How Middle America made me feel safer
Here were 32,000 Muslims saying they were proud to be Americans
By Robert Fisk
09/09/06 "The
Independent" -- -- Every time I enter the United
States, I wonder what the lads in Homeland Security have in
store for me. But last week, Chicago was a piece of cake. I was
arriving from Lebanon, I told the young man at the desk, and I
was to address a Muslim conference. "Gee, you must have had a
bad time out there in Lebanon," he commiserated, stamping my
passport in less than 30 seconds and handing it back to me with
a scriptwriter's greeting: "There you go, partner." And so I
passed through the barrier, saddled up my white Palomino in the
parking lot, and rode off towards the crescent Islamic moon that
hung over Chicago. Hi Ho Fisk, Away!
I had forgotten how many American Muslims were south-west Asian
rather than Middle Eastern in origin, Pakistani and Indian by
family rather than Syrian or Egyptian or Lebanese or Saudi. But
the largely Sunni congregation of 32,000 gathered for the
Islamic Society of North America's annual gig were not the
hot-dog sellers, bellhops and taxi drivers of New York. They
were part of the backbone of middle America, corporate lawyers,
real estate developers, construction engineers, and owners of
chain-store outlets.
Nor were these the docile, hang-dog, frightened Muslims we have
grown used to writing about in the aftermath of the
international crimes against humanity of 11 September 2001. To
about 12,000 of these Muslims in a vast auditorium, I said the
Middle East had never been so dangerous. I condemned the
Hizbollah leader, Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, for saying he had no
idea the Israelis would have responded so savagely to the
capture of two Israeli soldiers and the killing of three others
on 12 July. Later, a worthy imam told me: "I thought what you
said about Sheikh Hassan (sic) was almost an insult." But that
clearly wasn't what the audience believed.
When I told them that as American Muslims, they could demand a
right of reply when lobby groups maliciously claimed that a
network of suicide bombers was plotting within their totally
law-abiding community, they roared. But I warned them that I
would listen carefully to their response to my next sentence.
And then I said that they must feel free to condemn - and should
condemn - the Muslim regimes that used torture and oppression,
even if these dictators lived in the lands from which their
families came. And those thousands of Muslims rose to their feet
and clapped and yelled their agreement with more emotion and
fervour than any rabble-rousing non-Muslim yelling about "Arab
terrorism". This was not what I had expected.
Signing copies of the American edition of my book on the Middle
East some hours later - the real reason, of course, for going to
Chicago - these same people came up to me to explain they were
not American Muslims but Muslim Americans, that Islam was not
incompatible with life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Some had stories of great tragedy. One young man had written out
a short sentence for me to inscribe in the front of his copy of
my book. "To my parents and siblings," he had written on a pink
slip, "who perished in the hands of the Pol Pot Khmer Rouge in
Cambodia. Yousos Adam." I looked up to find the young man
crying. "I am against war, you see," he said, and vanished into
the crowd. There were other more ingratiating folk around: the
Pakistani broadcaster, for example, who wanted me to talk about
his country's peace-loving principles - until I began describing
the continued secret relationship between Pakistan's
intelligence service and the Taliban, at which the interview was
swiftly concluded.
Then there was the young man with Asiatic features who said
softly that he was "Mr Yee, the Guantanamo imam" - who turned
out to be the same Mr Yee foully and falsely accused by the US
authorities of passing al-Qa'ida type messages while ministering
to the prisoners of al-Qa'ida at America's most luxurious prison
camp. But there was no bitterness among any of these people.
Only a kind of growing pain at the way the press and television
in America continued to paint them - and all other Muslims in
the world - as an alien, cruel, sadistic race.
One woman produced an article of June this year from the Toronto
Star about the Israeli town of Sderot, the target of hundreds of
Palestinian missiles from Gaza. "Under fire at Israel's Ground
Zero," ran the headline. "Do you believe in this kind of
journalism, Mr Fisk?" the woman demanded to know. And I was
about to give her the "both sides of the picture" lecture when I
noticed from the article that just five Israelis had been killed
in Sderot in five years. Yes, every life is equal. But who at
the Star had decided that an Israeli town with one dead every
year equalled the Ground Zero of Manhattan's 3,000 dead in two
hours? All dead are equal in the American press it seems, but
some are more equal than others.
And I couldn't help noticing the degree to which The New York
Times's Thomas Friedman is stoking the fires. This is the same
man, an old friend, who wrote a few years ago that the
Palestinians believed in "child sacrifice" - because they
allowed their kids to throw stones at Israeli soldiers who then
obligingly gunned them down. Most egregiously for the Muslims I
spoke to, Friedman was now "animalising" - as one girl put it
beautifully - the Iraqis, and she presented me with a Friedman
clipping which ended with these words: "It will be a global
tragedy if they (the insurgent Iraqi enemy) succeed, but ... the
US government can't keep asking Americans to sacrifice their
children for people who hate each other more than they love
their own children."
So there we go again, I thought. Muslims sacrifice their
children. Muslims feel hate more than they love their children.
No wonder, I suppose, that their kiddies keep getting Israeli
bullets through their hearts in Gaza and American bullets
through their hearts in Iraq and Israeli bombs smashing them to
death in Lebanon. It's all the Arabs' fault. And yet here in
Chicago were 32,000 Muslims, dismissing all the calumnies and
sophistries and lies and saying they were proud to be Americans.
And I guess - for a man who wakes each morning in his Beirut
apartment, wondering where the next explosion will be - that I
felt a little safer in this world.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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