Orlando Sentinel

Values drive Muslims to aid those in need.

- By Zainab Arain

In the past month, the South and Southeaste­rn regions of the United States were besieged by climaterel­ated disasters. Hurricanes Harvey and Irma left at least 116 people dead and an estimated $290 billion in damages in their wake.

Motivated by the core Islamic teaching to aid those in need through compassion and service, American-Muslim individual­s and organizati­ons nationwide mobilized to provide emergency disaster-relief services preceding and following the onslaught of the storms.

In Houston, at least 25 mosques opened their doors to function as shelters, donation sites, supplydist­ribution hubs, or fundraisin­g spaces for the victims of Hurricane Harvey. American-Muslim-owned restaurant­s passed out hundreds of free meals to the 9,000 people sheltered in the city’s downtown convention center. The Islamic Society of Greater Houston, an umbrella organizati­on of local Islamic centers and mosques, compiled a list of on-call American-Muslim physicians to aid anyone in need of medical services.

Demonstrat­ing the spirit of concern encouraged by his faith, ISGH president M.J. Khan publicly announced in media interviews, “If you have no place to go, go to your neighborho­od mosque.”

More than 57 American-Muslim organizati­ons across the nation joined efforts to raise funds, with ICNA Relief USA dedicating more than $250,000 to relief efforts. In Dallas, 300 volunteers packed a room to attend an emergencys­helter training held by Islamic Relief to assist with the influx of evacuees coming to Dallas. ICNA Relief-Dallas solicited in-kind donations, partnering with local mosques to serve as donation drop-off centers, and coordinate­d with the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help with recovery and cleanup.

Following the catastroph­ic destructio­n of Hurricane Irma, mosques in Florida and Georgia emulated their counterpar­ts in Houston and Dallas to offer shelter and distribute aid. Atlanta’s Al Farooq Masjid created a map of more than 20 Islamic centers and mosques in the state that were providing assistance to hurricane evacuees.

Such outpouring­s of human and financial resources by the American-Muslim community are nothing new. After Hurricane Katrina wreaked havoc in 2005, a number of American-Muslim organizati­ons came together to form the Muslim Hurricane Task Force, which pledged to collect $10 million for the affected. Then too, mosques were on the front lines of relief efforts, functionin­g as shelters, donation hubs and health clinics.

It is these very mosques and Islamic centers, these pillars of community, faith and service, which have become targets of Islamophob­ic bigotry. Anti-Muslim extremists and politician­s have demanded mosques be subject to surveillan­ce and shut down, and dozens of mosques have suffered threats, arson and vandalism. In the first half of 2017, the Council on AmericanIs­lamic Relations recorded a 125 percent increase in the number of anti-mosque incidents as compared to the same period in 2016.

Bias incidents targeting American-Muslim communitie­s have likewise skyrockete­d over the past year. Comparing the first half of 2017 with that of 2016, hate crimes have increased 91 percent. In June, hundreds of anti-Muslim agitators collaborat­ed with white supremacis­t groups to hold rallies demonizing Islam. In January, the president of the United States instituted an executive order originally conceived as a way to ban Muslim entry into the country.

These are just a handful of examples that illustrate the toxic Islamophob­ic atmosphere that pollutes America and that American Muslims live and breathe every day. In spite of this, American Muslims launch into action, devoting time, energy and resources to help whenever their fellow Americans are in need because that is what their faith requires them to do.

This spirit of service is evident through innumerabl­e examples. American Muslims in Southern California founded UMMA Clinic, which provides free quality health care to the poor and underserve­d. IMAN Central works to address violence and poverty in Chicago. ICNA Relief operates 27 food pantries and kitchens, and five free health clinics across the country.

Following arson targeting eight black churches in the South, a group of American-Muslim organizati­ons launched an online campaign that raised more than $100,000 for rebuilding costs. When Jewish cemeteries were vandalized earlier this year, an online American-Muslimled fundraiser raised more than $100,000 in just over 24 hours. American Muslims donated 30,000 bottles of water to Flint, Mich., to help ameliorate the water crises.

Even as they are targeted for their faith, American Muslims exemplify their religious principle of being a benefit to society by supporting the country they reside in. As M.J. Khan eloquently said, “This is an obligation, a religious obligation to help others.”

 ??  ?? Zainab Arain is coordinato­r of the Department to Monitor & Combat Islamaphob­ia, part of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Washington, D.C.
Zainab Arain is coordinato­r of the Department to Monitor & Combat Islamaphob­ia, part of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Washington, D.C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States