Black; Muslim; Elected to Congress; Controversy

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
America, Not Keith Ellison, decides what
book a congressman takes his oath on


First African American from Minnesota and First Muslim elected
to Congress announced he will take on Oath on Koran, not Bible.
Dennis Prager, Conservative talkshow host says, its Un-American



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By Dennis Prager
Townhall.com
Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Keith Ellison, D-Minn., the first Muslim elected to the United States Congress, has announced that he will not take his oath of office on the Bible, but on the bible of Islam, the Koran.

He should not be allowed to do so -- not because of any American hostility to the Koran, but because the act undermines American civilization.

First, it is an act of hubris that perfectly exemplifies multiculturalist activism -- my culture trumps America's culture. What Ellison and his Muslim and leftist supporters are saying is that it is of no consequence what America holds as its holiest book; all that matters is what any individual holds to be his holiest book.

Forgive me, but America should not give a hoot what Keith Ellison's favorite book is. Insofar as a member of Congress taking an oath to serve America and uphold its values is concerned, America is interested in only one book, the Bible. If you are incapable of taking an oath on that book, don't serve in Congress. In your personal life, we will fight for your right to prefer any other book. We will even fight for your right to publish cartoons mocking our Bible. But, Mr. Ellison, America, not you, decides on what book its public servants take their oath.

Devotees of multiculturalism and political correctness who do not see how damaging to the fabric of American civilization it is to allow Ellison to choose his own book need only imagine a racist elected to Congress. Would they allow him to choose Hitler's "Mein Kampf," the Nazis' bible, for his oath? And if not, why not? On what grounds will those defending Ellison's right to choose his favorite book deny that same right to a racist who is elected to public office?

Of course, Ellison's defenders argue that Ellison is merely being honest; since he believes in the Koran and not in the Bible, he should be allowed, even encouraged, to put his hand on the book he believes in. But for all of American history, Jews elected to public office have taken their oath on the Bible, even though they do not believe in the New Testament, and the many secular elected officials have not believed in the Old Testament either. Yet those secular officials did not demand to take their oaths of office on, say, the collected works of Voltaire or on a volume of New York Times editorials, writings far more significant to some liberal members of Congress than the Bible. Nor has one Mormon official demanded to put his hand on the Book of Mormon. And it is hard to imagine a scientologist being allowed to take his oath of office on a copy of "Dianetics" by L. Ron Hubbard.

So why are we allowing Keith Ellison to do what no other member of Congress has ever done -- choose his own most revered book for his oath?

The answer is obvious -- Ellison is a Muslim. And whoever decides these matters, not to mention virtually every editorial page in America, is not going to offend a Muslim. In fact, many of these people argue it will be a good thing because Muslims around the world will see what an open society America is and how much Americans honor Muslims and the Koran.

This argument appeals to all those who believe that one of the greatest goals of America is to be loved by the world, and especially by Muslims because then fewer Muslims will hate us (and therefore fewer will bomb us).

But these naive people do not appreciate that America will not change the attitude of a single American-hating Muslim by allowing Ellison to substitute the Koran for the Bible. In fact, the opposite is more likely: Ellison's doing so will embolden Islamic extremists and make new ones, as Islamists, rightly or wrongly, see the first sign of the realization of their greatest goal -- the Islamicization of America.

When all elected officials take their oaths of office with their hands on the very same book, they all affirm that some unifying value system underlies American civilization. If Keith Ellison is allowed to change that, he will be doing more damage to the unity of America and to the value system that has formed this country than the terrorists of 9-11. It is hard to believe that this is the legacy most Muslim Americans want to bequeath to America. But if it is, it is not only Europe that is in trouble.

Dennis Prager is a radio show host, contributing columinst for Townhall.com, and author of 4 books including Happiness Is a Serious Problem: A Human Nature Repair Manual.

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/...des_what_book_a_congressman_takes_his_oath_on
 
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On the other hand, the Jewish reaction ...

Jewish groups slam Prager for Koran remarks

December 5, 2006

Jewish groups slammed Dennis Prager for his attack on a congressman who plans to use a Koran in a private swearing-in ceremony.

In his column this week Prager, a conservative talk-show host and author of a number of books on Judaism, rapped the plan by U.S. Rep.-elect Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), saying it would do “more damage to the unity of America and to the value system that has formed this country than the terrorists of 9-11.”

Prager said that all members of Congress, including Jews, use a Christian Bible for swearing in.

In fact, members of the U.S. House of Representatives are sworn in en masse with no holy books. Some members later hold private, unofficial photo-op ceremonies holding a family Bible, the ceremony to which Ellison, the first Muslim elected to Congress, was referring.

Prager’s column was “intolerant, misinformed and downright un-American,” the Anti-Defamation League said, adding that Prager’s recent appointment to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council holds him to a higher standard.

The Reform movement’s Religious Action Center said Prager’s was a “shameful argument” that would harm Jews were it to gain currency.



http://jta.org/page_view_breaking_story.asp?intid=5856
 
I'd be surprised if anyone here would agree with Prager's assessment. Keith Ellison's party is not the right wing. Nuff Said.

-VG
 
<font size="5"><center>In Virgil Goode's America, no room for Muslims</font size></center>

Extracted From:
Foreign Policy.com
December 21, 2006


Virginia Congressman Virgil Goode on Kieth Ellison's use of the Koran in his swearing in ceremony where Ellison will swear under oath to defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies foreign and domestic:

Virgil_goode.jpg

Virgil Goode

"I can not subscribe to using the Koran in any way.

The Muslim Representative from Minnesota was elected by voters of that district and if American citizens don't wake up and adopt the Virgil Goode position on immigration, there will likely be many more Muslims elected to office and demanding the use of the Koran."​



http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/node/2802
 
<font size="5"><center>Lawmaker Stands Firm on Quran Criticism</font size></center>

ELLISON_QURAN.sff_NYOL976_20061221231500.jpg

Minnesota Rep. Keith Ellison, the first Muslim elected to Congress,
is shown in this September file photo. Republican Rep. Virgil Goode
said Thursday that he will not retract a letter warning that unless
immigration is tightened, "many more Muslims will be elected" and
use the Quran to take the oath of office. (AP Photo/Jim Mone, File)



Dec 21, 11:16 PM (ET)
Associated Press
By SUE LINDSEY

ROCKY MOUNT, Va. (AP) - A congressman said Thursday that he will not retract a letter warning that unless immigration is tightened, "many more Muslims will be elected" and use the Quran to take the oath of office.

Republican Rep. Virgil Goode triggered angry responses from a civil rights group and some colleagues with a letter this month to constituents concerned about a decision by Rep.-elect Keith Ellison of Minnesota, the first Muslim elected to Congress, to use the Quran when he is sworn in.

"I will not be putting my hand on the Quran," Goode said at a news conference Thursday at the Franklin County Courthouse.

Goode, who represents Virginia's 5th Congressional District, said he is receiving more positive comments from constituents than negative.

"One lady told me she thinks I'm doing the right thing on this," he told Fox News. "I wish more people would take a stand and stand up for the principles on which this country was founded."

Goode also told Fox News he wants to limit legal immigration and do away with "diversity visas," which he said let in people "not from European countries" and "some terrorist states."

In his letter, Goode wrote that strict immigration polices are necessary "to preserve the values and beliefs traditional to the United States of America."

"The Muslim representative from Minnesota was elected by the voters of that district and if American citizens don't wake up and adopt the Virgil Goode position on immigration there will likely be many more Muslims elected to office and demanding the use of the Koran," he wrote.

Ellison said Thursday that Goode and others had nothing to fear about Muslims.

"They are our nurses, doctors, husbands, wives, kids, who just want to live and prosper in the American way," Ellison, a Democrat from Minneapolis, said Thursday on CNN when asked what he would say to Goode if they met. "All of us are steadfastly opposed to the same people he's opposed to, which is terrorists, and so there's nothing for him to be afraid of."

Asked whether he thought Goode was a bigot, Ellison said, "I don't know the fellow, and I'd rather just say that he has a lot to learn about Islam. ... I don't want to start any name-calling."

Virginia's senior senator, Republican John Warner, said in a statement Thursday that he respects the right of congressional members to freely "exercise the religion of their choice, including those of the Islamic faith utilizing the Quran."

Rep. Rahm Emanuel, an Illinois Democrat who is Jewish, said Thursday that he hoped Goode would meet with Ellison, saying he would "see what I saw: a good American with good values of a different faith who's trying to do right by the people he represents."

The Council on American-Islamic Relations had asked Goode to apologize, saying the remarks sent "a message of intolerance that is unworthy of anyone elected to public office."

Ellison was born in Detroit and converted to Islam in college.

His decision to use the Quran at his ceremonial swearing-in next month prompted criticism from conservative talk radio host Dennis Prager. The American-Islamic relations council has called for Prager's removal from the board of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

---

Associated Press writers Matt Reed in Richmond and Frederic J. Frommer in Washington contributed to this report.


http://apnews1.iwon.com//article/20061222/D8M5LONG0.html
 
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The ADL, a Jewish group, weighs in:

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What radio Islam says about the ADL:

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I keep hearing on the radio that he should respect the Judeo-Christian basis of our nation. However, alot of them had slaves and prohibited women & blacks from voting.

We should come up with our own "beliefs" and quit trying emulate what the founder would do today. It is obvious they were flawed in character but had some noble ideas for white men.
 
In the old days disgruntled peasants would open the gates so invaders could ravish and overtrow the kingdom. Letting a member of an ideology we are at war with determine which Bible he swears on could be seen as a dumbass step backwards.
 
COINTELPRO said:
I keep hearing on the radio that he should respect the Judeo-Christian basis of our nation. However, alot of them had slaves and prohibited women & blacks from voting.
I think there is some question as to exactly what "Judeo-Christian basis of our nation" means. It seems to mean different things to different people and what some say it means seems to be lacking a constitutional basis.

We should come up with our own "beliefs" and quit trying emulate what the founder would do today. It is obvious they were flawed in character but had some noble ideas for white men.
All men have flaws and the founders certainly are no exception. On the other hand, do you consider all of the founding principles flawed or some in particular ??? Would you improve upon those lacking or destroy them all ??? What would any nation be without certain underpinning priniciples ???

QueEx
 
nittie said:
... Letting a member of an ideology we are at war with determine which Bible he swears on could be seen as a dumbass step backwards.
What principle, law, statute, rule, regulation or constitutional provision says that a religious book must be used; and what principle, law, statute, rule, regulation or constitutional provision says that the <u>Bible</u> must be used ???

QueEx
 
If taking an OATH has to do with ONES PERSONAL CONVICTIONS, then why shouldnt he use the BOOK he BELIEVES IN?

These Whites talking about The Founding Fathers and all this other bullshit. Taking land from Native Americans and Slavery and all that. But when "WE" bitch about the past, they wanna say "Times Have Changed. Forgive and Forget". Well if times really have changed, then the Brother should be allowed to use Al Quraan.


The Jews Never Forgets.
 
nittie said:
In the old days disgruntled peasants would open the gates so invaders could ravish and overtrow the kingdom. Letting a member of an ideology we are at war with determine which Bible he swears on could be seen as a dumbass step backwards.

Are you serious? an IDEOLOGY WE ARE AT WAR WITH?
America is in war with "TERRORIST", not The Religion of ISLAM.
Ill Take My Shahadah just so i can whup your ass.
 
I thought there was freedom of choice here in the "United States"... :rolleyes:

Where's that clip of Colmes' bitch ass getting schooled on TV by that dude who was talking about this issue?

This country is becoming less desirable to live in. It's getting out of hand. We need a change, and fast...
 
tp2001 said:
... This country is becoming less desirable to live in. It's getting out of hand. We need a change, and fast...
If you could propose one law/rule that you believe would make a substantial difference in the direction the country is headed in -- what would it be ??? In as many sentences as you like, give us an example of your "make-a-difference-law".

QueEx
 
J Storm said:
Are you serious? an IDEOLOGY WE ARE AT WAR WITH?
America is in war with "TERRORIST", not The Religion of ISLAM.
Ill Take My Shahadah just so i can whup your ass.

You would have to take more than a Shahadah to whup my ass, don't really appreciate you thinking something like that. And whether you realize it or not we are at war with radical Islam or have you been living in a cave somewhere.
 
nittie said:
You would have to take more than a Shahadah to whup my ass, don't really appreciate you thinking something like that. And whether you realize it or not we are at war with radical Islam or have you been living in a cave somewhere.

RADICAL ISLAM!!! you said it.
The Key word is "RADICAL" !
Just because you believe in the QURAN doesnt make you a RADICAL.
I know a lot of Chirsitans who are quick to say They Believe in the BIBLE and JESUS CHRIST but dont live as Christ.

Are you a CHRISTIAN or Just an ASSHOLE?
And No I dont need to take my SHAHADAH to WHUP YOUR ASS.
This is AMERICA and the CONSERVATIVE GUN LOBBY is sloppy on GUN CONTROL. Is that better?
 
QueEx said:
If you could propose one law/rule that you believe would make a substantial difference in the direction the country is headed in -- what would it be ??? In as many sentences as you like, give us an example of your "make-a-difference-law".

QueEx

That's a great question. I don't know about making a new law off the top of my head, but I'd like to see these so called "freedoms" actually being executed better than they are today...You have freedom of speech, choice, religion, expession, etc. that are supposed to be excercised in this country but it seems like day-by-day those are being taken away from more and more people out here.

Maybe the Constitution needs to be revised...I don't know. I'll come up with something later...
 
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Black Muslim US Congressman

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Minneapolis, Minnesota, Keith Ellison speaks at the June 6 - 8 Free Press NCMR (National Conference on Media Reform) Event 20[WM]http://cdn.liveleak.com/17/media17/2008/Sep/14/LiveLeak-dot-com-226106-FK_2.wmv[/WM]
 
Re: Black Muslim US Congressman

People don't know yet,

But there's a Sista who's a Republican that's vying for his seat.

Barb Davis White.

She was at Ron Paul's event a few weeks ago.


barbwhite.gif
 
Re: Black Muslim US Congressman

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Re: Black Muslim US Congressman

<font size="5"><center>
Rep. Ellison arrested at D.C. Darfur protest</font size></center>



KeithEllison.f.jpg




By Emily Kaiser in Politics
Monday, Apr. 27 2009


Minnesota Rep. Keith Ellison was arrested today along with seven others in front of the Sudanese Embassy in Washington, D.C. He was protesting the removal of several aid groups from Darfur.

Ellison said he thought it was wrong to not help "the most vulnerable people on our planet" as he was being taken away.


Ellison spokesman Rick Jauert emailed a Save Darfur Coalition press release with more details on the incident:
Members of Congress - including Representatives Jim McGovern (D-MA), John Lewis (D-GA), Donna Edwards (D-MD), Keith Ellison (D-MN) and Lynn Woolsey (D-CA) - and Darfur activist leaders were today arrested for civil disobedience outside of the Sudanese Embassy while protesting the deteriorating humanitarian crisis in Darfur. Participants called on the international community to impose clear costs on the Sudanese government if it continues its use of starvation as a weapon of war. Additionally, advocates urged President Obama to be firm in responding to the impending humanitarian crisis, promoting international justice and working toward a viable long-term peace that includes Darfur and a reinvigorated Comprehensive Peace Agreement for the south.

After speaking on the steps of the embassy to a group of local activists and Darfuris, members of Congress and activist leaders were asked by police to leave the scene. When the protest continued, officers arrested Representatives McGovern, Lewis, Edwards, Ellison and Woolsey along with Save Darfur Coalition president Jerry Fowler, Enough Project co-founder John Prendergast and Rabbi David Saperstein, director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism.​

Ann Brown of Save Darfur says the representatives were arrested around 10:45 a.m. Eastern time and were unable to take cell phones with them. She said this type of arrest usually takes about two hours to process, so they are likely still in custody.

Jauert told Minnesota Public Radio that the representatives planned the arrest and Ellison was arrested for civil disobedience. He expects Ellison to be released from custody today.
It leaves these people with no lifeline whatsoever and so that is why the congressman and the other members of Congress have decided that they need to do something that hopefully will bring a heightened awareness to what is happening on our clock," Jauert said.​


http://blogs.citypages.com/blotter/2009/04/rep_ellison_arr.php
 
Re: Black Muslim US Congressman

I really thought it was a dumb point due to the obvious answer

If you are religious and made to swear the uphold what is true and was made to swear on a doctrine which means nothing to you, then the pact made is invalid. If he doesn't believe in the bible, his going through the motions would be meaningless, at least he is attempting to put forth his integrity.
 
Re: Black Muslim US Congressman

<font size="5"><center>
Christian Minister: Muslim Congressman's
Support Of 'Homosexuals' Is Part Of Sharia Plot</font size></center>



ellison-dean-cropped-proto-custom_2.jpg



TPM
Ryan J. Reilly
December 2, 2010


A Christian minister in Minnesota said on his radio program that the nation's first Muslim member of Congress was soliciting the support of the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community to implement Sharia law. Follow his logic with us, wouldn't you?

Bradlee Dean of the religious ministry You Can Run But You Cannot Hide International said on his radio program that Rep. Keith Ellison (D-MN) is only supporting LGBT rights as part of a strategy to bring Sharia law to the United States, the Minnesota Independent reported.

"I said time and time again that there is a correlation between the Muslims and the homosexual agenda, and we have a couple of fools in the state of Minnesota that are putting a rope around their neck and they just don't realize it," Dean said on a radio. "Here, let me give it to you this way: Keith Ellison is a Muslim."

Dear reasoned that Ellison's support of protections for the LGBT community (like the Matthew Shepard Act) and for same-sex marriage is part of a plot to overthrow the Constitution and put Sharia law in its place.

"Why is he so adamant about overthrowing the Constitution as it is right now? Because if you pay attention to the plow he's planting the seed," Dean said. "He's trying to come through with Sharee [sic] law."

"Does somebody want to talk to the homosexual community in the state of Minnesota and tell them what he is doing?" Dean continued. "Go online, folks! You love the homosexuals so much then why don't you tell them who they've appointed as their chairperson? He's a Muslim!"

"Hello? Why is he after it? Because he wants to bring in Sharee [sic] law through the homosexual agenda!"

"What is Keith up to? I think we have to ask the question, Keith," said Dean. "I'm just asking the gay communities what's up with Keith Ellison because they are so foolish, blind and stupid not to figure out that their vice chair is a Muslim. This is no hidden secret, folks. This is in America. Who is this guy working for?"

A spokesperson for Ellison, who serves as co-chair of the House LGBT Caucus, did not immediately respond to TPM's request for comment.

As the Minnesota Independent points out, Dean and his ministry "have close ties to the Republican Party and GOP elected officials and candidates including former gubernatorial candidate Tom Emmer, Gov. Tim Pawlenty, former Secretary of State and current state Rep. Mary Kiffmeyer, and state Rep. Dan Severson." Rep. Michele Bachmann has also fundraised for the group, the news website said.

Listen to the audio at the Minnesota Independent.


http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsme...ort_of_homosexuals_is_part_of_sharia_plot.php
 
Army makes history by putting a Muslim in charge of a division’s spiritual needs


islamic%20chaplain_1

Army Lt. Col. Khallid Shabazz prays five time a day as an Islamic chaplain at the Main Post Chapel on JBLM. Last month, Shabazz received
the call every Army chaplain dreams of, the call that validates years of intense study and hard work toward keeping the U.S. military in good
spiritual health as a division chaplain at JBLM. Lui Kit Wong lwong@thenewstribune.com


islamic%20chaplain_2

Army Lt. Col. Khallid Shabazz leads a discussion with fellow chaplains on JBLM on Feb. 22, 2017. Last month, Lt. Col. Khallid Shabazz
received the call every Army chaplain dreams of, the call that validates years of intense study and hard work toward keeping the U.S.
military in good spiritual health as a division chaplain at JBLM. Lui Kit Wong lwong@thenewstribune.com


By Hannah Allam
February 24, 2017

WASHINGTON
Last month, Lt. Col. Khallid Shabazz received the call every Army chaplain dreams of, the call that validates years of intense study and hard work toward keeping the U.S. military in good spiritual health.

He was offered the job of chaplain for an entire division, an honor for anyone in his field, but a milestone in his case. After a ceremony this summer, Shabazz will become the first Muslim division-level chaplain in the history of the U.S. military – a Muslim spiritual leader for more than 14,000 mostly Christian soldiers.

Shabazz, who’s dedicated his life to working across religious lines, found it hard to keep calm as he received the news at his desk on Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, Washington.

“I’m on the phone saying, ‘Thank you, I appreciate it, I’ll serve honorably,’ and then I hang up the phone and I’m jumping all around like a little kid,” Shabazz, 48, recalled in interviews this month. “I was running around the office saying, al hamdulillah, al hamdulillah, praise be to God!”

To get a sense of what a long shot this might’ve seemed like to Shabazz, consider the numbers. He’s one of only 56 Muslim chaplains in the entire U.S. military; the Army alone has around 1,400 chaplains. He said more than 140 other chaplains of his rank were vying for division-level jobs. And the number of Muslim division chaplains in the military’s 241-year history: Zero.


“When you get the call saying you have been bestowed a division, the news is kind of like, unearthly,” Shabazz said. “The list is so small and it’s such a tough cut.”

With four months until the ceremony that will make him chaplain of the Army’s 7th Infantry Division at Lewis-McChord, Shabazz has plenty of time to think about taking on such a visible role in an age of open anti-Muslim hostility. He’d like to think his transition will be as smooth as those of his Christian peers, but he knows that not everyone will welcome him as warmly as the senior officers who gave him a standing ovation when the news was announced at a meeting on base.

“For me, a regular old guy from Louisiana, I look to the heavens and say, ‘Why me?’ ” Shabazz said. “As the day gets closer, I’m sure I’ll have more anxiety and think about it more. I’m extremely proud to have been on this journey for 20 years and never would’ve imagined that I’d be chosen to be the first.”

“Islamic guy in a leadership position?” he said. “If I think about it too much, it’ll get overwhelming.”


Religious roots

Shabazz came into the world as Michael Barnes, born into a large Lutheran family in Alexandria, Louisiana, about three hours from New Orleans.

Faith was at the center of the household. His mother took the family to church three times a week and recited prayers with her children each night. Shabazz, a lifelong athlete with a 6’5”, 255-pound frame, had to study catechism before he could play football and basketball on Saturdays.

Other kids might’ve grumbled about such a rigorous worship schedule, but Shabazz said he didn’t mind – from an early age, he was taken with the spirit of friendship and service.


“I like people who have a commonality of purpose,” Shabazz said. “We loved each other. If people had rent problems or other problems, the church pulled us together to take care of those problems.”

I don’t want to help just Muslims.
I don’t want to help just Christians.
I want to help people who are in distress.


- Army Lt. Col. Khallid Shabazz, chaplain.


After high school, Shabazz headed to Jarvis Christian College, a historically black college in the small town of Hawkins in eastern Texas. Upon graduation, he returned to Louisiana and began teaching biology to fifth-graders at an elementary school in his hometown. He said he wasn’t prepared for how despondent he’d become at seeing so many children whose growth was stymied by poverty or poor parenting; he struggled to accept that he couldn’t help them all.

After just six months, he quit. At age 23, he decided to join the Army, thinking that it would help him mature and make him a better, stronger teacher afterward.

“I thought, ‘I’ll do 20 years in the military and then I’ll teach and coach,’ ” Shabazz said. “But I fell in love with the idea and the paradigm of the military.”

While stationed in Baumholder, Germany, Shabazz worked the motor pool with a Muslim soldier who annoyed other troops with his boasts about the virtues of Islam. Shabazz, who back then was still Christian, grew fed up and decided “to cut him down to size.” He challenged the Muslim to a public debate on the merits of their respective religions.

On the afternoon of the showdown, Shabazz recalled, about 30 soldiers filled a meeting room on base. Shabazz was ready to pounce, but the Muslim opponent “kind of blindsided me with some facts,” launching into a powerful, persuasive defense of his faith that put Islam in a whole new light.

Shabazz, stunned, was down for the count.

“It was all-out cognitive dissonance, depression and shame, honestly,” Shabazz said, recalling his feelings at that moment. “I thought I had a stronghold on the truth. And, for the first time, my confidence was shaken in who I was as a human being and what I believed.”

Becoming Muslim

Shabazz immediately began studying Islam on his own, determined to correct the lack of knowledge revealed in his debate with the Muslim soldier. He’d work all day and then stay up well past midnight paging through the Bible and the Quran. He described it as going into a “cubbyhole.”

After two years, Michael Barnes, the devout Christian reared in a Louisiana church, decided to convert to Islam, taking the name Khallid Shabazz to complete his transformation. He said that there had been no single tipping point in his thinking, just a deep identification with Islamic tenets, such as the lack of a clerical hierarchy and the emphasis on charity.

EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM

“One of my favorite passages in the Quran asks if the man who thinks and the man who does are the same,” Shabazz said. “It’s the thinking component in Islam that really intrigued me. I am in control of my grace, and I don’t have to answer to the imam. I tell my congregation, ‘Listen, you have to do your own research.’ ”

EDITORS: END OPTIONAL TRIM

Unsurprisingly, Shabazz’s conversion did not play well with his family in Louisiana, where he’s still known as “Michael.” He said it took years for them to accept the change, but now they tease him about praying on time and make him a special gumbo minus the pork sausage. Such conciliatory gestures, Shabazz said, must go both ways.

“I do still go to church with my family – that’s an important part of reaching across the aisle,” he said. “It would be improper for me to disrespect something that instilled in me so much of who I am.”

Shabazz’s switch in faiths didn’t exactly go smoothly with the military, either. He had to write memos for even the smallest religious accommodation, such as time to perform the traditional Friday prayers. He’d fast during the holy month of Ramadan, though his schedule called for grueling work in the field. Ravenous by the end of the day, he’d come to the mess hall only to find pork chops. He’d raise concerns with his superiors from time to time, but made little ground.

“When you have an unknown there, sometimes the leadership kind of treats you unfairly because they’re not educated into what you’re doing,” Shabazz said. “In defense of them, I didn’t explain it very well, either. I was growing. There were some tough days.”

On one of the toughest days, Shabazz was exhausted from a series of 12-hour shifts and hungry because of the lack of pork-free meals. Sitting outside on an M109 howitzer, he felt his frustration spill out in tears. Nobody’s here for me, he thought. Maybe this organization is not for me.

A passing Army chaplain noticed Shabazz’s distress and stopped. In an hourlong impromptu ministry session, the chaplain let Shabazz pour his heart out about his struggle to carve a space for himself in the military. After listening, Shabazz said, the chaplain mentioned that the Army had recently received its first active-duty Muslim chaplain: Would that kind of path interest Shabazz?

“I’m telling you, it was like a revelation from God,” Shabazz recalled. “Once it came out of his mouth, I said, ‘That is my calling. That is what I want to do for the rest of my life.’ ”

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New challenges

The chaplain Shabazz encountered that day wrote him a letter of recommendation for the Chaplain Corps. When he was commissioned, Shabazz said, his mentor pulled him aside for a talk.

“He said, ‘Promise me you will be an advocate for our corps no matter what the faith or the background of the person is,’ ” Shabazz recalled. “It moved me to the very essence of my core. Here you have a devout Christian who’s taken the time to care for a young Muslim soldier and make sure I got to be a chaplain. I don’t want to help just Muslims. I don’t want to help just Christians. I want to help people who are in distress.”

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Shabazz has now been in the Army for 26 years, 18 years as a chaplain. He’s been deployed seven times – including Iraq, Kosovo and a stint at the U.S. prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where he was sent to advise commanders on religious issues after a string of scandals.

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He’s also dispatched to far-flung U.S. installations to minister to Muslim soldiers who are wrestling with the some of the same issues he faced as a young Muslim in the service.

The Department of Defense counts more than 6,000 self-identified Muslims currently serving, from a total of 1.3 million active-duty and more than 800,000 guard and reserve members. The real number of Muslims is thought to be higher because many troops choose not to list a religion, especially if they’re worried about backlash.

Iraq, where U.S. troops fought insurgents near some of Islam’s most sacred sites, was a particularly hard deployment for Muslim soldiers. Shabazz said he counseled anguished soldiers to remember the centrality of intention in Islam – what were their intentions for serving? He’d remind them that they were there because they’d enlisted and that the Quran honors contracts. He offered reassuring passages, words to lift the heavy weight of the war from their shoulders.

“In combat, it was tough. You’re trying to establish Muslim service and you’re in a Muslim country fighting against Muslims,” Shabazz said. “The young Muslim soldiers could come in and do jumaa (prayers) and be assured that somebody is listening to them. You hold guys in your arms and they’re crying and saying, ‘Thank you.’”

The concerns Shabazz hears these days are much different, but just as fraught.



Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/nation-world/world/article134745544.html#storylink=cpy


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I was surprised at this. But why is the oath taken on a bible? I have not read any of this yet. But the bible was made legal for the masses by a homosexual (king James). Why was he finally able to make it legal? And is that so called brother a Sunni Muslim or Nation Of Islam? I really do not believe any Nation Of Islam would be promoting or defending homosexuality.
We can consider getting involved in politics as a way of doing something, but there is no real change unless we separate and do for self. Congressman Ryan was the first and only Congressman to be killed in the line of duty. And that was for putting his nose in a CIA controlled mind control experiment and an experiment on how to infiltrate black organizations. Working beside the enemy they will do all to make sure you are a devil like them.
 
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