altmuslim this week - june 29, 2009 - This week, reeling over the death of Michael Jackson (or is it Mikaeel?), a brutal (and brutally unfair?) new film about the stoning of women in Iran, and our good friend Farah Pandith - the most effective behind-the-scenes American Muslim you've never met - is promoted to a new office by Secretary Clinton.
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US outreach to Muslims in good hands - Several of us at altmuslim have had the opportunity to work with Farah Pandith, who has just been appointed by Secretary Clinton to be a special representative to Muslim communities worldwide.  (June 27, 2009)
Her name is Neda - Many have died tragic - and silent - deaths in the post-election violence in Iran. But one woman, Neda Agha Soltan, became a symbol with her death caught on video. Here, Neda's fiancee, Caspian Makan, comments on her story in comments transcribed exclusively for altmuslim.com.  (June 25, 2009)
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altmuslim review 032 - Muslim writers everywhere! We speak about the new wave of Western Muslim literature and interview two authors with recently released books. Our own Irfan Yusuf talks about his memoir, Once Were Radicals and Reza Aslan tells us more about his second book, How to Win a Cosmic War (June 11, 2009)
altmuslim review 031 - Oh, Bama! What does the election of Barack Obama mean for American Muslims, who were both courted and shunned during a long campaign? We speak with American Muslim Democratic activists who were gathered in Washington for the historic inauguration. (March 5, 2009)
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Recent and upcoming talks and offsite articles by altmuslim contributors
State-sponsored Sufism, Ali Eteraz, Foreign Policy, June 10, 2009.
Pushing the Envelope Without Breaking It, Shahed Amanullah, The Mosque in Morgantown, June 2, 2009.
Obama in Egypt: Let the unsaid be said, Zahed Amanullah, Patheos.com, May 28, 2009.
Zahed will be a panelist at Divan 2.0, a debate on the future of the Muslim internet sponsored by the Radical Middle Way at the London School of Economics in London, England, May 22, 2009.
Once Were Radicals (published by Allen and Unwin), the first book by Associate Editor Irfan Yusuf, is released in Australia, May 4, 2009.
Shahed and Wajahat will be speaking at the 3rd Annual Leadership Summit presented by the Council for the Advancement of Muslim Professionals in Princeton, NJ, May 2, 2009.
Shahed will be leading a workshop on Media Strategies & Techniques at the Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow conference in New York, NY, April 24-25, 2009.
Bringing it all back home, Wajahat Ali, The Guardian, Comment is Free, April 9, 2009.
Zahed will be conducting a two day workshop on Blogging and New Media for Italian students at the United States Embassy, Rome, Italy, April 8-9, 2009.
Crusading for Modern Islamic Art, Shahed Amanullah, Beliefnet, March 26, 2009.
Wajahat will be speaking at the Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow conference in Doha, Qatar (January 16-19, 2009)
Finding the middle ground, Hesham Hassaballa, Philadelphia Inquirer, January 8, 2009.
Shahed will be speaking about Muslims in the political process at the 8th annual Texas Dawah Convention in Houston, Texas (December 27, 2008)
Skyscraping ambition for Mecca, Ali Eteraz, The Guardian (UK), Comment is Free (December 18, 2008)
Zahed will be leading a technology workshop for European Muslim professionals at the Salzburg Global Seminar, Salzburg, Austria (November 16-20, 2008)
Zahed will be a keynote speaker at the inaugural meeting of the Network of European Muslim Technology Entrepreneurs, in Madrid, Spain (November 14, 2008)
Shahed will be a featured panelist at Red Faith/Blue Faith: Religion in the 2008 Election and Beyond at the Center for American Progress in Washington, DC (November 7, 2008)
Let the Global Islamic Conspiracy Begin, Ali Eteraz, Jewcy, (November 5, 2008)
Zahed will be a guest on Press TV's Islam & Life, hosted by Tariq Ramadan, speaking on French and American Muslim experiences (November 3, 2008)
Zahed will be a guest on Irish broadcaster RTE's Spectrum radio show, speaking about Barack Obama and the Muslim factor in the US presidential election (November 1, 2008)
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Media appearances and analysis featuring altmuslim editors
Islamic Society reaches out to other faiths - "ISNA is very interested in extending their connections with Protestant groups," said Rafia Zakaria, an Indiana lawyer and associate editor at altmuslim.com, a Web site that looks at Muslim issues. "Having a figure as high profile as him gives them legitimacy to extend those kinds of alliances with church groups that have a significant amount of power in the United States." (June 21, 2009)
American Muslims, Jews rate Obama’s speech - "He was really pressing for people to say in public what they say in private. Everybody knows what the solutions to a lot of these problems are and I think there is vast agreement on what they are going to be. But nobody really talks about it and puts the cards on the table," said Shahed Amanullah, editor of the Web site altmuslim.com. (June 5, 2009)
A place to explore Muslim American life - "The biggest challenge facing us is more internal - asking the deeper question. Okay, now that we know that we are Muslim Americans or American Muslims, whatever you want to call us, what does that mean?" (May 23, 2009)
The great potential for online Muslim media - "A recent study in the US implies a correlation between non-Muslims who fear Islam and those who don't know any Muslims. The more Muslims get to know their non-Muslim neighbours, the more ability they will have to influence them." (April 29, 2009)
Obama’s entreaty to Islam surprises Muslims - "Here's where the American public is going, and here's where Obama is going and trying to head it off," said Shahed Amanullah, editor and publisher of altmuslim.com. The Bush administration asked Amanullah for help in shaping dialogue with the American Muslim community. "He's heading it off on a global level," Amanullah said. "He's starting at a core of the problem. The core of the problem is the crisis overseas." (April 8, 2009)
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Honor Killing
Saving Banaz Mahmod
The case of Banaz Mahmod shows that some segregated immigrant communities exert draconian control over women in order to act out the frustration of feeling helpless in a foreign land.
By Rafia Zakaria, June 14, 2007

On April 28, 2006, 20 year-old Banaz Mahmod Bakabir Agha's body was found hacked to pieces and packed in a suitcase in a suburb of London. Her crime was leaving an abusive arranged marriage and wishing to marry a man of her own choice. Finally, on June 12 of this year, her killers were brought to justice when a British court convicted her father Mahmod Mahmod and her uncle Ari Mahmod of her murder.
Banaz's case illustrates how a host of factors can come together to allow such grotesque honour crimes to occur. Archaic and misogynistic cultural beliefs, on the one hand, reduce women to objects of ownership and control, whose family members have no qualms in obliterating them for imagined sins against tradition. On the other is a host foreign culture suspicious of a ghettoised and economically disenfranchised Muslim minority, and hence slow to provide protection. Banaz had repeatedly asked the police to provide her with protection and even given them a list of three people whom she believed would try to kill her, to no avail.
Finally, also blameworthy is the persistent silence of the Muslim Council of Britain, and other Muslim groups who jump to organise protests when Muslim women are denied the right to wear niqabs but choose to ignore their plight when they fall prey to the brutality of their own families.
The collusion of all of these factors, the low priority given to Muslim women's freedom by their own cultural tradition, their host nation and ultimately their religious community are all to blame in the Banaz case.
The saga began in late July 2005 when twenty year old Banaz left the marriage that her Iraqi Kurdish family had arranged for her at age seventeen, and returned to her family home. According to police reports, Banaz complained of being repeatedly abused and raped by her husband. In one incident, he punched her in the face and knocked out one of her front teeth because she had dared to call him by his first name in public. Despite her family's opposition to her divorce, Banaz chose to stay on in her family's home. In late 2005, Banaz met and fell in love with Rahmat Suleimani, a Kurdish man from a different tribe.
The love affair ignited even more of her family's ire. Already shamed at the fact that Banaz's sister Bekhal had left the home at age 15 to escape family violence, Banaz's uncle, Ari Mahmod, convened a family council in which the elders decided to kill Banaz to reclaim their family honour. Banaz was told of this plan by her mother and went to the police to report the death threat. Terrified at the course of events and still believing that her mother would protect her, Banaz refused to enter a shelter, but the threats against her life continued.
A chilling episode in the story took place on New Year's Eve 2006. Banaz was lured into her grandmother's house in nearby Wimbledon to meet with her father and uncle to sort out her divorce. While there, she became terrified when her father first made her drink brandy to sedate her (something she as a Muslim had never done before) and then proceeded to put on gloves. Hysterical and drugged, Banaz ran out of the house by smashing a window with her bare hands and found help in a nearby caf�. However, when she went to the local police they refused to believe her story.
In a video made at this time, one can see an obviously disorientated Banaz lying on a hospital bed and detailing her father's suspicious actions. On January 21, 2006, Banaz's family attempted to kidnap her boyfriend, Rahmat. In the days following the attempt Banaz again went to the local police station and filed a report saying she would co-operate fully in any investigation against her family. Four days later, while in her family home, Banaz was killed. Her body was found on April 28, 2006, with the bootlace used to strangle her still around her neck.
There is nothing that can mitigate the horror of an innocent life taken at the behest of the very people that were responsible for bringing it into the world. At the most primary level, a crime which involves a father killing his own daughter, whose only mistake was to choose her own mate, should evoke the deepest disgust in every human heart. But the Banaz case is also an indictment against the religio-cultural confusion becoming increasingly symbolic of West-European society in the twenty-first century.
Muslim immigrant communities like the Iraqi Kurds are geographically and economically ghettoized, with little incentive and few logistical reasons to assimilate into the mainstream. Segregated thus, these communities recast adherence to traditional customs as a form of resistance to a foreign culture they perceive as hostile and unwelcoming. Exerting draconian control over women becomes a convenient means of acting out the frustration of feeling helpless in a foreign land.
At the same time, host cultures use the issue to substantiate their own delusions regarding the 'other' people living in their homeland. The 'xenophobic' Britons treat the occurrence of such crimes as proof of the barbarism and backwardness of immigrants. The 'cultural relativist' Britons, used to exoticising the 'other', simply look elsewhere, unsure of how to judge such a saga of unabated cruelty.
In either case, girls like Banaz are denied the help they need.
Finally, religious groups such as the powerful Muslim Council of Britain find delving into such matters generally useless to their political and mobilisation aims. By disposing of the issue of honour killings in a convenient web disclaimer about the "pre-islamic" nature of the custom, they expose their own dubious commitment to Muslim women like Banaz, who are left to fend for themselves when it comes to fighting against repression in their own communities.
Rafia Zakaria is associate editor of altmuslim.com and an attorney and member of the Asian American Network Against Abuse of Women. She teaches courses on constitutional law and political philosophy. This article previously appeared in Daily Times (Pakistan).
We try to remove any comments that do not conform to our netiquette guidelines. If any comments remain that are in violation, please let us know. The presence of offending comments does not necessarily reflect the views of the editors of altmuslim.
Rafia,
Thank you for this article. It is sobering and painful to those of us who are committed to women's rights and our religion. There needs to be pressure put on organizations to respond to this type of violence. What can be done?
For one we must go further than simply saying that something is "cultural". Yet, I feel that people who murder women for "honor" could care less about what the Qur'an or sunnah says. In what terms do we fight against this type of violence? I am really interested to know what Rafia and others think.
Salaam.
- Posted by Anisah1 on June 18, 2007 at 08:55 PM
Another wake-up call in a world full of wake-up calls. When will we finally be bothered enough by the noise to do something other than hit the snooze button?
May God have mercy on the soul of Banaz, as well on those who stood by and did nothing.
- Posted by TarikwithaK (34.142N / -118.254W) on June 19, 2007 at 07:46 PM
"Finally, also blameworthy is the persistent silence of the Muslim Council of Britain, and other Muslim groups who jump to organise protests when Muslim women are denied the right to wear niqabs but choose to ignore their plight when they fall prey to the brutality of their own families."
You're right, Muslim groups should be more vocal. MCB missed the boat on this one, sad since they have been forthright before. Its been more than a 'web disclaimer'. One wonders what the author of this piece chose to hear and what not to hear:
1. 'Call it a crime of dishonour' say Muslim leaders
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article1922495.ece
2. Nothing Honourable in Honour Killings http://www.mcb.org.uk/features/features.php?ann_id=151
3. 'Forced Marriages: A Wrong, not a Right' http://www.mcb.org.uk/features/features.php?ann_id=1458
4. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/london/3150142.stm
- Posted by Disha on June 20, 2007 at 08:45 AM
Poor girl, there must be more done about this problem. I can't believe somebody was able to kill his sister / child. May Allah have mercy on her.
- Posted by nana on September 4, 2007 at 04:25 PM
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