This survey is really alarming. In a survey of more than 1,000 American Muslims under the age of 30 over 250 believe suicide bombings to be justified
under certain circumstances. Among Muslims of all ages, 13
percent of respondents condoned suicide bombings. Five percent had a favorable opinion of al Qaeda. How many of these Muslims were ex-cons who were indoctrinated in jail? It only takes one to kill a hundred people in a mall.
Survey of US Muslims' Views Pleases, Worries Islamic Groups
By Fred Lucas
CNSNews.com Staff Writer
May 24, 2007
This survey is really alarming.
(CNSNews.com) - Moderate Muslims who want to see adherents to
the faith assimilate into the mainstream American culture are in many
ways reassured by a new poll reflecting the community's views. But the
survey also sets off alarms, they said, pointing to respondents' views
on suicide bombings and 9/11.
The Pew Research Center survey
of more than 1,000 American Muslims showed more than one in four U.S.
Muslims under the age of 30 believe suicide bombings to be justified
under certain circumstances.
The breakdown shows that two
percent say it is often justified, 13 percent say sometimes justified
and 11 percent say rarely justified. Among Muslims of all ages, 13
percent of respondents condoned suicide bombings and 80 percent did not.
Critics
of Islam will predictably pick and choose portions of the poll, said
Ibraham Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American Islamic Relations
(CAIR), a group whose "moderate" tag critics have frequently called into question.
"There
was an unfortunate media emphasis on a tiny minority when the
overwhelming majority of the Muslim community rejects terrorism and
religious extremism," Hooper told Cybercast News Service.
"If
there is a tiny minority that can be addressed through education and
persuasion," he added. "I can't imagine a right-minded person saying
they condone suicide bombings."
But M. Zuhdi Jasser, the chairman of American Islamic Forum for Democracy, contends that there is reason to worry.
He
cited not just the suicide bombing issue, but the fact that 28 percent
of respondents said they did not believe Arabs were responsible for the
Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks. Another 32 percent said they did not
know, and 40 percent said they believed Arabs were responsible.
Jasser
said in an interview that the finding reflected a state of denial in
the Muslim community that must be fixed in order to break the control
of extremism.
"This is an outgrowth of political Islam and the
focus on foreign policy rather than the moral and spiritual components
of Islam," Jasser said. "Left to the current debate in America, these
numbers could go up. If we change the conversation and deconstruct the
legitimacy of the grievances, it will decrease."
On the positive
side, overwhelming majorities - close to or more than two-thirds of
American Muslims polled - say they are happy with their communities,
have never been discriminated against, believe they can get ahead
through hard work, and believe life in the U.S. is better for women
than life in Muslim countries.
But while those numbers may
suggest that such Muslims are less likely to subscribe to radical
Islam, terrorism expert Daniel Pipes said that is not necessarily the
case.
"There is little sociology to radical Islam - poor, rich,
educated, uneducated, young, old - it is an attractive ideology for
those with radical attitudes," Pipes, director of the Middle East
Forum, told Cybercast News Service.
He said some of the
alarming numbers in the survey mirror what has already been found in
Britain, where radical Islam is a growing movement.
Based on
the Pew Research Center figure of a total of 2.3 million American
Muslims, Pipes noted that "one percent is 23,000 people - that's not a
small number of people."
"The fact that the Muslim population is
doing well economically is good news, [but] it doesn't translate into
good news politically," he said.
'No opinion on al Qaeda'
Sixty-eight
percent of respondents said they had an unfavorable view of al Qaeda,
five percent had a favorable opinion, and a sizeable number - 27
percent - said they had no opinion.
Hooper was dismissive of
that finding. "You could ask all Americans if the moon is made of green
cheese and five percent would say yes," he said.
"In the
post-9/11 atmosphere, a lot of Muslims prefer not to put their opinions
out there. When we do our polling, a lot of Muslims won't answer,
because they are afraid of entrapment."
As for the fact that a
majority of respondents either don't think Arabs were behind 9/11 or
say they don't know, Hooper called it "just a bit of wishful thinking.
They would hope no Muslim is capable of that." He added that "a growing
number of Americans [are] buying into conspiracy theories" about 9/11.
"The idea of conspiracy theories runs wild in the Arab community," Kamal Nawash, president of the Free Muslims Coalition, told Cybercast News Service.
"The five percent that supports al Qaeda is the only number that
concerns me. Other than that, the numbers don't have practical concerns
to Americans."
Nawash, whose group is often at odds with CAIR,
said he did not believe those who indicated support for suicide
bombings would be willing to carry out such attacks in the U.S.
They
were speaking in the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, he
said, adding that such an attitude would change once Muslims understand
that suicide and murder are forbidden by Islam in all circumstances.
"They've
seen mixed messages that it was wrong in every instance, but Israel was
the exception. That's wrong for a whole bunch of reasons," Nawash said.
"One of the consequences of this double standard is the Muslims are now
the biggest victims of suicide bombings in Iraq."
Nawash does
concede that the percentages supporting violence, though small, should
not be ignored. "It only takes one to cause trouble," he said. "The
answer to this is a united message from Muslim clergy" against radical
Islam.
Jasser agreed. "It is the responsibility of the majority
of Muslims to fight political Islam and the radicalization of the youth
that engender these conspiracy theories and moral corruption," he said.
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