Pages

Showing posts with label Ahmed Rehab. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ahmed Rehab. Show all posts

Sunday, May 05, 2013

Terrorist Hijabi Doll Card Outrages US Muslims


Chicago Muslims have their knickers in a twist over a greeting card, and of course Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) is right in the thick of it.

A Chicago Muslim activist has spotted a troubling greeting card featuring an adorable hijab-wearing doll with an exploding message that equates smiling, non-threatening Muslims with extremist terrorists.

“Nothing identifies this doll as a terrorist in the minds of the card designers other than that she wears a Hijab,” Ahmed Rehab, Executive Director of the Chicago office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-Chicago), wrote in an article published by the Chicago Monitor on Friday, May 3.

“Moreover, she is a smiling, non-threatening normal-looking female wearing a pink Hijab and a flower-patterned dress.

“The unmistakable message behind the “humor” is that even the most peaceful looking Muslims are synonymous and exchangeable with terrorists.”
Oops.

The card is a photograph of an actual talking doll called "Aamina, the Muslim Doll" which says things like "Assalamu Alaikum is the Muslim greeting, and it means peace be upon you", and "Let's play together insha'Allah, insha'Allah means if God wills it." Desi Doll company manufactures the doll and was designed by a mom who wanted to teach her three kids Arabic and Urdu.

According to Rehab,

“Islamophobic generalizations and negative stereotypes often hit those who are most visibly perceived as Muslim, and women wearing the Hijab are often the group hit the hardest."

Of the card company, NobleWorks Inc, Rehab said:

“There are those who will claim Muslims do not have a sense of humor."

“But one would like to think humor comes with (even a minimal degree of) intelligence.

“The notion that a doll, that looks like any other doll that any little girl in the world would play with, can be presented as a terrorist doll simply and only because it is a “Muslim” doll or because it has a “Muslim scarf” on its head is not what defines “funny” for a lot of people, but bigoted, ugly, idiotic, moronic, etc."

Read the whole story from an Islamic perspective.

You might remember Ahmed Rehab from the My Jihad bus campaign.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

CAIR Chicago Launches "My Jihad" Bus Ad Campaign



There's a new effort by U.S. Muslims to counter the anti-Jihad ad campaign sponsored by Pamela Gellar and the American Freedom Defense Initiative that had posters placed on NYC MTA subway stops, and buses and trains in several cities across the country including New York. The message on the posters was:

“In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man” 
Support Israel 
Defeat Jihad

Geller created quite a stir but has hopes to continue with the campaign, next time adding other "groups" that are adversely affected by radical Islam, including Christian Copts, Hindus, Baha'is, Thailand and Nigerian Christians.

In the meantime, enter the "My Jihad" campaign. Ahmed Rehab, the founder of the "educational" campaign, also happens to be the executive director of the Chicago CAIR (Council on American-Islamic Relations).

Rehab says of his efforts:

“Jihad is a term that has unfortunately been widely misrepresented by the actions of Muslim extremists first and foremost, and by attempts at public indoctrination coming from Islamophobes who claim that the minority extremists are right and the majority of Muslims are wrong." “The MyJihad campaign is about reclaiming Jihad from the Muslim and anti-Muslim extremists who ironically, but not surprisingly, see eye to eye on Jihad.”
Essentially what they are trying to do is persuade us that the true meaning of jihad is personal struggle. From their website MyJihad.org:

Jihad is a central tenet of the Islamic creed which means “struggling in the way of God“. The way of God, being goodness, justice, passion, compassion, etc (not forcible conversion as wrongly claimed by some).

As Muslims, we are taught to put forth a concerted and noble effort against injustice, hate, misunderstanding, war, violence, poverty, hunger, abuse or whatever challenge big or small we face in daily life, with the purpose of getting to a better place.

While the struggle for justice may be physical (as a last resort, and even then it ought to be a just struggle that goes above and beyond observing the universal code of conduct and rules of engagement), the greatest Jihad is that of the self, a fact often ignored by, or unknown to, many. In more than one sense, Jihad is more about peace and education than anything else. The highest form of scholarly pursuit (the complex, tiring but important scholarly work of Muslims to decipher their faith and its relation to the world around them) is referred to in Islam as ijtehad which by no coincidence is derived from the same root word as Jihad (jahada meaning “to exert effort.”)

Jihad is a personal commitment to service, patience, determination, and taking the higher road, as such, it tasks us with confronting our own weaknesses, vices, and shortcomings; it is about taking personal responsibility.

All very admirable, if there weren't so many who do see jihad as Holy War. There are enough Muslims out there who believe jihad is more than personal struggle- including the Palestinians. And had they left out the whole 'blame the Islamophobes too' for messing with their 'jihad'  the idea might not have been so offensive. Don't blame us non-Muslims for associating jihad with terrorism, the radicals have done a pretty good job of doing that themselves.

The posters that are now on Chicago city buses include:

“MyJihad is to build friendships across the aisle,” says one ad showing an African American man leaning on the shoulder of a Jewish friend.

"MyJihad is to march on despite losing my son," says another ad, featuring a portrait of a mother with her three remaining children.

“MyJihad is to not judge people by their cover,” says a third, framed by two women in headscarves.
They're hoping to raise enough money to get those ads on trains and buses in Dallas, Cleveland, Houston, Oklahoma City, San Francisco and Seattle, some of the same cities that Geller's anti-Jihad ads were running. Their ultimate goal is to expand globally to buses in London, Melbourne, Sydney and Toronto.

They've also created a FaceBook page and have asked Muslims to tweet about their jihad using the hash tag #MyJihad.

It's going to take a lot more than a few posters on buses to persuade those of us who have a problem with a faith that seems hellbent on staying firmly rooted in the 7th century that the religion is not a threat to our Western way of life. I'm sure there are plenty of perfectly nice people who you probably wouldn't even know were Muslim, those I have no problem with. It's the ones who want Shariah law, who want us to change our laws, our rules and regulations to conform to their religious standards, those I have a problem with.