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WAFA SULTAN: Reformist or opportunist? Print E-mail
By Abdussalam Mohamed, Staff Writer   


Unlikely journey from obscurity to fame, rags to riches.

She has been described as a hero, a reformist, a crusader, and a brave woman who defied the Muslim world and stood up for what she believed in. In 2006, Time Magazine named her one of the 100 most influential people "whose power, talent or moral example is transforming the world." Dr. Wafa Sultan has been honored countless times for her now famous appearance on Al-Jazeera television opposite a Muslim cleric named Dr. Ibrahim Al-Khouly on February 21, 2006.

In that memorable clip widely distributed by MEMRI (Middle East Media Research Institute), Sultan referred to the current conflict between the West and militant Muslims as "a clash between a mentality that belongs to the Middle Ages and another that belongs to the 21st century... a clash between civilization and backwardness, between the civilized and the primitive, between barbarity and rationality." The clip spread through the internet like wild fire and landed Sultan in the LA Times, the New York Times and CNN among others. MEMRI estimated that the video was viewed at least one million times.

All of a sudden, and out of obscurity, Sultan found herself the center of both attention and controversy. On the one hand, she became the darling of many right wing media pundits and mainly pro-Israel groups who viewed her as a beacon of reform that stood up to what was wrong with Islam and Muslims. On the other hand, Muslims contended that by making broad, unfounded and ignorant proclamations about their faith, Sultan was nothing more than a pawn playing into the hands of Islamophobes, and an opportunist who intentionally pushed the divide between the Islamic world and the West to further ulterior motives that included fame, fortune and immortality.

Reformist or opportunist, Sultan continues to enjoy the spotlight as she routinely figures prominently as a guest speaker at many functions and fundraisers across the country. As her fame grows, so do her admirers and detractors.

Born in 1958 in the coastal town of Baniyas, Syria, Wafa Sultan grew up in a modest middle class Alawite family. She attended the University of Aleppo where she majored in medical studies (source: wikipedia).

In an interview with the New York Times, Sultan claimed that in 1979, gunmen from the Muslim Brotherhood burst into a classroom at the university and killed her professor before her eyes. It was then that her disillusionment and anger with Islam started. According to the same interview, Sultan, her husband Moufid, who goes by the Americanized name David, and their two children applied for a visa to the United States in 1989 and eventually settled in with friends in Cerritos, Calif.

Post 9/11, Sultan reportedly began writing for an Islamic reform Web site called Annaqed (The Critic) run by a Syrian expatriate in Phoenix. She wrote an angry essay about the Muslim Brotherhood and her writings eventually drew the attention of Al-Jazeera television, which invited her to debate, first an Algerian Islamist in July 2005 and then Dr. Ibrahim Al-Khouly, a lecturer at the prestigious Al-Azhar University, in February 2006 (New York Times, March 11, 2006).

It was the second debate, excerpts of which were translated and circulated by MEMRI that garnered her worldwide attention. Sultan went from obscurity to fame in a matter of weeks.

While Sultan’s admirers have nothing but praise for her, detractors charge that many of her public claims do not corroborate with facts. Moreover, they assert that the reasons behind her rise to fame have more to do with her personal life than with her desire to reform Islam.

Adnan Halabi*, a Syrian expatriate who met and got to know the Sultans when they first came to the United States, spoke at length about the Wafa Sultan that very few people know.

According to Halabi, Dr. Wafa Ahmad (her maiden name) arrived in California with her husband Moufid (now changed to David) in the late 80s on a tourist visa. Contrary to what she told the New York Times, they came as a couple, leaving their two children back in Syria.

Another source named Nabil Mustafa, also Syrian, told InFocus that he was introduced to Moufid Sultan through a personal friend who knew the family well, and both ended up having tea at the Sultans’ one-bedroom apartment one evening in 1989. It was then that Moufid told Mustafa the story of how he was reunited with his two children. According to Mustafa, Moufid Sultan told him that a short time after they arrived in the country, his wife, Dr. Wafa Sultan, mailed her passport back to her sister Ilham Ahmad in Syria (while the passport still carried a valid U.S. tourist visa). With Ilham bearing a resemblance to her sister Wafa, the plan was to go to the Mexican Embassy in Damascus and obtain a visa to Mexico, making sure that the airline carrier they would book a flight on would have a layover somewhere in the Continental United States.

With an existing U.S. visa on Wafa Sultan’s passport, Ilham Ahmad had no trouble obtaining an entry permit to Mexico. Shortly after, Ilham and Wafa’s two children landed in Houston, Texas. She and the children then allegedly made their way through customs and were picked up by Moufid and brought to California.

Taking advantage of an amnesty law for farmers, the Sultans applied for permanent residency through a Mexican lady who worked as a farm hand. She helped Moufid with the paperwork by claiming he had worked as a farmer for four years. The application went through and the Sultans obtained their green cards.

As incredible as the story sounds, Mustafa told InFocus that to the best of his recollection, this was the exact account he heard from Moufid Sultan. Halabi, who is not acquainted with Mustafa, corroborated the story, which he heard from Dr. Wafa Sultan herself but with fewer details. Dr. Wafa Sultan declined InFocus’ repeated requests to be interviewed or comment on the allegations. InFocus contacted the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to check on the veracity of the story but an official said that they would look into the allegations, which could take months to investigate.

Halabi alleges that Ilham Ahmad lived as illegal resident with her sister Wafa for years until she met an Arab Christian named Khalid Musa Shihadeh whom she ended up marrying (they were married in Nevada on 12/8/1991 and filed for divorce in 2002). It was during that time that Halabi got to know the Sultans well.

Halabi alleges that the Sultans lived in dire poverty. "Their rent was over $1,000 per month and Moufid was only making $800," he said. Dr. Wafa Sultan was forced to rent out a room in her apartment and work at a pizza parlor in Norwalk, Calif. where a personal friend used to pick her up and drop her off daily. This same friend used to help the Sultans out with groceries and occasionally loaned them money just so they could make it through the month. "It was a serious struggle," Halabi recalled. "The Sultans lived hand to mouth for years on end." Further, Halabi said that at no point during the period he knew the family did Sultan ever discuss religion, politics or any topic relevant to her current activities. "She is a smart woman, articulate and forceful, but she never meddled in religion or politics to the extent she is doing now," Halabi said.

As to the claim that her professor (thought to be Yusef Al-Yusef) was gunned down before her eyes in a faculty classroom at the University of Aleppo, Halabi said the incident never took place. "There was a professor who was killed around 1979, that is true, but it was off-campus and Sultan was not even around when it happened," he added.

InFocus contacted the University of Aleppo and spoke to Dr. Riyad Asfari, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, who confirmed Halabi’s account. "Yes, the assassination took place off-campus," he said. Dr. Asfari was keen to add that no one had ever been killed in a classroom anytime or anywhere at the university.

Syrian expatriate Ghada Moezzin, who attended the University of Aleppo in 1979 as a sophomore, told InFocus that she never heard of the assassination. "We would’ve known about the killing if it had happened," she said. "It would have been big news on campus and I do not recall ever hearing about it." Moezzin, who lives in Glendora, Calif., added that government security was always present around the university given the political climate in Syria at the time.

What are perceived as inconsistencies and half-truths like these convince Sultan’s critics that the motive behind her invectives against Islam and Muslims is other than her alleged desire for reform.

These same critics allege that Islamophobes are most certainly behind the likes of Sultan. They argue that the clip that made her famous was distributed by MEMRI, a media group that purports to independently translate and distribute news from the Middle East when in reality it is promoting a pro-Israeli slant. In an article titled, "Selective Memri," published on August 12, 2002 by the British newspaper The Guardian, investigative reporter Brian Whitaker wrote: "The stories selected by MEMRI for translation follow a familiar pattern: either they reflect badly on the character of Arabs or they in some way further the political agenda of Israel."

According to Whitaker, the founder of MEMRI is an Israeli named Yigal Carmon. "Mr - or rather, Colonel - Carmon spent 22 years in Israeli military intelligence and later served as counter-terrorism adviser to two Israeli prime ministers, Yitzhak Shamir and Yitzhak Rabin... of the six people named (as MEMRI’s staff), three - including Col. Carmon - are described as having worked for Israeli intelligence." (The entire article can be obtained at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/elsewhere/journalist/story/0,7792,773258,00.html

Another feature of deliberate bias and media myopia, critics say, is the fact that the Al-Jazeera clip was edited intentionally "out of context" to reflect one single point of view and promote Sultan’s arguments through American-style media sound bites, reducing the other debater to a mere punching bag.

InFocus was able to obtain a translated transcript of the Al-Jazeera debate. An example of this bias critics allege is Sultan’s much-rehashed quote, "It is a clash between civilization and backwardness, between the civilized and the primitive, between barbarity and rationality."

In the transcript, Shaikh Ibrahim Al-Khouli responded by saying, "…here we must ask a question, who facilitated the conflict and indeed initiated it; is it the Muslims? Muslims now are in a defensive position fighting off an aggressor... who said Muslims were backward? They may be backward in terms of technological advances, but who said that such are the criteria for humanity? Muslims are more advanced on a human level, in terms of the values and principles they endorse." (Entire transcript can be viewed at:

http://www.aqoul.com/archives/2006/03/aljazeera_trans.php
 

InFocus also found out that the web site called Annaqed (www.annaqed.com) she supposedly wrote for before being noticed by Al-Jazeera Television is not an "Islamic reform Web Site" as was reported in the New York Times article, but rather an Arab nationalist blog run by a Syrian Christian who defines it as being "in line with Christian morality and principles." The site is also replete with anti-Muslim writings.

Sultan’s detractors include not only Muslims but members of the Jewish community as well. In an op-ed piece published in the Los Angeles Times (June 25, 2006) and titled "Islam’s Ann Coulter," Rabbi Stephen Julius Stein at Wilshire Boulevard Temple, who attended a fundraiser for a local Jewish organization where Sultan was a speaker, wrote, "The more Sultan talked, the more evident it became that progress in the Muslim world was not her interest.... She never alluded to any healthy, peaceful Islamic alternative."

The rabbi mentioned that Judea Pearl, father of murdered journalist Daniel Pearl, "was one of the few voices of restraint and nuance heard that afternoon. In response to Sultan’s assertion that the Koran contains only verses of evil and domination, Pearl said he understood the book also included ‘verses of peace’ that proponents of Islam uphold as the religion’s true intent. The Koran’s verses on war and brutality, Pearl contended, were ‘cultural baggage,’ as are similar verses in the Torah."

He added, "Sultan’s over-the-top, indefensible remarks at the fundraiser, along with her failure to mention the important, continuing efforts of the Islamic Center (of Southern California), insulted all Muslims and Jews in L.A. and throughout the nation who are trying to bridge the cultural gap between the two groups. And that’s one reason why I eventually walked out of the event."

In the end, Dr. Wafa Sultan will remain a conflicting figure. Loved by some, reviled by others, she does not seem to be afraid to voice her opinions. She once said, "I don’t believe you can reform Islam," and claimed that the Qur’an was riddled with violence, misogyny and extremist ideas. Her Muslims detractors believe Sultan does not even qualify as a Muslim reformer since she has publicly rejected Islam and declared herself an atheist.

As for the Sultans’ financial troubles, Halabi told InFocus that ever since Dr. Sultan gained notoriety those troubles are a thing of the past. "She bought a house for herself and bought another for her son," Halabi said. "She also bought two smog-check stations, one for her husband and another for her son," he added. When asked about the source of her material well-being, Halabi was unsure.

As to the reasons that may have pushed Sultan to be so outspoken and vocal against Islam in a post-9/11 world, Halabi sympathetically remarked, "Poverty. It drives people to sell their soul."

* Adnan Halabi (not his real name) agreed to speak to InFocus on condition of anonymity. To this day, he maintains that he and the Sultans are still friends.

 


Comments (27) >>
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written by Anti-Zionist , June 04, 2008

PS = To the moron who said "Jews don't blow themselves up pizza joints." They don't have to, American supplied aircraft and the latest military hardware(free of charge) makes it easy for Jewish terrorists to kill Palestinians. 41 year old Occupation anyone?
The rest of you anti-Muslim cretins are just predictable and useful idiots in the cause of zionism terrorism and western imperialism.

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written by Anti-Zionist , June 04, 2008

Its amusing to see Wafa's "supporters" aka Zionist Jews and Christo-Evangelical nutters(both are terrorist groups) spring to the defence of their false idol. Malicious creatures that they are, their desperation in promoting criminals and frauds is all too obvious.
Wafa Sultan is a third rate Alevi charlatan pure and simple. 20 years in America and she can barely speak English. What stopped the "doctor" from taking her medical boards all these years? Another zionist puppet deflated....

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written by Matazell, May 27, 2008

Ya' know - I have seen so many videos of Imams telling people to lie to infidels and protect that which is sacred to Islam that yes I could see a professor and a whole bunch of Muslims lying about Wafa and her account. Muslims lie - How preposterous? NOT

And who cares if she worked hard at a pizza parlor or if she fell out of her mother's womb with a psychologist degree.

I Like Wafa - the pain in her eyes is real and so few people would have the conviction to tell the truth about these things and risk the lives of themselves and their family - so no I do not believe she would make this up just so she could move around and be forced to hide from muslims trying to kill her -

Deduction my dear Watson - so go stick a sock in it

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written by judi, May 17, 2008

One more thing. I believe this Adnan Halabi is a very very weak trick played by the website, otherwise how good such a friend would be? If such a person exists then why is he still a friend of this family which he obviously detests and disagrees with?If the green card fraud happened why then she is nt called yet to court? I dnt think this was professional creating this character.

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written by judi, May 17, 2008

That is so silly and so Islamic to accuse people of getting paid for their opinions! Everyone who speaks about islam is an israeli or paid by the US or Israel??? The woman could have got money anyother way and poverty as far as i knw only pushes people to more and more spirituality instead or rejecting all religion. How did she get a visa to the state and how did she get a green card is none of ur business here, this is irrelevant! If she worked in a Pizza rest.or in a night club it doesnt matter either! What matters is that what she says has some truth in it. I noticed a weakness in her argumentative skills but this is doesnt mean what she is saying is completely wrong. Again what am i expecting of an Islamic website? Do i expect u to respect an atheist? Disregard his/her religious views and take notice of his/her humanitarian opinions and ideas? Sure no...U can see only through islamic distorted glass.Pity the nation!Islam needs not be reformed, it needs to be ignored that is what i say!

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written by muhammad , April 13, 2008

i think she have been far a way from reality and what is really been happening that she has gone far, and my advice to you is go there and to the meddle east to Gaza and then see if you will have the same opinion or not, and if you do then you got some major issues and you need to see therapist beause you do remind me of Hetlur alot.

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written by hamad, March 31, 2008

wafa sultan just needs money and she knows how to get the money!

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written by nessuno, March 22, 2008

Don't worry about islam:ISLAM TOOK REFUGE IN ALLAH FROM ARABS/MUSLIMS.

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written by George, March 09, 2008

Let me add my 2 cents to these comments.

I grew up in Egypt as a student and an educator. As a Christian, I felt that Islam considered Christianity as a false religion. Please, forget what people tell you about "Ahl Al-kitab" and how they are held with esteem. Think of the fact that muslims consider that the bible has been altered. Why should we alter our own books? How would a muslim feel if he heard somebody claim that the muslims have altered the Koran? Second, nobody had the right to question not even an ioda of islamic beliefs or practices even though muslims gave themselves the full right to publish any criticism they like of other religions. If anybody tries to say anything negative about Islam, even if it is backed by truth, he is yelled at and threatened. Muslims do not accept criticism and they tend to return criticism with violence. They teach that to their kids from their early days "It is a taboo to criticize anything in Islam. It is the faith. Take it the way it is or God will punish you. Don't let anybody question your faith either."

I believe that is what Wafa Sultan is trying to say all along. Tolerance to criticism and civilized dialogue are the first step toward correction. Throwing blame at others never helps.

Thank you!

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written by Rafeh Hulays, March 07, 2008

Contrart to InFocus assertion, www.annaqed.com is NOT an Arab nationalist blog. Otherwise, I agree with the thrust if the article thesis.

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written by al mousa , March 06, 2008

thank you for an excellent essay , in these days ,the easiest way to become famous is to insult isalm , and the zoinst controlled media will pick u up in no time, this wfa to me is more like a toilet bowel she is just full of it, the big problem how did al jazeera put her on tv ,3 times ??

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written by Salman Salman, March 06, 2008

To Ahmed: "... muslims are again attacking the messenger as usual instead of discussing the issues raised by Wafa Sultan". Are you kidding?? Issues? What issues? She is not raising any issues in case you were not listening! The only thing she was raising is that "Koran and Islam are garbage so drop them and become civilized". Period! You want us to discuss this issue? Yeah, so let me me give you a parallel issue and let's try to discuss it: Americans and Israelis are evil and they should leave planet Earth immediately. What would you like to discuss about this 'issue' now? What transportation method will they use to leave planet Earth? What is the exact date they should leave? Whether they should take passports with them? How we would divide their belongings after they leave? Or do you have other things on your mind to discuss about this 'issue'? Oh, I forgot, you are out of your mind, "as usual"!

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written by Ahmed, February 17, 2008

It is unfortunate that muslims are again attacking the messenger as usual instead of discussing the issues raised by Wafa Sultan. Even granted that Wafa came to the US by false pretence and granted that she is supported by Jews, why dont the muslims talk about the issues she raises? That would be more healthy and reformist than pointing fingers at others.

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written by Fathima, January 21, 2008

Mrs. Wafa, you and I can all be nothing but pawns in someone else’s game, and all the things they will through at us to keep us distracted and unconscious “focus” totally in the wrong thing. We are so incredibly shortsighted, longing to belong to an “exclusive club” where you can enter only if you think like me.
Native people from everywhere, Buddhist, Muslims, Christians, Hindus, Jewish, Zoroastrians, Jainist, Shintus, Ta o ist, Baha’i, Sabi, Sikh and the list goes on and on, we all have been blessed with great consciousness that have been sent to teach us, but because we insist on limiting ourselves to our little minds and arrogance, we insist on defining ourselves as “better” than the others.
All these great people brought the same message but we keep on corrupting, manipulating it to achieve our own little limited purposes
They all simplify it for us, “Know yourself” and “Respect one another” but no, we insist on complicating it and flooding it with all sort of rules to allow religious institutions to rule us by fear. (too simplistic you might say… think about it)
Whether you like it or not we all come from the same source and that source is PURE LOVE.
We can look all we want outside of us for answers, but you know deep inside the answer is within.


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written by Adam, January 17, 2008

She is fame hungry, since it is popular to attack Islam that is what she is doing, lying, twisting the truth and taking things out of context do the job.
it is easy to lookup the truth, and it is easy to find refutal videos that show the parts that have been cut out by memri tvin
the most damaging interview is the one that gave her fame on aljazeera the opposite direction TV show, there was another person with an opposing opinion showing how idiotic and completely out of context her point of view was. Memri TV, a creation of an Israeli army Colonel Yigal Carmon, his editors cut off the truth “the other guy”, you can see the splicing of the video, and that is why you don’t see videos like the truth about 911 or Israeli atrocities on memri tv
Most people are wondering why aljazeera would put her on tv.

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written by charles rivera, January 13, 2008

Ya, that's right. When one can't argue against "Jews don't blow themselves up in German restaurants", the logical thing to do is attack the messenger. That's the ticket! NOT

The critics, and the cleric in that famous video, have two problems: first they have yet to identify the "unfounded claims" mentioned by Sultan. When she quotes from the Quoran, how dare they question the source? Second, they have to yet to address the extremist violence; THEIR OWN PROFOUND SILENCE on the matter is very telling.

Frankly, next to George Bush, the world is up to here in Islamic-led violence and threats of harm. Listening to the "non-extremists" whine and wring their hands that their teachings are "misunderstood", "miquoted", and "maligned" while at the same time ordering fatwahs on certain outspoken individuals is just soo rich and utterly hypocritical. What does that tell you about the culture and the ethic not to mention the religion?

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written by Aber Sabeel, December 30, 2007

I wonder how there are people like Mr. Bashar still defending Wafa Sultan even without taking the time to think about the serious points of her fraudulent nature that are mentioned here. Anybody who listens to her hateful remarks notices that she is totally biased against Islam, without even mentioning a single positive point about Islam. This is a characteristic of a biased person. One only needs to read a few pages of the Quran in order to understand that she is a liar!

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written by Hussam Hariri, December 10, 2007

to "Sophia",
What I said is the Islamic stance toward heretical sects. What I said represents more than 90% of Muslims (Sunnis), who are the only true Muslims (who follow Orthodoxy). Our religion is not an open yard where everyone and anyone can enter and then claim or believe whatever he wants. Muslim scholars never considered Alawites to be from among the Muslims, PERIOD. You are ignorant, be you Muslim or not, and your opinion doesn't count, like this Wafa's.

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written by Ibn Kasman, December 07, 2007

Yes, in the Quran --to quote from her statement in Aljazeera TV-- condems "maghdub" and "Dhallin", but they were not merely means Yahud and Nasara. In contrary, it literally mean Allah condemn "the people who are ungrateful with the mercy and the love from God", and "dhallin" it means the people who refuted truth, when they see the light. Unthankful muslim also could be categorized as maghdub and dhallin.

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written by alia, November 26, 2007

Why do so many Muslim people give so much importance to a clearly uneducated woman such as this one about islamic history and theology? i am not a Muslim scholar myslef, but i have read quite a few books about islam to know that this woman was a complete fake looking for an audience in America post 9/11. She seems to have done well!:)

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written by sophia, November 10, 2007

well, it seems like the comment of hussam hariri gives credit to what wafa sultan was saying - unwittingly, of course, as it is usually the case with dumb people. you, mr hariri, proves the point of your backwardness, and with people like you, islam needs no enemies.

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written by Hussam Hariri, October 22, 2007

Since she's an Alawite (follower of a heretical Shia cult), she was NEVER Muslim to begin with!!! No wonder she spoke like that!!! Everyone thought she was a fanatic Christian, now we know she's even "worse": an Alwaite!!! Those people don't do anything that is part of Orthodox Islam. Make a research on their beliefs then compare what you find to Islam, and you'll see what I mean.

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written by JLo, July 11, 2007

It's tiresome to see how everytime muslims are confronted with legitimate questions they do not look within but try to point the finger at others for something else entirely, oftentimes irrelative - like in this case, throwing dirt on Wafa Sultan for coming to the US when you all know that if she goes back to Syria she will not survive due to religious extremism and intolerance there.

This is always, always the case. One never sees muslims taking ownership for the violence that arises today from the muslim faith. You don't see Baha'is, Hindus and Buddhists (whose teachings are founded on non-violence) murdering people every week on the streets and using military religious rhetoric: that is in the past. People in previous centuries did this, not anymore - except muslims. When Christians or Jews kill or abuse people, they're not reading their sacred texts. But with Islam, the religion is part of the problem. I'd like to see courageous muslims acknowledging this and develop a RHETORIC OF NON VIOLENCE comparable to Ghandi's, to Martin Luther King's rhetoric, who seek conciliation with Jews instead of calling them pigs and monkeys, who treat women like human beings fully capable of intelligence and eloquence and leadership. When I see that, I may develop faith and optimism again in muslims, but as for now, I fully agree with Wafa Sultan: Islam is part of the problem. Muslims do not have a place from where they can draw these non-violent teachings because Islam does not teach non-violence. Please, do not answer to this but prove me wrong by developing a massive international muslim non-violence movement that befriends those who are different including Jews, Christians, Baha'is (whom you persecute in Egypt and Iran) and Hindus such as myself. Assalamu aleykum to all Arabs, religious and secularist alike.

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written by Fadi, June 24, 2007

Sorry! I - of course - meant "most likely be an ongoing condition" not "most likely been an ungoing condition".

Additionally, I naturally meant "enlightenment" not "enlightment".

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written by Fadi, June 24, 2007

Reformism indeed! May I remind the dear reader that if it weren't for the Muslim conquest of Iberia (now Spain and Portugal), as well as Sicily, and the West coming into contact with Islam, the "Dark Ages" of Europe would most likely been an ungoing condition and people in Europe would still be debating whether a woman has a soul or not.

The very first word revealed to the prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, was "Read!". If it weren't for Islam, you wouldn't be able to read this comment (i.e. there would be no such thing as the Internet), use Arabic numerals, know chemistry, know algorithm, know hygiene, know what a crankcase is, know what a watch is, know what medicine is, know etiquette, etc., etc.

Each and every reader is invited to get his or her own copy of the Holy Qur'an and judge for themselves. For one thousand years, the Muslims and their Christian and Jewish citizens were the beacons of the world. You cannot ignore one thousand years of enlightment and say we need to reform Islam! Those 1000 years were proudly our Middle Ages and re-living that time is a dream of every knowledgable Muslim or Arab.

Oh, and for Islam and women's rights, why don't you ask Yvonne Ridley and the many Western women that are embracing Islam every day why they choose to become Muslim? In fact, out of every 10 people embracing Islam, 7 are women!

What we need is to "re-affirm" Islam not "reform" it!

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written by cONsErNeD, April 03, 2007

I am sure many of the readers have heard of Wafa Sultan, the secularist 'humanist', the neither Muslim nor Christian nor Jew, the one who still describes herself a Muslim, but insists that "I don't even believe in Islam". No surprise there, after all it is more profitable to bash Islam while still claiming "Muslimship", ask Irshad Manji.

Originally Syrian, she is from an Alawi family, which kind of explains how she could be still a Muslim, yet not believe in Islam. I am glad that she admits this, in a sort of self-incriminating way, that Alawites are only Muslim by name, not really by their belief in Islam. After all, could this 'Alawite-Islam', which includes believing in Ali's (RD) divinity, almost similar to Christian belief in Jesus, be the Islam delivered by the Messenger of Allah (S)? I think not.

Last year, Wafa's claim to fame was via her appearance on Al-Jazeera, a piece of which was aired by the neo-con, Israeli-planted web-channel, MEMRI opposite Dr. Ibrahim Al-Khouli. Unfortunately, as with most of our Shayookh, they are good in what they do (Islamic education), but not good in what they don't (appearing in the media). Coupled with the fact that this was a MEMRI hit-job (apparently the Al Jazeera clip was edited out of context as per the transcript of the interview at the Annaqed website), Dr. Ibrahim didn't do too well. And the video resulted in pushing Wafa to a pedestal that she deserves not the least bit, not because she is an Islamaphobe, but because she doesn't have any real credentials, or any intellectual arguments. Amazingly, and this is an utter testimony to the media bias against Islam, she was named one of Time Magazine's 100 most influential people. Perhaps, I should start the list of the 100 most successful liars, and she definitely will get a ticket to the top 10!

Wafa claims that said she was shocked into secularism (from Alawism-- not sure what is really worse, hmm...) by the 1979 atrocities committed by Islamic extremists of the Muslim Brotherhood against innocent Syrian people, including the machine-gun assassination of her professor, Dr. Yusef al Yusef. Well, that is what she CLAIMED. Of course, the media does not care about checking facts... any self-described Muslim 'refuse-nik' is immediately elevated to media-darling status. But, fortunately for the sake of truth, someone did, and it seems that Ms. Sultan's story is full of holes, and her image is (hopefully sooner than later) imploding. Here is a catch from CAIR's email:
[See also this scathing post from Dr.M, the master of pro-regressive analysis!]

http://amadsden.blogspot.com/search/label/Propaganda

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written by Bashar, April 01, 2007

Aside from the obvious bias in Mr. Mohamed's article regarding Dr. Sultan position on Islam, he totally ignors Dr. Sultan's message of reforming the mindset of the Arab and the Muslim individual in regards to the rest of humanity. I find it a bit of an insult to InFocus readers to undermind the intelligence of its target audiance by portraying Dr. Sultan as being used by enemies of Islam without her concious knowledge in this article. Islam, as a so called Abrahamic religion, is in need of serious reforms to save it from the fundemetalists grib that has taken the whole religion hostage to violence and fear. That is sufficient enough cause for InFocus to praise Dr. Sultan efforts in speaking out against those elements instead of casting doubt as to her real intentions. But of course we who can expect objectivity from a Muslim newspaper!!

What also seems to be more intersting is how Mr. Halabi is refusing to come forward with his real name when speaking about his friends. As the saying goes " With friends like this who needs enemies" !!



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Muslim Bridges - 100% Dawa...it is time
Covering all publications related to Islam and Muslims
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How would you best describe your thoughts on the film, "You Don't Mess With the Zohan"?
 
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