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Imam Qatanani and America's Justice. More



Nextwave web

The Arab American National Museum

 

Survey: Arab and Jewish Americans

Human Rights in the US


Sharia and Secularization
| Bild: Cover 'Sharia and Secularization' |
"Islam and the Rule of Law" is the title of a new monograph published by Centre for Modern Oriental Studies, Berlin, and the Konrad Adenauer Foundation. Click here, to down the the PDF file...
 
Latest Updates :  Imam Qatanani is here to stay, says immigration judge
Feature Articles and Commentary
Failing the common sense test

Obama Scores Low on “The Israel Factor” Test
Ghassan Michel Rubeiz
 

Israeli social scientists have devised a clever psychometric test to evaluate US politicians on attitudes toward Israel.  On a scale of 1 to 10, Obama ranks as an “underachiever” in loyalty to Israel.  On this scale, the presumptive Democratic nominee scores around 5 - on repeated measurements since the campaign started.  Senator Clinton scores around 7.5 and McCain is the most favored. The Republican nominee receives 7.75 on fidelity to the Jewish state. For more details on this original methodology of rating politicians consult Haaretz’s newspaper on “The Israel Factor” project. More

De-Westernization and ObjectivityArab Journalism: Between De-Westernization and Objectivity

The growing ranks of media experts expressing opinions on the state of Arab journalism have come to the conclusion that, in spite of the increased number of sources, origins and contents, they all come under the heading of something that is ideologically evil. This has justified a significant number of institutions (both governmental and non) with the objective of providing assistance to improve Arab journalism and encourage greater freedom for the media in that region. Arab scholars, however, tend to see things differently and believe that Western programming in Arabic is in fact an euphemism for the word "propaganda". Read more
What Muslims Really Think?

What Muslims Really Think?
Dr. Fawaz Gerges 

In this critical essay, Dr. Fawaz Gerges disputes the myth that the Muslim world holds a Mmonolithic and existentially antagonistic view toward the United States.

Drawing on existing literature as well as his own extensive research, he shows that Muslims hold a vast range of opinions on foreign policy, but that by and large their anti-American antagonism is rooted in policy differences, rather than fundamental religious or cultural differences.

Moreover, he shows that support for terrorism and Al Qaeda, never strong to begin with, is fast on the wane. Read the entire article here

The New Arab Diplomacy

The New Arab Diplomacy: Not With the U.S. and Not Against the U.S

A paper offered by Marina Ottaway and Mohammed Herzallah examines the "new assertiveness and diplomatic activism" of countries in the Middle East apart from American foreign policy leadership. The paper, available through the Carnegie Middle East Program, is titled, "The New Arab Diplomacy: Not With the U.S. and Not Against the U.S."  Clcik here to read the document

Taking SidesRendering public opinion irrelevant
A new WorldPublicOpinion.org poll of 18 countries finds that in 14 of them people mostly say their government should not take sides in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Just three countries favor taking the Palestinian side (Egypt, Iran, and Turkey) and one is divided (India). No country favors taking Israel's side, including the United States, where 71 percent favor taking neither side. More
The Usual Scapegoat

Don't blame Arabs for oil prices
Aref Assaf

Arab bashing is now taking shape in the understandable disgust we have over the ever-increasing price of fuels. Threats of lawsuits and push for alternatives to fossil fuels are headline news. But who really dictates the price of oil? Aref Assaf opines

Ignorance or a deliberate policy?The US in the Mideast: ignorance abroad

American policy-making throughout the Middle East remains defined largely by three principal forces: pro-Israeli interests and lobbies in the United States that pander almost totally to Israeli government positions; an almost genetic, if understandable, need to respond to the 9/11 terror attack against the US by politically and militarily striking against Middle Eastern targets; and a growing determination to confront and contain Iran and its assorted Sunni and Shiite Arab allies. Rami khory writes
"They told me to cook, clean, do everything. I didn't speak English. And he told me, 'Don't say nothing.. she's going make you deported. And me, I'm going to be in jail."

Some Muslims in U.S. Quietly Engage in Polygamy

Although polygamy is illegal in the U.S. and most mosques try to discourage plural marriages, some Muslim men in America have quietly married multiple wives. No one knows how many Muslims in the U.S. live in polygamous families. But according to academics researching the issue, estimates range from 50,000 to 100,000 people. More

" the government has adopted the "paradigm of prevention,"

Trials of Muslim charities likened to a witch-hunt

The U.S. government's anti-terrorist financing programs are based on the "guilt by association" tactics of the McCarthy era and have had a widespread negative impact on U.S. charities, critics say.
That is the view of Kay Guinane, director of the Nonprofit Speech Rights Program for OMB (Office of Management and Budget) Watch, an independent not-for-profit government watchdog group. Guinane told IPS that government actions have resulted in program cutbacks and increased fear of speaking out on important public issues.
More

Why do they Love  us?Misreading the Arab Media
Rather than being the enemy, most Arab journalists are potential allies whose agenda broadly tracks the stated goals of United States Middle East policy and who can be a valuable conduit for explaining American policy to their audiences. Many see themselves as agents of political and social change who believe it is their mission to reform the antidemocratic regimes they live under. When asked to name the top 10 missions of Arab journalism, they cited political reform, human rights, poverty and education as the most important issues facing the region, trumping Palestinian statehood and the war in Iraq. More from the NYT

Aref Assaf, The other side of memory: commemorating the Palestinian Nakba

Every year, on May 15, Palestinians commemorate the Nakba ("the catastrophe"): the expulsion and dispossession of hundreds of thousands Palestinians from their homes and lands. In 1948 more than 60 percent of the total Palestinian population was expelled. More than 530 Palestinian villages were depopulated and completely destroyed. To date, Israel has prevented the return of approximately six million Palestinian refugees, who have either been expelled or displaced. Approximately 250,000 internally displaced Palestinian second-class citizens of Israel are prevented from returning to their homes and villages. More

Israel has received more than 50% of total US foregin aid!
What did the US get in return?

Should the U.S. End Aid to Israel? Funding Our Decline

By Alison Weir
  A
pril 1st I participated in a debate in San Francisco that raised the question of US aid to Israel.
It was highly appropriate that this debate was held two weeks before tax day, since in Israel’s sixty years of existence, it has received more US tax money than any other nation on earth.
During periods of recession, when Americans are thrown out of work, homes are repossessed, school budgets cut and businesses fail, Congress continues to give Israel massive amounts of our tax money; currently, about 7 million dollars per day.
More

To-do list should be to connect the dots of regional issues to reflect the realities and interdependencies on the groundThe next President and the Middle East, the must do list
Listen carefully when a new president is inaugurated next January for the sigh of relief coming from most of those Middle Easterners whom President Bush embraced as allies. Conversely, Bush’s rivals in the region are likely to tune in to the occasion in a disgruntled mood. For them the Bush years have been good for business. The menu of grievances on which they’ve fed has become a veritable feast. Opposition to American designs in the region -- deployed with different emphases and with different goals by al-Qaeda, Iran, Hamas, Syria, and Hezbollah, to name but a few -- has been an easy sell and has won countless new adherents. Daniel Levy writes
  
Tracking Transience is all about taking the intrusive "counter-terror" measures introduced after 9/11 one step further, to the point of absurdity.

Tracking Transience can be seen  here.

The eye of the beholder

"Art is in the eye of the beholder," as the saying goes. What is deep and profound to one is just a meaningless mess of images to another; or in some cases, smut. The same goes for terrorism — one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter, and the distinction is based as much on perception and personal bias as it is on facts. Unfortunately, for many Americans, a dark-skinned Muslim with a name like Mohammed, Ali or Hasan warrants suspicion for being a terrorist, to be detained and questioned at places like airports and be sent on their way, sans dignity. In some cases, people have been jailed and harassed because their name resembled someone else's on a watch list. More

Online Arab Journalism and views of US

The Image of the United States Portrayed in  Arab World Online Journalism

This study is trying to examine to what extent the online journalism in the Arab World has adopted biased coverage of the United States. The study hopes to provide a current assessment of how the U.S. is portrayed in Arab World online journalism. This valid, updated information will enable researchers and communicators alike to better understand not only what is being done, but may lead to ways of providing a solid basis for better dealing with American issues and images in the future More

A Paradigm Shift?Democrats Benefit From Shift in Muslim Voters’ Allegiance

Muslim Americans, many of whom gave President Bush enthusiastic support in his first election campaign in 2000, have largely fled the Republican Party and could help Democrats win key states this November. In surveys over the past six years, Muslims have cited administration policies in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq as reasons why GOP candidates no longer appeal to them.
Read more from CQ
The Racial Divide

Turning a Blind Eye to Injustice

 

Race & Ethnicity in America

The American Civil Liberties Union today released a comprehensive analysis of the pervasive systemic and structural racism in America. The report, Race & Ethnicity in America: Turning a Blind Eye to Injustice, is a response to the U.S. report to the United Nations’ Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) released earlier this year. The U.S. report, which the ACLU called a “whitewash,” swept under the rug the dramatic effects of widespread racial and ethnic discrimination in this country.
 

Poet Tamim al-Barghouti reads his poetry to an audience in Hebron. (Mamoun Wazwaz, Maan Images)Palestinian poet gives new life to art form

The overflow crowd in the biggest Palestinian music hall jumped to its feet, cheering and whistling as the curly haired star took to the stage. Hardly your typical vibe at a poetry reading. Poet Tamim al-Barghouti gets rock star treatment like that. The 30-year-old Palestinian-Egyptian is bedazzling audiences with texts written in classical Arabic, but packed with modern-day politics. His appeal is part charisma, part hopeful message and part proof of the survival of an old Arab art form.
"The amount of love that they have bestowed on me is something that so far I don't know how to deal with," he said in an interview before a recent performance. "I hope I live up to their expectations." 
Read More
  
Rev. Naim Ateek
Palestine's Ghandi?
A History of Nonviolence

Palestinian leader Naim Ateek has long advocated nonviolence as the only way to secure peace between Israel and Palestine. So why is he so despised by hard-line Israel supporters?
"The Palestinians need to become really conscious of and sensitive to the horror of the Holocaust. ...We must understand the importance and significance of the Holocaust to the Jews, while insisting that the Jews understand the tragedy of Palestine for the Palestinians." More
 
The Arab World Competitiveness Report 2007

United Arab Emirates is the most competitive economy in the Arab world among the countries at the third and most advanced stage of development according to The Arab World Competitiveness Report 2007. The Arab World Competitiveness Report series serves as a platform for public-private dialogue on issues related to competitiveness, as is being witnessed at the Arab World Competitiveness. More

View a 4-minute video about the Report
 

Thy Shall Make PeaceThe Ten Commandments for Middle East Peace

During the 1990s and into the early 2000s, the three of us worked on Israeli-Palestinian negotiations for our respective peace teams -- Israeli, American, and Palestinian. Much has changed since those days, little of it for the better. Still, many lessons remain -- from the failures no less than from successes -- of that previous experience. Whether the Bush administration carries through on its self-proclaimed objectives (and there is some reason to doubt it will) or whether the task of reinvigorating peace efforts falls to the next president, we herewith offer 10 recommendations regarding what the United States ought to do – and what it ought to avoid. More

Overview of Arab American Media in the United States

There are a total of 81 newspapers and national magazines or newsletters that currently produce news in the United States, the majority serving Arab American populations in 5 regions and in 22 states. Several distribute editions through mailed subscriptions across the country. Yet, 28 states do not have official home based Arab American newspapers. (This list is compiled by members of NAAJA, the National Arab American Journalism Association. Click here for a study report

  
 
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