An Open
Letter to Young Muslims Everywhere: The Seed of
Triumph in Every Adversity
By Ramzy
Baroud
December 31, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
When I was a
little boy, I used to dream of being reborn outside
the hardship of the Refugee Camp in Gaza, in some
other time and place where there were no soldiers,
no military occupation, no concentration camps and
no daily grind – where my father fought for our very
survival, and my mother toiled to balance out the
humiliation of life with her enduring love.
When I grew
older, and revisited my childhood fantasies, I came
to quite a different conclusion: if I had to, I
would do it all over again, I would not alter my
past, however trying, in any way. I would embrace
every moment, relive every tear, every loss, and
cherish every triumph, however small.
When we are
young, they often fail to tell us that we should not
fear pain and dread hardship; that nothing can be as
rewarding to the growth of one’s identity, sense of
purpose in life and the liberation of the human
spirit than the struggle against injustice. True,
one should never internalize servitude or wear
victimhood as if a badge; for the mere act of
resisting poverty, war and injustice of any kind is
the first and most essential criterion to prepare
one for a more meaningful existence, and a better
life.
I say this
because I understand what many of you must be going
through. My generation of refugee camp dwellers
experienced this in the most violent manifestation
you can ever imagine. These are difficult and
challenging years for most of humanity, but all the
more for you, young Muslims, in particular. Between
the racism of American and European politicians and
parties, the anti-Muslim sentiment sweeping much of
the world, propagated by selfish individuals with
sinister agendas, playing on people fears and
ignorance, and the violence and counter-violence
meted out by groups that refer to themselves as
‘Muslims’, you find yourself trapped, confined in a
prison of stereotypes, media hate speech and
violence; targeted, labeled and, undeservedly,
feared.
Most of you
were born into, or grew up in that social and
political confinement and remember no particular
time in your past when life was relatively normal,
when you were not the convenient scapegoat to much
of what has gone wrong in the world. In fact,
wittingly or otherwise, your characters were shaped
by this prejudiced reality, where you subsist
between bouts of anger at your mistreatment, and
desperate attempts at defending yourself, fending
for your family, and standing up for your community,
for your culture and for your religion.
Most
importantly, you continue to struggle, on a daily
basis, to develop a sense of belonging, citizenship
in societies where you often find yourself rejected
and excluded. They demand your ‘assimilation’, yet
push you away whenever you draw nearer. It is
seemingly an impossible task, I know.
And, it
seems that, no matter what you do, you are yet to
make a dent in the unfair misrepresentation of who
you are and the noble values for which your religion
stands. Their racism seems to be growing, and all
the arrows of their hatred persistently point at
Islam, despite your passionate attempts to convince
them otherwise.
In fact,
you hardly understand why Islam is, indeed, part of
this discussion in the first place. Islam never
invited the US to go to war in the Middle East, to
tamper with your civilizations and to torment fellow
Muslims in other parts of the globe.
Islam was
never consulted when Guantanamo was erected to serve
as a gulag outside the norms of human rights and
international law.
Islam is
hardly a topic of discussion as warring parties,
with entirely self-interested political agendas, are
fighting over the future of Syria or Iraq or Libya
or Yemen or Afghanistan, and so on.
Islam was
not the problem when Palestine was overrun by
Zionist militias, with the help of the British and,
later, the Americans, turning the Holy Land into a
battlefield for most of the last century. The
repercussions of that act has sealed the region’s
fate from relative peace into a repugnant and
perpetual war and conflict.
The same
logic can be applied to everything else that went
awry, and you have often wondered that yourself.
Islam did not invent colonialism and imperialism,
but inspired Asians, Africans and Arabs to fight
this crushing evil. Islam did not usher in the age
of mass slavery, although millions of American and
European slaves were, themselves, Muslim.
You try to
tell them all of this, and you insist that the likes
of vicious groups like ISIS are not a product of
Islam but a by-product of violence, greed and
foreign interventions. But they do not listen,
countering with selective verses from your Holy Book
that were meant for specific historical contexts and
circumstances. You even share such verses from the
Quran with all of your social media followers: “…if
any one killed a person, it would be as if he killed
the whole of mankind; and if any one saved a life,
it would be as if he saved the life of the whole of
mankind…” (Chapter 5; Verse 32), hoping to elicit
some understanding of the sanctity of human life
according to your religion, but a fundamental change
in attitude is yet to come.
So you
despair, at least some of you do. Some of those who
live in western countries cease to share with others
the fact that they are Muslim, avoiding any
discussion that may result in their being ostracized
from increasingly intolerant societies. Some of
those who live in Muslim majority countries, sadly,
counter hate with hate of their own. Either way,
they teeter between hate and self-hate, fear and
self-pity, imposed apathy, rage and self-loathing.
With time, a sense of belonging has been impossible
to achieve and, like me when I was younger, perhaps
you wonder what it would have been like if you lived
in some other time, in some other place.
But, amid
all of this, it is vital that we remember that the
burdens of life can offer the best lessons in
personal and collective growth.
You must
understand that there is yet to exist a group of
people that was spared the collective trials of
history: that did not suffer persecution, racism,
seemingly perpetual war, ethnic cleansing and all
the evils that Muslims are contending with right
now, from Syria to Palestine to Donald Trump’s
America. This does not make it ‘okay’ but it is an
important reminder that your hardship is not unique
among nations. It just so happens that this could be
the time for you to learn some of life’s most
valuable lessons.
To surmount
this hardship, you must first be decidedly clear on
who you are; you must take pride in your values; in
your identity; you must never cease to fight hate
with love, to reach out, to educate, to belong.
Because if you don’t, then racism wins, and you lose
this unparalleled opportunity at individual and
collective growth.
Sometimes I
pity those who are born into privilege: although
they have access to money and material
opportunities, they can rarely appreciate the kind
of experiences that only want and suffering can
offer. Nothing even comes close to wisdom born out
of pain.
And if you
ever weaken, try to remember: God “does not burden a
soul beyond that it can bear.” (Chapter 2; Verse
286).
– Dr
Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East
for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author of several books and the
founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books include
‘Searching Jenin’, ‘The Second Palestinian Intifada’
and his latest ‘My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza’s Untold Story’. His website is:
www.ramzybaroud.net. |