Like No One Expects…
I found this post by Azhar Usman on Akram’s Razor. He gives a general permission to reproduce it which I have done below. My comments are below Azhar’s post
On September 11th, 2008, while countless American flags whipped in the wind and the television and radio waves were dominated by remembrances, recordings, and stories about the terror attacks of seven years ago, I attended the funeral of Imam W.D. Mohammed (may God be pleased with him). For me, it was a somber day, but I found myself mostly lost in thought: about African-American Muslim communities, about the challenges ahead in American Muslim institution- building, and about the future of Islam in America. If you don’t know who Imam WDM was, you should look him up. The Sufis say: “The true sage belongs to his era.” And of the many gifts given to Imam WDM by God, perhaps the most obvious and beneficial one was the Imam’s profound understanding of the principles of religion, and his adeptness at intelligently applying those Islamic principles in a socially and culturally appropriate manner befitting the everyday lives of his North American followers.
While carefully respecting sound, traditional jurisprudential methodologies of the Islamic religion, and the collective religious history and time-honored scholarship of classical Islam, he promulgated creative ideas and dynamic teachings across many domains of human endeavor, including theology, law, spirituality and even ethics and aesthetics, that together articulated a vision for a quintessentially “American Muslim” cultural identity. And he did all of this before anyone else, with quiet strength and unending humility—a true sage indeed.
So I stood before his final resting place, brokenhearted. And I suddenly began to feel the weight of the moment, realizing that when God takes back one of his dearly beloved friends, those who are left behind should cry not for the deceased, but rather for themselves. For the fact that they are now without one of God’s friends in their midst, and, in a sense, they are orphaned. And the tears began to well up, for I became acutely aware that I was standing in front of the grave of my spiritual grandfather, who was himself a spiritual descendant of Bilal al-Habashi (may God be pleased with him), the mighty and beloved companion of the Prophet himself. Bilal was the first Black African to convert to al-Islam at the hands of the Prophet Muhammad (may God bless him and keep him) in the sands of Arabia nearly a thousand and a half years ago. Undoubtedly, some measure of that love, mercy, compassion, and spiritual stature that inhabited the heart of Bilal has found its way down through the ages, and I found myself begging God to transfer to my own heart some glimpse of these realities now laying before me.
Almost five years ago, my business partner, Preacher Moss (who is a member of the WDM community) founded the standup comedy tour “Allah Made Me Funny,” and he invited me to be his co-founder. Needless to say, it has been nothing less than an honor to work with him on the project. But to many, it was an unusual pairing: a Black comic and an Indian comic? Both Muslims? Working together? And before we ever even announced our partnership publicly, we met privately and swore an allegiance to one another—a blood oath of sorts—which was this: No matter what happens, in good times and in bad, we have to be the brothers no one expects us to be. And built on this promise (and premise), we brought on our first collaborator, Brother Azeem (who is a member of Minister Farrakhan’s NOI), with whom we toured for over two years (2004-2006) before parting ways amicably. Then we brought Mohammed Amer onto the team in the fall of 2006 (a Kuwaiti-born Palestinian refugee who grew up in a Sunni Muslim family in Houston, Texas). Mo, Preach, and I are still going strong together, and we are grateful for the unqualified support, love, and blessings that Imam WDM and the entire community have always given us.
But today, as I observed the funeral proceedings, I felt sad and heavy-hearted. Something wasn’t sitting right. Something was physically paining my heart, and it felt like remorse, shame perhaps, maybe even guilt. I began to realize that the tears flowing from my eyes were as much a function of these feelings as they were any lofty spiritual aspirations of mine.
You see, I attended an interfaith event a couple of years ago on 9/11. A group had assembled to commemorate the tragic event, to honor those who perished that day, and to pledge ongoing inter-community support and bridge-building to fight ignorance, hate, and intolerance. At that event, there was this short, middle-aged, sweet, extremely kindhearted, White Christian woman. When she took the microphone to speak, she was already teary-eyed, and I assumed that she was going to make some comments about the victims of 9/11, as so many others already had that night.
But she didn’t do that. Instead, she explained that she had become utterly grief-stricken by the constant barrage of news stories she witnessed about Muslims and Arabs being harassed, profiled, and mistreated after 9/11. She explained that she felt powerless to do anything about it, and that it made her sick to her stomach to hear of hate crimes against Muslims and Arabs, and especially to hear of Christian preachers denigrating Islam and its Prophet. She started to cry, and so did many others in the room, humbled by the magnanimity of this simple woman.
And then she did what I thought was a strange thing: she apologized. She prefaced her apology with all the logical disclaimers, such as “I know this may mean nothing to you,” and “I know that I am not the one who did these horrible things,” and “I know that you may dismiss this as empty rhetoric until you see some follow-up action on my part, but anyway,” she continued, “I want to apologize on behalf of all the Christians and all non-Muslims and non-Arabs who have been attacking your communities, harassing your people, and accusing your religion of all these horrible things. I’m sorry. I’m very, very sorry.” I was stunned. Speechless, in fact. Though all of her disclaimers were true, and my skeptical mind knew it, her apology melted our hearts. Here was this powerless servant of God sharing some of her most deeply felt emotional vulnerabilities, and she was apologizing to Muslims for something she didn’t even do? Jesus (may God bless him and keep him) once famously remarked: “Make the world your teacher,” and so I immediately took this woman as a lesson in humility. Admitting her powerlessness made her incredibly powerful.
And this brings me to the point (and title) of this essay. I would like to unburden myself of something that has been sitting like a ton of bricks on my heart for my entire life. I want to apologize to my Blackamerican brothers and sisters in Islam. I know that this apology may not mean very much; and I know that our American Muslim communities have a LONG way to go before we can have truly healthy political conciliation and de-racialized religious cooperation; and I know that I am not the one who is responsible for so much of the historical wrongdoing of so-called “immigrant Muslims”—wrongdoings that have been so hurtful, and insulting, and degrading, and disrespectful, and dismissive, and marginalizing, and often downright dehumanizing.
But anyway, for every “Tablighi” brother who may have had “good intentions” in his own subjective mind, but behaved in an utterly insensitive and outrageous manner toward you when he suggested that you need to learn how to urinate correctly, I’m sorry.
And for every Pakistani doctor who can find money in his budget to drive a Lexus and live in a million-dollar house in suburbia, and who has the audacity to give Friday sermons about the virtues of “Brotherhood in Islam,” while the “Black mosque” can’t pay the heating bills or provide enough money to feed starving Muslim families just twenty miles away, I’m sorry.
And for every Arab speaker in America who makes it his business to raise millions and millions of dollars to provide “relief” for Muslim refugees around the world, but turns a blind eye to the plight of our very own Muslim sisters and brothers right here in our American inner cities just because, in his mind, the color black might as well be considered invisible, I’m sorry.
And for every liquor store in the “hood” with a plaque that says Maashaa’ Allah hanging on the wall behind the counter, I’m sorry.
And for every news media item or Hollywood portrayal that constantly reinforces the notion that “Muslim=foreigner” so that the consciousness of Blackamerican Muslims begins even to doubt itself (asking “Can I ever be Muslim enough?”), I’m sorry.
And for every Salafi Muslim brother (even the ones who used to be Black themselves before converting to Arab) who has rattled off a hadith or a verse from Koran in Arabic as his “daleel” to Kafirize you and make you feel defensive about even claiming this deen as your own, I’m sorry.
And for every time you’ve been asked “So when did you convert to Islam?” even though that question should more properly have been put to your grandparents, since they became Muslims by the grace of God Almighty back in the 1950s, and raised your parents as believers, and Islam is now as much your own inheritance as it is the one’s posing that presumptuous, condescending question, I’m sorry.
And for every time some Muslim has self-righteously told you that your hijab is not quite “Shariah” enough, or your beard is not quite “Sunnah” enough, or your outfit is not quite “Islamic” enough, or your Koranic recitation is not quite “Arabic” enough, or your family customs are not quite “traditional” enough, or your worldview is not quite “classical” enough, or your ideas are not “authentic” enough, or your manner of making wudu is not quite “Hanafi,” “Shafi,” “Maliki,” or “Hanbali” enough, or your religious services are not quite “Masjid” enough, or your chicken is not quite “Halal” enough, I’m sorry.
And for every Labor Day weekend when you’ve felt divided in your heart, wondering “When will we ever do this thing right and figure out how we can pool our collective resources to have ONE, big convention?,” I’m sorry.
And for every time a Muslim has tried to bait you with a question about the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, trying to force you to condemn him—turning it into some sort of binary litmus test of true iman—with reckless and irresponsible disregard for the historical fact that he was among the first Black men in America to ever do anything meaningful for the upliftment and betterment of Black people, I’m sorry.
And for every time you’ve heard of an African-American brother who tried to bring home a South Asian or Arab sister to meet his parents, only to learn that her parents would rather commit suicide than let their daughter marry a “Black Muslim” (a/k/a “Bilalian brother”), even as they cheer hypocritically at stadium style speeches by Imams Siraj Wahhaj, Zaid Shakir, Johari Abdul Malik, or others—or get in line to bring one of them to speak at their multi-million dollar fundraiser for yet another superfluous suburban mosque, I’m sorry.
I’m sorry. I’m very, very sorry. From the bottom of my heart, I want every African-American Muslim brother and sister to know that I am ashamed of this treatment that you have received and, in many cases, continue to receive, over the decades. I want you to know that I am aware of it. I am conscious of the problem. (Indeed, I am even conscious that I myself am part of the problem since curing hypocrisy begins by looking in the mirror.) I am not alone in this apology. There are literally thousands, if not tens of thousands of young American Muslims just like me, born to immigrant parents who originate from all over the Muslim world. We get it, and we too are sick of the putrid stench of racism within our own Muslim communities. Let us pledge to work on this problem together, honestly validating our own and one another’s insecurities, emotions, and feelings regarding these realities. Forgiveness is needed to right past wrongs, yet forgiveness is predicated
on acknowledging wrongdoing and sincerely apologizing. Let us make a blood oath of sorts.
When the bulldozer came to place the final mounds of dirt over the tomb of Imam WDM, I was standing under a nearby tree, under the light drizzle that had just begun (perhaps as a sign of mercy dropping from the heavens as the final moments of the burial were drawing to a close), and I was talking to a dear friend and sister in faith, whose family has been closely aligned with Imam WDM for decades. She shared with me a story that her father had just related to her about the passing of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad in 1975 (the same year I was born, incidentally) . She told me that her father described the scene in the immediate aftermath of Elijah’s demise: utter confusion and chaos within the NOI and the communities surrounding it. There was much debate and discord about what direction the NOI would take, and many were still in shock and denial that the founder had actually died. Out of the midst of that confusion arose Imam WDM, and along with his strong leadership came an even more, perhaps surprisingly courageous direction: the path away from the Black nationalism, pan-Africanism, and proto-religious beliefs of his father, and instead the unequivocal charge toward mainstream Islam, the same universal and cosmopolitan faith held and practiced by over a billion adherents worldwide. In this manner, her father explained, the death of Elijah Muhammad became a definitive end to a chapter in our collective history, and the resulting re-direction by Imam WDM marked the beginning of the next, far better, chapter in that unfolding history.
Maybe I am just an idealistic fool, or maybe Pharaoh Sanders was right about the Creator’s Master Plan, but I sincerely believe that all we have to do—all of us together: Black folks, South Asians (Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis) , Arabs from every part of the Middle East and North Africa, Southeast Asians (Indonesians and Malaysians), Persians, Turks, Latinos, assorted Muslims of all stripes, colors, and backgrounds, and yes, even our White Muslim brothers and sisters—is live up to a simple promise to one another: No matter what happens, in good times and in bad, we have to be the brothers and sisters no one expects us to be.
It is hoped that the passing of Imam WDM will also mark the end of a chapter in our collective American Muslim history, and perhaps now, in earnest, we can all look together toward The Third Resurrection.
May God mend our broken hearts, lift our spirits, purify our souls, heal the rifts between our communities, unify our aims, remove our obstacles, defeat our enemies, and bless and accept our humble offerings and service.
[NOTE: Please feel free to forward this essay to others via email or post it on blogs. For permission to otherwise publish or print this essay, please email: azhar at azhar dotcom.]
Imagine meeting a person. You start to get to know them and there seem to be some encouraging signs of a potential friendship. In the course of the conversation, you find you are discussing the virtues of various health foods. Your friend then begins talking about the great results they have been getting from this amazing new product they’ve been using. At this point, you want to know where to get this product. It’s then that your new friend just so happens to be selling this great new product.
At that point, you start to feel stupid for trusting this person and making yourself vulnerable to this person’s sales scheme. They were not seeking a friendship. They were after a sale. It is very similar when a person is only interested in you as a “recruit” to their particular movement or agenda. There is no genuine concern. You are simply a mark. The purpose of the relationships in these cases become to sell the mark a “product” and not to genuinely befriend them. I personally believe that all of the things that Azhar is apologizing for are rooted in a lack of authentic relationships - regardless of race.
Friendship/Brotherhood/Sisterhood is something that can be only acheived when people are honest with each other no matter what race. This is something I think that Azhar is getting at here. Pretending will NEVER produce real friendships and relationships. Real relationships are not about being on some mission to shoot everybody down or to straighten everybody out, but to love them and travel with them in their life journey. Share moments of joy. Feel their pain. None of this can happen without authenticity.
We ask people “how are you?” and do not really want to know how they are doing. It is just a formality that comes from our mouths without even thinking about it. Our answer to the question “How are you?” says a lot about the depth of a relationship. For casual relationships, “Fine” is an adequate answer. We have neither the time nor the trust established in that person to elaborate further. Furthermore, people are usually not expecting to hear more from us than that.
That is why I have made it a habit to not ask that question unless I mean it. That would be a person I feel that I have established a relationship where that person would really want to share their feelings and get things off their chest.
I think many of us get into placating each other a lot rather than being honest. Still, we have gotten the idea that we must perpetuate the myth that we are always happy and on top of our affairs. If we are to have a relationship “like no one expects” then it must be authentic and deep - not pretentious and shallow.
Filed under: Community of Compassion
Salaam dear Tariq,
Usman’s apology and your excellent observations on authentic friendship are a beautiful place to start.
Thank you,
Baraka
Asalaamu alaikum.
I know I don’t comment often, Tariq, but I do read. And your thoughts on true friendship, what it really means and why it needs to be the root of our relationships, what brotherhood/sisterhood really are about… I want to thank you for sharing this. Thank you for always being brave and saying what some find difficult to articulate and others are just afraid or ashamed to say.
Beautifully put…..
Al Hamdu Lillah !!
Azhar spoke the truth that people need to hear. This post should read and printed up and handed out at every ISNA convention and every other Muslim conventions.
Reading this post reminds me that in Islam Hilm, forbearence,the ablity to put up with people’s rudeness and overlook their ignorance, is a major part of the deen. As well as a major part of building relationships. Although I know many immigrant muslims I can’t say they are my “friends”. Having and increasing your Hilm is someting that benecial to one spiritiuallly and a necessary trait when dealing with “real” muslims.(as though only real muslims were born elsewhere)
I am confident ,God Willing ,in the future times will change for the better as I am seeing this already especially amongst the youth. IMAN in Chicago is good example.
AsSalaamu Alaikum,
Apology accepted, And I give the same apology to you akhi.
And AsSalaamu Alaikum, and inshaAllah this Ramadan we, all muslims, sincerely give each other the salaams and inshaAllah that be the start to that real friendship in which brother Tariq and brother Azhar is talking about. I met brother Azhar when he performed for the MSA at my college. Very sincere brother, and it was funny I left his performance upset due to a comment made by a brother about comedy. May Allah guide and forgive us and lead us on the straight path inshaAllah.
The Qur’an says and I paraphrase, Allah has brought us together when we were once enemies and now he can bring us close as if there were no enmity between us. InshaAllah we seek that as muslims no matter our race ,culture, financial or historical background inshaAllah. We are muslim. Ana min al-muslimin.
Alhamdulillah
AsSalaamu Alaikum
Salaams.
My husband and I were just talking about relationships amongst the Muslims. Sometimes thinking too much about this topic really depresses me. I have to remember what I truly want for this ummah and continue to try to make a difference and encourage others to try as well.
I loved this post. It embodies many of my past and present thoughts.
Masha’Allah…
Very well put! Mashallah!
B.
As salaamu alaikum.
Allah says “Bow you down to Adam(as) and Iblis refused. Ask why he didn’t and the answer was. “You created me from fire, and him clay.”
Now, apology for what? or tawbah(seeking Allah’s forgiveness).
Allah has taught and told us of the one(s) who think in this manner; they follow in the ways of the accursed and rejected. The leaders of those of hell-fire.
Do African-Americans understand this verse? because truly if they did, they would spend less time on worrying, and speaking about these followers of Iblis.
You know what if someone thinks or says he is better than you. Tell them to go and “bite the penis of their fathers” plain and simple. Endless blogs, apologies, and talks. Talk about something that manners and that will help us get to Jannah inshaAllah.
I am happy though that the brother has found out that Iblis is not the one that you should example yourself after.
Wa alaikum salaam
As-Salaamu `Alaykum,
My only comment relating to Azhar’s well put essay is in regards to his comment about the rich immigrant that drives a lexus and lives in a palace but won’t give to the “black masjid” twenty miles away.
Frankly, most “Black” masajid don’t solicit funds nor really care if rich suburban immigrants give to the masajid in the “hood.” I would dare to say that we want a seat at the table to set the agenda and have an proportional voice in regards to the priorities of the Muslim community. That’s more desired than getting a check.
Unity isn’t having the agenda set then inviting everyone else to the table to comment on a pre-set agenda. That’s control, and that has been the major problem that I’ve had over the years with the immigrant-indigenous relation.
If I can use an analogy with food, let us all come to the table with our own dishes. You eat some of my halal food and vice versa. Then we can appreciate each others’ food. Heck, we might come up with a new dish together. I just don’t want to eat your food, and I don’t want my food dissed.
When speaking at a conference at the National Press Club yesterday, I stated how I was asked to speak at a fundraising program for Palestine and why I turned it down. I simply stated that my conscious wouldn’t let me do it because more of “my people” in Detroit were murdered last year than Palestinians were killed in the West Bank by the Israelis. The same people that asked me to do this don’t give two cents about the Blackamericans starving and dying in Detroit, including the Blackamerican Muslims.
So, I recommend another speaker and stated why I couldn’t do it.
I appreciate what Br. Tariq said about “brotherhood”. If we have true love for each other and respect our common humanity, we’ll come into true ikhwah/brotherhood. And when a brother cares enough about another, he doesn’t want to see him hurt himself. To me, we have been spiritually hurting our own souls with this pseudo-Muslim unity in American. Perhaps this will be the start of a new round of sincere discussion.
Wassalaam
Salaam alaikum,
Well put brother Dawudwalid so well put, masha’Allah.
As Salaamu Alaikum;
I have found myself drawn to your website/blog because of what I sense is true sincerity coming from your writings and those whom you choose to publish here.I am writing today motivated by the responses on true friendships and especially across racial lines, and even religious ones.. And because of the balanced and thorough coverage you gave to the death of the beloved Imam W. Deen Mohammed.I now follow your comings and goings and talks to various groups.
My friendship with Muhammad Siddeeq of Indianapolis is the most unlikliest friendships one could imagine; if one looks at our very different backgrounds. I am a southern, rural, Christian,Caucasian lawyer, who would a few decades ago have been the very person who the “black Muslims” would have thought was the devil. Muhammad is an inner city, northern, African-American Muslim activist, and I admit before I met him, I stereotyped him.
But the most amazing friendship has emerged, and it all, every bit of it, is based on a common spiritual yearning for truth and mutual respect and fellowship.Otherwise it would not have survived our many arguments on religious doctrines; most of which has become a thing of the past, as we find we now agree about 90 % of the time on the basic values. We discuss these issues for hours.
Because he is my friend, I came to the aid of him and his family during the death of his son and the subsequent affront to his daughter, who was married to W.D. Mohammed at the time of his death.
Speaking of the 3rd resurection, I may or may not have the right to discuss it. But I do see the great potential for the African American Muslim in the coming decades. And I want to be constructive and not disruptive–although there are times when one has to take a stand on principle.And an attorney’s job often is to be an advocate.
I refer you to my latest and maybe last posting in which in the absence of other plans, I suggest a “roadmap” for this community. You may read it at:
http://www.siddeeq.com/brother_siddeeq/
I look forward to becoming a regular reader to your blog and keeping up with your career.
Richard D. Allen Jr.–known as Rashid to my Muslim Friends