CSID Statement Against
Bigotry and Ignorance
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CSID Statement Against
Bigotry and Ignorance
We noticed with great disappointment and dismay the attack
on Prof. Akbar Ahmad, one of the valued members of our community and one of the
most prominent and respected scholars of Islam, in pipelinenews.org's
scurrilous article Who Is Behind The State Department Hyped Muslim Da'wa Film, "Journey Into America?". As the attack is also
against the Center for the Study of Islam & Democracy, we would like to
take this opportunity to categorically reject and deny the unsubstantiated
claims made in the article. This method of defaming any person or institution
that writes objectively about or explains Islam creates an atmosphere of fear
so that only voices of intolerance are heard.
CSID is proud to be a multi-faith organization. CSID uses no "religious test"
for our supporters, members and even board members, just like the U.S.
Constitution is blind to religion for the purposes of standing for public
office. We estimate that about half of these are not Muslims, but Christians,
Jews and others who share a desire to live in peace and harmony with Muslims,
both in America and in the World.
CSID has consistently, and for the past 10 years, spoken in favor of
toleration, peaceful coexistence, religious dialogue and harmony, respect for human
dignity, human rights, freedom, and democracy in America and throughout the
world.
CSID has never been a "Saudi Think Tank" and has never
received a single penny from the Saudi government. Even when we organized a conference on Islam and Democracy in
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in 2004, it was funded by the congressionally funded and
mandated United States Institute of Peace (USIP), and not by the Saudi
government. CSID has consistently
spoken against theocracy (whether in Saudi Arabia or in Iran) and in favor of
Muslim democracy, which is based on Islamic values, and respects and provides
equal rights to all its citizens.
Such attacks do not stem only from ignorance or difference of opinions. They are part of a well established and orchestrated campaign to stir up bigotry and hatred of Islam and Muslims and create division among people. Such ill will and intent is not rooted in religions (whether Islam, Christianity, or Judaism) but in closed minds and dark hearts.
Pipelinenews.org's bigotry and hatred of Islam and Muslims
become strikingly obvious when it makes the preposterous assertion that Islam
is not one of the three "Abrahamic faiths," and in addition states that those
who say that Islam is one of the three Abrahamic monotheisms are creating a
"false sense of kinship and moral equivalency with Judaism and
Christianity." (link)
CSID believes very strongly in interfaith dialogue,
cooperation, increased understanding and mutual respect. CSID's programs, membership and board
are ample proof that we not only strive for these within CSID, but that we also
encourage it and promote at every opportunity. We reject the idea that the intelligent, scholarly discussion of
religion and democracy is a "means of recruiting converts" nor is there any
evidence that this occurs. CSID
simply accepts the fact that there are three monotheistic "Abrahamic faiths".
CSID provides the vision that governance in Muslim-majority countries can be
improved with a deeper understanding and a robust development of democratic
institutions as compatible with religious faith. CSID simply asserts that tolerance and
respect among those of different religions is preferable to the ignorance and
hatred that the authors of this attack on CSID and Akbar Ahmad so amply demonstrate. It is
precisely because CSID pursues a thoughtful, respectful and moderate course
that so many scholars, officials and democratic activists of all three faiths
(and others) from so many countries have endorsed CSID, participated in its
programs, and supported its mission and activities.
This is why the work of CSID has been praised by world-renowned
scholars and leaders, such as Professors Larry Diamond and Francis Fukuyama:
"The CSID is doing vital work to explore and
demonstrate the compatibility of Islam and democracy, and to promote innovative
thinking, fresh analysis, informed assessment, and free debate on the need for democratic
development and reform in the Muslim world. Now, more than ever, when we need
understanding of Islam in the United States, and tolerant, moderate, and
democratic voices of Islam to be heard worldwide, we need the CSID, and it
merits generous support."Larry Diamond, Stanford University
"The Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy has
for seven years played a critical role in setting out a vision of a Muslim
world that would be modern and democratic, in promoting debate about the
political development of the Middle East, and in promoting better appreciation
of Islam at a time when distrust and misunderstanding are rampant."Francis Fukuyama, Johns Hopkins University
For more endorsements of CSID, please click here.
This is also why CSID has been funded for the past 10 years
through grants from the National Endowment for Democracy, the U.S. Institute of
Peace, the State Department's Middle East Partnership Initiative, and the
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, as well as by hundreds of
individual donors, members, and supporters.
One might well suspect that the virulence of these false
attacks on CSID is a recognition of its success in bringing people of various
faiths together in support of a positive way forward. All else aside, such
errant propaganda and irredeemable ignorance are embarrassing and damaging to
long term peace and harmony among all Americans and destructive of a productive
relationship between the United States and the rest of the world.
Radwan
A. Masmoudi President
CSID
Board of Directors
- Asma
Afsaruddin, Chair
-
Antony
T. Sullivan, Vice Chair
-
Geneive
Abdo
-
Akbar
Ahmed
-
Saad
Eddin Ibrahim
-
Peter
Mandaville
-
Radwan
Masmoudi
-
Ali
Nawaz Memon
-
Robert
Schadler
-
S.
Abdallah Schleifer
-
Tamara
Sonn
-
Radwan
Ziadeh
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