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Thursday, September 02, 2010 | 23 Ramadan 1431  

  Film "Inside Islam"  
What do a billion Muslims think?
The film Inside Islam, based on the 2008 book Who Speaks for Islam?, creates an environment where dialogue among civilisations becomes inevitable. It also prompts American audiences to reconsider their perceptions of Muslims–who are often also their neighbors

 Washington, DC 
  Despite widespread media coverage of global terrorism by various self-proclaimed "Islamic" groups from America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia, little is known about what the majority of the world's Muslims really think and feel. What do Muslims have to say about violence and terrorist attacks, democracy, women's rights and their countries' relations with the West? What are their values, goals and religious beliefs?

This month, Washington, DC and New York movie audiences were able to learn some answers to this question when they watched Inside Islam, a groundbreaking film based on the 2008 book, Who Speaks for Islam? What a Billion Muslims Really Think, co-authored by Georgetown University professor John Esposito and Dalia Mogahed, Executive Director of the Gallup Center for Muslim Studies. The film premiered in Washington, DC this summer and has been touring the country since.

The film is based on many years of innovative research. Between 2001 and 2006, Esposito worked with Mogahed at Gallup, a research and public opinion organisation, to complete the largest study of Muslim populations worldwide. Their results challenged the conventional wisdom and the inevitability of a "clash of civilisations" even as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan continued.

Long before Who Speaks for Islam? was released, Washington's politicos were crafting policies about a people they barely knew. Indeed, Nobel Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu was correct when he said: "In these fraught days of heightened tension and increasing hostility, few books could be more timely."

Unity Productions Foundation (UPF) decided to turn the book into a film in 2008, recognising the importance of the message and the need to take it to an even larger audience. As Alex Kronemer, UPF co-founder and one of the film's executive producers, pointed out, the message of the book is one that US leaders need to hear: "In order to effectively engage the Muslim world, we have to understand what the Muslim world really wants."

The initial screening, specifically for an audience of policymakers, took place in August 2009 at the US Department of State. After viewing Inside Islam participants took part in a discussion with Kronemer, who had served at the US Department of State's Human Rights Desk during the Bill Clinton Administration. The goal of these policy screenings–derived from the Gallup findings–is to help policymakers understand the impact of US foreign policy on Muslim attitudes towards the United States, and to understand that a shift in policies will go a long way towards improving Muslim perceptions of Americans.

The film's 3 June, Washington, DC, premiere featured former US Secretary of State Dr. Madeleine Albright as keynote speaker. After the screening, Albright said, "When fear takes over, communication stops and suspicion builds. That's why Inside Islam is such an important film, and why the extensive surveys conducted by the Gallup organisation are so worthwhile."

Since then, the film has been screened at several cities across North America. These events bring together civic and political leaders and interfaith organisations, usually with a Gallup expert and UPF representative on hand to discuss the film and the poll's findings.

The Gallup poll found, among other things, that when asked what they admire about the West, Muslims frequently mention political liberty and freedom of speech. What audiences might also find surprising is that most Muslims–including 73 per cent of Saudis and 89 per cent of Iranians–say that women should enjoy equal legal rights with men.

To date, the film has been viewed by thousands of people. It appears that from Toledo to Toronto, from New Orleans to New York, audiences everywhere are yearning to know what a billion Muslims really think, including many leading decision makers. Other organisations have gone so far as to express interest in not only helping to screen the film through their networks but to also assist in the creation of educational materials so that younger audiences can benefit from the film's thought provoking information.

The film creates an environment where dialogue among civilisations, as former President Muhammad Khatami of Iran put it, becomes inevitable. The film prompts American audiences to reconsider their perceptions of Muslims–who are often also their neighbours. We hope that through movies like Inside Islam, fear and suspicion can stop, and communication can take over.

Sara Reef is Project Manager at Intersections International and Zeeshan Suhail is a board member of Americans for Informed Democracy. This article was written for the Common Ground News Service (CGNews).


6 COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE



But I also think its important for us Muslims to know and respect what other Muslims are thinking. Lets admit it, we are strangers to each other too. The suspicions are internal too. And yet ALLAH SWT has commanded us in the Quraan TO KNOW ONE ANOTHER. Very few people actually care much for this injunction.


As always, what we actually think and do, draws far less commentary than what people think we think and do.


The average person focuses on the cliche extremes that capture their imagination. All blacks are crack mammas and pimps in gold lame, all gays are screaming queens in dresses, all Muslims are one-toothed villagers with swords, all educated people are commie elitists .... do I really need to go on, all Americans are slathering neanderthals? Okay, can I stop now? You get my point.


>>> The average person focuses on the cliche extremes that capture their imagination.

I'm average. This problem of prejudice and focussing on the extremes ... how can we change it?


People will always focus on extremes because they are captivating, bright shiny objects of the mind, or fear causing. When I tell people there are 1.8 villion Muslims and how many actual bomb throwing "terrorists" have we seen or how frequently do extreme events happen, they're not interested. It's the extremes that are, to use the popular word, "sexy" in the minds of the popular imagination. It's always that way. Which are people more likely to read? The story about the do-gooder or the serial killer? Particularly in the case of Islam where the extreme sells newspapes, movies, and TV spots. It's not going to wind down gently, it will have to play itself out, like any other social current or major global wave. That's just how it is historically.


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Shahed will be a guest on the BBC World Service's World, Have Your Say discussing the proposed French ban on niqab (and fines for husbands who compel their wives to wear them) on May 18, 2010.

Even Controversial Views Should Be Protected by Freedom of Speech, Asma Uddin, The Huffington Post, May 7, 2010.

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Shahed will be a guest on the BBC World Service's World, Have Your Say discussing the South Park controversy along with Zarqa Nawaz (Little Mosque on the Prairie) and other guests on April 22, 2010.

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'Jihad Jane': not the usual suspect, Wajahat Ali, The Guardian, Comment is Free, March 18, 2010.

Al-Awlaki, a new public enemy, Zahed Amanullah, The Guardian, Comment is Free, December 30, 2009.

Islamophonic: Review of the year, Riazat Butt, Zahed Amanullah and David Shariatmadari, Cif Belief (The Guardian), December 18, 2009.

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Children of Dust (published by HarperOne, an imprint of HarperCollins), the first book by longtime altmuslim.com contributor Ali Eteraz, is released in the US, Canada, and the UK on October 13, 2009.

Shahed will be attending the m100 Sansoucci Colloquium in Potsdam, Germany, September 14-16, 2009. He will be moderating a panel discussion on the Danish cartoon crisis with Denis MacShane MP, Jasim Al-Azzawi (Al Jazeera English), and Flemming Rose (Jyllands Posten).

Associate Editor Wajahat Ali's play "The Domestic Crusaders" is having its premiere at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe in New York City, NY, September 11, 2009. The play will continue through Sunday, October 11, 2009.

Shahed will be moderating or participating in three panel discussions at the Islamic Society of North America's annual convention, including Muslim Journalists: The View from the Inside, Supporting Social Entrepreneurs and Civic Leaders, and Blogistan: Muslim Americans on the Web in Washington, DC, July 3-6, 2009.

State-sponsored Sufism, Ali Eteraz, Foreign Policy, June 10, 2009.

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Censorship is in the ascendant - Zahed Amanullah, associate editor of altmuslim.com, has argued in a national newspaper blog that, since the warning came from an unrepresentative group, the media interest was not justified. As for events of the past – the fatwa on Salman Rushdie, the Danish cartoons, the murder of van Gogh – they were "three incidents over a 20-year period from amongst 1.6 billion people. These things do happen. But we all need a bit of perspective." (April 30, 2010)

Muslims say new security rules unfair, ineffective - ''Muslims are doing their duty. Muslim parents are being attentive. It's the TSA that's not being attentive. It's the TSA that's not doing its duty," said Shahed Amanullah, an editor at the Web site altmuslim.com. "There's nothing more that Muslims can do than turn in their own families." (January 7, 2010)

US Muslims & media… Lost love - "We have a big problem; it’s that other people are shaping the story about us," Shahed Amanullah, editor-in-chief of altmuslim.com, told IslamOnline.net. (December 16, 2009)

Moves to Seize Mosques Spark Outrage - "I'm extremely skeptical that the link between these mosques and this organization is so strong as to merit the seizing of a considerable amount of assets that do a lot of good for the Muslim community," says Shahed Amanullah, a prominent Muslim blogger based in Austin. "The government better be prepared to make a very good case, because this is unprecedented." (November 17, 2009)

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