Grieving Muslim father calls for calm am...

Email:

Grieving Muslim father calls for calm amidst racial tensions

To

Email address:
Separate multiple addresses with a comma (,). Maximum of 10

From

Your name:
Your email address:
Security test:
Please enter the numbers that appear here in the box below.
refresh captcha
CAPTCHA Image
Security code:

Details provided here will never be used in any other context

Grieving Muslim father calls for calm amidst racial tensions

Country: United Kingdom, Europe

Harroon Jahan's father, Tariq, with a picture of his son
Harroon Jahan's father, Tariq, with a picture of his son

A Muslim father whose son was one of three Pakistani men run down and killed during the riots in Birmingham has been praised after calling upon his community to stay calm and refrain from engaging in violent reprisals.

Tariq Jahan's 21-year-old son, Haroon Jahan, and his friends Shahzad Ali, 30, and his brother Abdul Musavir, 31, were killed on Tuesday 9 August as they tried to guard family shops from carloads of looters.

Scores of young Muslim men filled the pavements outside Dudley Road's parade of nine small businesses and a mosque after complaining that police had failed to stop looters the night before.

Only hours after trying to save his dying son on the pavement near his home, Mr Jahan focused on the need for peace in Birmingham, a multicultural city of 1 million people that has previously suffered repeated clashes between its South Asian and Caribbean communities.

Mr Jahan appealed on TV to angry young Muslim men debating the need to strike back against those in the black community whom they blame for Wednesday's hit-and-run attack:

I lost my son. Blacks, Asians, whites: We all live in the same community. Why do we have to kill one another? Why are we doing this? Step forward if you want to lose your sons. Otherwise, calm down and go home, please.

A day later, Mr Jahan's face and message were on the front page of many British newspapers and he received praise from MPs.

Daily Mail columnist, Melanie Phillips, was one of several journalists who expressed appreciation for Mr Jahan in her blog:

The exemplary response of the father of one of the three who were killed, in which he asked his community to stay calm and to engage in no violent reprisals, has rightly drawn widespread admiration in bringing down the dangerously elevated temperature through his selfless and far-sighted gesture at a moment of shock and grief.

Phillips also commented on the special cooperation that has existed between ethnic groups since the riots:

Despite the violent mayhem across Britain over the past few days, it is important to point out that there have also been heartening examples of cross-community co-operation and solidarity. Sikhs have been volunteering to stand guard over mosques; Muslims have been guarding gurdwaras; ultra-orthodox Jewish men in Stamford Hill handed out challah loaves to people forced out of their homes in the conflagration; and people of all colours and creeds have been coming together to clean up their communities after the mayhem.

This is how a healthy society should behave: people from different communities and creeds co-operating in a neighbourly, helpful and respectful way. That is very different from multiculturalism, which is often wrongly assumed to mean precisely this. It does not.

Multiculturalism is a baleful creed which, far from bringing people together drives them apart. That is because multiculturalism is not a synonym for people from different cultures all getting along together. If this were so, it would be no more than a re-statement of how all decent and civilised societies should behave.

No, multiculturalism is the doctrine which says that no culture can ever claim precedence over any other. So there can be no hierarchy of values, and no society can uphold its historic traditions and values against any challenge. It is therefore by definition impossible for a multicultural society to uphold liberal values over their opposite - or, indeed, to uphold the fundamental democratic axiom of ‘one law for all'. It is also an oxymoron; for without an overarching set of cultural values to which everyone equally subscribes, there is no cultural glue to keep together a society - which then disintegrates into a war of group against group, value against value and the strong versus the weak.

It is multiculturalism which has done so much to wreck Britain; it is multiculturalism which has resulted in police neglect of black-on-black murder and gang warfare; it is multiculturalism which has helped create the anomie, amorality and utter absence of attachment to any notion of the common good which manifested itself in the anarchy on the streets of British cities.

By contrast, how very heartening have been the many scenes of kindness between strangers, and the poignant attempts to forge common bonds in the face of such terrible loss and provocation. In this must lie our hope for the future

So far three men have appeared in court charged with the murder of the three friends.

External links

Please note: We have no control over other websites and links do not signify that we endorse the website(s). We have no responsibility for the content of the said linked website(s).

Read The Associated Press article - Father of slain Muslim pleads for UK racial peace
Read Melanie Phillips' article - Dogma and decency

Help Barnabas: Share this article

Email:

Grieving Muslim father calls for calm amidst racial tensions

To

Email address:
Separate multiple addresses with a comma (,). Maximum of 10

From

Your name:
Your email address:
Security test:
Please enter the numbers that appear here in the box below.
refresh captcha
CAPTCHA Image
Security code:

Details provided here will never be used in any other context

christian, persecution, charity, church, persecuted, sookhdeo, Islam

Partner with Barnabas

partner-box.jpg

Our magazine - Barnabas aid

Barnabas aid magazine

Follow Barnabas

or

receive news & appeal emails as they are published

From Twitter

From Twitter_icon
  • Sudan & S.Sudan agree 2 peace talks–but attacks continue "Khartoum is bombing civilian targets, killing women/children" http://t.co/ImZPDfxd 18 hours ago

  • Kuwait's ruler blocks Islamist parliament's bid to impose sharia law http://t.co/RQOx3Ar7 19 hours ago

  • "The funds provided by Barnabas have been a big source of help and a glimpse of hope" for needy Christians in Syria http://t.co/hPehUw4y Thu, May 2012 16:50

  • Kuwaiti parliament approves death penalty for blasphemy "we need this legislation - incidents of cursing God have risen http://t.co/ay3seTcP Thu, May 2012 16:07

  • Nigerian #Christians undeterred by attacks "we must have faith in God.This is our home.This is where we should worship" http://t.co/CnqS64Hm Wed, May 2012 16:59

Daily prayer

Daily prayer_icon
  • Unregistered churches in Kazakhstan can face intense harassment from the authorities. On 8 February Aleksei Asetov, a father of ten, was given a fine equivalent to about 18 months earnings of an average wage for leading a small unregistered church that meets in his home in Ekibastuz in Pavlodar Region. His property was raided and Christian literature seized, and he was convicted of carrying out banned religious activity. He is the fourth Christian known to have been fined since the new Religion Law came into force. Pray that Christians will stand firm in their faith and show the love of Christ to those who persecute them. Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed 11 hours ago

  • “The activity of small religious groups in the territory of Kazakhstan is now banned since there is no such form of religious association of citizens.” A senior religious affairs official in Kazakhstan bluntly declared that under the new Religion Law that came into force in October 2011, religious associations with fewer than 50 members must either re-register with more than 50 people or stop their activities. A number of churches from a range of Christian denominations have already been stripped of their registration, and no rules have yet been drawn up to enable them to re-register, even if they have enough members to do so. Pray that this repressive new law will be enforced less strictly and will eventually be repealed. Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed Fri, May 2012 00:00

  • The new president of Russia, Vladimir Putin, has promised to make the protection of repressed Christians in foreign countries one of his foreign policy priorities. During the presidential election he met with a group of church leaders in Moscow on 8 February, who told him that Christians were suffering persecution all over the world, with one Christian dying for his or her faith every five minutes. When they asked him to give attention to this problem, he replied, “This is how it will be, have no doubt.” Give thanks for this undertaking, and pray that the president will honour it. Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed Thu, May 2012 00:00

  • Pray for Greater Grace Church in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, which has been closed by the authorities. The State Committee for Work with Religious Organisations moved against the church for its failure to obtain the re-registration required by the harsh Religion Law of 2009. This is thought to be the first attempt to use the new law to force a church to close, and it creates a legal precedent that may threaten other churches. Several congregations that have tried to re-register have recently been informed that their applications have been refused. Pray for an easing of the tight limitations and severe penalties imposed by the law, and for the churches as they seek to serve Christ under great pressure. Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed Wed, May 2012 00:00

  • Give thanks that the charge of religious defamation against Egyptian Christian businessman and liberal political leader Naguib Sawaris has been thrown out of court. Mr Sawaris was charged with “blasphemy and insulting Islam” for an image he tweeted in June 2011 depicting the cartoon characters Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse in Islamic guise, with a long beard and face veil respectively. Both lawsuits filed against him were rejected, one on 28 February, the other on 3 March. The tweet sparked a Muslim backlash against Mr Sawaris, with groups calling for a boycott of his companies. Pray that this will not happen and that freedom of speech will be upheld in the new Egyptian order. Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed Tue, May 2012 00:00

© Barnabas Fund 1997 - 2012 All rights reserved.
Barnabas Fund & Barnabas Aid are registered trade marks