Walking
the Prophetic Walk for a Pathway to Citizenship
(also published at another site)
(also published at another site)
Over
the last 30 years, I have worked on many different social justice issues as a
central passion in my life. This call to work for social justice is deeply
rooted in my faith as a Muslim, and it is this call I have tried to serve since
2005 as the executive director of the Shura Council of Southern California,
which is an umbrella association of Mosques and Muslim organizations serving
Muslims living in Southern California and society at large.
For
more than a millennium, my faith has taught that “when you see a wrong, right
it.”
This
mandate is without an option for neutrality, let alone apathy. The choices
to right the wrong includes, “action,” “speech” or “empathy,”
in that order. Action is considered to be the strongest demonstration of faith
while empathy, though admirable is considered as the weakest expression of the
faithful. A central part of our history as Muslims is the migration of the
Prophet Muhammad, where he was forced to leave his home and family to seek
freedom, justice and peace for all. These teachings, urging me to right wrongs
with action and to seek peace by leaving behind home and homeland give me
incredible peace as a Muslim.
Central
to this call to work for social justice has been my own journey as an immigrant
to the United States. I came from India in 1985 and ever since, by watching the
journeys of my friends and family members, and through my work in the interfaith
community, I have seen the ways that our current immigration system tears
families apart. This is especially true for the 11 million aspiring Americans
living in this country whose status is uncertain –people of diverse national
origin and religious backgrounds, who are often exploited by corporations and
often the law with very little if any recourse. They are hardworking people who
are forced to live in constant fear of being separated from their families.
For
almost two decades, our nation’s indifference toward these undocumented
Americans who are freely exploited from the valleys of California to the shores
of Maine has left me agitated, unable to be at peace. During these last 20
years, the poor and those without legal status have become poorer and more
powerless while the rich have become richer and more indifferent. I saw this
wrong; I struggled with how to right it. Peace eluded me. Indeed I have also
seen how the policies of this countries broken immigration system have also
affected the Muslim community unfairly, as was recently revealed in an ACLU
report which exposed the previously unknown national security program known as
the “Controlled Application Review and Resolution Program,” where
the government purposely and illegally excludes many applicants from Arab,
Middle Eastern, Muslim and South Asian communities from these opportunities by
delaying and denying their applications without authority.
My
agitation as a naturalized United States citizen and as a person of faith, I
believe now morally binds me to the more than 11 million mothers,
fathers, daughters, and sons of myriad faiths and diverse traditions who are
aspiring Americans and all those who suffer from unjust immigration policies.
Following the legacy and example of the Prophet Muhammad, I decided that I too
must become a Pilgrim for the sake of freedom I decided to join the Pilgrimage
for a Pathway to Citizenship and walk 111 miles in solidarity with and dignity
for the 11 million aspiring Americans yearning for full citizenship and
enfranchisement in our great nation.
I
walked with my fellow Pilgrims, learned their stories, and shared mine with
them. We are all immigrants, all Americans. Together, we walked, prayed
and broke bread. We sang and sometimes, we wept. But for the 10 days on the
Pilgrimage for a Pathway to Citizenship, rain or shine, we walked as one—walking
for respect and dignity, demanding equality and fair treatment.
Walking
is prophetic. On this journey it was my prayer, that we walked in the tradition
of Moses who walked out of Pharaoh’s land to free the oppressed. We will walk
in the tradition of Jesus who walked to Jerusalem and protested oppressors. And,
I will also walk in the tradition of Muhammad who walked from his birthplace to
a city afar, for a better tomorrow of his people.
1 comment:
Dear Shakeel, your continued passion inspires. I hope you succeed to spread your insight into Islam to your brothers & sisters as MLK enlightened his fellow Christians. Maybe that will be Islam's role in the U.S.-- remind all people of faith of what the real central tenants of their respective faiths.
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