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Mohammed`s resignation could encourage African American Muslims to take more individual initiative to advance their religion, improve blighted communities and become a powerful showcase for Islamic values in America.
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Islamic leadership change in America
9/16/2003
- Social Religious - Article Ref: LT0309-2090 Number of comments: 10 Opinion Summary: Agree:7 Disagree:0 Neutral:3
By: Teresa Watanabe
Los Angeles Times* -
The recent resignation of Imam W. D. Mohammed, arguably the nation's most
influential African American Islamic leader, marks a defining moment for the
group he had headed for nearly 30 years.
Some analysts fear that Mohammed's surprise resignation as leader of the
American Society of Muslims could set that movement adrift, with no one to unify
the 300-plus affiliated mosques across the nation.
"It will be a devastating loss," said Imam Saadiq Saafir of Masjid
Ibadillah, a Los Angeles mosque on West Jefferson Boulevard. "The danger is
that the community could become fragmented, where you have so many leaders
taking the people in so many different directions. Some people may wonder if the
community can actually survive."
Others, however, said Mohammed's resignation could encourage African American
Muslims to take more individual initiative to advance their religion, improve
blighted communities and become a powerful showcase for Islamic values in
America.
"For African Americans, we're going to see the beginning of a renaissance
for Islam in America," predicted Najee Ali, Mohammed's son-in-law who heads
Project Islamic Hope, a Los-Angeles based social service organization.
Imam Fahim Shuaib, a Mohammed follower and leader of Masjid al Waritheen in
Oakland, said the resignation could help the African American Islamic community
grow beyond what he called a "victim-savior complex."
"It's recognized that this has been one of our crippling conditions: We've
been too dependent on a charismatic figure to bring home the bacon while we sit
on the sidelines," he said.
Mohammed, 69, has a mild-mannered mien that can mask his stature as one of the
most pivotal figures in the history of American Islam. In 1975, he startled the
world when he rejected the black nationalist vision of the Nation of Islam Ñ
which was founded by his father, Elijah Mohammed Ñ and brought his community
into orthodox Islam. The Nation of Islam was later resurrected by Louis
Farrakhan, with controversial doctrines considered heretical by mainstream
Muslims.
W.D. Mohammed said last month that he would continue to guide followers through
his Chicago-based ministry, the Mosque Cares, but would no longer oversee daily
operations of his association of mosques. He is still scheduled to inaugurate a
new school at the Bilal Islamic Center in Los Angeles on Friday and next
Saturday.
How his American Society of Muslims will fill its leadership gap remains
unclear. Many imams say no single leader can replace Mohammed and are advocating
a leadership council to make decisions collectively. Others are promoting
individuals such as Imam Earl Abdulmalik Mohammed, the group's national
spokesman, or leading imams in New York, Atlanta and Oakland to lead.
Ali said he was planning to poll followers nationwide to find out their top
concerns.
Accurate statistics on the number of African American Muslims are not available.
But according to Ihsan Bagby, who helped conduct a 2001 study for the Council on
American-Islamic Relations, about 27% of the nation's 1,200 mosques were
predominantly African American. Among those mosques, Bagby found, 67% were
affiliated with Mohammed's American Society of Muslims.
According to Lawrence Mamiya, a specialist in African American religions at
Vassar College, W.D. Mohammed moved his followers into both the Islamic and
American mainstream. Although his father's Nation of Islam took an antagonistic
stance toward the U.S. government, for instance, the younger Mohammed encouraged
Muslims to join the military, run for political office and cooperate in
interfaith activities.
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His followers now comprise the largest presence of Muslim prison chaplains in
the nation, and his affiliated mosques are the most active in providing social
services to the homeless and hungry, to drug addicts and former prison inmates,
Mamiya said. The Vassar professor is currently completing a study with Bagby on
Muslim programs to help ex-offenders.
"They've had a tremendous impact on American life," Mamiya said.
"You just don't hear about them because they're not controversial and they
work in an unsung but very efficient way."
In Los Angeles, such social services are provided by both Project Islamic Hope
and the Ilm Foundation Ñ a philanthropic organization directed by Saafir of
Masjid Ibadillah. The Ilm Foundation, for instance, runs feeding programs,
distributes free clothing, provides annual health checkups, works with
ex-offenders and offers youth leadership training.
Despite those contributions, Mohammed expressed deep frustration with his
movement's progress soon after his Aug. 31 resignation at the annual convention
of his American Society of Muslims in Chicago.
In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, Mohammed said that 80% of the 1,000
imams in his group opposed his mission to integrate African American Muslims
into mainstream Islam and refused to tackle the rigorous training in Arabic and
Islamic studies needed to authentically convey the tradition. He was not
available for an interview for this article.
Mohammed's resignation threw open long festering concerns. Shuaib of Oakland
said too many imams had "exploited" their leader, using his name to
raise funds while failing to provide Islamic services in return. Others said too
many imams failed to support his attempts at community economic development.
Sherman Jackson, a University of Michigan associate professor of Arabic and
Islamic studies, said many African American Muslims outside Mohammed's movement
regarded it as "nouveau Islamique" Ñ insufficiently grounded in
Islam's vast scholarly traditions. That impression grew, he said, as more Muslim
teachers from the Mideast and South Asia immigrated to the United States,
displacing African Americans as the main locus of Islamic authority in this
country.
But Jackson said a new generation of African American Muslim intellectuals has
tackled the requisite training in Islamic classics and could be poised to
re-energize the movement. His forthcoming book, "Islam and the Black
American: The Third Resurrection," lays out what he calls "a new
vision for black American Islam.''
Meanwhile, other organizations to advance the interests of African American
Muslims are springing up but insist they are not rivals to Mohammed's Society of
Muslims. The most prominent one is the new Muslim Alliance of North America,
which targets the needs of American-born Muslims: blacks, Latinos, whites and
the children of Muslim immigrants from South Asia, the Mideast and elsewhere.
Imam Talib Abdur-Rashid, the alliance's deputy amir who heads the Mosque of
Islamic Brotherhood in New York's Harlem, said that priority will be given to
domestic issues such as community development, education, civil rights and
social justice. Some of the first issues the group may take on include inmate
rights, domestic violence and African American reparations, group members said.
Foreign affairs, such as the Israeli-Palestinan conflict, will take a back seat,
he said
Even with such efforts, many African Americans agree that Mohammed's resignation
represents a turning point.
"If within the black American community there emerges an intelligentsia who
can get the great tradition of historical Islam to speak effectively to issues
of black Americans, the movement will be inspired," Jackson said. "If
not, the movement will be set adrift."
Source: Los
Angeles Times
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