tuesday morning
rolls, and around 11:00 AM, we got a telegram (those days, no cell
phones, no faxes, not even a phone in our neighborhood) that my
grandfather (great uncle in American terms) had passed away. My father
rushed and got him buried on the same spot where he had told him in his
dream. The man was considered a holy man and every year the townspeople
celebrate and visit his grave, of course, I did not subscribe to such
celebrations.

 2004 – This is unreal, but real, I saw winning
6.4 Million dollars in lottery, told my wife and kids about the dream,
she asked if I had actually purchased the ticket, and I pulled the
ticket and checked. I won $64.00; we ate a lot of doughnuts that day.

One
of the ugliest dreams that I have not seen in a few years was my inability
to put breaks on the vehicle I was driving, I could not lift my foot, like my foot was bolted the floor…and it would not reach the break pad..and before I hit something, I would
wake up panting and puffing. Thank God, I have not seen that again in the last four years, I must have seen that at least once year for nearly twenty years.

One of the most consistent dreams that I have seen
for years was flying. I would just lean forward and lift off like the
Harriett jet and go everywhere. One time, I actually got up and made an
attempt to fly to found out that I was out of the dream. A few years ago, a gentleman from UK sent a note on the face book, that he had the same precise dream, since then, a few others have mentioned having similar dreams. It is the most beautiful dream and I would love a repeat.

…….
Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place and standing up for
others
as an activist. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. 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 everything you
want to know about him.

Texas Faith: Do we need a new national conversation about marriage?

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Humanity
is diverse, that’s God’s intentional creation. The male/ female ratio
has always remained around 50/50 with +/- 2 points variation on either
side. The world would never be 100% male or female, likewise the world
would never be 100% Gay, it will be a natural 10-15% of the population.
Mike Ghouse

Texas Faith: Do we need a new national conversation about marriage?

By Bill McKenzie / Editorial Columnist
Dallas Morning News, Published on February 5, 2012

Ten panelists contributed to this forum, to read the contributions from all the panelists, please visit – http://religionblog.dallasnews.com/2013/02/texas-faith-do-we-need-a-new-national-conversation-about-marriage.html/

Has
the conversation about marriage reached a dead-end in our country, as
Blankenhorn suggests? If it has, please explain what you would like this
conversation to now include. If you think we don’t need a new
conversation, please explain.

MIKE GHOUSE, President, Foundation for Pluralism, Dallas, and Speaker on interfaith matters, diversity and pluralism

The
conversation on marriage has just opened up, and we are far from
reaching the dead-end. But until that time we will need two parallel
societies. They will not be in conflict with each other, but each on its
own path.

What is missing in the conversation is our untapped
ability in understanding the wisdom of God. As humans we are
disgustingly selfish, and grind on to the selective verses that suit our
insecurities to force the weak (minority) into obedience, as if we gain
something.

The conservatives among us, particularly those who
are Christians and Muslim, are stuck in the dished-out versions of the
Sodom and Gomorrah story. We need to follow Jesus in spirit, and follow
the merciful and inclusive God of the Universe (Quran).

God has
endowed us with free will. He let Adam make the mistake without slapping
him for eating the forbidden fruit. Instead, he kicked us out, and gave
us an opportunity to multiply and live out in a bigger world with free
will. He wanted us to figure out living with each other without
punishing the few, who opt not to multiply.

As a futurist of
interfaith trends, I have been struggling to understand sin. I found
guidance in Buddhist literature about sin from this analysis, which I
read on ReligionFacts.com:

“‘Sexual misconduct’ has thus
traditionally been interpreted to include actions like coercive sex,
sexual harassment, child molestation and adultery. As homosexuality is
not explicitly mentioned in any of the Buddha’s sayings recorded in the
Pali Canon (Tripitaka), most interpreters have taken this to mean that
homosexuality should be evaluated in the same way as heterosexuality, in
accordance with the following principles: I) Intention – Is the act
motivated by love, generosity and understanding? And ii) consequential –
does the act cause harm and regret (in oneself or others) or benefit
and joy?”

As a pluralist, I draw upon different religious
scriptures, and here is a corollary from Quran about carrying on a civil
dialogue. “Respectfully, I do not practice what you practice, and you
do not practice what I practice, so you live with your belief as I do
with mine, as long as we understand our differences and not harm each
other.”

The dialogue must continue until we learn to respect the
otherness of others and live in harmony. No one’s belief should be
thrust on the other. That kind of freedom is a hallmark of civil
societies.
 …
The phobias that acknowledging and accepting the gay
sexual orientation will cause more people to become gay is as
ridiculous as saying eating Chicken will make you a Chicken. The sooner
we accept this, the quicker we can put this fear behind and move on with
our lives, instead of harassing and denigrating fellow humans. Thank
God, I am blessed to be friends with all of God’s creation including
many gay and lesbian friends. The alarmist attitude will evaporate one
day, why not junk it now? Indeed, it’s a blessing to be free.
…..

References:

 New York Times piece on Blankenhorn. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/30/us/in-shift-blankenhorn-forges-a-pro-marriage-coalition-for-all.html?_r=0

American Values, marriage a new conversation
http://www.americanvalues.org/marriage-a-new-conversation/index.php

Buddhism about Homosexuality
http://www.religionfacts.com/homosexuality/buddhism.htm

Quran about Civil Dialogue
http://www.religionfacts.com/homosexuality/buddhism.htm
 

. . . . . . . Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place and standing up for
others
as an activist. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. 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 everything you
want to know about him.

Intra-faith Panel on Islam

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This is the first of its kind, if not the first intra-faith dialouge in Texas within the fold of Islam.  It is not going to be easy, but God willing, we will do our best to tread on the path laid out by Prophet Muhammad (pbuh), to be respectful of the otherness of others without having to agree.The program will be videotaped and will set a new benchmark for the future conferences. Please register with the listed registrar and attend. Media will be invited as well.

Mike Ghouse

Boniuk Center for Religious Tolerance
      An Intrafaith Panel Dialogue on Islam
Thursday, February 21, 2013
6:30 PM  to 9:00 PM

Asia Society Texas Center
1370 Southmore Blvd.
Houston, Texas, USA

An Intrafaith Panel Dialogue on Islam. A Boniuk Center’s Bridge-Builder Series Event to be held at the Asia Society Texas Center,1370 Southmore Blvd.,Houston,TX 77004 on Thursday, Feb. 21st. There will be a reception @ 6:30 P.M. and the event starts at 7:00 P.M. Registration required due to limited seating @ InfoDeskASTC@AsiaSociety.org.

Moderated by Mike Ghouse, Religious and Cultural Pluralism Commentator,President of the Foundation for Pluralism & America Together Foundation.

Panel Participants: Imam Azhar Haneef, Vice President of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community of the US, Silver Spring, Maryland.

Imam Wazir Ali, Masjid Warithud-Deen Mohammed and Masjid Al-Qur’an,Houston, Texas

Imam Moustafa al-Qazwini,Founding Director of the Islamic Education Center of Orange County, California

Imam Zia Shaikh, Islamic Center of Irving, Texas.

Open to the Public    /    Registration Required

 
Mike
(214)
325-1916 Text/Talk
———-
 
 Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place and standing up for
others
as an activist. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. 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 everything you
want to know about him.

Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) and I

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As a kid I learned things about him and did not relate with him at all,
he was too divine and remote for me. All that changed when I read the
book “Muhammad” by Karen Armstrong. She narrates his life from a
non-religious point of view, as a civic leader of the society, a
dimension that I appreciated it very much. Karen Armstrong’s book is one
of the five reasons I chose to become a Muslim after a lapse of nearly
three decades. He was a man that I can relate with, making decisions
that create trust, mutual respect and a sense of fairness among his
people at that time. That was indeed the role of every prophet and
peacemaker of the time. Mike Ghouse

How I Connect With Prophet Muhammad
Published by Huffington Post
On 01/25/2013 9:48 pm
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-ghouse/how-i-connect-with-prophet-muhammad_b_2547782.html
 
 

How do
I relate with the prophet? I don’t wear clothes like him, eat like him
or live like him. But when it comes to respecting fellow beings,
nurturing goodwill, mitigating conflicts, forgiving others and building
cohesive societies, I can relate.

Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) was
born on 12th day of Rabi’ al-Awwal, the third month of the Islamic
calendar, and the year was 571 A.D. The birth celebrations will continue
through this week, and if you wish to greet a Muslim, you can say,
Milaad (birth) Greetings, Happy Maulood-an-Nabi, Maulood-an-Nabi
Mubarak, happy Eid Milaad and Milaad’s blessings to you.

First
thing first, he took the larger view of the society and became a model
of what it takes to be an exemplary citizen. The first requirement of
any civil society is to trust each other in living their daily life
safely and without fear of the other. He earned the trust of the society
for being truthful, honest in his dealings, trustworthy and just. The
Jews, Christians, pagans and others called him Amin, the trust worthy.
That was indeed the first foundational Sunnah (prophet’s example).

Wherever
he saw conflicts between people, he found a way to mitigate and nurture
goodwill amongst them. Indeed, he was committed to building a cohesive
society, where no one feared the other, and he continuously built upon
creating balance and harmony in the society. Blessed are the
peacemakers, said Jesus! Indeed, Prophet Muhammad is my mentor.

Muslims
celebrate his birthday in a variety of ways, including cooking the
simplest food as an expression of humility. They sing the likes of
Christmas carols, called Milaad, Nasheed, even Milaad Carols and other
names. I have found it peaceful to think about his work and reflect on
how I could relate with him, the ultimate peacemaker.

Do I
forgive often? Do I stand up for the rights of others? Am I a blessing
to fellow humans? Do others feel secure and safe around me? Today, I
have concluded my day with a short prayer and a commitment and get on
the road. God willing, I will follow him to the best of my ability.

As
a kid I learned things about him and did not relate with him at all, he
was too divine and remote for me. All that changed when I read the book
“Muhammad” by Karen Armstrong. She narrates his life from a
non-religious point of view, as a civic leader of the society, a
dimension that I appreciated it very much. Karen Armstrong’s book is one
of the five reasons I chose to become a Muslim after a lapse of nearly
three decades. He was a man that I can relate with, making decisions
that create trust, mutual respect and a sense of fairness among his
people at that time. That was indeed the role of every prophet and
peacemaker of the time.

When someone hurts me, I think of the
prophet, he advised against score keeping and piling revenge and
aggravating each other, and I love the freedom it gives me, freedom from
brooding and obsession to get even with the other.

When someone
dialogues with me, prophet’s words jump at me, to respect the otherness
of other, without having to agree but respectfully differ and move on.
Indeed, it is a big lesson in conducting civil dialogue.

When I
am frustrated, I think of prophet’s narration, God told him to do his
work, and not worry if people don’t get his message, give them the room
to make up their own minds, and let me guide them, and you respect
everyone’s free will.

Every day, I think about the Prophet, how
he would have found a solution to a given conflict, and all I see is the
application of the principles of fairness and justice to every human,
with goodness and inclusiveness.

My spiritual mentors are
Muhammad (pbuh) and Jesus (pbuh), and my civic mentors are Mahatma
Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., and Barack Obama.

When I think of
getting even with someone who maligns me, I think of the advice of
Prophet Muhammad and Jesus: The best thing we can do is to forgive the
other; it brings relief and frees us from being possessed.

When I
see injustice done to others, the prophets words ring again, the least
you can do is to speak out against injustice. Injustice to one is
injustice to the whole humanity.

When I see inequality in our
society, our immortal declaration of independence kicks in for me, that
all men are created equal. I think of prophet’s last sermon, where he
said no man is superior to the other and that all are equal.

Whenever
I think of the liberation of women, I think of the prophet, he was
perhaps the first women’s libber; and he officially liberated women from
the shackles of the bondages. He was a radical of his time, as Jesus
was, and said women are free to marry or divorce, own their own business
and property, separate from their husbands, and he introduced the idea
of consent and free will in marriage. Let’s not judge America by the
Newtown, Aurora and Oak Creek murderers, and let’s not judge Muslims by
the misogynistic men among them either.

Whenever I feel
judgmental toward others, the prophet’s voice pulls me back, only God
knows everything about the other, not me, then let me not judge anyone
without the full knowledge.

When I think of standing up for
others, I think of Gandhi and MLK, if we don’t stand up for others, why
should anyone stand up for us.

Whenever the idea of being better
than others crosses my mind, I think of the prophet, who said, I am a
human like you, and don’t make a God out of me or paint my pictures and
put me on the pedestal. He even said to his daughter, you earn your
paradise through your good deeds, the good you do to the fellow beings
and not because you are the Prophet’s daughter.

Whenever
arrogance attempts to creep in me, I hear the words of the prophet,
“Treat all prophets the same, no human is above the other” — instead of
saying I am the greatest prophet and listen to me. Feeling and
practicing equality is the way for creating peaceful societies.

I
will be writing a full chapter on the prophet in my upcoming book, as
to how I relate with him in my daily life, and I have learned to give a
20 minutes motivations talk on “Prophet the Peacemaker” and that is
rejoicing.

Further reading:

Milaad Mubarak!

 Follow Mike Ghouse on Twitter:

www.twitter.com/MikeGhouse 

———-
Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place and standing up for
others
as an activist. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. 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 everything you
want to know about him. 

Remembering the Holocaust and All Genocides

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There is a shameless cruelty in our societies when it
comes to acknowledging other people’s suffering. Either we shy away or refuse to
acknowledge the sufferings of others, worrying that it will devalue our own
and/or it amounts to infidelity to our own cause. I submit to you, that the human atrocities are pent up frustrations and
unresolved issues that reach a boiling point and explode into massacres and
genocides. As civilized societies, we need to bring a closure to the issues
through forgiveness, apology and restoration of justice. The least we can do in
the process of healing is to know and acknowledge every one’s pain. 

MikeGhouse
www.HolocaustandGenocides.com

….
Remembering the Holocaust and All Genocides  
Published in Huffington post on 01/25/2013 11:31 am
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-ghouse/holocaust-remembrance-and-recognizing-all-genocides_b_2547164.html

There is a shameless cruelty in our societies when it comes to
acknowledging other people’s suffering. Either we shy away or refuse to
acknowledge the sufferings of others, worrying that it will devalue our
own and/or it amounts to infidelity to our own cause.

Unless we reload our hearts with empathy, and feel the pain and
suffering of others, each one of us will continue to dwell in silos and
the genocides will continue to happen. As Martin Niemoller wrote in his
eternal poem, the essence of which is; first they came for communists, I
did not do a thing because I was not one of them; then they came for
Jews, and I wasn’t one, and finally when all were wiped out, they came
for me, and there was no one to defend me.

One of the most popular dialogues from a 1958 Bollywood movie “Yahudi” was, Tumhara khoon, khoon aur mera Khoon pani?
— “Your blood is blood and my blood is water? An immortal dialogue
uttered by a Jew in the film, Yehudi as it is called, when the Roman
emperor freezes when he learns that his son Marcus cheated Yehudi’s
daughter. In plain English, the inhumanity in us does not value other
people as we value ourselves.

VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=DcloW-WF7l0

By nature many of us are disgustingly selfish, nothing but our own
interest matters to us. Do you recall standing in a food buffet line at a
friend’s wedding, a family or a community gathering? Someone said that
the food may be short, but yet, the guy in front of you piled up his
plate, or may be the one, knowing well that there a lot of people behind
you, and some may not get the food. 

It’s Not Easy

Those who build bridges understand the experiences we have
encountering in organizing the sixth annual reflections on the Holocaust
and genocides in Dallas on Sunday, Jan. 27 at the Unity Church of
Dallas on Forest Lane. There are nearly 50 genocides in the last
century, and it is humanly impossible to talk about all of them in one
sitting, the selfish attitudes displayed by each group of people is
amazing, each one thinks his blood is blood and others blood is water
that can be ignored. 

 

Muslims

Way back in 2006, a Muslim shouts at me in a public meeting, “Why are
you commemorating Holocaust of Jews? Why don’t you commemorate the
Holocaust of Palestinians?” I countered, all of this should be done, why
don’t you do it? He was belligerent; he was one of the loose mouths and
not a doer. Indeed, we plan to attend to every one of the atrocity in
the next few years. 

Another Muslim knocked God out of his throne, and chose to declare,
“If you don’t talk about Palestinians, you are not a Muslim.” They don’t
care to read the work that is being done for both Israelis and
Palestinians. The Huffington Post has published many articles on the topic and the other work is at www.IsraelPalestineDialogue.com 

Another one writes, “You are writing about the holocaust of Jews, you
forgot what Stalin did?” My instant response was, “Did you forget the
genocides of gays?” And you also forgot about the genocides of Native
Americans, African Americans over the Atlantic… the list is a long
one. Can I accuse you, that did you did not care about others?

Jews

We were criticized and asked to remove the phrase “A Muslim
initiative” from the publicity material. Instead of recognizing the
effort to build bridges, they were bent on not giving credit to Muslims
for extending the hand of understanding. Please remember, it was not the
Jews, it is the few individuals who wore the label Jews. I have known
the community closely through strong interactions and conflicts, rather
than superficial salaams and shaloms. Indeed, I have a whole book to write about how to improve Jewish Muslim relationships for a better society.

A few years ago a Jewish speaker canceled his speech at the event in
the last minute because we were addressing the Gaza massacre as one of
the seven items; he considered it anti-Israel and did not participate.
However, my Jewish friends attended the event, and called him back to
let him know that it was not about Israel, but about the human suffering
and the brutal inhumanity in all of us. Most people don’t want to face
the truth, that someone from their own tradition is capable of murdering
and massacring people. 

No one should be ashamed of what fellow humans from your group do,
what you should be ashamed of is your own attitude toward another human.

Hindus

Several of my Hindu friends have jumped on me for not including the
plight of Kashmiri Pundits, they are so obsessed with their own that
others don’t matter to them. We have mentioned about the plight of
Kashmiri Pundits at least three times in five years, those who criticize
don’t come to the event, unless it is “about them.” We need to stand up
for everyone, and certainly stand up for others before we do for our
own.

Indian Muslims

A friend writes another friend’s quote, “The question was why Mike
forgot 2002 Gujarat Holocaust & Genocide that was lot bigger and
wider than 1984 Sikh Holocaust & Genocide.” I did not forget, nor
will I ever forget any genocide. In April 2002, rallies were held for
Gujarat in down town Dallas, when Shabnam Hashmi came to Dallas, she was
hosted to show the documentaries of that genocide. If the event is dear
to the people, they should express their love and commemorate it. We
will do our share; each event will take its turn. 

Indians and Pakistanis

A few Pakistanis think that talking about 1971 Bangladesh genocide is
an Indian conspiracy to defame Pakistan, and they resort to attacks on
India instead of understanding the suffering of the people. 

The Indians on the other hand think that talking about Sikh genocides
amounts to defaming India. “Why the hell do you want to bring this up;
it’s done with.” It is not done with, the wounds are still open.

Please remember, there is a fraction of a percent of people in each
group, whether religious, ethnic, nationalistic or racial, who tend to
ignore facts.

Standing Up For Others

Let’s learn to understand the selfishness embedded in us, if we can
stand up for others, particularly for strangers, then there is a greater
self nurtured within us, making us a better human to live with peace
and tranquility. We have to stand up for women’s right and the rights of
minorities and voiceless as a part of securing the future. Each one of
us has to do our share of good to the world around us, for our own good
at the end. We have to stand up for others, that is the right thing to
do. 

Standing in line (food or anything) to wait for your turn is one of
the most human things to do. It is a sign of acceptance of equal rights
of others, and others needs as much as yours. We have a list of about 50
genocides, and each year we will focus on a few. More than likely, you
will find yourselves guilty of not listening or paying attention to
other’s tragedy but your own. Slap yourselves, if you do not think
other’s plight is not as important as your own.

Every year we have reflected on our failings, massacres, genocides
and the Holocaust. This year, we will focus on the Sikh genocide of
1984. Dr. Amarjit Singh, will deliver the key note address on the topic.
Mr. Hasan Mahmud will share about the Bangladesh Genocide of 1971, Dr.
Petra Weldes will talk about the effects of stereotyping on the
societies, and Kelly Obazee will reflect on current massacres around the
world. I will speak about the Holocaust, our anchor event, and the
need to take a stand against oppression of others. 

Please visit www.HolocaustandGenocides.com
for details, the event is an initiative of the Sikh Gurdwaras of North
Texas, Foundation for Pluralism and World Muslim Congress. 

I submit to you, that the human atrocities are pent up frustrations
and unresolved issues that reach a boiling point and explode into
massacres and genocides. As civilized societies, we need to bring a
closure to the issues through forgiveness, apology and restoration of
justice. The least we can do in the process of healing is to know and
acknowledge every one’s pain.


Follow Mike Ghouse on Twitter:

www.twitter.com/MikeGhouse 

———-
Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place and standing up for
others
as an activist. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. 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 everything you
want to know about him. 

Native American Heritage Day Bill in Texas

      Comments Off on Native American Heritage Day Bill in Texas

Details in the links below, but all you need to do is send an email to:

roberto.alonzo@house.state.tx.us,
pslarney@gmail.com
,
MikeGhouse@gmail.com

  
SUB: NATIVE
AMERICAN HERITAGE DAY


As a Texan, I support the Native Americans and the American Indian Heritage Day Committee request to consider supporting H.B. No.174, a bill to create the American
Indian Heritage Day. 

Your name
Address
email and phone
…… ……..

DETAILS BELOW

You can also send a full letter drafted in the links below:

Note: http://standingupforothers.blogspot.com/2013/02/american-indian-heritage-day.html
Draft
Letter: http://www.mikeghouse.net/AmericanHeritageDay-DraftLetterofSupport.docx

 With enough signatures from fellow Texans, it will make it easy for the
state representatives to pass the bill, that will create an “American Heritage
Day” to honor and appreciate the Native Americans. Every community, and every
nation on the earth has a national day, except fellow Native Americans. We all
have to participate and contribute towards each others pride.

Thank you.

Mike Ghouse
America Together Foundation
Building a cohesive America.

———-  Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place and standing up for
others
as an activist. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. 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 everything you
want to know about him.

Mahatma Gandhi's 65th Anniversary

      Comments Off on Mahatma Gandhi's 65th Anniversary

Mahatma Gandhi was shot on this day on January 30 in 1948. He was determined to
seek freedom for India from the mighty Great Britain, and he got it without the
war and without bloodshed. His was one of the greatest successful experiments
in non-violence.  I hope President Obama
follows him, we don’t need the senseless wars with any one, the best way to
eliminate the enemy is to make friends with him, and it is the smartest thing
to do.


Can
you imagine the power he had? He shook the empire, they could have easily killed
or poisoned him, but they did not have the guts to do that. What made Gandhi,
Mandela, and MLK successful?
None
of them had anything to gain, all they wanted was justice and harmony in the
society, and that was their drive, when you become unselfish, you can do a lot
of good to the world. I am inspired and driven by him. Twice in my dreams, he
has appeared and patted on my back and said, son you got a lot of work to do.
Indeed, I do, we all need to do our share of work in making the world a better
place, at least around us. It begins with learning the respect the otherness of
other and accepting the God given uniqueness to each one of us, if we do that,
conflicts fade and solutions emerge.
The
frightened ones (right wing) in India did not like Gandhi’s dialogue approach
to conflicts, they wanted bloodshed and mayhem, the animalistic way of
resolving disputes, Gandhi pushed dialogue, the human way to finding solutions
to conflict.
I
salute this great Soul and thank God for blessing the world with this prophet
of non-violence!  God bless him! Amen
Mike
Ghouse