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Freethought Association of West Michigan
Meeting Minutes for September 11, 2002; #
123

An addition to our calendar of topics is the January 8, 2003 presentation by Dr. Gregory Forbes on "Intelligent Design; Grasping for Straws in the New Millennium- A Presentation of the Many Unintelligent Designs in Nature." Dr. Forbes is a FAoWM member and well qualified to speak on this topic, being a professor of biological sciences at G.R.C.C., Education Director of the Michigan Evolution Education Initiative and Director of the Institute for Evolution Education.

Our quarterly financial statement was shown on our bulletin. A reminder was made that we are entirely supported by the donations of our members for all expenses, including but not limited to special guest speaker fees, equipment and rental fees for our meeting space and mailings for special events.

Jeff announced that he was looking for topic and speaker ideas. Volunteers from our group to head up discussions are encouraged or if you know someone you can contact or pass along for us to make contact with, this would be appreciated.

Our next meeting will be on September 25. The topic will be "An Evolutionary Approach to Critical Thinking" and will be presented by Ron Palmer.

Geoffrey Saint informed us of two alarming bills. One is a freedom of speech act for houses of worship (HR 2357) and the other, the "Brightline" (HR 2391), would allow churches to use 20% of their funds to promote specific political candidates or oppose others while still retaining a tax exempt status. As Saint pointed out, freedom of speech is already a Constitutional guarantee, but these bills are intended to circumvent barriers to endorsements of political candidates, keep accountability of church funds hidden, limit the scope of investigation into the use of church monies and further erode the wall of separation between State and Church. Surprisingly, 77% of clergy said "no" to this bill, even though most identified themselves as "evangelical" Christians, perhaps realizing that separation of Church & State is to the good of BOTH, just as mixing of the two is to the detriment of both. It will come as some surprise to many that a staunch ally in this fight against these bills is the Interfaith Alliance. For more information on these bills and what you can do to help deter passage of them or on the Interfaith Alliance itself, visit their website at www.interfaithalliance.org.

Dirk Nebbeling announced that he is offering a short course on Humanism during the 5 Wednesdays in October. It will be held at Fountain Street Church. An AHA and FaoWM member, Nebbeling has been highly involved in the Humanist movement and approach to life for much of his life. The textbook for the course will be Lloyd and Mary Morain's book, Humanism as the Next Step. He passed around a sign up slip for those interested in attending and encouraged prospective attendees to purchase the book in advance of the course.

Jeff announced that there is actually a secular Islamic group that some members might be interested in checking out. The website is info@secularislam.org.

This meeting was on the one- year anniversary date of the attacks on the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and an attempt on another significant American site, by the Islamic Fundamentalist Al Qaeda terrorist network. Our topic for this meeting, "The World of Islam", therefore had a special significance. Our presenter for this topic was Mustafa Eissa of the Islamic Center of West Michigan.

Mr. Eissa began by trying to dispel the many errors of interpretation, as he sees it, with Western understanding of Islam. He started off by saying that Islam means "peace" and that correct practice of this faith is counter to the violence associated with it popularly. Furthermore, the perception of Islam as a faith mostly of Middle Eastern Arabs is also incorrect; this population represents only 15% of the world's representation of Islam. He said that those who follow this religion believe that the killing of one individual is the same as killing all humans on Earth. In another related part of his talk, he said that Islam allows for defense against attack but that this is to be focused on the specific perpetrator(s) and not to involve innocents who are not directly involved in the offense.

M. Eissa continued with other challenges to the public perception of Islam, such as the inequality between the sexes. He stated that stories we see on the treatment of women in Afganistan reflect that particular culture rather than the dictates of Islam itself. He acknowledged that there is a greater inheritance that is left to male offspring but that this is because men are more responsible for financial leadership and burdens in a given household and is also indicative of the respect toward women that Muslim men hold. He explained that a Muslim male can marry a non-Muslim but a Muslim woman is forbidden to marry a non-Muslim man. Somehow, in this egalitarian faith as presented to us, the man is considered the head of the house; therefore it is assumed that a Muslim woman will be subsumed by a non-Muslim man but the Muslim man will direct his household in accordance with his faith, nullifying the faith of the female.

And he stated that, in Islam, there is no difference seen in belief in the Torah, the Bible or the Qur'an. All believe in the Creator; the one God, and all follow their Holy books. All are brothers and created by the same God. One must be a good neighbor no matter the faith of those living near him. People of the Islamic faith believe that the Prophet Mohammed received the word of God (Allah) from the angel Gabriel and transmitted these divine messages to his people. This was all compiled into what would become the Qur'an. This book contains, according to Eissa, not only the practices and rituals of the Islamic faith but a complete system for life.

Next, our speaker explained the Five Pillars of Islam. The first one is that God is the Creator. The second deals with how a Muslim must pray five times per day so as to form and retain a connection with Allah. There is to be no eating at this time or any other distractions and one must clean himself before prayer, since he is "meeting with God." The third pillar involves charity-giving to the needy. The Muslim saves, throughout the year, a percentage of his income and this is donated to those less fortunate. The fourth regards fasting during the holy month of Ramadan. There is to be no war, except in self- defense and no sex as this time stresses self- control in life. The idea with fasting at this time is that if you are hungry yourself, you will have more empathy for others who are hungry. Finally, the fifth pillar acknowledges the pilgrimage to Mecca that every Muslim who is able to, is expected to go on. One must be physically capable of the journey but also financially able. One is to accrue no debt in the pilgrimage to this sacred place of Islam.

Eissa drew a distinction between God as a Creator as opposed to a "Maker." To make is to manufacture out of available resources, whereas God creates out of nothing in a divine fiat. He discussed the eye-for-an-eye mentality of Islam, in particular the well- publicized practice of amputating a hand of a thief or the head of a murderer. But he noted that there is a very low crime rate among people of this faith. He also mentioned the condoned practices of stoning and whipping. Regarding the latter, he said that it was not intended for the whip to cut the flesh and cause injury but rather to humiliate the wrong-doer. Likewise Qur'anic law permits the beating of a wife by a husband but our speaker was quick to point out that the practice involves a piece of wood no larger than a toothbrush, and again not intended to cause corporeal harm so much as spiritual correction.

He spoke about how God knows more about you than you know yourself and so the Muslim has acceptance of all things, since they are allowed or willed by God. Everything that will come to pass has been recorded already. When a tragedy befalls a follower of Islam, s/he is to thank God for it. At this time he gave a personal account of an instance of delayed success. If he had graduated "on time" he would have been thrust into a time when his training was not marketable. But when he did graduate, the timing was right for success. He feels this was God's will. This is reminiscent for many religious skeptics of people who survive some event that takes the lives of most others. They praise God for this, but fail to consider why God did not intervene on behalf of all the other equally deserving people who perished in the event. In a sort of "all good things come to those who wait" idea, he said that God is with the person who is patient. He also equated suffering as a time to be thankful for the suffering takes away the sins in life. If one has suffered long in the mortal plane, he will be all the more richly rewarded in the next life.

In the discussion portion it was asked if there was any atonement concept as is seen in Christianity with Jesus dying on the cross for the sins of humanity. No, the sinner is punished directly for his own sins; there is no savior figure acting as a scapegoat.

Asked if there were differing interpretations of the Qur'an leading to different sects as with Christianity and the Bible. Mr. Eissa explained that one is to study the Qur'an in the original Arabic and if one does this he will not have a multiplicity of interpretations. Even one who is illiterate will be given "credit" for trying to learn the writings in the original language.

Regarding the Muslim suicide bombers, he said that when one is under-equipped against transgressors this is a means to even the odds. The Muslim who commits suicide in the cause of his faith knows he will be rewarded in the hereafter. When other political issues were brought up, our presenter said that Islam like anything can be politicized but groups making this faith political are not following Islam as they should.

After taking about suffering, the scale of good and bad deeds to be weighed on the Day of Judgment, etc., it was asked how this works with infant mortality. He responded that infants get essentially a "free pass" into heaven since they are before the age of culpability and have not sinned. Interestingly, he further noted that these heaven-bound babies may serve as advocates for their parents after they die, testifying on their behalf.

After the attacks on the U.S. a year ago, there was much made of the 72 dark-eyed houris who will avail themselves to the martyred Muslim man. Why a given number in an eternity? What about the rewards of the female? It was asked what happens after the virgins are no longer maidens. We were informed that in Paradise they are restored to untouched purity again. As with fundamentalist Christianity, there seemed to be a lot of just-so explanations given to make "sense" of the holy teachings.

He was asked about how he reconciles the vilification of non-Muslims in the Qur'an with what he had said earlier. He told us that this was regarding a different place and time and under different circumstances. Unlike the Crusades and other Christian led conquests, there is no concept of forcing others to become Muslim in Islam.

Eissa was perplexed by the wording of an animal rights advocate member who asked how Islam regarded the killing of "non- human animals." When he translated this in his own mind to simply "animals", he said that there is no admonition against the slaughtering of animals for food except with the pig. He expanded on this to say that one can take a fish for the purpose of eating it but not to place in a bowl. One must not kill simply for sport or amusement.

Asked about the term "jihad", he explained that this meant a struggle against Satan. Jihad is simply following God's rules. Qur'anic scholars, however, often point out textual evidence that "jihad" is meant as "an armed struggle against the unbelievers." Just one such example is: "Kill those who join other gods with God wherever you may find them." (IV.76).

What is the Muslim view of the divinity of Jesus? Islam does not believe in a God that takes the form of a man that can be tortured and killed or suffer other insults to the flesh. This is a "limiting" view of a limitless entity.

At one point in the Q & A, he explained that the good of all religious and secular institutions are all found in the Qur'an. The concepts inherent in the Bill of Rights being one example he asserted.

With all the emphasis on destruction and death for the infidel we were perhaps fortunate to leave this meeting intact. "Believers! Make war on the infidels who dwell around you; let them find harshness in you." (ix.123). "When you meet the unbeliever in the battlefield, strike off their heads and when you have laid them low, bind your captives firmly." (x1vii.4-15). "Make war on the unbelievers and the hypocrites. Be harsh with them. Their ultimate abode is hell, a hapless journey's end." (ix.73). The basest creatures in the sight of Allah, are the faithless who will not believe." (8:55). "I will instill terror into the hearts of the Infidels; strike off their heads then,and strike off from them every fingertip." (8:12). As to the brotherhood between the Follower of the Torah, the Bible and Qur'an mentioned earlier: "Believers, do not take Jews or Christians as friends. They are but one another's friends. If anyone of you takes them for his friends, then he is surely one of them. God will not guide evil-doers." (5:51). "Believers, do not take as your friends the infidels or those who received the Scriptures before you (Jews and Christians)…" (5:56-64).

Secretary: Charles LaRue.

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