|
Allison Moore
grew up, as she says, in the buckle of the Bible Belt in Tulsa,
Oklahoma. Sixteen years ago she converted to Islam and has been active
ever since in the Tulsa chapter of Interfaith Alliance, a
multifaith-based organization that works to protect the boundaries
between religion and the government, as well as fight against the
threat that religious extremism poses to individual rights. Part of a
community of grass-roots activists, she volunteers to speak before the
public and to politicians about misconceptions surrounding Islam.
Q. What led you to convert to Islam?
I was raised Episcopalian. When I
married a Muslim man from Lebanon, I wanted to covert him to
Christianity. I studied the Qu’ran to find its weaknesses and instead
found God’s word, and reluctantly I converted. My family was a little
shocked. I didn’t convert for my husband but because I truly believed
it was God’s message. My life would be a hundred percent easier if I
were Christian. Easier with my own family and society at large. I have
since divorced and remarried a Catholic, who himself has become Muslim.
Q. Why do you say you “reluctantly”
converted?
Growing in your religious faith is a
slow process. I took baby steps. When I first converted, I started
praying five times a day. In the next year I began to fast. But I faced
more challenges with letting go of my culture, part of which included
dress. Ten years into it, as I wanted to give myself up more to God, I
dressed more conservatively and thought about wearing the headscarf. I
struggled to give up vanity. It’s no different than a nun who puts on a
habit to think less of herself and her appearance and more about
others. About a year ago, I decided to wear it full time.
I have to admit it’s not easy going
out in public and have people stare and say, ‘You’re not one of those
Muslims, are you? Why do you wear that thing on your head?’ I have to
give them something they can relate to. I smile and explain that just
as Mary the mother of Jesus wore a scarf as an act of piety, so do we.
I have a young daughter who we’ve raised Muslim and she chooses not to
wear the headscarf, which is fine.
Q Why do you think the headscarf
bothers people?
Christian women worry that veiled
Muslim women are oppressed, but it’s non-Muslims employers who won’t
hire women if they don a scarf, so they’re the ones discriminating
against them. If people see the veil as oppressive, we see it as
liberating, because we don’t have to conform to stereotypical standards
of beauty. Things such as Saudi women not being allowed to drive are
cultural restrictions, not religious.
Q. What other challenges do American
Muslims face?
The biggest hurdle I’ve had to jump
as an American Muslim is getting out and educating the public about
what Islam stands for. Out of some 600,000 people in Tulsa only about
5,000 to 8,000 are Muslim. It’s a vibrant community, but because we’re
a minority, we don’t have funding or a vast publicity department. So
while many of us are trying to educate the public about our culture and
faith, far more powerful forces are ‘educating’ the public against us.
So I feel we’re losing the pr battle. Many people have a real
misunderstanding of Islam and view Muslims as the current
representation of evil in the world. Jihad, for example, which is the
struggle of a person trying to be good on a daily basis, the media says
means holy war. The media’s focus is on extreme radicals, who represent
less than one percent of the people in our faith.
Q. How has this misunderstanding
played itself out in Tulsa?
Last year for the centennial of
Oklahoma, a local Baptist group bestowed Bibles with the centennial
seal as a gift to our state’s elected officials. The Governor’s Ethnic
American Advisory Council and the local Muslim community decided to
send Qu’rans with the centennial seal, which the Muslim community paid
for, selecting an edition that provided explanation of all the verses
because they are so often taken out of context. An email went out
asking the officials if they wished to receive the gift and several
dozen declined. One of them, Republican state representative Rex
Duncan, told The Tulsa World he couldn’t
support a religion that endorsed the killing of women and children.
Nowhere does the Qu’ran state such a
thing. Everyone was concerned about where Duncan was getting his
information. We couldn’t let a comment like that go unattested. We held
a press conference at the mosque and had a great showing of the
Interfaith community. In the end, Duncan still didn’t accept the Qu’ran
and a few other state officials followed suit, but we never had a
problem with anyone’s refusal, it was the bigoted comments.
Q. Has the situation improved?
Anti-Muslim sentiment has gone up in
the last year. For a while the White House stopped constantly pairing
the word “terrorist” with “Islamic,” but at the Republican convention,
the entire party was at it again. Why not call these people simply
“terrorists”? It’s a double standard. After abortion center bombings we
never hear the people who planted the bomb referred to as “Christian
terrorists.” That’s because people know true Christianity does not
sanction such acts. The same is certainly true in Islam.
Q. Have you
witnessed or experienced harassment?
I have a lot of friends who have been called terrorists in stores. One
friend was chased in her car in the Wal-Mart parking lot by guys
screaming at her to go back home. What’s ironic is that she was born
here. This is her home. But hate is blind.
Just last month, an organization
called the Clarion Fund sent copies of an extremely anti-Muslim film to
28 million homes in presidential election swing states, basically to
scare the wits out of people and make them vote Republican. The Council
on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has asked for an SEC investigation
regarding the group’s tax-exempt status and this controversy. CAIR has
also reported a significant increase in workplace-related incidents
against Muslims. The climate seems so bad at times, that some of my
Christian friends have offered to hide me and my family should any
large-scale lashing out occur, God forbid.
Q. What gives you hope?
The essence of pure religion is not
divisive. Mankind is divisive. Despite everything, the Interfaith
community here in Tulsa is strong and vibrant, with Hindus, Buddhist,
Jews, Muslims, and Christians and none of them are giving up their
individual religious identity but working together as one community. It
serves as a model that it can be done.
Visit:
www.interfaithalliance.org
|