Sunday, September 26, 2010

Islamic Leaders Make Statement at University Discussion

From left: Malaka Elyazgi, Mona Eltahawy and
Mohammad Daadaoui

The University of Oklahoma hosted its third and final seminar with Mona Eltahawy Tuesday. The award-winning columnist and outspoken Muslim was joined by Oklahoma City University Assistant Professor of Political Science and Middle East Studies Mohammad Daadaoui and Malaka Elyazgi, Chair of the Ethnic American Advisory Council to Gov. Brad Henry and board member of OU's Women's and Gender Studies program.


The panel discussion, free and open to the public, dealt with several hot-button issues, including the current national controversy of the mosque near New York's ground zero. All three panelists shared the same opinion: the mosque should be built.

The controversial building, Elyazgi pointed out, is actually several blocks away from what is now being called "Park51," and has been used for Islamic prayer for over a year. Elyazgi also said the facility will actually be an entire Islamic cultural center, complete with its own swimming pool.

Eltahawy, who spent four days with Park51 advocates protesting the relocation of the center, said this is not just a Muslim ordeal, but a constitutional and minority issue. "I feel the pain, (the Sept. 11 attacks) affected us all," she said. "There was a mosque in the World Trade Center."

The panel fielded numerous questions regarding public
perception of Islam and the Park51 mosque Tuesday.
Elyazgi said she was Arab by race, American by culture, and Muslim by faith and felt she needed to publicly speak her mind because of the perception of Islam often given by some extremist factions. Elyazgi ended the evening by referencing Tuesday's being World Peace Day and asked those in attendance to contemplate three words before leaving -- "Inclusiveness overcomes intolerance."

Tuesday's discussion was hosted by OU's Center for Middle East Studies in the School of International and Area Studies. The school has also organized a public lecture, titled "Modern Iran: The People, Their Lives, and What Makes Them Tick," for Monday evening in Robert S. Kerr auditorium.

For more information regarding on international program events visit http://www.ou.edu/content/sias/home/left_navigation/sias_global_forum.html. For a more extensive look on Eltahawy's Park51 opinion visit http://www.commongroundnews.org/article.php?id=28427&lan=en&sid=1&sp=0&isNew=1 or http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/us/2010/09/09/nr.muslim.panel.imam.feisal.cnn.html

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Social Justice Blogger Speaks to University Students


Activist Mona Eltahawy speaks to university students 
Wednesday on the impact of blogging. 
Wednesday social blogger, activist, and award-winning columnist Mona Eltahawy spoke to University of Oklahoma students about the importance of blogging in today's tense political and social climate. The event, titled "Blogging for Social Change," was open to all university students and was focused primarily on her experiences with blogging on international affairs.

Students participated in a question and answer session
with Eltahawy after her presentation.
A professed Muslim originally from Egypt, Eltahawy said she first saw the necessity of blogging after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

"I love being a Muslim, I'm very proud of being a Muslim, but I hated what was done supposedly in the name of Islam on that day, Sept. 11, 2001," she said. "And that day really marked the beginning of my - not so much becoming a blogger - but my becoming an opinion writer."

The seminar was already the second in a trio of discussions with the final workshop, "My America, My Islam," coming Tuesday. The event will be held in the Regents Room of the Oklahoma Memorial Union at 7p.m. and will cover the recent New York mosque controversy from a Muslim perspective.


Stephanie Heck, Center for Social Justice Program Coordinator
Wednesday's seminar was sponsored by OU's Women's and Gender Studies Program Center for Social Justice.The center brings in speakers throughout the year to speak on social issues, says Center for Social Justice program coordinator Stephanie Heck. "Last fall we had our first activist-in-residence Franciska Issaka, join us from Ghana...In the spring we invited local activist Nathaniel Batchelder to interact with our students concerning his many years of peace activism," she said.

The center, located on campus in Buchanan Hall, offers a host of opportunities for involvement, Heck says, including internships, film screenings, and service projects. For more information visit http://peace.ou.edu and check out the website's event calendar.