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| In the Wake of Fort Hood Tragedy People of Faith United |
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| Written by Jameelah A Aziz | |
| Friday, 27 November 2009 | |
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Jameelah A Aziz
Islamic Post Writer It is too soon to have forgotten about the day 39 year old Army Major and psychiatrist Nidal Malik Hasan allegedly killed 13 and wounded 31 others. During the commemoration of Veterans Day, just days after the shootings, President Obama encouraged Americans to remember those whose lives were lost, as well as those who were injured in the tragedy at the army base located in Fort Hood, Texas. In response to the President’s request, men representing four faiths joined together and sat shoulder to shoulder to talk about the tragedy and how Muslims are viewed in the aftermath.
The three Muslim men at the meeting voiced their frustration that some people characterize the whole faith by the violent acts of a few like Hasan. “Every faith has its extremists,” Saqr said. In the wake of the tragedy of the Oklahoma City bombings involving Timothy McVeigh, the 1999 Columbine Massacre involving 2 high school students, the 2007 Virginia Tech Massacre, involving a psychologically imbalanced young man, none of the perpetrator’s faiths were mentioned as Christian, Jew, Hindu, or whatever they may have been. In the case of Fort Hood, and similar incidents, too much emphasis is being placed on the suspects’ faith, and alleged connection to Islam.
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