Published April 05, 2007 12:23 am - Transcript Staff Writer
"How many Texans does it take to screw in a light bulb?"
This is how Imam Zaid Shaki...
Religious Sensitivity and the First Amendment
The Norman Transcript
Transcript Staff Writer
"How many Texans does it take to screw in a light bulb?"
This is how Imam Zaid Shakir started his speech on religious sensitivity and the first amendment last Thursday night at the Sam Noble Museum of Natural History.
It was his attempt to "win over the audience" by telling a joke about Texans, as well as inserting some humor into what he called a "very touch situation."
"Growing up in America I was taught there are two things you don't talk about, religion and politics ... and the task before us is to talk about both religion and politics," Shakir said.
Shakir was the keynote speaker for the Islamic Alliance for Justice's (IAJ) "Religious Sensitivities and The First Amendment" program. The program was birthed in November of 2006, when inflammatory cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad were published in a Danish newspaper, causing an uproar in the Islamic world.
"Muslims were justified in their distress over the matter in seeing their beloved Prophet degraded," wrote Adeel Khan in a letter to the audience, "but the ungainly response of misguided riots and indiscriminate violence did little to help resolve the issue and in fact only further deteriorate between the Islamic world and West." Khan, an OU student is the president and founder of IAJ.
The IAJ is a predominantly Muslim student organization that aims to raise awareness and coordinate effective response to issues of global, social, economic, and political justice. The goal of the program is to "hold productive and intellectually-stimulating responses to confrontational situations and materials ... with an interfaith spirit which fosters the harmony so needed in today's divided world."
Along with the Religious Studies Program, The Muslim Students Association and The Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication, the Islamic Alliance for Justice brought Imam Zaid Shakir "as a voice for Oklahoma's group of thoughtful individuals, both Muslim and non-Muslim, seeking to build bridges across islands of strained relations," Khan wrote.
Shakir is among the most respected and influential Islamic scholars in the West. Born in Berkeley, Calif., he became a Muslim at the age of 20, while serving the United States Air Force. He received a bachelor's degree in international relations at American University in Washington, D.C., and later earned a master's degree in political science at Rutgers University. In 2001, he graduated from Syria's prestigious Abu Noor University and he currently teaches Arabic, Islamic law, history and Islamic spirituality at Zaytuna Institute in California.
Organizers hoped bringing Shakir to OU would help create the necessary "dialogue that is critical to justice and peace and harmony, which all of us ? every human being ? wants," said Barbara Boyd, director of outreach for the Religious Studies Program. She said she could not imagine a more difficult topic that is "near and dear to our humanity."
The first amendment in the U.S. Constitution provides many freedoms, which we as Americans hold at a high importance. The two freedoms focused on during the program were the freedom of speech and freedom of press. The first amendment is a "bedrock for journalists," Joe Foote, dean and Edward L. Gaylord chair at OU's college of journalism and mass communication said in his opening remarks. Having a free press is essential for journalists, but "in order to have a free press, you must have a fair press, inherent that you are sensitive to your audience."
In November, the IAJ and its partners, brought in Doug Marlette, an award-winning American cartoonist and writer, currently working for the Tulsa World. In his address, also addressing the Danish comics and their effect and implications on society, Marlette said, "A cartoonist is someone who is supposed to be insensitive ... you're going to make someone mad, daily," since your job is to make fun of people and situations.
Foote said that Marlette's speech is what started the discourse, and Shakir would now speak in response to that, presenting the other side.
While he concedes that maintaining personal liberty is important, Shakir also says that a liberal interpretation of the first amendment as "absolute freedom" is what leads to chaos and disaster. Going back to Plato, Hobbs, and even Marx and Mussolini, Shakir said our tradition and past has supported the need for a balance between personal liberty and rules/order. Whether it is the state or the agreed upon social contract that provides that balance, one is always needed.