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Poll: Alabamians distrust Muslims
Atlanta Journal Constitution ^ | 07/07/02 | SEAN REILLY

Posted on 07/07/2002 4:51:35 PM PDT by scratchgolfer

Poll: Alabamians distrust Muslims

07/07/02

By SEAN REILLY Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON -- Last September's terrorist attacks didn't just topple the World Trade Center and kill thousands. They also left bitter feelings about Muslims, and the enmity appears to be more severe in Alabama than the nation as a whole.

Fewer than one in five Alabamians has a favorable view of the world's second-largest religion, a percentage far below the national average, according to the latest University of South Alabama-Mobile Register poll.

At the same time, more than one-third of the respondents said they believed that Islam's teachings encourage terrorism and violence -- even though the overwhelming majority admitted they don't know much about those teachings.

"Apparently, we have a long road ahead of us," said Shafik Hammami, president of the Islamic Society of Mobile. Since Sept. 11, Hammami said that he and other mosque leaders have responded to more than a dozen invitations to speak on Islam at area churches and synagogues. While those appearances have been well received, he said, knowledge of Islam remains "terribly weak."

Indeed, almost three-quarters of those responding to the statewide USA survey said they did not have "a good basic understanding" of Islam. More encouraging from the Muslim perspective, perhaps, is that an even larger percentage said that it is at least "somewhat important" for Americans to learn more.

Most Muslim leaders were quick to voice horror at the Sept. 11 attacks. Some liken the terrorists' use of Islam to justify murder as being similar to the Ku Klux Klan's reliance on Christianity to trade on racism.

Now that Islam's best-known representative is Osama bin Laden, however, it's no easy task to explain that the essence of Islam is peace and submission to God's will. Nor is there any consensus within the mainstream Muslim community on how to get the word out.

Ronald Ali, imam of the Mobile Masjid of al-Islam mosque, attributed the USA poll results to negative portrayals of Muslims in the media. Rather than making special efforts to explain their faith, Muslims should teach by personal example, Ali said.

"We just live our religion as good Americans," he said, "and let people see us as we are."

But numerically, Muslims comprise a tiny percentage of Alabama's population, making it unlikely that most people will encounter them often enough to form an impression.

"You need to do both," said Ibrahim Hooper, a spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, an advocacy group in Washington, D.C. "You need to have upright conduct and also reach out to people of other faiths."

Neither Ali nor Hammami knew of any local instances of harassment of Muslims after Sept. 11. But Hammami said he had encountered hostility from members of evangelical churches "bent on destroying the image of Islam for some reason."

Like other Southern states, Alabama has a high proportion of evangelicals. Two-thirds of respondents to the USA poll described themselves as born-again Christians.

Last month, the Rev. Jerry Vines, a former Mobile pastor and past president of the Southern Baptist Convention, told participants at the SBC's annual meeting in St. Louis that the prophet Mohammed was a "demon-possessed pedophile."

"That kind of message does not help," Hammami said. "It puts a barrier between religions rather than trying to promote religious understanding."

For people of all faiths, the carnage of the Sept. 11 attacks produced at least a temporary rush for spiritual solace across the nation. Many pastors reported a spike in church attendance in the weeks afterward. Attendance levels have reportedly since fallen back to normal levels.

The USA-Register survey results appeared to reflect that backsliding. More than half of those polled said the nation as a whole has become more religious. Only 16 percent said their own attendance at religious services had increased.

"I think the perspective of ourselves as a nation has changed, but in terms of our actual behavior it doesn't appear from this self-report that it made a whole lot of difference," said Keith Nicholls, a USA political science professor and head of the USA Polling Group.

But several local clergymen said the attacks have produced changes less easy to quantify.

At St. Peter Baptist Church in Mobile, the Rev. Cleveland McFarland Jr. said he has seen a lasting increase in church attendance, as well as signs of "better understanding and tolerance."

In regard to Muslims, McFarland added, church members "seem to understand that it is not just the Islamic world or religion. It is really the overzealous action of some radical thinking people."

At the Congregation Ahavas Chesed, a conservative Jewish synagogue in Mobile, "we did have increased attendance at a variety of functions," said Rabbi Steven Silberman. Although there has since been a dropoff, Silberman said, some congregation members are more likely to attend services before and after a trip. In addition, he said, "there seems to be a greater awareness of not taking family and friends for granted."

One should not expect people to be instantly and permanently transformed, said the Rev. Edwin Beachum, pastor of St. Catherine of Siena Catholic Church in Mobile. Instead, Beachum said, individuals may go through many conversion experiences over time.

"Maybe this is a beginning," Beachum said. "Maybe most people won't change, but maybe a few will. Maybe they're going to become more loving parents, more concerned citizens. And, you know, if one person changes, one person is a whole lot."

The telephone poll of 418 adult Alabamians was taken between June 25 and July 1. USA Polling Group, which conducted the survey, put the margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level. This means there is a 95 percent probability that the results are within 5 percentage points of the results that would have been obtained from a survey of all adult residents of Alabama.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
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To: Alas Babylon!
We are going RV. Our mail drop will be Hoover. We hane family in Springville and a son at Auburn.
61 posted on 07/08/2002 8:30:11 AM PDT by KC_for_Freedom
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To: Lee308
Plan on it. I understand after 6 mo. my pistol will be eligible to be legal. (After the classes etc), Looking forward to it.
62 posted on 07/08/2002 8:32:10 AM PDT by KC_for_Freedom
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To: scratchgolfer
a "boot in your ass" bump for Alabama!
63 posted on 07/08/2002 8:44:18 AM PDT by ghost of nixon
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To: KC_for_Freedom
"I understand after 6 mo. my pistol will be eligible to be legal."

There is no such thing as an illegal pistol in Alabama. You do need to wait six months to get a CCW permit, but there is no registration requirement. There are no classes or tests.
64 posted on 07/08/2002 8:44:55 AM PDT by DugwayDuke
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To: usconservative
Most Muslim leaders were quick to voice horror at the Sept. 11 attacks.

I,too must have been sleeping when this happened. I was wide awake however for the "tongue lady" and her ilk dancing and cheering after 9/11. I will reiterate an earlier post; Islam sucks and I dont care what people think of me for saying that.

65 posted on 07/08/2002 12:35:14 PM PDT by cardinal4
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To: scratchgolfer
While those appearances have been well received, he said, knowledge of Islam remains "terribly weak."

If he thinks we don't like them now, just wait. The more folk know about that religion the more they despise it.

Most Muslim leaders were quick to voice horror at the Sept. 11 attacks.

Where was this reporter after 9/11. He must have seen things no one else did.
66 posted on 07/08/2002 3:07:41 PM PDT by Michael2001
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To: ExSoldier
How does Bear Bryant end up in every Alabama fan's conversation? He died.
67 posted on 07/08/2002 7:17:14 PM PDT by AUsome Joy
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To: AUsome Joy
AHHHH, but I knew him when he was alive. In fact, when he fell in his home in 1979 and spent time in a hospital in Northport, Alabama, I was working there as the chief of security. Some idiot phoned in a death threat and I was suddenly posted as his personal bodyguard. He couldn't move from his hospital bed, so it was no big deal.

My pleasure came from some of the brief conversations I held with him late at night, and in watching him and the head nurse do BATTLE over the fact that he was forbidden to smoke...pure oxygen in use you know. I'll bet that was one of the few arguments he ever lost on that subject!

68 posted on 07/09/2002 2:32:11 PM PDT by ExSoldier
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To: TonyRo76
Yeah, I notice that the Dems and the media admitted that for them the issue of "gun control" is a nonstarter in "backward, rural areas..." Yeah, buddy..you go DEMS! INSULT a huge majority of your traditional base...the farmers.
69 posted on 07/09/2002 2:36:04 PM PDT by ExSoldier
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Comment #70 Removed by Moderator

To: ExSoldier
OK we have a few things in common. We are Alabamians, we are conservatives, Christians, and teachers. I love the military as my husband served in the army after coming out of Auburn ROTC. We can just forget the Alabama-Auburn thing. (I do love Auburn.)
71 posted on 07/10/2002 2:15:21 PM PDT by AUsome Joy
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To: onedoug
"...said Ibrahim Hooper...." Who is either a liar or an ignoramous

Probably both. He was a guest on Alan Keyes who, with little effort, wadded him and his disinformation up like a piece of paper and scored 2 points in the trash can.

72 posted on 07/10/2002 2:19:10 PM PDT by Dataman
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To: scratchgolfer
I suspect Alabamians don't think much of yankee liberal newspaper reporters and editors posing as Georgia southerners either.
73 posted on 07/10/2002 2:19:55 PM PDT by TADSLOS
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To: AUsome Joy
Actually, I'm a FLORIDIAN who used to live in Alabama. Stipulating that, I'd agree to the rest. I was commissioned out of the Bama ROTC program. Auburn has a beautiful campus and some very sweet people. And they have a course not offered by Bama that I would have given my eyeteeth to take...even just to audit!

It was a course offered thru the agriculture program in cattle butchering. Taught you all the cuts of meat and how to secure and preserve them. For the final exam they handed you a steer carcass (whole on a pair of sawhorses) and the tools and told you to cut it up. Invaluable tool for a hunter, or anybody interested in long term survival skills.

74 posted on 07/10/2002 9:31:03 PM PDT by ExSoldier
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