The Muslims around the world have avoided their responsibility in asking
Mr. Shekau to have a conversation and acknowledge what God says in
multiple verses in Quran including 4:19 (Asad translation), “O YOU who
have attained to faith! It is not lawful for you to [try to] become
heirs to your wives [by holding onto them] against their will; and
neither shall you keep them under constraint with a view to taking away
anything of what you may have given them, unless it be that they have
become guilty, in an obvious man¬ner, of immoral conduct. …” These are
innocent girls this man is holding against their will.
URL - http://theghousediary.blogspot.com/2014/05/texas-faith-boko-haram-false-prophets.html
Mike Ghouse
Texas Faith: Boko Haram, false prophets and phony messiahs
By Rudolph Bush | rbush@dallasnews.com | 10:45 am on May 13, 2014 | Permalink
In Nigeria, a nation awaits the fate of 276 girls kidnapped by the
terrorist group Boko Haram. Like so many groups before it, this one is
led by a man who claims direct contact with God. History is filled with
false prophets and phony messiahs. Faith is twisted to justify the most
horrible acts. What can believers in all parts of the world do to resist
and challenge such people? And in our own part of the world, how do we
separate the subtler difference between those who use faith for their
own ends and those who are truly trying to bring us closer to God?
Mike Ghouse, President, Foundation for Pluralism and speaker on interfaith matters, Dallas
Poor
Religion has been an easy target of blame for the evils men do, as if
it is a tangible being that can be beat up, butchered, buried and put to
rest. Myths are manufactured about “other religions” without any
substantiation; it is an old business of maligning others to have a
variety of gains, but messing up the long term cohesiveness of the
societies, thus each one of us.
Finding the truth is our own
responsibility, as it brings relief to each one of us, and removes fears
and prejudices towards the others. Indeed, that was the unwritten
purpose of religion; to create societies where no one had to live in
fear of the other. Isn’t that the bottom line of God’s will? As a
society we have faltered in blaming the religion for the acts of
individuals.
Does blaming a religion mitigate the conflicts or
aggravate them? Do we separate the subtler difference between those who
use faith for their own ends, and those who are trying to do the right
thing?
A majority of people of faith shrink from the
responsibility of speaking up, and instead flame the blame and mess up
societal harmony even further. I will share two extreme examples of the
brutes in a civilized society like ours and “developing societies like
Nigeria” in this case.
In 2009, the words of Pastor Robert
Jeffress of the First Baptist Church of Dallas generated fear, anxieties
hate and ill-will, it was him and not the reflection of his Church,
even if the congregation sheepishly clapped and gave a standing ovation
in the Church when the pastor said, “Islam is an evil evil religion and
Quraan is a book written by a false prophet” with full passion. The
religious clergy of different faiths in Dallas did the right thing, they
spoke up and together we held a conference on Quran led by this
panelist of Dallas Morning News, the story in video and print is
captured at www.QuraanConference.com in its entirety.
Going to
the “lower end of the civility” (per bigots) in Nigeria , Abubakar
Shekau the Chief of Boko Haram shamelessly said that, “God instructed me
to sell them (the 276 girls), they are his properties and I will carry
out his instructions.” Like Pastor Jeffress he has duped his
congregation and the world to believe that it is his religion that made
him do or say the the wrongs.
The Muslims around the world have
avoided their responsibility in asking Mr. Shekau to have a conversation
and acknowledge what God says in multiple verses in Quran including
4:19 (Asad translation), “O YOU who have attained to faith! It is not
lawful for you to [try to] become heirs to your wives [by holding onto
them] against their will; and neither shall you keep them under
constraint with a view to taking away anything of what you may have
given them, unless it be that they have become guilty, in an obvious
man¬ner, of immoral conduct. …” These are innocent girls this man is
holding against their will.
Muslims rightfully claim that Prophet
Muhammad was a mercy to the mankind, and he was the first law giver who
liberated women from the clutches of men’s oppression, and declared
that men and women are each other’s protectors, and a woman has a right
to decide who she marries (1400 years ago, whereas she was considered a
chattel in the west until a hundred years ago), and has the right to
divorce and own her own property separately. Mr. Shekau is going against
the prophet, and it needs to be called out.
The first word
revealed to the Prophet was “Learn” and Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) had
famously said, “Learn, even if you have to go to China to learn, do it,
learning is important, “he further beefed it up by adding that a woman’s
education is a must, as she must willingly sign the marriage or a
business contract and that obviously required education. Mr. Shekau on
the other hand believes education for girls is evil.
The more we
push them, we essentially tell them to dig in. Dialogue opens up
opportunities with least damage and least cost. On our part in the west,
we have failed to communicate to the world that our education system is
designed to deliver good for the society at large. It is necessary for
us to learn and share about each other in a world of increasing
conflicts to mitigate conflicts and nurture goodwill. Pluralism is the
way forward; that is respecting the otherness of others and accepting
the God given uniqueness.
To read the other panelists point of view, please go to Dallas Morning News at: http://dallasmorningviewsblog.dallasnews.com/2014/05/texas-faith-boko-haram-false-prophets-and-phony-messiahs.html/#more-39000
...............................................................................................................................
Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a
writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work
place. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. He believes in
Standing up for others
and a book with the same title is coming up. Mike has a strong presence on
national and local TV, Radio and Print Media. He is a frequent guest on Sean Hannity show on
Fox TV, and a commentator on national radio networks, he contributes weekly to
the Texas Faith Column at Dallas
Morning News; fortnightly at Huffington post; and
several other periodicals across the world. His personal site www.MikeGhouse.net indexes all his work
through many links.
B U L L E T I N
PLEASE VISIT www.CenterforPluralism.com for all information - Please note that this site was Foundation for Pluralism before
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