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Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, Other Muslim Scholars and Tauriyya

Author: Hussein Hajji Wario
Date: 09.09.2010
Category: World Faiths, Truth and Pluralism, Reconciliation

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Originally Posted in English

Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, the man behind the proposed Islamic center near Ground Zero, has started writing and speaking about his project. When I heard about the man and read he was a “Sufi” Muslim, I had wondered how a Sufi could make such explosive political statements as “Osama bin Laden was made in USA,” US “was accessory to the crimes” of 9/11 or “that the United States has more Muslim blood on its hands than al Qaeda has on its hands of innocent non-Muslims.”

For starters, Sufi Muslims are apolitical and pacifists and they hate confrontations of any kind. A prominent Sufi Muslim and scholar Dr. Alan Godlas says “the Sufi surrenders to God, in love, over and over; which involves embracing with love at each moment the content of one’s consciousness (one’s perceptions, thoughts, and feelings, as well as one’s sense of self) as gifts of God or, more precisely, as manifestations of God.” Sufi Muslims live a busy life of meditation. They care about God and abhor drawing any attention to themselves. Imam Abdul Rauf lacks traditional Sufi traits because he draws attention to himself, most notably, taking credit for President Obama’s speech in Cairo. You can hear him here.

Sufi Muslims hate a confrontation of any kind yet this Imam wrote in the New York Times, “We are proceeding with the community center, Cordoba House. More important, we are doing so with the support of the downtown community, government at all levels and leaders from across the religious spectrum, who will be our partners.” Sufi Muslims are humble. They listen to concerns of people who disagree with them. Has this Imam considered the voices of 911 families? Most of them are definitely opposed to his project. Why is he so confrontational and defiant? A Sufi wouldn’t have come this far offending people.

He continued, “The very word “islam” comes from a word cognate to shalom, which means peace in Hebrew. The Koran declares in its 36th chapter, regarded by the Prophet Muhammad as the heart of the Koran, in a verse deemed the heart of this chapter, “Peace is a word spoken from a merciful Lord.”” This is verse 58 of chapter 36 and refers to Muslims in paradise. Imam Abdul Rauf is really good at misleading the public. He quotes a verse, which to unsuspecting non-Muslims sound really reassuring but very frightening if they actually know what it means. This is a very important chapter in Islam and it is recited for the dead or those close to death. Verses 59 to 63 are about unbelievers (those who did not believe Prophet Muhammad’s message: Christians, Jews, etc) in hell. The chapter was revealed in Mecca when Islam was in its nascent stage. At that time, alcohol and pork were halal (permissible to Muslims). Prophet Muhammad had only one wife. Wife beating was unheard of. Islam was about peace because Muslims were minority and were being persecuted.

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Keywords: Ground Zero Mosque, Sufism, religious freedom, Islam

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