Another cool website, created after NPR's Juan Williams' crazy comments, examines "Muslim garb." Hint: There is no such thing as a "Muslim garb". If you haven't, check out an insightful, well written piece by a Rhode Scholar challenging Juan Williams' comments.
When you hear about Muslims in the mainstream media, its never anything positive. With over 1 billion Muslims in the world, the news seems to only focus on the more controversial aspects. In a 24-hour news cycle, news stories about the Taliban, radicals, extremists, etc is what gets aired. These 24-hour news organizations want money, advertisers will only give them money if people are watching TV. How do they get people to watch TV? Make things controversial, violence sells. Enough with the commentary, I can tell you readers (do I even have readers? The internet is so saturated with bloggers...) are getting bored. There is a new blog that has been set up called "Muslim Good News," whose goal is to bring you news stories that are often under-reported. Another cool website, created after NPR's Juan Williams' crazy comments, examines "Muslim garb." Hint: There is no such thing as a "Muslim garb". If you haven't, check out an insightful, well written piece by a Rhode Scholar challenging Juan Williams' comments. 1 Comment Open Letter to Juan Williams Look, Juan, I’m not an apologist. But I am an American woman who chooses to wear that ‘Muslim garb’ on planes … and also at school, at work, to the grocery store, the library, the shopping mall, at the park, on the metro, in line to get lunch, or coffee, or a movie ticket. When I enter an airport, or step out of my car at a gas station, or go jogging on the street, I’ve got to tell you, I realize that I am in Muslim garb and I think, you know, I am identifying myself first and foremost as Muslim, I get worried. I get nervous. I realize that my identity-marker triggers a Pavlovian aversion among the public; conditioned by the right wing rants of FOX and friends and their attempts to incarnate a public solidarity through the shared experience of fear. ‘First and foremost as Muslim’ has become linked to images of death, destruction, and apocalyptic doom. But ‘first and foremost as Muslim’ is what gives meaning to my life devoted to truth, and mercy, and justice, what constantly affirms my commitment to the common good and the public welfare. ‘first and foremost as Muslim’ is what empowers a more expansive understanding of self, what confronts that self-interested rational actor in me and challenges it to be a loving actor. ‘first and foremost as Muslim’ is what holds the center together so things don’t fall apart – it is the call of the falconer drowning out echoes of nihilism amplified by the chamber of modern life. |

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