Seek news on
InfoAnda
powered by
Google
Custom Search

Last text search :
2016 wso 2.5 rw-r
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r

wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php


Monday, 18 January 2010 - US Shiites tentatively try to Americanize
  • Pakistanis angry over detentions in Times Sq. case
    Monday, May 24, 2010
    ISLAMABAD – Relatives of three men detained by Pakistan for alleged links to the suspect in the attempted Times Square bombing say the men are innocent.
    They
  • Taiwan denies boycotting Australian film festival
    Thursday, August 6, 2009

    AFP - Thursday, August 6TAIPEI (AFP) - - Taiwan's Beijing-friendly government on Wednesday denied boycotting an Australian film festival amid a row over the e
  • Merkel's support dips, regional ally resigns International
    Thursday, September 3, 2009

    By Sarah Marsh and Noah Barkin

    BERLIN (Reuters) - Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered a double blow on Thursday as a senior party ally in east German
  • Minister seeks closure of anti-Berlusconi websites
    Wednesday, December 16, 2009
    ROME (AFP) - – The Italian government moved Tuesday to close down Internet sites encouraging further violence against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who
  • Asian markets mixed after Wall Street rally
    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    By ELAINE KURTENBACH,AP Business Writer AP - Wednesday, March 18SHANGHAI - Asia's stock market rally seemed to be running out of steam Wednesday, despite an
  • Five billion people to use mobile phones in 2010: UN | 16 February 2010
  • U.S. reviewing UN agency over IT supplies to Iran | | 4 July 2012
  • Playboy to open first shop in Taiwan | 12 October 2010
  • India probes Google, Yahoo for possible forex violation: report | | 14 February 2012


    Forum Views () Forum Replies ()

    Read more with google mobile : US Shiites tentatively try to Americanize

    Yahoo! My Yahoo! Mail More Yahoo! Services Account Options New User? Sign Up Sign In Help Yahoo! Search web search Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Africa Europe Latin America Middle East North America US Shiites tentatively try to Americanize By RACHEL ZOLL,AP Religion Writer - 2 hours 55 minutes ago Send IM Story Print DEARBORN, Mich. – Sayyid Haider Bahar al-Uloom paces before his students seated in two neat rows _ men in one, women in the other. They meet each week in a small but growing office in an old storefront downtown, its shelves lined with Arabic texts on Islamic jurisprudence. Tonight's lesson is on justice, but Bahar al-Uloom's lecture ranges wide of Muslim teaching. He cites The Federalist Papers, slavery in U.S. history and spirituality in "The Audacity of Hope." A 37-year-old Iraqi Shiite, he consumes books on American culture and religion, analyzing the work of mega-pastors Rick Warren, Joel Osteen and others, to learn their appeal. "We should not fear introducing people to other ideas," says Bahar al-Uloom, whose title sayyid is for those who trace their lineage to the Prophet Muhammad. On this night in Michigan, he ends his lecture with the same message he brings to Shiite groups around the country: Your ideals, rooted in Islam, are not alien here. "We call them Islamic values, but they are universal values," he says in near accentless English. "If it's a principle or act that would help all Americans, all I need to do is speak it in a language that is universal." Shiites comprise less than 15 percent of the 1.5 billion Muslims in the world and an even smaller percentage of the Muslims in the U.S. Within the wider Muslim world, they are often persecuted for their beliefs and way of worship. Islamic law governs even the smallest issues for devout Shiites. Can they wear cologne? Listen to popular music? Sit at a table where alcohol is served? New interpretations are needed for life in non-Muslim countries. Pious Shiites have seen threats to their faith from the permissive American way of life and what for many is their first experience of a non-Muslim government. Worried that voting or other civic involvement would violate Islamic law, many have opted instead to turn inward, focusing on preserving their traditions. But the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror strikes, the war in Iraq and other world events have prompted some significant changes in the U.S. Shiite community in recent years. Shiite clerics and activists are pushing community members beyond the protective walls they built, encouraging them to fully embrace their American citizenship. At the forefront of the effort is the nonprofit that Bahar al-Uloom helps represent, called I.M.A.M., which tells Shiites they can vote, participate in the 2010 U.S. Census and hold public office without abandoning their faith. "In the United States, the law here is not against Islam," said Sheik Mohammed el-Ali al-Halabi, a Syrian who came to the U.S. a decade ago, sitting in his bare-bones office at I.M.A.M. "I can be a good Muslim and a good American." Half a world away from Dearborn lies the inspiration for this drive, an unexpected source for dramatic change: an elderly holy man who rarely leaves his home in the old quarter of the Iraqi holy city of Najaf and who will probably never visit the United States. Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani isn't widely known in the U.S. outside public policy circles, but he should be. He is one of the most revered thinkers in global Shiism, a moderate in outlook and a powerful force in Iraq. His behind-the-scenes interventions were key to guiding the country's fledgling democracy. The grand ayatollah and his advisers lead lives dedicated to religious tradition, but they are also pioneers in using the Web to reach the globally dispersed faithful. They teach that good Muslims must be active citizens of whatever country they call home. As Shiites emigrate around the world, al-Sistani sends his representatives along to guide them on how to remain devout in a foreign culture. I.M.A.M., the Imam Mahdi Association of Marjaeya, is the American office for al-Sistani. The organization's lecturers and scholars crisscross the country to support fledgling Shiite institutions. Al-Sistani is far from the only marja, or top-level religious authority, with American followers, but he is one of the most prominent, and through the Dearborn office, he is helping shape American Shiism. "It's kind of a status symbol that you are recognized and trusted by the office of the ayatollah," said Liyakat Takim, author of "Shi'ism in America," and professor at McMaster University in Canada. "It builds your credibility." I.M.A.M. opened a year ago under the leadership of Sayyid Mohammad Baqir Kashmiri, a cleric who works in Dearborn and Los Angeles on behalf of al-Sistani and his advisers. The Dearborn area has the biggest concentration of Shiites in the United States. The city is home to the headquarters of Ford Motor Co., which started attracting Arab and Muslim immigrants in the early 1900s with above-average assembly line wages. Now, the city bordering Detroit is filled with mosques, Islamic schools, Lebanese restaurants and food markets that follow Islamic dietary laws. Inside I.M.A.M., poster-size photos of al-Sistani and his late mentor, Ayatollah Sayyid Abdul-Qasim al-Khoei, hang above the office reception desk. It is one of the rare portraits that the reclusive al-Sistani ever allowed of himself, as he, like many of the Dearborn staff and volunteers, consider it a sign of humility to avoid photographs of themselves. Bahar al-Uloom, I.M.A.M.'s vice chairman, graduated from Dearborn's public high school and Wayne State University, but his seminary education has been by correspondence with scholars from Najaf, Iraq, and Qom, Iran _ prominent centers of Shiite learning. For years, teachers mailed him sackfuls of cassette recordings of their lectures, which he would play in his car as he drove the streets around Dearborn. He and his cousin, Sayyid Hassan al-Hakim, a 26-year-old graduate student in public administration, often arrive early in the morning to study before the deluge of calls and e-mails with questions about Islamic law and requests for help. Staff cell phones buzz all day with questions sent by text. "How far off can u be from the Qibla?" reads a query on al-Hakim's cell phone, about facing in the proper direction, toward Mecca, for prayer. Volunteers, mostly in their 20s and 30s, share computers crammed into a small room off the library. Among them are the editors and designers of I.M.A.M.'s glossy educational magazine, Reflections. They have a policy of publishing in English, except for religious references that require Arabic, to reach a younger generation of American Muslims, along with non-Muslims. "Muslims should be essential participants in their respective societies while maintaining the beauty of Islam as their code of conduct," reads a recent article titled "Being American and Being Muslim." Al-Sistani "is known to have repeatedly called for integration with preservation of identity," the author writes. The same article indirectly addresses the threat of extremism, condemning "so-called `Muslims' who endanger innocent lives." The author urges Muslims and non-Muslims to report any potential threats to civil authorities and "hold fast to the principles of Islam and protect those around them." In the spirit of the Najaf scholars, and their embrace of new technology and thinking, I.M.A.M. uses contemporary management tools to aid its cause. Bahar al-Uloom quotes from the corporate success book "Good to Great." Al-Hakim collects evaluation forms for feedback on programming. The office uses customer service software to monitor response time for calls to 1-888-SISTANI, the toll-free line. In side rooms, al-Halabi and other clerics offer counseling on personal and religious issues. Sayyid Mehdi al-Ameen, a resident scholar at I.M.A.M., had been a judge in a religious court in Lebanon, hearing cases on divorce, child custody and other issues. Three days a week he teaches a class on ethics and another on the Quran, and provides marriage counseling. Down a winding staircase into the basement is the organization's video production arm, AscentTV.net. It was created by Aous Asfar, a veteran branding executive, and targets young people under age 35. The shows are in English and include lectures on Islamic teaching, the importance of interfaith relations, and discussion of workplace and family issues. An underlying theme of the shows is that observant Shiites can find ways to fit into Western society. On a program for young professionals, Wissam Bazzi, a 34-year-old who works at AscentTV, holds out his right arm to show how men can create a personal safe zone _ two or three arm lengths _ to avoid being drawn into a handshake or hug with a female co-worker. "They don't have to feel like outsiders," says Asfar, a Canadian of Iraqi descent. The call to prayer sounds at midday. Staff members assemble in a corner of the library with their prayer mats directed toward Mecca. Houda Fawaz, a 26-year-old project manager for AscentTV, was working at a bank when she thought "there had to be something more," and began volunteering with the video unit. She now does editing and post-production work for a women's show called "Sister to Sister" and is planning a new career in media. Fawaz, who wears a scarf that covers her hair and neck, said she hopes the show reaches non-Muslims as well so they can learn how Western Muslim women think and move beyond stereotypes _ or what she calls "the whole `women are oppressed' issue." "I've always wanted a job where I felt I was helping other people," said Fawaz, the college-educated daughter of Lebanese immigrants. "With communications, you can touch so many people at one time." The office is open at least 10 hours a day but often far longer. On a recent evening, two young women without appointments dropped in after 9 p.m. seeking help with family troubles. One woman was upset that her father opposed her decision to become a psychologist. He didn't think she'd earn enough. The second woman said her mother objected to the man she loved because he had not earned a bachelor's degree. Bahar al-Uloom agreed to talk with the parents. I.M.A.M. takes its responsibilities to the Shiite community far beyond Dearborn. The group recently organized a meeting of the Council of Shia Muslim Scholars in North America, a panel revived by lead cleric Kashmiri. The theme of the event, citizenship and integration, was written in Arabic and English on a banner across a photo of the U.S. Capitol. More than 40 turbaned clerics gathered for two days in the conference room of an Atlanta airport hotel, drawing surprised stares from other guests. Along with the Muslim scholars, I.M.A.M. invited two Roman Catholic academics to explain how Catholic immigrants overcame the hatred that greeted them in a once overwhelmingly Protestant United States. The Muslim clerics discussed the challenges they face urging their communities to, as one participant said, "come out of their boxes." No one is sure how effective I.M.A.M. can be. Like American Sunnis, Shiites are divided by ethnicity, language and culture. Often, I.M.A.M. is viewed in the Dearborn community as a mostly Iraqi or Lebanese organization, even though the group works with Iranians, South Asians, African-Americans and others. Then there are those Muslims who seem beyond reach: the notable number of Shiites who have become so Americanized that they no longer practice their faith. The staff at I.M.A.M. acknowledge all the challenges to their mission, but they find encouragement in the Shiite history of struggle and survival, and the success of other U.S. immigrant groups before them. With a growing number of American-born Shiites, just blending in with the larger Muslim community or hiding away in enclaves is no longer an option, they say. "Sayyid Sistani emphasizes that you are in this country," Bahar al-Uloom says. "You are citizens here." ____ On the Net: I.M.A.M.: http://www.imam-us.org/ Recommend Send IM Story Print Related Articles Rights group urges Israel to end Gaza blockade AP - 1 hour 1 minute ago Cleveland Orchestra musicians strike over contract AP - 1 hour 7 minutes ago Suicide bombers, gunmen attack central Kabul Reuters - 1 hour 8 minutes ago Pope gunman released from prison AP - 54 minutes ago Taliban launches attacks on central Kabul AFP - 1 hour 25 minutes ago News Search Top Stories Toyota to double global hybrid output: report Why coastal oil spills can pollute for decades: study Saab drivers hit the road to support car brand Pope to visit Rome synagogue amid Jewish anger Obama's 1st yr marked by diplomacy, but few results More Top Stories » ADVERTISEMENT Most Popular Most Viewed Most Recommended Obama surprises Michelle with birthday dinner Cancer-stricken Dennis Hopper files for divorce Obama's 1st yr marked by diplomacy, but few results Pope to visit Rome synagogue amid Jewish anger Saab drivers hit the road to support car brand More Most Viewed » Beat the blues by going to bed early: study Huge tomb found at Egypt's Saqqara pyramid Woman who saved Anne Frank's diary dead at 100 Scientists praise Obama as Doomsday clock reset More Most Recommended » Elsewhere on Yahoo! Financial news on Yahoo! Finance Stars and latest movies Best travel destinations More on Yahoo! News Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Subscribe to our news feeds Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS » More news feeds | What are news feeds? Also on Yahoo Answers Groups Mail Messenger Mobile Travel Finance Movies Sports Games » All Yahoo! Services Site Highlights Singapore Full Coverage Most Popular Asia Entertainment Photos Copyright © 2010 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved. Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Community | Intellectual Property Rights Policy | Help

    Other News on Monday, 18 January 2010
    Ex-housekeeper alleges abuse by Israeli PM's wife
    US-TECH Summary
    Pope to visit Rome synagogue amid Jewish anger
    Afghan president to offer Taliban new peace plan
    Fearful Haiti quake survivors turn to God for help |
    Karzai to offer Taliban new peace plan
    Venezuela's Chavez nationalizes French-owned retailer |
    Saddam official Tareq Aziz hospitalized
    Billionaire seen winning tight Chile vote |
    Northern Irish leaders shake hands for first time |
    Angola arrests a third rights activist in Cabinda |
    Quake-hit Haiti's cabinet meets -- in the open-air |
    Turner's bid for park bison stokes wildlife debate
    Afghan lawmakers adjourn despite Cabinet standoff
    Taliban kidnap two Chinese engineers, four Afghans
    Obama to parishioners: Keep faith in hard times
    Wall St sets bar higher for IBM in 2010 after rally |
    US supports Afghan plan to reintegrate Taliban
    MySQL founder turns to China, Russia to halt Oracle |
    Drug abuse in US prisons is tough to stamp out
    182 more ex-child soldiers leave camps in Nepal
    4,000 homeless, 1 girl killed in Manila slum fire
    No progress in RI immigrant prison release program
    Haiti's history created bond with many US blacks
    Pakistani officials: Suspected US drone kills 20
    Plug being pulled on decades-old navigation system
    Police: Minor sidewalk squabble leads to stabbing
    Bush, Clinton: Haiti response not about politics
    Filipino WWII veterans still waiting for payments
    NASA listens for silent Mars lander
    Globe nominees mix wild fantasy, harsh reality
    Hollywood gets ready for Golden Globes
    Avatar hits $1.6 billion worldwide |
    O'Brien, NBC separation may upstage Golden Globes |
    Filmmaker: Movie about balloon dad could clear him
    "Avatar" hits $1.6 billion worldwide
    O'Brien, NBC separation may upstage Golden Globes
    Globe nominees mix wild fantasy, harsh reality
    Taliban launches attacks on central Kabul
    Ukraine vote heads for tense run-off
    U.S. troops to help Haiti's security; aid flows in |
    Sony's PlayStation is 'poison' to children: Chavez
    Marines exit Iraq in first wave of US forces out
    Why coastal oil spills can pollute for decades: study
    Yanukovich, Tymoshenko qualify for Ukraine run-off: polls
    MySQL founder turns to China, Russia to halt Oracle
    Saab drivers hit the road to support car brand
    Suicide bombers, gunmen attack central Kabul |
    Iran state TV cracks open door to opposition
    Netanyahu, Merkel to meet on Iran, Palestinian issues |
    Iraq's 'Chemical Ali' sentenced to death
    Chinese kidnapped as Karzai mulls Taliban strategy
    Chavez says U.S. occupying Haiti in name of aid |
    Iraq's "Chemical Ali" gets 4th death sentence
    Al Qaeda: Yemen claims of killing fighters untrue |
    Iran ex-prosecutor denies role in torture deaths
    Iraq's 'Chemical Ali' to hang for 1988 gas attack
    Kenyan police raid Somali suburb after riots |
    Haiti's voodoo priests object to mass burials |
    Chile shifts right as billionaire wins presidency |
    Fearful Haiti quake survivors turn to God for help |
    Ukraine PM Tymoshenko to face old rival in runoff |
    Sony's PlayStation is 'poison' to children: Chavez
    Motorola plans 5-6 smartphones in China this year |
    Can newspaper muckraking carry on in nonprofits?
    5 Americans detained in Pakistan allege torture
    CAPITAL CULTURE: Obama cites value of volunteerism
    China to expand smoking bans in 7 major cities
    US Shiites tentatively try to Americanize
    Gunbattle reported in Afghan capital
    Tips for getting involved in national service
    Attorney: Man in JFK breach just used 'wrong door'
    Myanmar court hears Suu Kyi appeal of house arrest
    5 people found slain in southeast Texas home
    Support for Japan PM drops amid cash probe: polls
    Shanghai targeted in China phone porn crackdown
    More cold to compound misery in China's Xinjiang
    Search halted for potential CA boat crash victims
    Extreme cold, snow kills 4 in northwest China
    4 Miss. college students killed in Ala. motel fire
    Police arrest man accused of "time zone" cheating
    Earthquake in China kills 7 people
    15 sickened on flight from US Virgin Islands to NC
    Globe nominees mix wild fantasy, harsh reality
    Seoul shares rise 0.6 pct; LG Elec, KEPCO advance
    IMF chief: global recovery stronger than expected
    S.Korea finmin warns against hasty policy exit
    China Eastern surges on 2009 profit expectations
    PAKISTAN
    Avatar, Hangover take home top Golden Globes |
    Glee sings top TV show tune at Golden Globes |
    Ricky Gervais falls flat at Golden Globes |
    RPT-UPDATE 1-Korea Life Insurance IPO planned for Q1- Hanwha
    Golden Globe fashion fights gloom of Haiti, rain |
    Oil price drop, Wall Street hit Asian shares
    U.S. Juggles Aid And Military Logistics, Relief Suppliers Complain
    Simon Cowell recruiting X Factor judges |
    Taiwan dlr up, market watches govt fund selling, QDII
    Obama Attends Church Founded in 1866 By Seven Freed Slaves
    Tsunami-generating quake possible off Indonesia: scientists
    Seoul shares down on banks; KEPCO, Doosan Heavy rally
    Chaotic Conditions In Haiti Still Hamper Distribution Of Disaster Relief Supplies
    Peace Activist Cindy Sheehan Concludes Protest In Front Of Cheney's House
    S.Korea firms urge govt caution over exit strategy
    'Mad Men' wins third drama award in a row
    Ricky Gervais falls flat at Golden Globes
    Suspected U.S. Missile Attack Kills 12 In Pakistan
    Haitian-American Man Behind JFK Security Breach, Police Say
    Hillary Clinton Arrives In Haiti, Meets With President Preval And Reassures People
    Classy, glitzy, 'Golden Globes' failed as a party
    Obama Announces Clinton And Bush Teaming Up To Help Haiti
    Cameron's `Avatar' wins best drama honor at Globes
    Breaking: JFK Terminal Security Fiasco, Passengers Re-screening Going On
    "Glee" sings top TV show tune at Golden Globes
    'Avatar' wins top honors at Golden Globes
    Avatar scores best film and director at Golden Globes
    Leno gets support from staff; O'Brien ratings soar
    Actor Todd Lasance to plea to cocaine charge
    Militants launch multiple attacks across Kabul
    Toyota to double global hybrid output: report
    Stars Announced To Perform At Hope For Haiti Event
    Turk who shot Pope John Paul released from prison |
    Israeli police arrest 5 in West Bank mosque blaze
    Iran says sees signs of progress in nuclear talks |
    Motorola plans 5-6 smartphones in China this year
    Meryl Streep, Sandra Bullock Share Best Actress Win At The Critics Choice Awards
    Rights groups urge Hamas to allow war crimes probe
    UK court scraps curfews on two terrorism suspects |
    Meryl Streep, Sandra Bullock, "Avatar" Win Golden Globes
    Qaeda says fighters alive, Yemen vows more strikes |
    Iran tries five people over December unrest |
    Somali pirates free oil tanker after record ransom |
    Saudis say Sept blast killed 3 wanted militants |
    CORRECTED: Gunmen kill five in Iraqi NGO office |
    US-TECH Summary
    Motorola plans 5-6 smartphones in China this year
    Google probing possible inside help on attack |
    Handset market recovery in focus after weak 2009 |
    Turkey blocking 3,700 websites: OSCE |
    ASML Q4 order book seen to signal tech rebound |
    Rapes of elderly women terrify central Texas towns
    UK High Court rules for Nokia vs IPCom |
    Obama to celebrate MLK's life and legacy
    Leno gets support from staff
    Shanghai Expo plans before, after Haiti exhibits
    Ex-Minn. senator ousted by Al Franken won't be gov
    Cleveland Orchestra musicians strike over contract
    China's 1,459-year-old Buddha gets $10.8M facelift
    Turkmens to take down golden monument of ex-leader
    5 Americans detained in Pakistan allege torture
    China to expand smoking bans in 7 major cities
    SKorea: Talks with North still on despite threats
    Vietnam aims to carve world's biggest jade Buddha
    Activist freed on bail after arrest in India
    Taiwan artist carves 'world's tiniest tiger'
    Taliban militants launch attack on Afghan capital
    Conan O'Brien finalizing exit from NBC |
    Pakistani rupee weakens vs dollar; stocks end lower
    Google says 'business as usual' in China
    S.Korea's rate hike seen premature- OECD
    JAL shares hit all-time low of $0.05
    China's 2009 web earnings reach 11 billion dollars
    The Golden Globes: As It Happened
    Japan's recovery still fragile: finance minister
    Mazda, Ford deny plans to dismantle China venture
    King Cameron redux? `Avatar' aims for Oscar glory
    Obama musical thrills audiences in Germany
    US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary
    Conan O'Brien finalizing exit from NBC
    Backstage and on the red carpet at Golden Globes
    Simon Cowell recruiting "X Factor" judges
    Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
    Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
    Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
    AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
    The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
    AMD to Start Production of piledriver
    Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
    Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
    Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
    ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
    Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
    What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
    AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
    Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
    Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
    Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights

    [InfoAnda] [Home] [This News]



    USD EUR - 1 year graph

    BlogMeter 1.01