
COUNCIL ON AMERICAN-ISLAMIC RELATIONS - CHICAGO | DEFENDING CIVIL RIGHTS. FIGHTING BIGOTRY. PROMOTING TOLERANCE

Thank you for allowing Interfaith Worker Justice to speak out against immigration raids. The December 13 editorial, “U.S. must stop workplace raids, enact immigration reform,” was right to point out how inhumane, unnecessary, and potentially dangerous it is for the government to initiate these raids.
Thank you for portraying the actions of an individual that will have a lasting effect on an entire community. (Orland Park Teacher Honored for Work with Muslim Students 11/17).
Dear Mr. Nelson,
In your recent OpEd you state:
“It must be recognized, sympathetically, that Muslims face a tough task to decisively distance themselves from cynical killers, like evangelical and fundamental Christians have had to do with, say, David Koresh’s troublesome Branch Davidians in Waco, Texas, or Fred Phelps’ questionable, vengeance-stained, judgmental theology.”
Contrary to Nickels’ claim, I have no qualms with freedom of speech. In fact, I am obligated to exercise my First Amendment right to refute your letter. The overriding concern remains that when misguided words are used to defame all of Islam, it creates an intensifying cycle of bigotry and that needs to be countered.
Larry Nickels letter, “MDH Should Research Islam” (Morris Daily Herald, Sept. 17) is an example of how ignorance incites hate.
The Associated Press article “Soap opera shakes customs of Arab married life” (July 28) was a nice change from the usual stories that only show Muslims in the context of political oppression and warfare. Unfortunately, the article is still guilty of conveying gross generalizations of Arab and Muslim people
I wish to inform you that I go to a madrassa. There I said it. No really, I go to a madrassa. Before you call the FBI, though, consider that just as “escuela” means “school” in Spanish, “madrassa” means “school” in Arabic.
Dalia Mogahed and John Esposito recently asked one of the most pertinent questions of our time: Who speaks for a billion Muslims?
I won’t tell you the answer because I recommend that you read their book. But I will give this away: the answer is not Edward Luttwak.
Too often, the news is filled with impersonal or sensational stories. So, I was pleased to read the article ‘An Ancient Art.’
It was great to read how Brittany Whitfield’s perspective on Arabs changed for the betteras a result of studying the Arabic language. (More CPS students can learn Arabic, May 2, 2008).