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A Midwestern Muslim
Hesham A. Hassaballa

The Terrorist Disconnect

Why do Muslims say that terrorism has nothing to do with Islam? Because we believe the two are disconnected. And here's why:



 
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It seems that the Muslim community did not get a chance to finish breathing a sigh of relief when it was learned that the Virginia Tech shooter was not a Muslim. Because unfortunately it is pretty standard now that when there’s a mass shooting or any sort of man-induced disaster, many Muslims immediately pray, “Let it not be a Muslim.”

Soon another round of bad news made the headlines: Federal authorities arrested six Muslim men in New Jersey on charges that they allegedly plotted to attack Fort Dix, and, in the words of one of the men, "kill as many American soldiers as possible." What's worse, media reports stated that they were ready to kill and die "in the name of Allah."

So once again American Muslims appealed to their fellow Americans not to link Islam with terrorism. In a statement applauding the FBI for foiling this plot, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) requested that "media outlets and public officials refrain from linking this case to the faith of Islam." Afterwards I was listening to the Dennis Miller Radio show, and he seemed to make light of this statement by CAIR.

Miller said that he found it interesting how Muslims keep saying terror has nothing to do with Islam when it is clear that terrorist after terrorist insist that, "Islam made me do this." He brought this up to Ibrahim Hooper, national spokesman for CAIR, who was a guest on his show. The question was half in jest, but it’s one that keeps coming up.

I myself was recently a guest on a radio program in Tampa, FL, and a caller asked how it could be that if I don't believe Jesus was crucified, that I would go to heaven "without doing jihad." I believe his question stemmed from his misconception that Muslims only can go to heaven by committing acts of terrorism or declaring “holy war” (“jihad” in his mind). Whenever I hear something like that, I get upset--because I just don't understand how people can truly think that Islam would call for terror and death. There is a serious disconnect, and I think I have finally figured out why.

It is natural for someone with very little familiarity with Islam and Muslims to make the connection between Islam and terrorism, especially with all the negative press and publicity that has surrounded Islam for the past few years. It is very easy to conclude that Islam calls for murder when they hear tapes by Osama bin Laden or Aiman Al Zawahiri calling upon all Muslims to "kill an infidel." Then there are those who make it their mission to smear the religion by selectively quoting from Islamic texts to bolster the fallacious argument that Islam itself is the reason for the terrorism perpetrated by some Muslims.

Thus, when the average American hears Muslims say, "Terrorism has nothing to do with Islam," they either think we are in denial or lying.

But we American Muslims mean it when we say, "Terrorism has nothing to do with Islam." And here’s why: There is a disconnect between Islam and terrorism that can be traced to the mind of a terrorist--even if that terrorist believes the complete opposite. At his very essence, a terrorist is a criminal. When a criminal commits a crime, he or she has a rationale in their mind for why they committed their crime.



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When Muslims engage in violent acts:
I chalk it up to Islam's religious teachings.
I think it's about politics rather than Islam.
I study the root causes of their anger.
I imagine what I would feel like in their place.
As a Muslim, I identify with their anger.
As a Muslim, I reject their brand of Islam.

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