Latest Updates: dalia mogahed RSS

  • johnpi 4:46 pm on February 9, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
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    White House Faith Based Council posts votes on two controversial church-state issues.

    The council has two American Muslims on it, Eboo Patel and Dalia Mogahed. Their votes counted as follows:

    1. Should the government allow nongovernmental providers of federally funded social services to provide those services in rooms that contain religious art, scripture, messages, or symbols?

    Patel voted to allow such services in areas with religious symbology only if there is no other space available that is symbol-neutral. Mogahed voted ‘yes’ but the guidelines should “encourage all providers to be sensitive to, and to accommodate where feasible, those beneficiaries who may object to the presence of religious symbols.”

    2. Should the government require houses of worship to form separate corporations to receive direct federal social service funds?

    Patel and Mogahed both voted no, which was the minority opinion, though it was close at 13-12. I believe the majority got it right.

    (via)

     
  • aziz 9:07 am on November 2, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
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    Cool article on Dalia Mogahed and her role in the Obama Administration. She deserves some love given that she’s been viciously attacked by conservatives, like all muslims who dare to participate in civics are.

     
  • johnpi 8:56 am on October 28, 2009 | 12 Permalink | Reply
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    AltMuslim has more commentary and perspective on Hizb ut-Tahrir in the wake of the group’s interview with Obama’s Muslim policy advisor, Dalia Mogahed, on a UK talk show called Muslimah Dilemma.

    Mogahed expresses her anger about her treatment here.

    Rather than read more commentary about the incident, why not watch the Youtube clip of the show here and form your own impressions.

    I watched the show and did not find the Hizb ut Tahrir hosts to be nearly the cartoon bad guys Mogahed’s recollection of the experience led me to believe – though I did find Nazreen Nawaz’s (HT rep) narrative about current problems in Muslim majority countries to be evasive, and the vision of the problem-free life of the Caliphate unbelievable. Basically, every controversial incident in Muslim majority countries is a result of not following Shariah. All the self-identified Islamists whose understanding of Sharia has devolved into aggression, harsh punishment and repression of women are just wayward in their understanding of shariah. But the Caliphate is going to get everything right…

    She says Shariah comes directly from Allah (swt) as a way of explaining that you can’t go wrong with Shariah – problem is, the Shariah is being delivered and implemented by imperfect humans who are as at risk of being influenced by racism, classism, tribalism, greed, corruption, sexism, etc as any other human – but that part of the Shariah equation is elided, as so much else is in her comments.

    Removed to the plain of equivalency with other human-administered systems of justice, in example after example it seems too swift, too certain, too unrecoverable and brutal in its punishments (your amputated hands and feet will mark you with your crime for life), and too little interested in the redemption of those it punishes. In a religion that is thick with reminders (ritual) to return to God, it seems discordant to say that the ideal Islamic society removes that option from people by way of capital punishment.

     
  • abunoor 4:13 pm on October 26, 2009 | 4 Permalink | Reply
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    Jeffrey Goldberg comes to the defense of Dalia Mogahed.

    Mogahed was a phone-in guest on the show, and only after did she learn that it was affiliated with Hizb ut-Tahrir, which advocates for very ugly things. Instantly, it was assumed by some of the more reflexive critics of anything Muslim that Mogahed herself was an advocate for extremism. Well, I know Dalia Mogahed, and if she’s a Muslim extremist, then I’m the King of Sweden. From everything I can see, Dalia went on the show in her role as a pollster, and, in the conversation, stuck to her polling data. I’ve heard her present the same findings she presented on British television on two separate occasions. I’m sure some people are freaked out by Dalia’s appearance — she covers her hair and dresses very traditionally, though she is not a “veiled woman” in the language of some of the more ridiculous posts on the subject — but I know her as a devout, modest and sensible woman, someone who likes being American very much, and someone who even has — shocking though it may seem — Jews to her home at Ramadan (that would be moi, along with Mrs. Goldblog and several smaller Goldblogs). Do we agree on much? Nah, especially on Middle East politics. But so what? I don’t agree with this guy on everything, and I don’t think he’s a member of Hizb ut-Tahrir.

     
  • johnpi 6:00 pm on October 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
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    Dalia Mogahed, Obama’s Muslim policy advisor, is angry about her treatment at the hands of Hizb ut Tahrir propagandists on a UK television show – as angry as she is at US conservatives who twist what she says to form an equally dishonest, distorted, ideological view of Islam.

    The HT representative on the program dismissed or “reinterpreted” findings I presented so as to not challenge the group’s simplistic utopian ideology which holds liberty in contempt as morally decadent. For example, as I regularly report, our research shows that far from denouncing democracy, Muslims around the world say it is among the things they most admire about the West, specifically mentioning “liberty” as a desirable attribute. Around the world, from Morocco to Malaysia, Muslim respondents described their respect for much of what the West holds dear: freedom of the press, the rule of law, and transparency and accountability of government.

    As much as HT selectively ignored and exploited these findings to push their propaganda, many conservative pundits who diametrically oppose HT’s vision of the world, did much the same. To them, my crime was that I reported that many Muslim women wanted sharia as a source of legislation. I also explained that Muslim women surveyed by Gallup said they believed they should have access to equal legal rights, free employment, voting without family influence, and even leadership positions in government. This suggests that many Muslim women see Sharia differently from those who use it to deny women rights. For simply stating results of survey research, I stood accused of “endorsing” Taliban-like rule, and downplaying the abuses done in the name of sharia.

     
  • johnpi 6:29 am on October 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
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    Dalia Mogahed: Hizb ut Tahrir talk show producers ‘misled us to score propaganda points.’

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 3:23 pm on October 22, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
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    Faith-based council makes Dalia Mogahed a Muslim celebrity.

    Dalia Mogahed, a Muslim, is one of 25 people President Obama tapped to advise him on faith issues. She may have met the president exactly once, but to Muslims, she’s a celebrity — thanks to the headscarf, or hijab, she wears every day.

    When Obama spoke to the Muslim world from Egypt last summer, Mogahed was in the audience, sitting five rows from the front, sandwiched between old men in prayer caps and women in suits.

    To Muslims who saw her there, she was traveling with the president — even though she wasn’t. To them, she’d written his speech — even though she’d only contributed a couple of paragraphs.

    To them, she was his Islamic adviser. She’s not.

    The denials didn’t matter. The sight of Mogahed, a Muslim, in her hijab, seeming very official and “Washington,” prompted Muslims to think of her as something more. To them, she is the hijabi in the White House.

     
  • johnpi 10:08 pm on October 8, 2009 | 10 Permalink | Reply
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    President Barack Obama’s adviser on Muslim affairs, Dalia Mogahed, has provoked controversy by appearing on a British television show hosted by a member of Hizb ut-Tahrir to discuss Shariah.

    Miss Mogahed, appointed to the President’s Council on Faith-Based and Neighbourhood Partnerships, said the Western view of Sharia was “oversimplified” and the majority of women around the world associate it with “gender justice”.

    The White House adviser made the remarks on a London-based TV discussion programme hosted by Ibtihal Bsis, a member of the extremist Hizb ut Tahrir party.
    ….

    Mogahed: “I think the reason so many women support Sharia is because they have a very different understanding of sharia than the common perception in Western media. The majority of women around the world associate gender justice, or justice for women, with sharia compliance. The portrayal of Sharia has been oversimplified in many cases.”

    Sharia in its broadest sense is a religious code for living, which decrees such matters as fasting and dressing modestly. However, it has also been interpreted as requiring the separation of men and women.

    It also includes the controversial “Hadd offences”, crimes with specific penalties set by the Koran and the sayings of the prophet Mohammed. These include death by stoning for adultery and homosexuality and the removal of a hand for theft.

    Miss Mogahed admitted that even many Muslims associated Sharia with “maximum criminal punishments” and “laws that… to many people seem unequal to women,” but added: “Part of the reason that there is this perception of Sharia is because Sharia is not well understood and Islam as a faith is not well understood.”

    The video of the broadcast has now been prominently posted on the front page of Hizb ut Tahrir’s website.

     
  • Fatemeh 12:38 pm on October 4, 2008 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , dalia mogahed, , , , ,

    This week on MMW, we look at Muslim women’s sexuality through film, wondered about ethnic/cultural representation in the Guardian’s “This Muslim Life” column, review Sumbul Ali Karamali’s The Muslim Next Door, examine the Manji vs. Mogahed debate, deconstruct cultural and capitalist appropriation of Afghan culture in a New Zealand catwalk, look at Na’ima B. Roberts’ personal journal for the Times Online, review Azadeh Moaveni’s Lipstick Jihad, and crown ourselves queens of the Friday link list.

     
  • thabet 11:54 pm on September 16, 2008 | 3 Permalink | Reply
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    Talk Islam: Dalia Mogahed* v Irshad Manji.

    Both speakers were not clear on the need for political reform (the real problem), although Mogahed does touch on it at the end.

    *Co-author of Who Speaks for Islam?

     
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