American Muslims look to exercise their vote in midterm elections

Author: 
M. SCOTT BORTOT | ARAB NEWS
Publication Date: 
Mon, 2010-11-01 23:03

Muhammed Malik, a South Florida Muslim community advocate,
said debate over the Park51 Community Center in Manhattan, the rescinded threat
to burn Qur’ans in Florida, and Muslim fears of racial profiling have created a
positive moment in American history.
“When you look at it historically, we are really stepping up
to the plate, I think, in very positive, peaceful ways that are really joining
that great American tradition of becoming the fabric of this country,” Malik
said. “Once you get politically engaged, we become what people think of what it
means to be an American.”
The Council on Islamic-American Relations (CAIR) and the
Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) are acquainting American Muslims with the
voting process. CAIR has released voting guides for 23 states that explain when
polls open, how to register to vote, what identification is needed and voters’
rights.
Estimates on the number of Muslims in America vary. The Pew
Research Center places their number at about 2.5 million while CAIR estimates
there are some 7 million Muslims in America.
Haris Tarin, the director of MPAC’s Washington office, said
his organization is reaching out to American Muslims through a series of
workshops conducted across the country.
“We’ve been educating them on how to get out the vote, on
how to best engage their candidates that are on the ground to make sure they
come out to mosques, to hold candidate nights,” Tarin said.
At a candidate night co-sponsored by MPAC on Oct. 26 in Northern
Virginia, Muslims listened to Democratic and Republican candidates discuss
issues of importance to American Muslims and to Americans generally.
“When the recession hit, it hit the Muslim Americans just as
it hit anyone else,” Tarin said. “You’ve got Muslim Americans who have gone
through foreclosures, who have gone through job loss, who have gone through
various issues, health-care problems.”
And it’s not just in the lead-up to the midterm elections
that American Muslims are engaging in the political process. Organizations such
as the Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago helped organize
Muslim Action Day in April, when community representatives met legislators at
the state capitol to discuss voter issues.
Abed Ayoub, legal director at the American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee, said Muslim and Arab Americans are expressing
shifting priorities through their vote.
“Typically, the Arab and Muslim community are often looked
at as individuals who are going to be voting on foreign affairs — how is the
candidate going to help or deal with the Middle East. That trend is changing,
and it is changing quickly,” Ayoub said.
A new generation is playing a role in how American Muslims
vote. Immigrants to America tend to vote according to policies that affect
their homelands, but their children adopt a different worldview, Ayoub said. He
said a recent survey of Arab Americans in Michigan, which has the country’s
largest concentration of Arab Americans, found that their biggest concerns were
the economy and education, not foreign issues.
The 2008 presidential election highlighted the new
generation of Muslim and Arab-American interest in civic engagement.
“We have a lot of younger-generation Arab and Muslim
Americans that became involved… college kids or recent graduates, and now are a
bit more involved in the footwork,” Ayoub said.
The September 11, 2001, attacks also influenced the
political engagement of American Muslim voters. Before 2001, many American
Muslims were content with social and economic integration. But, as focus
increased on the American Muslim community, they needed to make their voices
heard.
“Post-9/11, the American Muslim community realized that we
have to speak for ourselves, that on 9/11, 19 foreigners who were not Muslim
Americans hijacked not only planes but hijacked their narrative and their
story,” Tarin said.
Now, American Muslims say they will write their own story
through civic engagement at the ballot box.
“The strongest tool that we have here is the power of our
vote,” Ayoub said. “If the community gets out and votes, they will make their
voice heard.”
— M. Scott Bortot is a staff writer at www.america.gov

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