How Jesus became white

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This article was first Published on July 7, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/how-jesus-became-white/

We have created God/Jesus in our own image. Whomever we admire and love, we tend to see them as our own, and going further we imagine them to look and act like us. I am sure each one of you had an image of God that you could relate with. When I was a kid, there was a man in my town with a long flowing white beard and I thought he was God, if I was White, Black, or Yellow I would have seen that God in my image, in my ethnicity, or my race.

Whoever is in power or influential determines the narrative. That is the story of Sallman’s head of the Christ painting. He painted Jesus as White and everyone around the world bought it, indeed that is one of the major paintings of Jesus in the market place.

If all the different people come together and place their God on the table, we see different versions of God. There is nothing wrong with having your own version, the problem comes when you insist your version is the truth, then God becomes a source of unwanted conflict and disharmony. It defies the very purpose of religion.

The un-stated purpose of the religion is to build cohesive societies, where each human being lives his/ her life securely. The need of the day was to conjure up an all-in-one God, a collapsed God of all different versions that is universally acceptable. That was the wisdom expressed in every religion.

Unfortunately, a few powerful clergymen drive the narratives to satisfy their needs. The same Bible, Torah, Quran, Gita, Vedas and other holy books are interpreted differently to suit their needs. The problem is not with the books, the problem is with our selfish needs. I was aghast when some Pastors were justifying the harsh treatment of children on our Southern Border in support of the President, while the majority of pastors were seeing it as a deviation from Christ’s teachings. The same is true in all faiths.

If we don’t customize God, what we have is a universal God with greater acceptability from all quarters.

Exodus 20:4 – Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image or any likeness [of any thing] that [is] in heaven above, or that [is] in the earth beneath, or that [is] in the water under the earth:

Leviticus 26:1 – Ye shall make you no idols nor graven image, neither rear you up a standing image, neither shall ye set up [any] image of stone in your land, to bow down unto it: for I [am] the LORD your God.

It is convenient to have an image or an idol, but it is difficult to have conceived a God that is not a being or unimaginable.

Thanks to Emily McFarlan Miller for the following article.

Mike Ghouse
Center for Pluralism.

# # # #

Emily McFarlan Miller

Courtesy: Religion News Service June 24, 2020

Painting by Warner Sallman, Head of Christ, © 1941 Warner Press, Inc., Anderson, Indiana. Used with permission.

CHICAGO (RNS) — The first time the Rev. Lettie Moses Carr saw Jesus depicted as Black, she was in her 20s.

It felt “weird,” Carr said.

Until that moment, she’d always thought Jesus was white. 

At least that’s how he appeared when she was growing up. A copy of Warner E. Sallman’s “Head of Christ” painting hung in her home, depicting a gentle Jesus with blue eyes turned heavenward and dark blond hair cascading over his shoulders in waves.

The painting, which has been reproduced a billion times, came to define what the central figure of Christianity looked like for generations of Christians in the United States — and beyond.

For years, Sallman’s Jesus “represented the image of God,” said Carr, director of ministry and administrative support staff at First Baptist Church of Glenarden in Maryland.

When she grew up and began to study the Bible on her own, she started to wonder about that painting and the message it sent. 

“It didn’t make sense that this picture was of this white guy,” she said.

Carr isn’t the first to question Sallman’s image of Jesus and the impact it’s had not only on theology but also on the wider culture. As protesters around the United States tear down statues of Confederate heroes and demand an accounting for the country’s long legacy of racism, some in the church are asking if the time has come to cancel so-called white Jesus — including Sallman’s famed painting. 

Modest beginnings

The “Head of Christ” has been called the “best-known American artwork of the 20th century.” The New York Times once labeled Sallman the “best-known artist” of the 20th century, despite the fact that few recognized his name.

“Sallman, who died in 1968, was a religious painter and illustrator whose most popular picture, ‘Head of Christ,’ achieved a mass popularity that makes Warhol’s soup can seem positively obscure,” William Grimes of the

Times wrote in 1994. 

“The Covenant Companion” cover in 1924, featuring a Warner Sallman sketch of Jesus. Image via covenantcompanion.com

The famed image began as a charcoal sketch for the first issue of The Covenant Companion, a youth magazine for a denomination known as the Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant.

Sallman, who grew up in the denomination, which is now known as the Evangelical Covenant Church, was a Chicago-based commercial artist. Wanting to appeal to young adults, he gave his Jesus a “very similar feeling to an image of a school or professional photo of the time making it more accessible and familiar to the audience,” said Tai Lipan, gallery director at Indiana’s Anderson University, which has housed the Warner Sallman Collection since the 1980s.

His approach worked.

The image was so popular that the 1940 graduating class of North Park Theological Seminary in Chicago commissioned Sallman to create a painting based on his drawing as their class gift to the school, according to the Evangelical Covenant Church’s official magazine.

Sallman painted a copy for the school but sold the original “Head of Christ” to religious publisher Kriebel and Bates, and what Lipan calls a “Protestant icon” was born.

“This particular image of Jesus met the dawn of the ‘Mad Men,’ of the marketing agency,” said Matthew Anderson, affiliate professor of theological studies at Concordia University in Montreal.

The image quickly spread, printed on prayer cards and circulated by organizations, missionaries and a wide range of churches: Catholic and Protestant, evangelical and mainline, white and Black.

Copies accompanied soldiers into battle during World War II, handed out by the Salvation Army and YMCA through the USO. Millions of cards produced in a project called “Christ in Every Purse” that was endorsed by then-President Dwight Eisenhower and Trump family pastor Norman Vincent Peale were distributed all around the world. 

The image appeared on pencils, bookmarks, lamps and clocks and was hung in courtrooms, police stations, libraries and schools. It became what scholar David Morgan has heard called a “photograph of Jesus.”

The Rev. J. Manning Potts of Nashville, Tennessee, left, presents the 1957 Upper Room Award for World Christianity Fellowship to artist Warner Sallman of Chicago at a dinner meeting of church and government officials on Oct. 3, 1957, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. Sallman was honored for his “Head of Christ” painting, shown in background. (AP Photo/Bob Schutz)

Along the way, Sallman’s image crowded out other depictions of Jesus. 

Anderson said that it has been common for people to depict Jesus as a member of their culture or their ethnic group. 

“If a person thinks that’s the only possible representation of Jesus, then that’s where the problem starts,” he said. 

Morgan, professor of religious studies at Duke University in North Carolina, agrees. Some of the earliest images of Jesus showed him “with very dark skin and possibly African,” he said.

RELATED: The N-word of God: Envisioning the image of Christ (COMMENTARY)

Sallman wasn’t the first to depict Jesus as white, Morgan said. The Chicagoan had been inspired by a long tradition of European artists, most notably Frenchman Leon-Augustin Lhermitte.

But against the backdrop of U.S. history, of European Christians colonizing Indigenous lands with the blessing of the Doctrine of Discovery and enslaving African people, Morgan said, a universal image of a white Jesus became problematic. 

“You simply can’t ignore very Nordic Jesus,” he said. 

Cancel white Jesus

The backlash to Sallman’s work began during the civil rights movement, when his depiction of a Scandinavian savior was criticized for enshrining the image of a white Jesus for generations of Americans.

That criticism has been renewed recently amid the current national reckoning over racism sparked by the death of George Floyd, a Black man killed in an encounter with police.

Earlier this week, activist Shaun King called for statues depicting Jesus as European to come down alongside Confederate monuments, calling the depiction a “form of white supremacy.”

Hugo- and Nebula Award-winning science fiction author Nnedi Okorafor echoed that sentiment on Twitter.

“Yes, ‘blond blue-eyed jesus’ IS a form of white supremacy,” she tweeted

Anthea Butler, associate professor of religious studies and Africana studies at the University of Pennsylvania, has also warned of the damaging impact of depictions of white Jesus.

“Every time you see white Jesus, you see white supremacy,” she said recently on the Religion News Service video series “Becoming Less Racist: Lighting the Path \to Anti-Racism.”

Anthea Butler. Courtesy photo

Sallman’s Jesus was “the Jesus you saw in all the Black Baptist churches,” Butler told RNS in a follow-up interview. 

But Sallman’s Jesus did not look like Black Christians, according to the scholar. Instead, she said, Jesus looked “like the people who were beating you up in the streets or setting dogs on you.”

That Jesus sent a message, Butler said.

“If Jesus is white and God is white,” she said, “then authority is white.”

Edward J. Blum, who co-authored the 2014 book “The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America,” said many Christians remain hesitant to give up the image of white Jesus. He believes the continued popularity of white depictions of Jesus are “an example of how far in some respects the United States has not moved.”

 “If white Jesus can’t be put to death, how could it possibly be the case that systemic racism is done?” Blum said. “Because this is one that just seems obvious. This one seems easy to give up.”

Jemar Tisby, whose 2019 book “The Color of Compromise: The Truth About the American Church’s Complicity in Racism” appeared on The New York Times bestseller list this week, said that believing in a white Jesus “denigrates the image of God in Black people and other people of color.”

Vincent Barzoni’s “His Voyage: Life of Jesus.” Image via blackartdepot.com

Tisby said that depicting Jesus as only white has theological implications. It narrows Christians’ understanding of Jesus, he said.

“To say that Jesus is Black — or, more broadly, to say that Jesus is not white — is to say that Jesus identifies with the oppressed and that the experience of marginalized people is not foreign to God, but that God is on the side of those who, in Matthew 25, Jesus refers to as ‘the least of these,’” he said.

Still, Tisby is hopeful, pointing to a number of diverse images of Jesus that offer alternatives to Sallman’s.

A decade after Sallman painted his “Head of Christ,” Korean artist Kim Ki-chang created a picture cycle of the life of Christ in traditional Korean clothing and settings, featuring figures from Korean folk religion.

“Māori Jesus” is artist Sofia Minson’s depiction of the Messiah as tangata whenua (indigenous Māori) with full-face moko (traditional tattoo). Image via newzealandartwork.com

More recently, Sofia Minson, a New Zealand artist with Ngāti Porou Māori, English, Swedish and Irish heritage, reimagined Sallman’s Jesus as an Indigenous Māori man with a traditional face tattoo.

And there are numerous popular depictions of Jesus as Black. 

Vincent Barzoni’s “His Voyage: Life of Jesus,” depicts Jesus with dark skin and dreadlocks, his wrists bound, while Franciscan friar Robert Lentz’s “Jesus Christ Liberator” depicts Jesus as a Black man in the style of a Greek icon.

Janet McKenzie’s “Jesus of the People,” modeled on a Black woman, was chosen as the winner of the National Catholic Reporter’s 1999 competition to answer the question, “What would Jesus Christ look like in the year 2000?”

“I don’t know that there’s one depiction that is coming to the fore, and that, I think, is illustrative that people are resisting a monolithic vision of Jesus’ embodied self and, and understanding that his very incarnation — the fact that God became a human being in itself — is a way of identifying with all peoples everywhere,” Tisby said.

These days, Carr said, she tries to avoid locking Jesus into one image.

She’s also more concerned about how Jesus is represented in the lives of Christians — rather than in a piece of art.

“It’s not so much the picture and my question about who Jesus is,” she said. “It’s more really the picture of who I look across the aisle and see as representing a different Jesus.”

Turkey: Hagia Sophia should not be converted to a Mosque

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This article was first Published on July 7, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/turkey-hagia-sophia-should-not-be-converted-to-a-mosque/

Appeal to Turkey’s President Erdogan about Hagia Sophia  

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is considering converting the Hagia Sophia to a Mosque, which has been a museum since its conquest. As Muslims, we appeal to President Erdogan to keep it as a Museum, and not convert it to a Mosque.  I speak for many Muslims in appealing to Erdogan to let it remain a museum. 

 The Hagia Sophia, built as a cathedral in the sixth century by the Byzantines before serving as a mosque for 500 years, has been a museum since the 1920s, when the founder of modern Turkey, Kemal Attaturk, converted it to secular use. For the past few months, Turkey’s current president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has been making signs that he wants to turn the majestic building on the Bosporus back into a mosque.

Changing the status of Hagia Sophia, “one of the most contested buildings” in the world, according to a recent report in Al-Jazeera, would create needless animosity between Islam and Christianity, while offering only a short-term political gain for Erdogan’s pro-Islamic Justice and Development Party. 

 The idea of converting Hagia Sofia to a mosque offers a short-term political gain, but at the cost of long-term harmony between Muslims and Christians. 

The role of Muslims is to mitigate conflicts and nurture goodwill – a formula embedded in Prophet’s actions; he was a blessed peacemaker. Islam means peace, and it behooves us to achieve peace and harmony through our actions and words. 

The Greek Orthodox Church mourns the loss of their Church to Muslim conquest; however, they have accepted it. If this is converted to a mosque, it amounts to rubbing salt on the wounds. It will rekindle hostilities that none of us want. Today, the societies are moving towards respecting the otherness of the others. 

Hazrat Umar set a great example – after conquering Jerusalem, he was offered to pray in the Holy Sepulcher. He chose not to pray inside the church for the concern that the future generation of Muslims will convert it into a Mosque. 

Quran 22:40 essentially says God’s name is extolled abundantly in Churches, Synagogues, and Mosques. We have to protect such places of worship. God will most certainly assist him who succors His cause: verily, God is all-knowing and almighty.

The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) has paved the way for building bridges among different communities in the United States. It is the largest Muslim civic body in America. It maintains good relationships with all populations, including the Greek Orthodox hierarchy. ISNA has played Amin’s role in building a cohesive America and has earned the goodwill of Jews, Christians, Hindus, and others. Out of a sense of righteousness, they have stood up for Muslims against Islamophobic rhetoric during 9/11, and it continues today. We, the Muslims, appreciate them. 

 Dr. Sayyid M. Syeed, President of ISNA, said, “The conversion of the Hagia Sophia was against the historical examples set by the righteous Caliphs, beginning with Abu Bakr when he advised his general heading to conquer foreign lands. The Umayyad Caliphs apologized and paid for the church land used to build the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus. 

As American Muslims, we celebrate this Islamic provision in US law that enabled us to build 3 thousand mosques in the last half a century. Hagia Sophia is not just a Church; it is the main symbol of the Greek Orthodox Church. It is a slap on the entire system of the Greek Orthodox Church and Greece. It fostered permanent hate against Muslims and Islam in those quarters.”

Dr. Syeed further adds, “The destruction of the Babri Mosque in India is a historical example of religious bigotry. We cannot do the same thing to Hagia Sophia.”  

Indeed, we have to be consistent in our policies – if we apply it in one place, we must be able to use it in every situation. As an Indian American Muslim, it hurts me to see the destruction of the Babri Mosque, and it equally hurts me to see the Hagia Sophia converted to a Mosque. We have to set an excellent example for the world. The Alhambra is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, let Hagia Sophia be one as well.

 We urge President Erdogan to consider the Sunnah of Prophet Muhammad, who was and is a mercy to mankind. He granted permanent protection to places of Worship in the covenant he issued in 628 AD. A majority of Muslims believe in the sanctity of the location of Worship. We hope President Erdogan can be a catalyst in correcting false perceptions about Muslims and not convert Hagia Sophia into a Mosque. The majority of Muslims will applaud him for walking on the right path. May God bless him. 

Dr. Mike Ghouse is the founder and president of the Center for Pluralism. He is a speaker, thinker, author, community consultant, pluralist, activist, news-maker, and an interfaith wedding officiant. Mike is deeply committed to Free speech, Human Rights, and Pluralism in Religion, Politics, Societies, and the workplace. He has dedicated his life to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions to the media and the policymakers. More about him at www.TheGhousediary.com

Hagia Sophia articles

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This article was first Published on July 18, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/hagia-sophia-articles/

A few articles that I have read and written two of them

  1. President Erdogan, preserve Hagia Sophia as a church https://religionnews.com/2020/07/08/president-erdogan-preserve-hagia-sophia-as-a-church/
  2. Press Release – Hagia Sophia should not be converted into a church. https://www.einnews.com/pr_news/521200391/turkey-hagia-sophia-should-not-be-converted-to-a-mosque
  3. Hagia Sophia: Is the decision in line with divine guidance
  4. A monumental struggle to preserve Hagia Sophia
  5. Hagia Sophia’s status as a Mosque Mocks Prophet Muhammad’s covenant –
  6. The complexity of History of Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia
  7. Why Turkey wants to convert Hagia Sophia into a Mosque
  8. Hagia Sophia – should we dig up dirt or stand on higher moral grounds?

Should Muslims sacrifice animals on Eid-al-Adha?

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This article was first Published on July 30, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/should-muslims-sacrifice-animals-on-eid-al-adha/

Should Muslims sacrifice cattle on Eid-al-Adha? 

by Dr. Mike Ghouse, Washington, DC

On Friday, July 31, 2020, over a billion and a half Muslims around the world, will be slaughtering millions of goats, camels, and cattle to carry out Abraham’s tradition of sacrificing the symbolic lamb. Is there an alternative to the ritual of slaying animals on Eid Al-Adha, the festival of sacrifice? The answer is yes!​

Rituals are the pathways to accomplish milestones of peace for oneself and with what surrounds one; life and environment. None of us can escape from the ceremonies. Each of us instinctively follows certain routines, from waking up to the time we go to sleep. Whether we shower, eat breakfast, go to the office, or gym, we follow the rituals. 

The essence of Islam is to create cohesive societies where every human feels secure about his/her faith, race, religion, region, or ethnicity. It is time for Muslims to consider the essence of sacrifice rather than the ritual itself. 

Real sacrifice requires us to give up some of what is dear to us. It is about parents going to sleep without food but feeding their kids; it is clothing their kids while waiting to get their own. In the case of extremities, we would instead get the bullet and save our loved ones, we are willing to rescue an individual from a freezing lake risking our own lives, and even strangers do that.  

A thousand years ago, a man’s assets were made up of his goats, camels, and cattle. The ultimate sacrifice one would make was to give away his precious assets in gifts. Today, the most cherished possession is money, and people must be willing to part some of it to give the ability to the receiver to spend on his/her critical needs. 

One of the examples set up for guidance was the test of Abraham’s faith, love, and devotion to God, which humans do routinely, “If you love me, you would do this for me.” A simple assurance would suffice, be it your fiancé, spouse, kids, siblings, or parents.

It was Abraham’s turn to face the command of God to sacrifice his son. Upon hearing this, he prepared to submit to God’s will and places his son on the block. Right at that moment, a lamb appears as an alternative. Then God revealed to Abraham that his “sacrifice” has already been fulfilled. 

Does God want animals to be sacrificed? 

Not at all. Qur’an, Al-Hajj 22:37 (The Pilgrimage) is clear: “Never does their flesh reach God, and neither their blood. It is only your God-consciousness that reaches Him. It is to this end that we have made them subservient to your needs so that you might glorify God for all the guidance with which He has graced you. And give thou this glad tiding unto the doers of good.”

The act symbolizes our willingness to give up a part of our bounties to strengthen and preserve the web of the universe and help those in need. We recognize that all blessings come from God, and we should open our hearts and share with others.  

What would you sacrifice instead?

It is customary for Muslims to sacrifice an animal on the day of the Hajj, a symbolic representation of Prophet Abraham’s act. What are our alternatives?  

We can put that money to a different use that will do greater good like lending to a street hawker who can sell things from a cart and take care of his family or a single mom who can weave baskets or make sweaters to take care of her family. The beauty of this practice is you can make the same money repeatedly work for the common good. Muslims call it Sadaq-e-Jariah, which is continual giving. 

 Dr. Nauman Anwar: “Sacrificing animals without making a public spectacle is still a good idea, as long as no wastage of the meat and hides occur. Many Muslim countries have a lot of poverty, and if the meat reaches the deserving population, it will help improve the nutritional status of the poor.

Let your single sacrifice multiply rather than the one-time sacrifice of animals. Prophet Muhammad had emphasized service to fellow humans as the highest service to God. Quran (4:152) says, if you are kind to your fellow humans, which is my creation, you will earn my grace regardless of your faith.

Honoring police, firemen, and soldiers

Every day our police officers and firemen risk their own lives to protect ours, our freedom is protected by our men and women in the uniforms. I urge fellow Muslims to stop and salute every one of these men and women, honoring them for their love for humanity. Better yet, call the firemen, policemen, and let them know that as a Muslim you appreciate their sacrifice, and this festival is about appreciation for such sacrifice.

I did that in Louisville; within minutes, the officer had emailed the article to his fellow officers, appreciating the Muslims.

Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) had said the least you can do as a charity is to smile and appreciate the otherness of the others.

You can wish your Muslim friends by saying, Eid Mubarak, Eid Saeed, Happy Eid, Happy Festivities, etc.

 Dr. Mike Ghouse is the founder and president of the Center for Pluralism. He is a speaker, thinker, author, community consultant, pluralist, activist, newsmaker, and an interfaith wedding officiant. Mike is deeply committed to Free speech, Human Rights, and Pluralism in Religion, Politics, Societies, and the workplace. His latest book, the “American Muslim Agenda” is available on Amazon, Kindle, and the bookstores. He has dedicated his life to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions to the media and the policymakers. More about him at www.TheGhousediary.com

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Racism and Islam

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This article was first Published on June 7, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/racism-and-islam/

Given the problematic race relations we are facing now, I hesitantly heard the full Sermon of Dr. Imam Yasir Qadhi on Racism today, June 6th, and I recommend it wholeheartedly, it is one of the best speeches on race relations.  I used the word hesitantly because Dr. Qadhi had made flagrant statements about Jews in the past. Of course, he has apologized since then. The links for all the references are at the bottom of the article.

A few key points about his sermon following the video

He traces the story of racism to Pharaoh -indeed, whenever a group of people believes that they are more privileged than the other, it amounts to racism.

Dr. Qadhi narrates the story of Hazrat Bilal (the freed slave) flawlessly.  A few people were considering joining the Prophet’s faith, but had a race problem and snidely asked the Prophet to keep Bilal out of the meeting. The Prophet was committed to building cohesive societies and did not believe in exclusion, and instead requested Bilal to call on the prayer (Adhan) from the top of the Kaaba. He wanted to assert that no one is superior to the other. He chose to do the right thing than compromise on the value of equality. It reminded me of the dilemma Abraham Lincoln faced 1100 years later and decided against politics and made the right decision to declare emancipation of slaves. They were two of the key historical figures who stood against slavery. There is a lot more power to this story and will write another time.

Dr. Qadhi talks about verse 49:13 – that came through Gabriel. God has created all of us from one single couple and spread us into different races, communities, and nations. He could have added that the best one among us is the one who learns about each other, knowledge leads to understanding and understanding to acceptance of the otherness of the other. By the way, the anthropologists have discovered in the last fifty years that we all originated in Africa and spread out into different regions and created nations and communities.

Qadi does well on emphasizing that the Prophet dedicated 1/5th of his speech on race relations in his very last sermon.

Imam Qadhi talks about what we can do as Muslims – to stand up against oppression against anyone and everyone.  He suggested standing with the Black community.  I wonder if he would also stand with the LGBTQ community.

Critique:

He uses the phrase, “This country” I wish he instead uses the phrase “Our Country” I hope you can see the difference between the two.

Idol worship – Why are we hung up on this? Islam did not emerge to wipe Idol worship; instead, it came to bring people together on the concept of the unity of humanity and integrity of the universe and oneness of God.

I accept the sheepishness in some Muslims who swallow everything dished out to them if the big-name scholars are ascribed. It goes against the grain of Islam -that is to Iqra, read, understand, and accept. After all, you are responsible for your acts and not the Imams, and not even the Prophet. Islam places great emphasis on accountability and individual responsibility.

Thank God for guiding me to be a doer and not a talker. He has guided me to (links are provided below for all the items):

Standing up for others – everyone out there.

As a Muslim, I have prayed in Mosques of all major denominations and looking forward to going to Najaf and Karbala to embrace Muslims completely.

Friday prayers, I alternate between African Americans and all other Mosques.

Now in the last three years, I live in an all-Black neighborhood.

Imam Yasir Qadhi’s words against Jews
https://centerforpluralism.com/imam-yasir-qadhis-disgusting-words/

Muslim Scholars of the past Presented Islam incorrectly
https://theghousediary.com/muslim-scholars-presented-islam-incorrectly/

The Source of Muslim Extremism
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/the-source-of-muslim-extremism_b_57843863e4b04041a9858324

Standing up for others
http://www.standingupforothers.com

Visiting Mosques of all denominations
http://ramadanexclusive.blogspot.com/

Black Neighborhood is my neighborhood
http://ramadanexclusive.blogspot.com/

Dr. Mike Ghouse is the founder and president of the Center for Pluralism.  He is a speaker, thinker, author, consultant, pluralist, activist, newsmaker, and an interfaith wedding officiant.  He is deeply committed to Religious Freedom, Human Rights, and Pluralism in Religion, Politics, Societies, and the workplace, and to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions to the media and the policymakers.  Book information is at www.AmericanMuslimAgenda.com and his info at www.TheGhousediary.com 

Books on Islam and Muslims worth reading

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This article was first Published on June 7, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/books-on-islam-and-muslims-worth-reading/

If you are serious about building a cohesive America where every American feels secure about his faith, ethnicity, race, or other uniqueness, these books are for you.

Corona Virus will kill thousands of people and wither away as soon as a vaccine comes along. However, the killer virus of Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia does not have a cure yet, one is at least 2000 years old, and the other is 1400 years.

A small percentage of the population is vulnerable to this disease. Each of the afflicted ones has unresolved personal issues and found it convenient to unload their frustrations on someone or the other. Facts don’t matter to them.

Interactions with the Islamophobes and Anti-Semites have been fruitful, but only to a small extent. Some of them legitimately subscribe to the myths about Jews and Muslims, many of them spew their venom for money. Yet some fall into the trap of monkey see monkey do, just the gawkers on the roads do.  We have to continue to work on mitigating this virus.

One way to counter this virus is by placing the right books in the hands of these men and women.  The majority of the virus inflicted men and women may consider, except those whose money-making comes from hatred.

We hope the following books will make a difference and pull out at least some of the men and women from misery.

The following books are available on Amazon, kindle and other book stores

Our Muslim Neighbors—Achieving the American Dream
Author: Victor Begg
Website: https://ourmuslimneighbors.com/

It’s the story of a young man who achieves his dreams in a new country and becomes an “accidental activist” building interfaith coalitions and advocating inclusion. Begg’s story provides a window into the family, community, and spiritual values of ordinary families—values they share with fellow Americans.

Getting to know our neighbors is one way to allay Islamophobia. Begg believes in the power of directly talking to one another. Our Muslim Neighbors is an invitation to conversation, “to learn about each other beyond the vicious stereotypes.” It’s an effort to help readers get to know the Muslim Americans next door: their dreams, fears, and a misunderstood faith.

The Qur’an with references to the Bible
Authors: Safi Kaskas and David Hungerford

Hungerford and Kaskas noted that they discovered more than 3,000 verses in the Quran that have similar meanings and purposes in the Bible. Hence, they set out to place biblical references at the bottom of each relevant page in the Quran.

Drs. Kaskas’ and Hungerford’s underlying motivation for the translation and inclusion of the extensive footnotes were not intended to promote a particular school of Islam or Christian apologetics. These exist in abundance.

Their goal is to build bridges of better understanding, undermine radicalism, and enlighten ignorance. This powerful instrument offers Muslims and Christians a fresh insight on the “straight path” to reconciling with God and man; sorely needed and missing from other translations.

They’re hoping that the book will help to dispel the “ignorance” that they see when it comes to the ongoing friction between the two groups; they’re also hoping the Quran edition helps spark “an open discussion.”

Hadith: The Authority Issue and How it Affects Muslim Beliefs and Practices
Authors: Abdur Rab and Siraj Islam

The Hadith never enjoyed unquestioned scriptural authority. This book is a systematic attempt to chronicle challenges to its authority in early Islam and introduce modern-day critics, summarizing their positions. It then provides theological underpinnings that call into question the authority and the authenticity of the Hadith corpus.

More importantly, the book offers a detailed analysis of egregious Hadith that contradict the Quran, science, or reason and negatively affect Muslim beliefs and practices. The disturbing content of the Hadith has made Islam a religion of ridicule and the staple of the Islamophobes who use the most egregious Hadith to paint Islam as a fanatic, violent, and misogynistic faith.

website: http://quranonly.com/

My Story as a Muslim Immigrant in America:
Psychiatry, Social Activism, and Service

Author:  Dr. Basheer Ahmed

Basheer Ahmed’s remarkable life is rooted in fertile soil that cultivated a passion for learning and a desire to give back to the world. But this man wasn’t created all at once. Ahmed’s amazing story spans many decades, continents, cultures, and languages, and serves as a testament to the interconnectedness of all people.

Inspired by his mother’s academic pursuits, Ahmed launched an epic journey for his education. He left India for Pakistan, then the United Kingdom, and the United States, where he immigrated to practice psychiatry in 1968. Along the way, he started a family and devoted himself to teaching and service to reinvest the spiritual riches life had bestowed upon him.

With honesty and warmth, Ahmed shares his story in the hope that future generations may find fertile soil, value education and spirituality, and grow up in a world full of love and acceptance.

American Muslim Agenda:
Muslims Together, building a Cohesive America.

By Dr. Mike Ghouse

The American Muslim Agenda, is a primer, a blueprint, a roadmap for American Muslims. As a community, American Muslims have not developed any concrete plans to extricate themselves from the chaotic situations, hostility, and incessant Islamophobic rhetoric we face. Each time a terrorist acts out, we start praying and wishing that the terrorist not be a Muslim. We are Americans, and we can do better than that.

This book paves the way for us to own the mistakes we have made, remedy them, and become fully integrated Americans.  I have some success stories to share on that front. When we start defending America and American values, we are in! We become an integral part of the American Fabric.

The book closes with the chapter about electing a Muslim woman president of the United States in 2036 and lays the pathway to get there. More about the book at www.AmericanMuslimAgenda.com

Remembering the Sikh Genocide of 1984

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This article was first Published on June 7, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/remembering-the-sikh-genocide-of-1984/

This week is the 36th Anniversary of the attack on the Golden Temple. We, at the Center for Pluralism, feel the apprehensions the Sikh community feels. Since the inception of the event, “Reflections on Holocaust and Genocides” in 2006, we have commemorated 15 aspects of the Holocaust, 30 Genocides, and several Massacres. The purpose of the events is education, development of empathy towards fellow humans, and shedding our prejudices towards fellow humans.

On Sunday, January 27, 2013, we held the commemoration of the 1984 Sikh Genocide. In our annual Holocaust and Genocides program, we have covered over 30 Genocides around the world.

When we decided to commemorate the Sikh Genocides despite severe opposition from the extremist segment of the Indian community. We faced similar attitudes from the right-wing Pakistani community when we did the program on Genocides of Bangladeshis. The Turkish people behaved the same when we did a program on the Armenian Genocide. The right-wing Muslims opposed organizing the Holocaust event.  Oddly, and unbelievably, the right-wing segment among the Jews vehemently opposed holding a talk on Gaza Massacre to the point of lying to the public.  I remember all the insults hurled at us by everyone. 

If we want others to be inclusive, we have to demonstrate to the right-wing segment among us, that we are inclusive by showing them compassion and caring, rather than rejecting them. It is this attitude at the Center for Pluralism that has allowed us to deal with extremists among all traditions with care and empathy for their perceived or real pain.   

We have chosen not to respond to their hate with more anger or challenges, we made attempts to let them know that it is necessary to acknowledge the pain all of us have inflicted on the others.

 No one should be ashamed of what fellow humans from your group, nation, faith, or ethnicity do to the others; what you should be ashamed of is your attitude toward another human. If you don’t feel the pain of others, then there is something seriously wrong with you.  

We will continue to cover all the Genocides of the previous century and complete them in the next 20 years. We have also included Massacres around the world, including the Kashmiri Pundits, Gujarat Riots, and few more in India.  

We have come a long way, boldly rejecting the opposition from the extreme segments and doing the right thing. The purpose of this annual event is education – of learning to prevent these atrocities from happening again.

As Indian Americans, we owe it to our motherland that none of her children are hurt. The sparks of hatred are not dead, they will light up again between different communities in critical situations. Shame on us, if we allow anyone of the 1.3 Billion Indians to look down on the others, or consider them to be less valuable than us. We need to sit down, acknowledge every one’s pain, and forgive each other. Shame on us again, if we dump our problem to the next generation and poison them against each other.

God bless our motherland and every child of hers.

79 Pictures:  https://www.flickr.com/photos/mikeghouse/sets/72157636856041595/Show 

Standing up for Sikhs- http://standingupforothers.blogspot.com/2012/08/standing-up-for-sikhs.html 

More pictures – https://www.flickr.com/photos/mikeghouse/albums/72157631922541157

199 Pictures -Honoring Sikhs for setting the exemplary response towards Wisconsin Shooting – https://www.flickr.com/photos/mikeghouse/sets/72157631762797919/show/

Press release – http://holocaustandgenocides.blogspot.com/2013/01/6th-annual-holocaust-and-genocides-sikh_23.html 

Remembering the Holocaust and all Genocides. Watch Sohrab Modi’s clip in this link – https://www.huffpost.com/entry/holocaust-remembrance-and-recognizing-all-genocides_b_2547164

India Report: Warning for the violations of religious freedoms

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This article was first Published on June 13, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/india-report-warning-for-the-violations-of-religious-freedom-in-india/

The Center for Pluralism and the supporting organizations welcome the Press Release by the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) and the Annual report released by the U.S. Department of the State (DOS) in June 2020. 

The USCIRF made a recommendation to the DOS about the gross violations of religious freedoms in India and listed India as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) and suggested penalties against India’s Home Minister Amit Shah, the man behind the violations. 

The CPC designation has severe consequences for India. The major global corporations that are interested in India’s prosperity will hesitate to do business in India due to social and political unrest. Most companies in the world want to do business in a stable nation.

The biggest economic threat to India is the loss of prosperity gained by the employees and the companies in the information technology sector. The employees and employers stand to lose all the gains they have made in the last twenty years. In the end, every Indian stands to lose. 

You can read the report in its entirety at https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/INDIA-2019-INTERNATIONAL-RELIGIOUS-FREEDOM-REPORT.pdf 

Prime Minister Modi earned the CPC title by his calculated silence. He has a record for letting the bad guys do whatever they want. He had once said at the beginning of the Gujarat Massacre to his men, “You’ve three days to finish the job.” meaning kill as many as you can. It resulted in the killing of over 1000 people in February 2002. 

Modi lives on with his three days formula – An 8-year-old girl Asifa was gang-raped and butchered into pieces, Modi did not speak until the whole nation was agitated. Ansari was brutally beaten with crowbars; Modi did not talk until the entire country condemned it. There were 114 such incidents during his six-year reign. In March this year, his men placed the saffron flag on their homes to identify Muslim homes who did not have the flag – they burned several houses and killed nearly 50 people. Modi did not speak or even had the courtesy to visit. 

Christians and Muslims are given an ultimatum by a few members of the ruling BJP Party, that they (230 Million) have three options. Convert to Hinduism, live as 2nd class citizens, or disappear. Mr. Modi has not said a word to allay the fears.

Prime Minister Modi needs to repeal the unnecessary Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), and the protests will stop at once, and the nation’s social and political stability will return. The demand for birth certificates is to separate Muslims as the Jews in the Holocaust were pinned Megan David on their sleeves. As per the provisions of the law, if one is a Hindu or of other faith, he/she gets automatic citizenship, but Muslims will go to the detention camps. The great Indian people of all religions have joined the protests, and they have realized, discrimination to one is discrimination to all. The demonstrations are identical to the George Floyd protests across the world.

The Modi government arrested a pregnant woman Safoora Zargar for protesting. She was slapped with false charges. Mr. Amit Shah has extensive experience with making up charges against the people he doesn’t like or, worse, killing them in fake encounters.

Kaleem Kawaja of Association of Indian Muslims of America (AIM) adds, “We hope the Government of India heeds the reports issued by the Department of State and work on correcting the course and save India from the destruction of social structure leading the economic disaster.”

We offer the following solutions to restore sanity and democracy, take back the title of CPC, and recognize all citizens are equal under the law. 

We urge the Indian government to issue the visas to the Commissioners of USCIRF to verify the truth and make the recommendations to rectify the wrongs heaped on Indian Citizens, particularly the Kashmiri citizens. 

We urge the Prime Minister to speak up and tell the nation that he will not tolerate lynching, cow vigilantes, raping, and harassment of fellow Indians. The calls for Christians and Muslims to convert to Hinduism or live as second-class citizens will be pushed back, and the callers will face serious consequences.

Dr. Mike Ghouse is the founder and president of the Center for Pluralism. He is a speaker, thinker, author, community consultant, pluralist, activist, newsmaker, and an interfaith wedding officiant. Mike is deeply committed to Free speech, Human Rights, and Pluralism in Religion, Politics, Societies, and the workplace. He has dedicated his life to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions to the media and the policymakers. The book information is at www.AmericanMuslimAgenda.com and his info at www.TheGhousediary.com

My Father was an Amin

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This article was first Published on June 14, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/my-father-was-an-amin/

1952 MANDYA, KARNATAKA, INDIA — The Chief Minister of Karnataka (then Mysore state) Sri. Kengal Hanumanthiah called on a Mayor’s meeting in the Town of Mandaya, and I am delighted that I have that souvenir book of all Mayors in Karnataka – here is a page from Yelahanka. My father was the Deputy Mayor at that time.

Later on, he became the Mayor of the Town of Yelahanka. Its population in 1952 was about 20,000 – of which Muslims were a meager 150, yet he was very popular among all the people.  He remained on the council through the late ’50s. I remember going to the council meetings with him and running around the meeting table. One distinct thing I remember was the map of the town of Yelahanka. Since then, I have developed a fascination for Maps. I can draw plans of most places, including Bangalore and Yelahanka.  

Mohamed Abdul Rahman, when he spoke, people listened. The town has remained free from Hindu Muslim conflicts, he and Mayor Ramas Swamy quell the possible conflict when Ganesha Statute was passing by the Mosque and a few people wanted to create a conflict. My father was the Amin of the town, and the entire town called him Mamu.

Everyone came to seek his advice on marital relations to property disputes and everything else. He always made time for everyone.

He broke many traditions, including having the Dalits in our home, eat with us, and my mother would make tea for them, and we all used the same glasses. Most of his Brahmin and Muslim friends were angry at him for treating them with dignity.  That was the time when Dalits (untouchable was the word used then) people were not allowed in anyone’s home. As a teen, I followed my Dad’s example and fought with many people to get equal access to the Dalits at the tap on the street corner for water or the well on the Yelahanka Kere (lake).

The most humiliating thing I have witnessed was to see Dalits waiting until all others took the water from the tap. On top of it, when they were through, the upper caste people would wash that tap like there was no end to washing. Even the President of India, who is a Dalit, must have felt the humiliation when the temple was washed and cleansed several times after his visit.

If I had remained in Texas, I would have run for the Mayor of Carrollton and would most certainly have been elected. The transition from the president of the largest homeowner’s association and commissioner-at-large at the City would have made it easy.  Two former Mayors had urged me to run.  I had dropped all desires to be in politics and have chosen to do what gives me the most pleasure; Human rights, Freedom, Pluralism in Religion, politics, society, and workplace.

I am finding myself copying my father subconsciously, and thanks to my Father and Mother, who are role models for me.  They considered everyone in the town to be their family, and I feel the same about fellow humans with a bias towards none.

Amin was the title bestowed by Jews, Christians, and Pagans to Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) – he was trustworthy, told the truth, stood up for justice for every human and they felt safe around him. My father followed him in practice and looks like I am treading the same path.

Do you agree that is what a Muslim was meant to be, the Amin who embraces the entire universe like the creator, and Mercy to entire humankind like the Prophet?

 Dr. Mike Ghouse is the founder and president of the Center for Pluralism. He is a speaker, thinker, author, community consultant, pluralist, activist, newsmaker, and an interfaith wedding officiant. Mike is deeply committed to Free speech, Human Rights, and Pluralism in Religion, Politics, Societies, and the workplace. He has dedicated his life to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions to the media and the policymakers. The book information is at www.AmericanMuslimAgenda.com and his info at www.TheGhousediary.com

Pakistani NGO denies food to Hindus and Christians.

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This article was first Published on June 18, 2020 at – : https://centerforpluralism.com/pakistani-ngo-denies-food-to-hindus-and-christians/

Pakistani NGO denies food to Hindus and Christians.

June 17, 2020, Washington, DC — The Center for Pluralism condemns the shameful act of a Pakistani NGO for denying food to Hindus and Christians during the Corona epidemic.

It is a disgusting act, this Muslim and Muslims across the world condemn it. Pakistan claims to be an Islamic country, but its behavior is not Islamic.  Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) had said, “When you eat stomach full and let your neighbor go hungry, you are not among my followers.” Such is the emphasis placed on caring for fellow humans.

Shame on Karachi’s Saylani Welfare trust. They have been refusing food assistance to Hindus and Christians, arguing that the aid is reserved for Muslims alone.

They need to learn about Islam; from the very first chapter to the 114th chapter of the Quran, God addresses humanity and not any particular group. Your duty to care for fellow humans is placed above all other duties.

Examples abound where a woman of the street (sinner) sees a thirsty dog, and she goes around and finds water and saves the dog, and per the Prophet, her sins will be forgiven. Quran adds, saving a life is like saving the whole of humanity.

 There is another story where the Prophet’s associates ask him, who would be a better human – the one who prays all the times or the one who does not, but when the night falls, he walks over to the neighbor and offers a share of his food. The answer is obvious.

 We urge Prime Minister Imran Khan to put a stop to this non-sense and restore sanity. Every Pakistani should have equal rights and equal access to food and water. Evil acts continue not because of the wicked people, but because reasonable people don’t speak up.  

PM Khan wanted to model Pakistan after the Madinah Treaty, where all citizens were treated with dignity and respect and had the freedom to practice their faith. It is time for Khan to walk the talk.

 Dr. Mike Ghouse is the founder and president of the Center for Pluralism. He is a speaker, thinker, author, community consultant, pluralist, activist, newsmaker, and an interfaith wedding officiant. Mike is deeply committed to Free speech, Human Rights, and Pluralism in Religion, Politics, Societies, and the workplace. He has dedicated his life to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions to the media and the policymakers. The book information is at www.AmericanMuslimAgenda.com and his info at www.TheGhousediary.com

PUBLISHED AT
Counterview https://www.counterview.in/2020/06/washington-based-centre-condemns-pak.html