Muslim mayor avoids mixing politics, religion
Tuesday, January 2, 2007
By MAYA KREMEN
STAFF WRITER
Mayor Mohamed Khairullah took office in Prospect Park Monday.
PROSPECT PARK -- The mayor's voicemail is full of pleas. Two residents want
handicapped parking permits. A man who's moved out of state is trying to pay
parking tickets. And there's a woman facing eviction. His cellphone buzzes. The office phone rings. He picks it up.
"Hey, what's up," Mayor Mohamed Khairullah says. "Assalam alaikum. I got your
e-mail."
Khairullah, 31, set a precedent in November by becoming the state's first
elected Arab-American Muslim mayor. Now he's all about proving that, like any
good politician, a Muslim can serve the public without mixing religion into it.
You'll find the Quran in his office. But it's wedged between essential reading
for this job: a municipal manual and a flood insurance study.
Deliver the goods to everyone, and then you can exert personal perspective. It's
a strategy he imparts to other Muslims and Arabs.
"You need to be sitting at the table with the decision makers; that's how you
get involved," he tells them. "But we should never forget that we are Americans
before anything. We work through the larger community first."
FAST FACTS
• Leaders say that more Arab-Americans are starting to get involved in politics,
but the large percentage are non-Muslim.
• In this year's elections, 54 Arab-Americans ran nationwide, 40 won primaries
and 24 won general elections.
• Two candidates with Arab heritage ran in New Jersey, Mayor Randy George of
North Haledon, who is Christian, and Mohamed Khairullah of Prospect Park, who is
Muslim. Both won.
Source: Arab-American Institute
But to get to where he is, Khairullah weathered trouble specific to being an
Arab Muslim politician after 9/11. He has been called a "betrayer" and had his
remarks on the Palestinian situation come back to bite him.
Of late, he says, he's learned to temper public stands on hot topics, especially
after seeing Sami Merhi of Clifton, a Lebanese American, dumped by Democrats as
a 2006 freeholder candidate. Merhi had reportedly said at a function that he
couldn't see the similarity between Palestinian suicide bombers and the 9/11
hijackers.
"For me and for anyone else of Middle Eastern descent who wants to get into
politics, it comes as a learning experience," Khairullah said. "Politicians need
to watch what they say -- it's plain and simple." Besides the political fray,
there have been personal tough times: his father's death when he was just 20,
and raising a young son after divorce. And there, his faith has pulled him
through.
As mayor, though, Khairullah can't help but operate beyond faith. Besides the
residents' pleas this particular day, there are checks to sign for a seniors'
luncheon, and a streetscape project in danger of going over budget.
"Your mailbox is full," his voicemail says.
"What else is new?" he asks.
An English phrasebook
Khairullah's family came to town after living in Syria, Saudi Arabia and Queens.
He was 16, and he worked hard at assimilating, always carrying an English
phrasebook. After his father, a body shop owner, died of a heart attack, the
family struggled. But, borrowing money from an uncle, Khairullah managed to go
to William Paterson University.
By then, he already knew he was destined for politics. His epiphany had come as
a highschooler when he saw a council campaign sign for Khalil Kasht. Khairullah
recognized the name as Muslim and thought, "If he could do it, maybe I could."
That seemed especially possible in Prospect Park.
It's Passaic County's smallest town, but its residents include Hispanics,
African-Americans, Turks, Albanians, Arab-Americans, Circassians, and the
descendants of Dutch settlers. It's a place where the supermarket signs say
"Halal Meat" and "Se Habla Espanol."
Khairullah, a Democrat, showed early political savvy in his election to council.
As a volunteer firefighter, he had gotten fire department support by pledging to
deliver on new radios.
As councilman, he allied with Mayor William Kubofcik.
"The political game has a lot to do with loyalty," Kubofcik says. "There were
times things needed to be done, and he stayed the course with my agenda."
When Kubofcik left town in 2005, Khairullah was appointed his successor.
Since then, Khairullah has tried to balance ethnic concerns. He has attended
Latino Police Organization events, and hired the first African-American police
officer. He helps Arabic-speakers with immigration problems.
It's not just the right thing to do, its good politics, he concedes -- "It's the
humane thing. And if you're thinking about it politically, you're building up
credit."
Still, he hasn't muted his heritage as part of his public persona, and that's
drawn opposition.
In late 2005, when he was cast as Kubofcik's successor, anonymous mailings
called him a "betrayer living among us."
Political foes also faulted him for speaking at a pro-Palestinian rally, and
attending a meeting of Arab-American leaders who called on the U.S. to broker
peace between Lebanon and Israel.
"You got a sense he was supporting groups that were not particularly popular,
that wouldn't be popular with anyone," said Thomas F. X. Magura, a Republican
who ran against Khairullah. "He's taken a lot of positions that are not really
in the best interest of the community."
Khairullah fired back -- even offering a $1,000 reward for information about the
fliers' author. And in November, he won overwhelming election as mayor.
"People who stand strong continue to be successful," Khairullah said. "I could
have said, 'I don't want to go through these attacks,' and given up. But I said,
'I'm going to swallow it and move on.' "
In a cocoon
That thick-skinned approach is an example for other Muslim and Arab politicians,
said Aref Assaf, president of the Denville-based Arab-American Forum.
"It's the first step in many we have to take," Assaf said. "We have cocooned
ourselves in our own ethnic enclaves because we're fearful of the challenges
that lurk out there."
In the end, beyond the issues of ethnic sensitivity are the hard fights familiar
to every local politician, like Magura's current claims that the mayor is
running up debt and letting the town look grimy.
Khairullah said his best moment in public life wasn't becoming the first
Arab-Muslim mayor. It was presiding over the borough's first Christmas lighting
last year.
Town hall already displayed symbols of other religions, including a crescent
during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. But Khairullah wanted all included.
"People will say, 'Why would a Muslim mayor put a crescent and not a Christmas
tree?' " he said. "If I want to promote something, I have to lead by example. It
was the logical thing to do."
E-mail: kremenm@northjersey.com
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