Muslim Anti-Racist Collaborative Centres Black Voices

 

http://www.patheos.com/blogs/mmw/2014/03/muslim-anti-racist-collaborative-centres-black-muslim-voices/

March 18, 2014 By  

Black Muslims took to Twitter last month in light of Black History Month, which is celebrated in February in North America. The Muslim Anti-Racist Collaborative (MuslimARC), a collaborative of diverse Muslims dedicated to combatting anti-Black racism, discrimination and exclusion within the Muslim community, launched a Twitter campaign that has opened the door to discussing anti-black racism within the Muslim community.

In an interview over email correspondence, Margari Hill, a member of MuslimARC, said that discussions began in 2013 about creating a Twitter campaign that would shed a spotlight on Black experience within the Muslim community. The call out was sent out in the second week of the month, notifying Black Muslims to participate in the live twitter conversations#BeingBlackandMuslim, #UmmahAntiBlackness, and #BlackMuslimFuture.

The #BeingBlackandMuslim campaign has situated Black Muslims as the drivers and leaders of the discussion that proceeded and was covered on Al Jazeera’s “The Stream.” One of the main events that prompted the creation of the Twitter campaign was CAIR- Michigan’s Executive Director Dawud Walid’s article entitled “Responses to my calling out the term ‘abeed’,” which denounced the use of the word, which means “slave” and has been used by both Christian and Muslim Arabs for Black people. As Margari told me in our email correspondence,

“Dawud Walid began to address the frequent use of the the Arabic slur word ab**d among Muslim and Christian Arabs. Several members of MuslimARC’s original core supported his Twitter campaign, and we were all shocked to see numerous Muslims who professed faith be so casually racist. Dawud Walid’s article on how individuals responded to his campaign went viral.”

Some key tweets from the #BeingBlackandMuslim conversation:

Tweet by @Payitforward87#BeingBlackAndMuslim Where did the persecuted Sahaba/Muslims flee to? Abyssinia? (Ethiopia, Africa). Preservation of islam by black Africans

Tweet by @illy_dae: Facing white supremacy, arab supremacy AND the patriarchy, and still we rise. #BeingBlackAndMuslim #BeingaBlackMuslimWoman

Tweet by @BlkonPalestine: Theoretical invisibility of African Muslims is part of Muslim anti-blkness premised on a Middle Eastern model of Islam.#BeingBlackAndMuslim

Non-Black Muslims also encouraged others to not derail the conversation and to allow Muslims who experience anti-black racism to voice their stories of both struggle and empowerment.

Tweet by @noor3amoor: If you’re a non-black Muslim, pay attention to#BeingBlackAndMuslim & evaluate your own internalized anti-blackness. Do not deny / derail.

Some Muslims engaged in the conversation with the notion that “We are all Muslim,” yet they were quickly met with responses that explained the particular and very real experience of marginalized Black voices in predominately South Asian and Arab Muslim communities.

“For Muslims to be engaging in anti-black racism is unacceptable given the main thread that connects us: a religion that is explicitly against racism,” says Namira Islam, another member of MuslimARC, about the importance of centering conversations about anti-blackness in the ummah.

Margari further explains,

“Muslims are long overdue for an internal conversation; we need to have a family meeting about this taboo topic. Stereotypes and discrimination have shaped the ways that we interact on a communal level. We are supposed to pretend that we are on a unified front in face of the onslaught of Islamophobia, but it is clear that there are fissures.”

I participated in the first conversation and was energized by joining in with other Black Muslims who have experienced marginalization and racism within the broader Muslim community. I had wanted to include and open a space for folks were identify as queer and Muslim, so I tweeted:

Tweet by @_aisharae#BeingBlackandMuslim woman, queer, and/or trans….anyone ready to talk about this? We are a diverse and vibrant people.

There is always the need to ensure that we are not silencing the stories and experiences of others in our attempts to make pathways to our liberation. The added measure of being queer, along with a Black Muslim identity, contributes to further marginalization, isolation that needs to be addressed Although the tweet didn’t go far into discussions of queer experience, scholars, artists, students who identified both as Muslim and queer had an opportunity recognize and acknowledge each other and have side conversations on the struggle of resisting on multiple fronts beyond our race and faith.

Through using the social media platform, Namira and Margari and the folks at MuslimARC are sparking an international dialogue that could potentially inspire and influence a change in the relational dynamics between non-Black and Black Muslims.

“Islamophobia is external, and antiblack racism is internal. At the end of the day, they’re two separate issues […] it’s important to take care of our intrafamily issues.”

DawudWalid

Dawud Walid is currently the Executive Director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-MI), which is a chapter of America's largest advocacy and civil liberties organization for American Muslims and is a member of the Michigan Muslim Community Council (MMCC) Imams Committee. Walid has been interviewed and quoted in approximately 150 media outlets ranging from the New York Times, Wall St Journal, National Public Radio, CNN, BBC, FOX News and Al-Jazeera. Furthermore, Walid was a political blogger for the Detroit News from January 2014 to January 2016, has had essays published in the 2012 book All-American: 45 American Men on Being Muslim, the 2014 book Qur'an in Conversation and was quoted as an expert in 13 additional books and academic dissertations. He was also a featured character in the 2013 HBO documentary "The Education of Mohammad Hussein." Walid has lectured at over 50 institutions of higher learning about Islam, interfaith dialogue and social justice including at Harvard University, DePaul University and the University of the Virgin Islands - St. Thomas and St. Croix campuses as well as spoken at the 2008 and 2011 Congressional Black Caucus Conventions alongside prominent speakers such as the Rev. Jesse Jackson and Congressman Keith Ellison. In 2008, Walid delivered the closing benediction at the historic 52nd Michigan Electoral College in the Michigan State Senate chambers and gave the Baccalaureate speech for graduates of the prestigious Cranbrook-Kingswood Academy located in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Walid was also a featured speaker at the 2009 and 2010 Malian Peace and Tolerance Conferences at the University of Bamako in Mali, West Africa. He has also given testimony at hearings and briefings in front of Michigan state legislators and U.S. congressional representatives, including speaking before members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus in Washington, D.C. Walid has studied under qualified scholars the disciplines of Arabic grammar and morphology, foundations of Islamic jurisprudence, sciences of the exegesis of the Qur’an, and Islamic history during the era of Prophet Muhammad through the governments of the first 5 caliphs. He previously served as an imam at Masjid Wali Muhammad in Detroit and the Bosnian American Islamic Center in Hamtramck, Michigan, and continues to deliver sermons and lectures at Islamic centers across the United States and Canada. Walid was a 2011 - 2012 fellow of the University of Southern California (USC) American Muslim Civil Leadership Institute (AMCLI) and a 2014 - 2015 fellow of the Wayne State Law School Detroit Action Equity Lab (DEAL). Walid served in the United States Navy under honorable conditions earning two United States Navy & Marine Corp Achievement medals while deployed abroad. He has also received awards of recognition from the city councils of Detroit and Hamtramck and from the Mayor of Lansing as well as a number of other religious and community organizations.

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