The Herald-Mail
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11/06/2009

Local Muslims saddened by Fort Hood killings

By ANDREW SCHOTZ
andrews@herald-mail.com

HAGERSTOWN — Dr. Abdul Waheed said the Koran, Islam’s holy book, teaches this: “If you save one life, you save the entire human race. If you take a life, you kill the entire human race.”

Thursday’s mass shootings at the Fort Hood Army base in Texas — allegedly by a Muslim U.S. soldier preparing to be deployed to a war zone — violate the beliefs of Islam, Waheed said.

“Islam does not condone the killing of innocent people,” said Dr. Tanvir Pasha, the president of the Islamic Society of Western Maryland, which has a mosque near the eastern edge of Hagerstown.

Pasha and Waheed said Muslims, like the rest of the country, are saddened by the killings and have expressed sympathy.

“We’re supposed to share with people what we would want for ourselves,” said Kasim Burmi, the society’s imam, or spiritual leader.

The motivation for the shootings still wasn’t known Friday and there was no evidence they had anything to do with Islam.

Yet, Muslims prepared for backlash because the alleged shooter is a Muslim, said Louay Safi of the Islamic Society of North America, who spoke at the local mosque Friday.

Safi said Muslims, at times like this, speak up to clarify their religion.

Islam espouses love and peace, Waheed said, and the majority of the local community seems to understand that.

“We are doctors, attorneys, accountants,” he said. “Many of our children serve in the armed forces.”

Safi said there are at least 15,000 Muslims on active duty in the U.S. military. Some have died fighting violent extremists; some are buried at Arlington National Cemetery, he said.

The Washington, D.C.-based Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) on Thursday condemned the Fort Hood shootings as a “cowardly attack.”

“No religious or political ideology could ever justify or excuse such wanton and indiscriminate violence,” CAIR’s press release says.

On Friday, MAS Freedom, which is connected to the Muslim American Society, also denounced the shootings and cautioned against making conclusions based on the alleged shooter’s ethnicity.

During a phone interview Friday afternoon, the Rev. Ed Poling of Hagerstown Church of the Brethren, the coordinator of the Interfaith Coalition of Washington County, said he hopes the fact that the alleged shooter is Muslim “doesn’t create more division along religious lines.”


Reader Comments:

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From: tyrone

Fri 06 Nov 2009 11:53:57 PM EST
“No religious or political ideology could ever justify or excuse such wanton and indiscriminate violence,” CAIR’s press release says. From Mohammed beheading the Jews of Medina, to the expansion to Islam with further forcible conversion, to the slave trading (including Christian whites), to ritual humiliation of conquered Christians and Jews, to the violent Jihadis seen today what can we expect. We we need to do is to stop the large scale immigration of Third World People. The killer's parents immigrated thank to Drunken Ted opening the flood gates in 1965.
From: hdenof

Sat 07 Nov 2009 07:50:44 AM EST
Why is it members of this religion are responsible for so much radical killing? I could point to all the events, but I'll save the time. I just don't understand this? Other religions don't do this! All, in the name of God? And we are supposed to open our arms to this religion as we pursue a peaceful world? I just don't get it!
From: allerdoc

Sat 07 Nov 2009 08:31:41 AM EST
I would like to know what the local Muslim community who meets in their secluded Mosque which seems placed in a location designed to keep their organization hidden from public view is teaching their children. What message are they spreading regarding the duties and passions of good Muslims vis a vis American culture and other "non-believer" Americans? I hear many Muslim students state that America is not their country and that 9/11 was somewhat appropriate and a wake-up call for aggressor America. Is that what these kids are hearing from local Muslim leaders and from their parents and Muslim relatives? There may be public statements of regret that do not reflect the real attitudes and agenda of the local Muslim community.
From: mdboy216

Sat 07 Nov 2009 09:55:31 AM EST
tyrone, hdenof, allerdoc and the rest of like mind...being a Christian does not make me responsible for the actions of you and your extremeist (so called "Christian" group) nor should the true Muslims be held accountable for their extremeists. I should not be slandered, threatened, or feel I have to defend your twisted bastardized "christian" acts nor should these peace ful Muslims have to defend the bastardization of their religion by their extremeists. Read your Bible first then "throw your stones" you just come across as fear-mongering small-minded cowardly hypocrits. You only are disgracing yourselves and disrespecting your religion by your actions. FYI...through out history more wars have been fought and more people have killed under the excuse of us suposedly knowing and then carrying out "God's will". Is our God so small that we must do His dirty work? Or be fearful of other people?
From: silencedogood

Sat 07 Nov 2009 10:27:18 AM EST
What religion was Timothy McVeigh? What religion was David Koresh? What religion was Jim Jones?....idiots are idiots no matter what religious label they select for themselves....that includes Malik Hasan....
From: 6flhxi

Sat 07 Nov 2009 11:07:36 AM EST
(Deleted by Administrator)
From: gerber

Sun 08 Nov 2009 12:11:07 PM EST
Again, I am reading the comments from these close minded racist people of Hagerstown. There are bad people of all religious beliefs, so called Christians, Jews, Muslims, etc. God wants us to treat others as we would want to be treated, if everyone focused on his words the world and our local community would be a better place to live.

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