|
Islam Growing
in America, U.S. Military
"Islam is peace,"
President Bush said. And the United States is not against the religion of Islam,
he stresses, but those who pervert the religion to support terrorism and mass
murder.
By Jim Garamone American Forces Press Service, WASHINGTON, Oct. 4, 2001.
Muslims, those who believe in
Islam, are everywhere in the United States. They may be your doctor or drive
your taxi. They may serve you in restaurants or advise you in law. And they
increasingly may be in the same foxhole, manning the same position or working on
the same aircraft as you.
Islam is the second-largest
religion in the world, counting more than 1.3 billion believers. Americans have
the misconception that all Muslims are Arabs and that all Arabs are Muslims. In
fact, less than 20 percent of the Muslims in the world are Arab, and all Arab
countries have populations that believe in other religions. The nation with the
world's largest Islamic population is Indonesia -- 88 percent of its 280 million
people are Muslims.
In the United States, Islam is the
fastest growing religion, a trend fueled mostly by immigration. There are 5
million to 7 million Muslims in the United States. They make up between 10,000
and 20,000 members of the American military.
Army Chaplain (Capt.) Abdul-Rasheed
Muhammad is a Muslim Imam stationed at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in
Washington. In his chaplaincy, he ministers to all faiths.
Imam Muhammad said Muslims all
believe in the Five Pillars of the Faith. "The foundation of the faith, or
Shahada, is the testimony in the belief in one God and that Muhammad is a
messenger of God," he said.
Another of the pillars is prayer.
Muslims pray to Allah five times a day, at dawn, midday, afternoon, evening and
night. Wherever they are, they bow in the direction of Mecca, the Saudi Arabian
city where Muhammad was born, for their prayers.
Charity is another pillar, Imam
Muhammad said. "One gives a minimum of 2.5 percent of their wealth to the
Islamic community yearly," he said.
Another requirement is fasting
during the month of Ramadan each year. Ramadan begins Nov. 18 this year.
Finally, Muslims are expected, if
possible, to make a pilgrimage to Mecca once in a lifetime. This is the Hajj to
the Grand Mosque.
In addition to prayer, a
requirement of Islam is to not eat pork and not consume alcohol. Muslims gather
at mosques for religious services, called Jumah, on Fridays just after mid-noon.
Like many other religions, men typically do not mix with women during worship.
Muslim women wear the headscarf,
or hijab, and all Muslims must dress modestly. Men may wear a head covering
called a kufi, but it is not a requirement of the faith. The chaplain said one
of the obstacles for Muslim women serving in the U.S. military is that
commanders may authorize them to wear the hijab or not. "Some do, some
don't," he said.
Muslims accept vast portions of
the Bible and accept many Judeo-Christian teachings. Islam sees Jesus Christ as
a very holy man, but not the Son of God. But Muslims believe the Prophet
Muhammad received the revealed word of God -- and that is Islam's holy book, the
Koran.
Like the Bible, the Koran is open
to interpretation, up to a point. "Those terrorists must be reading a
completely different Koran than the rest of us," said Marine Corps Capt.
Aisha Bakkar-Poe. Bakkar-Poe is from Kentucky. Her father comes from Syria and
her mother from the States.
She said her co-workers have been
asking her about Islam since the attacks in New York and Washington. "The
question I get most often is, 'Who is this Allah guy,'" she said. "And
how could these fanatics make these attacks.
"I try to answer their
questions and explain that Islam does not believe in killing innocent men, women
and children."
Army Capt. Arneshuia Balial, a
nurse instructor at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and a Muslim, said the
terrorists claiming to act in the name of Islam was "like a knife through
my heart -- that people would practice Al-Islam, but do deeds like what they've
done. It's not true faith. Some people twist religion to the way they
think." Balial converted to Islam in 1987. She said the religion is more
than just a set of beliefs, it is a way of life.
Army Sgt. Jamal Abdel-Wahed is a
medical supply specialist at Walter Reed. Born in Jordan, he moved to the United
States in 1986 and is now a citizen. Abdel-Wahed said he has a good working
relationship with his co-workers.
"The people I work with are
all professionals, and we deal with each other in a professional manner,"
he said. Like many other Muslims in America he worries about the effect the
terrorist strike will have on his family. He said he hasn't experienced any
discrimination, but has heard reports. "I am proud of what I am, who I am
and what I believe in," he said.
All of the Muslim service members
said they would have no problem going to war against terrorism. "This isn't
about Islam," Bakkar-Poe said. "It's about terrorism."
Chaplain Muhammad said service
members must understand that their fellow soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and
Coast Guardsmen who are Muslim are just like they are. "It's important for
all of us to see ourselves as coming from the same origin," he said.
"It's too easy for people to get off on what's different.
"People have a way of just
being people," he continued. "That nature God has already put into us.
There's not one Polish nature or Italian nature or Muslim nature or Christian
nature. It's just human nature. When people get to the essence of what makes us
who we are, then that's what binds us together.
"The Koran says that God
created us different nations and tribes that we may come to know each other, not
that we should hate or despise each other."
|