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American Forces Press Service – January 2006

Muslim troops highlight nation's diversity

By Linda D. Kozaryn

 WASHINGTON -- Qaseem Ali Uqdah and Abdullah Hamza Al-Mubarak  share a common goal. Both former enlisted men aim to help make  life a little easier for people in the armed forces who share  their faith.

 Uqdah, a former Marine, and Al-Mubarak, a former airman, are  followers of Islam, a religion based on the teachings of the  prophet Mohammed. The 1.2 billion who practice the faith  worldwide are known as Muslims. They believe in one God, Allah,  and abide by religious laws written in the Koran, Islam's holy  book.

 Islam is the fastest growing religion in the United States. The  Council on American-Islamic Relations here estimates there are  now 6 million Muslims in America compared to 2 million in the  early 1970s. Nearly half are African-American converts. The rest  are immigrants from such countries as India, Pakistan, and Arab  and African nations.

 Uqdah and Al-Mubarak converted to Islam and while on active duty  often found themselves with nowhere to turn for religious  guidance. For the most part, Muslim chaplains were unheard of in  the armed forces. When the two service members left the enlisted  ranks, they set out to help their religious brethren in uniform. 

 Uqdah, a 21-year Marine Corps veteran, today heads the American  Muslim Armed Forces and Veterans Affairs Council, based in  Arlington, Va. Al-Mubarak is now an Air Force Reserve second  lieutenant and attending the School of Islamic and Social  Sciences in Leesburg, Va. Upon completing seminary training in  May, he will become the Air Force's first Muslim chaplain. 

 "When I started at Parris Island [Marine Corps Recruit Depot,  S.C.] in 1975, there was no support for Muslim service members,"  Uqdah recalled. The former gunnery sergeant has worked to change  that since he retired eight years ago. "It's been a labor of  love. This is like Christian missionary work. We have to have  someone focus on it. If you don't, it's going to fall short."

Since Uqdah and Al-Mubarak served in the enlisted ranks,  military leaders have come to recognize Muslim service members'  religious needs. Things have improved somewhat for the estimated  4,000 Muslim service members now on active duty. Two Muslim  chaplains serve the Army and two serve the Navy. 

 Along with Al-Mubarak, two more Muslim chaplain candidates are  in training, one for the Air Force and one for the Army. The  first permanent Islamic mosque, the Masjid al Da'wah, opened at  Norfolk Navy Base, Va., last November for the estimated 750  Muslim sailors there. 

 Al-Mubarak said he experienced "a certain level of anxiety and  emptiness" not having a chaplain of the same faith. He said he  missed having someone who could facilitate his religious needs  and understood his religious etiquette.

 In 1995, he took the initiative to find out why there were so  few Muslim chaplains and got the ball rolling to do what he  could to change that. Two years later, he picked up his  commission and entered the Air Force chaplain candidate program.  The program allows the military and the candidate to look each  other over while the candidate's enrolled in seminary, he said.

 Today, Al-Mubarak goes on active duty during seminary training  breaks and works with chapel staffs. "In my case, whatever base  I go to, it has been something new for everybody," he said.  "Other chaplains have been fantastic at showing me what it takes  to be a chaplain -- how to help airmen, how to work within an ecumenical environment to facilitate other faith groups without  compromising your own."

 Uqdah and Al-Mubarak recently helped senior military leaders  recognize Muslim service members. Deputy Defense Secretary John  J. Hamre and Vice Adm. Vern Clark, director of the Joint Staff,  invited them and about 25 Muslim service members to the Pentagon  Jan. 15 in honor of the month-long celebration of Ramadan.

During Ramadan, Muslims do not eat, drink or have sexual  intercourse from sunup to sundown. After sundown, they break the  fast during "Iftar." This was the second annual Ramadan Iftar  hosted at the Pentagon.

 Uqdah said the event is designed to remind commanders and senior  enlisted members that they have Muslim service members within  their ranks. 

 "Often, Muslim service members have the support of the chaplain,  but the one who truly makes a difference is that commanding  officer," he said. "When an issue comes up with respect to  religious accommodation, ... the chaplain will make a  recommendation, but the commanding officer is the one who says,  'This is what's going to happen.'" 

 By recognizing Muslim service members at the Pentagon, military leaders send a clear signal to the field that "Muslim soldiers  are there; take care of them," Uqdah said. 

 Before dining, the Muslim troops turned toward Mecca, the Muslim  holy city in Saudi Arabia, and chanted prayers led by Army  Muslim Chaplain (Capt.) Mohammed Khan of the 519th Military  Intelligence Battalion, Fort Bragg, N.C. Khan also led prayers  during the first Iftar at the Pentagon. 

 Khan, an 18-year Army veteran born in India, said he originally  worked in preventive medicine in the Army Nurse Corps. He said  he became the Army's second Muslim chaplain in May 1997.

 "They were looking for chaplains, so I switched over," he said.  "I was already serving the Army, educating commanders and troops  about Islam, especially during Desert Storm. I was writing  articles about Muslim events like Ramadan and dietary  requirements for Muslim soldiers."

 Khan said the annual Pentagon celebration of Ramadan is very  encouraging and supportive for Muslim soldiers. "It indicates  the integrity of the armed forces that they're committed to all  faiths," he said. 

 One guest who accompanied Khan from Fort Bragg echoed the  chaplain's view. Army Pfc. Boukassim Khalid of C Company, 1st  Battalion, 321st Field Artillery, said the Iftar celebration  gave him a chance to meet some fellow Muslims and discuss  religious issues. Originally from Morocco, Khalid said he joined  the military two years ago to earn education benefits. "Muslim  troops are a minority, but they are a part of the military," he  said. 

 After Muslim service members said prayers and broke their day's  fast with water and dates, Clark expressed his appreciation for  their contribution to the nation's defense. "I'm thankful that  we're here where it's all right for us to have different views  and different faiths," he said. "Diversity is part of our  greatness."

 Hamre, who also spoke at last year's event, told the group, "we  come together as people of faith who have assumed a larger  responsibility -- service to our country."

 Hamre said the fundamental principles expressed in the  Constitution -- liberty, justice, equality and opportunity --  are the same fundamental values of Muslims, Christians and Jews.  "We are faithful to our Constitution only if we recognize the  religious freedoms and rights of all of our soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines," he said. 

CAIR Bulletin - January 11, 2006

A Muslim soldier's funeral

On Thursday, January 12, the family of Staff Sgt. Ayman Taha and other American Muslims performed an Islamic funeral service in Arlington cemetery. Staff Sgt. Taha was killed recently in Ballad, Iraq, while preparing a weapon's cache for demolition. The service was led by Imam Mohammed Magid of the All Dulles Area Muslim Society (ADAMS).

Read More: "Muslim Funeral to Be Held at Alington Cemetery 1/11" (CAIR)

"The Pentagon said [Staff Sgt. Ayman] Taha was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group, based at Fort Campbell, Ky. His father said Taha was a devout Muslim who believed that 'the message of Islam is very simple... to believe in God and do good deeds.' He believed that what he was doing were the good deeds Islam is asking for. On Friday, as Staff Sgt. Ayman Taha, 31, was preparing a cache of munitions for demolition in the town of Balad, the explosives detonated and he was killed, the Pentagon said. Taha strongly agreed that what they were doing is good and that they were helping people in the Middle East to get out of the historic bottleneck that had confined them." - Washington Post

Read More: "Serving Was Soldier's Mission; Sudan Native Killed in Iraq Did 'Good Deeds'" (Washington Post)

"'I talked to some of his colleagues, and they all said he was a first-class soldier and he did everything to perfection,' said Ayman Taha's father, pointing out that Taha had reached the rank of staff sergeant after only three and a half years. 'His colleagues tell me it is a remarkable achievement,' he said." - Connection Newspapers

Read More: "Vienna Man Killed in Iraq" (Connection Newspapers)

"'We received the news of Ayman Taha's tragic death in Iraq with great sadness,' said UMass Amherst chancellor John V. Lombardi. 'While large international events produce a wide range of opinion, the loss of one of our own unites us in sorrow. We offer our condolences and support to Ayman Taha's family and friends.'"

Read More: "Alumnus Dedicated Life to Serving" (UMASS Alumni Association)