Archive for January, 2007

Muslims In Need

Family 1
is a family of 6, with limited income for rent at this time. They are in desperate need of at least $300.00 for rent before they face eviction. It is very cold this time of year and they face being on the street. Please help if you can insha’Allah

Family 2
is a family with 6 children mashaallah. One child is very ill. They are in need of money to pay utilities, and food to feed their family insha’Allah. The brother works very hard daily but with the freezing weather and snow, work is not every day at this time. In addition, their sick child needs extra things from time to time that get them behind mashaallah. They are seeking $300. Please help if you can insha’Allah

Family 3
has 4 children, one is a newborn and with weather not permitting the brother to work each day they have no money for bus fare or to pay their rent insha’Allah if you can help them with anything it would be greatly appreciated insha’Allah, please help if you can insha’Allah

Please send sadaqa for any family to UmmeZahid@aol.com, via PayPal, for prompt distribution. OR for the addresses of the families - Jazakallahu Khairan.

http://companionsofthegarden.org/Help.aspx

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Homeless Muslim Women Shelter: An Idea Born of Necessity

By Farkhunda Ali

Muslim Link Staff Writer

The Muslim woman gives birth to the Muslim child. The Muslim woman nurtures the Muslim youth and the Muslim man. The Muslim woman instills the Islamic values in her children, who eventually carry on the legacy of Islam through their adulthood. The same Muslim woman cooks for an Islamic household, builds an Islamic environment for her children to follow and assists other Muslim women to increase their faith and stabilize their emotional and physical insecurities.

Many relationships are established through the primary source, the Muslim woman, whether it is through marriage, a medical professional helping with the birth of a child, or the primary educator in the home teaching Quran to the young generation.

Every aspect of an Islamic life is revolved around the hard work of a Muslim woman. So, what happens to her when one day she is kicked out of her home, or has found herself homeless without the presence of her husband or father?

The Muslim woman is currently in need of the assistance of the strong Muslim man, and the overall Muslim community. Just as the Muslim woman has a vital role in building an Islamic family, the Muslim man has an equally important role of maintaining and protecting an Islamic nation.

Currently, in the DC Metropolitan Area and especially Baltimore, Maryland, there are many Muslim women without access to a stable Islamic living environment. Many Muslim women have often approached non-Muslim social service organizations that have placed them in shelters where they practice un-Islamic dietary habits, and disrespect the dress code of the Muslim woman. Leaving them with no other choice but to seek shelter for themselves and their small children, Muslim women have often accepted local county shelters and temporary housing. These shelters sometimes force them to compromise their Islamic beliefs in order to grant them a secure place to live. After all, some shelter is better than no shelter at all.

What does a Muslim woman do in times of disparity? Does she live under a bridge on cold windy nights, or does she live with a non-Muslim man who is often available to help her, but probably does not allow her to maintain her modesty? Also, the Muslim woman sometimes has to be separated from her children in order to accomodate foster living for them while she is forced to accept housing in women-only shelters.

Can she depend on the mercy of Allah that the Muslim community will ease her burden and provide a safe haven for her and her Muslim children?

Most probably, whenever there is a Muslim woman involved, there are usually children involved. Some Muslim women have lost jobs, divorced, or fired from jobs when they chose to put on their hijab. There are also some Muslim women who have been kicked out of their homes for accepting Islam. Is homelessness the punishment a Muslim woman should endure for wanting to follow the laws of Islam?

So, where does the responsibility of the Muslim community come in a problem like this? Is it possible for American Muslim community to come together to invest in building an Islamic shelter for the Muslim woman?

Imagine having a shelter available in the DC Area where Muslim women may reside temporarily until they are able to get assistance with government public housing projects. Envision a shelter which provides three meals a day that are prepared according to Islamic dietary principles. Imagine a place where Muslims assist each other with the caretaking of their children. This shelter should have clothing donated by community members for Muslim women and children. It will be a center that provides at least the minimal health care services. In addition, it will be a shelter equipped with a few computers and phones lines for her to apply for employment, schools for their children and government assisted living.

When a Muslim woman suddenly finds herself without a home, it is very difficult for her focus on building herself up to be able to find work or take care of her children when her primary concern is shelter, food, and clothing. Once the primary necessity is fulfilled, then she can pay closer attention on finding employment and doing other things to sustain her self. In any case, she needs temporary Islamic environment where she is able to fulfill her obligations of her faith and build herself to move on to the next step.

Do Muslim leaders in the DC Area think this is worthwhile investment? Is it a problem that is only affecting Muslim women, or should it unanimously concern the larger American Muslim community?

The project of a Muslim Women’s shelter has already been initiated by Asma Hanif, the owner of the Muslimat An-Nisaa, a holistic health and wellness center for the Muslim woman.

Baitul An-Nisaa is an attempt of the Muslimat An-Nisaa to address the problem of homelessness within the Muslim community. Hanif has compiled a comprehensive proposal which outlines every minor to major detail of her vision of a “safe haven” for the Muslim woman. Hanif has the plan, but she needs the funding. She has compiled an extensive amount of research on homelessness in the Baltimore Area and put together a proposal on how the Baitul An-Nisaa will be operated.

“Wherever there is homelessness, there is no money, and wherever there is money, there is no homelessness,” said Hanif.

Baitul An-Nisaa has collected several dozens support letters from the DC Area of Muslims and community leaders who support this project. Baitul An-Nisaa has taken the signatures of approximately 200 individuals who believe this is a much needed project in the DC Area Muslim community.

The 100-page proposal outlines the program summary, program design, institutional & personnel information, statistical data on homelessness, budget analysis, ideas on a security force, and series of letters asking for a shelter, especially for the Muslim woman.

One of the support letter written to Baitul An-Nisaa on July 20, 2006 reads, “There are Muslim women with or without children in Baltimore, Maryland that are needing a place to stay for reasons such as divorce, mental instability, and unforeseen events like the death of a spouse, the lost of a job, or fires to their homes. . . If a Muslim shelter is established, these women will be able to still practice their deen and get the assistance they need to receive proper job training and job placement as well as address any health concerns.”

Another support letter with no date reads, “Have you seen or heard of Muslim women being without a home? Well, if you haven’t, I have here in Baltimore City. Currently, there are three Muslim sisters living in one of the local Masajids her in Baltimore City because they have no home, no money, and no family to turn to in their time of need.”

There are various Muslim social service organizations in the metropolitan area; however none own a shelter to place homeless Muslim women.

Margaret Farchtchi, treasure of the Herndon-based Foundation for Temporary and Immediate Help (FAITH) commented that her organization has to often rent hotel rooms to provide temporary housing to homeless women. Farchtchi also stated that FAITH works with needy families to assist them into getting into government assisted public housing.

Furthermore, the Islamic-American Zakat Foundation (IZF) in Bethesda, Maryland gets many phone calls from clients that are either homeless or at the verge of losing their homes. According to Bahija Abdus-Salaam, former case working of IZF, homelessness is a serious issue among Muslim women. Most of the time, the IZF places homeless families in hotels or finds them inexpensive public housing in Maryland. “There is a desperate need for the American Muslim community to build a shelter for the Muslim families.”

Abdus-Salaam stated that IZF’s clients are often refereed to shelters run by Christians and the Muslim community is thankful for their assistance. However, she believes that this serious problem of homelessness needs to be addressed by Muslims leaders in the DC Area.

“It saddens me to know that Muslims are willing to send money overseas, but have not looked into funding a shelter to help homeless Muslim women in despair right her in DC,” said Abdus-Salaam.

“I personally know a sister who has been homeless because she was suffering from a disability. The sister had children. Many times, children are taken away form their mothers to be placed in foster homes. We want to be open up a shelter to avoid these types of problems.” Mina Osiruphu-El, assistant director of Muslimat An-Nisaa.

“I would love to see the Muslim community support my project and see that it will benefit many homeless woman and it was be one of the best forms of charity,” said Hanif.

If anyone is interested in contributing to this project, please contact Asma Hanif at (410) 466-8686.

http://www.muslimlinkpaper.com/

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Love Your Relatives

“None of you are believers unless you love for your brother/sister what you love for yourself.” - Hadith of Prophet Muhammad (s)

How often have we heard the above words of our beloved Prophet (s)? I’m sure there are not many Muslims who have not heard this phrase. It is one of the most oft-repeated and famous hadiths of all time. But as is so often the case, sometimes we can hear something so often that it’s deep meaning can escape us. This hadith is primarily referring to your Muslim brothers or sisters–and rightly so. If you look to give to another person what you would desire for yourself, you have given the utmost respect to that individual.

But sometimes we overlook our blood brothers and sisters as we dish out our love. We can get so caught up trying to show how righteous we are that we miss the point of what righteousness is. This is especially true of some of us converts (reverts) to the religion who have family members who are not Muslim.

Maintaining love and relations with our blood relatives is a very important part of our religion. ALLAH, The Almighty, has put blood relations pretty much at the top of the list in importance. Some erroneously think our non-Muslim relatives don’t count. I even heard one brother refer to his own mother as a kafir. I happen know his mother and she is a nice lady. She goes to church and is a believer in G-d. But just because she had not received or understood the spiritual connection to Muhammad the Prophet (s), he was cutting off relations with her. This is crazy and shows the depth that misunderstanding of the religion can take you; because there is something special about your own family, and especially your mother. There is not another human being in the world that will go to the end of the earth with you. Sometimes your family members, no matter how estranged, are the only people you can count on in time of need. A famous author coined the phrase, “home is the place where when you have to go there, they have to take you in.”

No one else fits that bill. Your friends and acquaintances will sympathize with you and probably make du’a for you; but that’s about as far as it goes. They don’t have to take you in and probably won’t.

You can lift your relatives up by you being the best Muslim you can be. It does a lot for you and the religion with the superior Islamic character dominating all situations. By dominating, I actually mean being submissive. Don’t air your family’s dirty laundry in public with other people. If your cousin, brother, sister or aunt has done something to offend you, make the Islamic decision to go no more than three days before reaching out to reconcile your differences. And by all means, get over petty differences.

Lastly, if you have aging parents, make them your priority. Cherish them now that they are weak, as they cherished you in your weak childhood. If there are more than one offspring, share the responsibility. Don’t leave all the work on one person even though they may be residing with them. Take turns watching and washing if need be.

ALLAH loves relationships that follow His rules for success. You will too.

As Salaam Alaikum
(Al Hajj) Abdullah Bey El-Amin

http://muslimmedianetwork.com/mmn/?p=662

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The Life of This World

Verily, Allâh! With Him (Alone) is the knowledge of the Hour, He sends down the rain, and knows that which is in the wombs. No person knows what he will earn tomorrow, and no person knows in what land he will die. Verily, Allâh is All­Knower, All­Aware (of things). Luqmân 31:34

Hadith - Sahih Bukhari Vol. 4, No. 41, Narrated ‘Abdullah bin Mas’ud
I asked Allah’s Messenger (saaws), “O Allah’s Messenger! What is the best deed?” He replied, “To offer the prayers at their early stated fixed times.” I asked, “What is next in goodness?” He replied, “To be good and dutiful to your parents.” I further asked, “What is next in goodness?” He replied, “To participate in Jihad in Alah’s Cause.” I did not ask Allah’s Messenger (saaws) anymore and if I had asked him more, he would have told me more.

One’s welfare in the Hereafter hinges upon how one conducts oneself in this life. It is imperative for every person to bear in mind the link between this life and the next, for some have wrongly thought that there is only this world; they spend their time gathering things and becoming attached to this life, a life that is fleeting. Then they die with their wishes and aspirations in their chests, unfulfilled and forgotten.

Sometimes I am amazed at our long term hopes in this world - at our future expectations for a life in which one may die at any moment:

No person knows what he will earn tomorrow, and no person knows in what land he will die.” Surah Luqman – Ayah 34.

Ask yourself these questions:

1. Do you really suppose that you will find peace and tranquillity while you are not pleased with your Lord or with His Decree, and while you are discontented with your sustenance and your talents?

2. Have you thanked your Lord properly for His blessings and favours, to the point that you deserve to ask for other favours? Whoever is incapable of handling a little is more than likely unable to handle a lot.

3. Why do we not benefit from those talents that Allah has given us, failing as we do to develop and cultivate them? Had we used those talents, we could have given to others and contributed to society.

Positive qualities and talents are often buried deep within us. Yet in so many of us, these talents are buried like expensive minerals underground - minerals that only the expert can mine, wash, and polish, making them shine. Therefore, our task lies in mining for our talents and then developing them.

Wasalaamu Alaikum Wa Rahmatullahi Wa Barakatuhu Ahsin.

PLEASE PASS THE WEBSITE DETAILS TO A FRIEND - http://www.jugon.com/reminder/

Details Taken From – “Don’t Be Sad” by Shaykh Aaidh Al-Qarni.

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The Melungeons: An Untold Story of Ethnic Cleansing in America

by Brent Kennedy, taken from Islamic Horizons, Nov/Dec 1994

Perhaps Nancy Hanks, the mother of Abraham Lincoln, was Melungeon. It somehow seems fitting that one of America’s greatest Presidents should be of mixed race and probable Muslim heritage. But who are the Melungeons?

Historical records document that from 1492 through the early 1600s, an estimated 500,000 Jews and Muslims were exiled from Spain and Portugal through a religious witch-hunt known as - the Spanish Inquisition. Hundreds of thousands of Muslim exiles escaped to their ancestral homelands of Morocco, Algeria, Libya, and Tunisia. In fact, the well-known Barbary Coast Pirates (that is, Berber Coast Pirates) of North Africa sprang from this group. They, along with their Turkish compatriots, were renowned for their seagoing exploits as they sought revenge against the Spanish and Portuguese in ferocious Mediterranean sea battles.

Of course, they didn’t always win: those pirates unfortunate enough to lose at sea often ended up as galley slaves beneath the creaking decks of Spanish and Portuguese ships bound for the New World. Ironically, slaves of the Christians once again.

Other Muslims - Berbers in particular - Moricos they were called, made their way to the Canary Islands, India, France and other countries. And interestingly enough, wherever these exiled Berbers went, they identified themselves as “Portuguese,” even if they had originated in Spain. In fact, the term “Portuguese” became almost synonymous for both the Muslims and the Jews who had been exiled during the Inquisition.

Finally, as the Inquisition grew in power and severity, even Christianized Moors and Jews were forced into exile. The “Conversos” - the name given to both Muslim and Jewish converts - were not trusted by either the Church or the government, and probably with good reason, since most had converted to Catholicism only to avoid the death sentence.

The Spanish Inquisition, horrible as it was, accomplished something of great historical value for Islam. Even though Western historians have generally ignored the evidence, there is little doubt that Muslims played an early - perhaps the earliest - role in the permanent settlement of this Nation. And there is little doubt that the Inquisition - with all its agonies - drove Spanish and Portuguese Muslims toward the New World.

While American school children learn of Columbus’s role in the discovery of the New World, they aren’t told the entire story. For example, Columbus employed both Moorish and Spanish sailors, and himself may have been Jewish. On his fourth voyage in 1502, he records two important discoveries:

First, on the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, he discovered an iron pot and an old ship’s mast preserved in an Indian hut. He and his crew determined these artifacts had come from the Canary Islands. The Canaries, a Portuguese possession, had been a favorite dumping ground for Conversos of Muslim Berber origin.

Second, on July 31, 1502, came an even more extraordinary discovery. Off the island of Jamaica, Columbus encountered strange people on a strange ship that western historians have generally considered to be Mayan Indians.

This ship was forty feet long with a diameter of eight feet, and had a shaded pavilion in the center. From a distance, Columbus thought it to be uncannily like the Moorish galleys he had so often seen in the Mediterranean. There were approximately forty men and women on this galley, and unlike the Jamaican Indians, these people wore clothing: sleeveless shirts with showy colors and designs like those Columbus had seen, in his own words, in Muslim Granada.

These so-called Mayan Indians carried a cargo of tools, copper implements, and forges for working copper. But perhaps Columbus’s striking observation was that the women aboard this galley “covered their faces like the women of Granada.” Were these truly Mayan Indians? Or simply one more case of biased historians refusing to accept the fact that Muslims could have reached the New World before Columbus? Columbus certainly considered the possibility.

In 1527, the first land crossing of the United States by a non-Native American most likely was achieved by Azemmouri, a Moroccan Berber - a Muslim. Originally a member of an expedition of 300 Spaniards, only Azemmouri and three of his comrades survived this eleven year, 5,000 mile trek from Florida to the West Coast and back to Texas. He was the first explorer to enter a Pueblo Indian village, and the story of his daring exploits make for fascinating reading. Curiously, Azemmouri is never mentioned in American history books.

The establishment of Jamestown, Virginia in 1607 was indeed an important event in American history. But it was by no means the first European settlement in the New World. The Spanish established the Santa Elena, South Carolina, colony in 1566, forty years before Jamestown. The Colony thrived for more than twenty years, until it was overrun by the English in 1587. But since the English won the battle for this Nation, Santa Elena was conveniently left out of American history books.

What happened to the survivors of Santa Elena, and who were they? Their identity is important to understanding the Melungeon people, and understanding the hidden role played by Islam in the shaping of the American nation. Many of the Santa Elena colonists were converted Muslims and Jews, or Conversos. In Spain, the Muslims were known as Mudajjan, a word probably related to the term Melungeon. Ethnically, many of the Santa Elena colonists were Berber Muslims and Sephardic Jews, recruited by the Portuguese Captain Joao Pardo from the heavily Berber Galician Mountains of nonhern Portugal in 1567 - less than one year before the Inquisition kicked into high gear against the Muslims.

When Santa Elena fell, its inhabitants - including its convened Jews and Muslims - escaped into the hinterlands, making their way to the mountains of North Carolina. And there they survived, intermarrying to some degree with Native Americans, eventually merging with a second group arriving on American shores in, ironically, 1587 - the same year Santa Elena fell.

North African Berbers and Turks captured in the Mediterranean by the Spanish and Portuguese were regularly used as galley slaves in ships crossing the Atlantic. Once in the New World, these Muslim captives were assigned to slave labor on the sugar plantations and in the mining operations of, among other places, Cuba and Brazil.

In 1586, the English pirate, Sir Francis Drake, commanding thirty English ships, made a daring raid against his Spanish and Portuguese enemies on the coast of Brazil. During this raid, Drake liberated some 400 Portuguese and Spanish held prisoners, including an estimated 300 Moorish and Turkish galley slave Muslims captured in Mediterranean sea battles - as well as several dozen South American Indians, a smaller number of West African Muslims, and a few Portuguese soldiers. Drake had planned to arm and release the Turks and Africans on Cuba, to seve as a stronghold against the Spanish - but heavy storms forced him to continue up the coast to North Carolina.

There, on Roanoke Islam, he was besieged by stranded English settlers pleading for a ride home to England. The English colony of Ralph B. Lane had enough of the New World and wanted to go home. To fulfill their wish, Drake had to make room for them on his already crowded ships. According to English records, only 100 Turks were taken back to England where they were ransomed to the “Turkish Dominions.” There’s no further mention of the remaining 200 Moors and Turks, the West Africans, the Portuguese soldiers, and the South American Indians by Drake, and records show that Sir Walter Raleigh, who visited the Island two weeks later, found no trace of them. Where did they go?

Research indicates that Drake left them behind, assuring that he or someone would be back for them. But that was no guarantee of safety from the pursuing Spanish or Portuguese. On Roanoke Island they wre little more than sitting ducks. There is little doubt that they made their way the short distance to the mainland, probably utilizing the small boats left behind by the English, and then traveled steadily inland. Along the way, they too intermarried with Native Americans, mostly Powhatan, Pamunkey, Nansemond, and Hatteras.

Within the next decade or so they encountered the remnants of the Santa Elena colony, many of whom shared their Muslim heritage. And there, thousands of miles from their homelands, these two surviving groups became one people. Christians, Jews, and Muslims - literally, the People of the Book - living and worshiping the God of Abraham together.

In 1654, the English explorers learned from southeastern Indians of a colony of bearded people wearing European clothing, living in cabins, smelting silver, and dropping to their knees to pray many times daily, wherever they might be. A people who did not speak English, but claimed to be “Portyghee.”

In the mid 1600s, there were people living among the Powhatans and related tribes of eastern Virginia and North Carolina who wre described as dark like Indians, but called “Portugals.” A similar people in South Carolina called themselves “Turks.” The early seventeenth-century Powhatan Indian description of Heaven is nearly word for word the description found in the Holy Qur’an.

In the 1690s, French explorers reported finding “Christianized Moors” in the Carolina mountains. When the first English arrived, in the mid-1700s, large colonies of the so-called “Melungeons” were already well established in the Tennessee and Carolina mountains. And, in broken Elizabethan English, they called themselves “Portyghee,” or by the more mysterious term, “Melungeon.”

Tennessee Governor John Sevier records a 1784 encounter in what is now western North Carolina with a dark-skinned, reddish-brown complexioned people supposed to be of Moorish descent who claim to be Portuguese.

In east Tennessee in the late 1700s, Jonathan Swift, an Englishman married to a Melungeon woman, utilized Melungeon men in his own silver mining operations. His dark-skinned companions were known as the “Mecca Indians.”

Over the years, as growing numbers of Anglo settlers swept upon them and around them, the Melungeons were pushed higher and higher into the mountains. And their claims of Portuguese and Melungeon heritage were increasingly ridiculed. Even the word “Melungeon” became a most disparaging term. In fact, to be legally classified as a Melungeon meant, in the words of one journalist, to be “nobody at all.”

The Melungeons, pushed off their lands, denied their rights, often murdered, always mistreated, became an embittered and nearly defeated people. Over the ensuing decades - in a vain effort to fit in with their Anglo neighbors, they lost their heritage, their culture, their names, and their original religion but not their genetic structure.

Perhaps the most stunning evidence is the gene frequency research conducted in 1990 by Dr. James Guthrie, who performed a reanalysis of 177 Melungeon blood samples taken in 1969 in east Tennessee and southwest Virginia. Dr. Guthrie compared thbe frequency of certain genes within the Melungeon sample to the known genetic make-up of nearly 200 other world population groups. His findings indicated no significant differences between the Melungeon people of east Tennessee and southwest Virginia, and the people of North Africa, especially Morocco, Algeria, and Libya, the Galician mountains of Spain and Portugal, Iraq, Cyprus, Malta, the Canary Islands, extreme southern Italy, and most interesting certain South American Indians and, last but not least, the Turks.

Can it be pure coincidence that these gene frequency comparisons match up so perfectly with those populations theorized to be the source of the Melungeons? Can this sort of coincidence truly exist? There are also a number of medical conditions associated with the Melungeon people, e.g. sarcoidosis, a debilitating and sometimes fatal disease of Arabic, North African, and Portuguese people with links to the Canary Islands. In this country it’s most common among Caucasian-Americans of Melungeon descent and African-Americans with southeastern roots. Both groups undoubtedly share the same Mediterranean and Middle Eastern gene pool. There is strong evidence that Christopher Columbus himself suffered from sarcoidosis. And there are other genetically related illnesses as well. Familial Mediterranean Fever, thallasemia, and Machado-Joseph Disease (also known as Azorean Disease) are all strong indicators that Melungeons are indeed of mixed Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, North African, and African descent.

Even if historians never took seriously the Melungeon claim to be Portuguese or Moorish, the medical and genetic work cannot be so easily dismissed.

What can the long-standing mystery word “Melungeon” possibly mean? It was used by Spanish and Portuguese Berbers to describe themselves. But now there is yet another hint, further substantiating a Muslim origin. There are two Turkish words: “melun” meaning cursed or damned, and “can” meaning “life” or “soul.” Used together, these words - pronounced “Melungeon” - translate as “one whose life or soul has been cursed.” Which would seem quite appropriate for 200 Muslim Turks an Ocean away from their loved ones and their country.

The descendants of the Melungeon people are everywhere, especially those who have ancestors from the Southeastern United States, of any race, with the following surnames: Adams, dkins, Bell, Bennett, Berry, Bowling, Chavis, Coleman, Collins, Gibson, Goins, Hall, Jackson, Lopes, Moore, Mullins, Nash, Robinson, Sexton, and Williams. As a result of continuing research, several American celebrities have recently discovered their Melungeon roots.

The Melungeon researchers are supported by grants from the governments of Portugal, Morocco, and especially Turkey. The Turkish are providing Arabic-reading scholars to translate records from the Ottoman Empire. Among other competent scholars assisting in this research are Dr. Ahmad al-Hassan, author of An Illustrated History of Islamic Science and Technology, published by the Cambridge University Press. Research grants have also come from the humanities councils of South Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky, and Georgia. Many Melungeons are excited to learn, though they themselves are Christians, but their ancestors were Muslims, and what they accomplished. This realization puts into better focus the prejudices that their people have suffered, not only the older members of their families, but still living ones. A Melungeon lady suffering because of the dark color of her skin, or a Melungeon male being attacked by two men in Blacksburg, Virginia, in 1980 because they thought he was Iranian, or another being detained as a suspected Palestinian at an Israeli border crossing while visiting the Holy Land with his family. All these things have impact, and point out the insanity of prejudice based on one’s physical characteristics. The Melungeons were Americans, and Christians we well, and even thought they were Scots-Irish. But it didn’t matter, because the rest of the World was caught up in its preset prejudices.

The Melungeons’ experience shows that even if kinship may not be seen on the surface, it’s there.

The Melungeons, victims of an early form of ethnic cleansing, are the ancestors of a significant number of present day Americans. Americans who may not know that they are descended from Muslims and Jews, Arabs, Berbers, Africans, Native Americans, Portuguese and Spanish. And when people maliciously target any religious, racial, or ethnic group that is different from what they perceive themselves to be, they are truly hurting themselves. Racial and religious prejudice is nothing more than self-mutilation. Humankind are all - not just figuratively, but literally - brothers and sisters. Not just in God’s eyes, but in true family kinship as well.

The Melungeons, though most today are Christians, are the living legacy of Islam’s first wave of immigration to the New World.

Author of ‘The Melungeons: The Resurrection of a Proud People,’ published by Mercer University Press (1994).

http://www.beautifulislam.net/history/melungeons.htm

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