Category: Uncategorized

  • Dr. Asma Salam's Call for Prayer in the Matter of the Holy Land Foundation Trial

    Assalamu Alaikum,

    I strongly believe in the power of prayer as God has himself said that no evil can touch us with out His will and no one can harm whom He wants to save. Why sometimes evil surround us is not a mystery. I think it is God’s way of testing our strength and love for Him. These tests, trials and tribulations increase the depth of our soul and are just a next step towards Heaven. God is most forgiving and most merciful, He forgive us if we truly asks His help and guidance through prayers as God has said that “Ask Me and you will get whatever you seek.”

    I also believe in the power of congregational prayers, as it unites community and align our souls for a good cause. Is it possible that you ask Imams of most if not all mosques in DFW and other cities to have a special prayer during Khutba or after Khutba before Juma prayer for HLF brothers starting this Juma and continuing on other Jumas in Ramadan so that God forgive them, and forgive us and all Muslim community. This is a very critical time for all of us and not for them only. I wish we all pray together and remember the power of unity as God mentioned to hold on to the rope with strength and not to be divided, ” Wa atasamu bi hablillah e jamian wala tafaraqu.”

    My prayers are with these brothers and their families. May God have mercy on them and on us. Amen.

    Best regards
    asma
    Asma Salam, MD

  • Albanian Press Splashes Story of Deportation Plans

    Email from John Wheat Gibson:

    A major newspaper in Tirana, the capital of Albania, yesterday [Sept. 5] picked up the Texas Civil Rights Review story on Rrustem Neza’s deportation, translated it to Albanian, and splashed it on the front page. Korrieri says that Rrustem was denied asylum in the US and will be back in Albania soon. For sure, now, the killers will be waiting to arrest or maybe just shoot Rrustem before he gets out of the airport.

    ************

    Note: Until the facts of this case can be more fully comprehended, the Editor of the Texas Civil Rights Review solemnly hopes that USA immigration authorities will reconsider their rush to put Rrustem Neza’s life in further danger –gm

  • Ayman's Pledge

    By Ralph Isenberg
    September 5, 2007

    Ayman Suleiman called me from Jordan tonight. He wanted to talk about his growing up in the United States. Ayman reminded me that for eleven and one half years he went to school and each morning he recited the “pledge of allegiance.”

    “That is the only pledge I know or want to know” he said. His words have amazing meaning given what he has been through.

    There is a new pledge for Ayman to recite. That pledge has to do with manhood, for Ayman must now care for the entire family.

    In the next 72 hours Ayman is going to do something very brave. He is going to take his sisters to the US Embassy in Amman, Jordan and ask to talk to the head of the Citizen Immigration Services (CIS) with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The topic will be what can be done by DHS in Jordan to bring him and his two sisters’ home now.

    Ayman is willing to care for his sisters in the United States even if it means the family must be temporarily separated. His sisters and he must continue with their education. One can only wonder what is going to happen.

    Regardless, the Suleiman children will continue to recite the “pledge of allegiance” and Ayman has learned the pledge of manhood that goes with caring for family.

  • Against the Evil: Three Paths of Resistance

    By Nick Braune
    Mid-Valley Town Crier
    by permission

    People battle against evil in different ways. Sometimes those various efforts work together to bring change, sometimes they fail. But having different but concurrent efforts is crucial in the long haul, and I will describe three such recent efforts.

    A Lawsuit

    The first battle, a legal challenge: The ACLU last week forced some important changes to be made in the infamous T. Don Hutto detention center near Austin; the facility “houses” immigrants (many of them children) in cells.

    Although Immigration and Customs Enforcement, ICE, calls Hutto a “residential center” not a detention center, it was originally built as a prison. And when I covered a protest there two months ago, it still looked like a prison to me. ICE, under public pressure, had recently removed the most intimidating barbed wire, but there clearly were guards and fences.

    The New York Times reported how Hutto “drew protests when it was reported that immigrant children were inadequately fed, deprived of toys and confined to cells with open toilets.” But the victorious ACLU legal challenge now requires Hutto to improve the children’s education, recreation and nutrition. Hutto must also hire a pediatrician, install privacy curtains around toilets, and allow inspections by a magistrate.

    The Times noted that things started changing when protests hit and the suit was announced in March: The government (ICE, etc.) soon backed off its disgusting policy of forcing children to wear “institutional uniforms” (prison outfits), and has allowed more toys and recreational time.

    My note: These immigrants have not been convicted of crimes; they are simply in violation of immigration rules or are awaiting refugee status. By international law they should not be detained as prisoners.

    Although its suit won a victory, the ACLU insists it still finds Hutto “an inappropriate place” to house children. And most activists I know want it shut down completely, along with the huge detention camp for adults in Raymondville.

    A Forum

    A second battle: some successful Valley coalition organizing. On August 23rd, seventy people gathered for a dramatic Weslaco public forum. At issue was Raymondville’s detention center (camp) where two thousand people are held in punitive conditions in huge tents.

    Held at South Texas College and sponsored by the Coalition Against Immigrant Repression and other groups, the event hosted some fired-up speakers: local TV reporter Victor Castillo and immigration lawyer Jodi Goodwin from Harlingen lambasted the callous mistreatment of immigrants in Raymondville. Juan Guerra, the district attorney for Willacy County (Raymondville), exposed the financial shadiness behind the detention center and the cover-up.

    Psychotherapist Kenneth Koym discussed how “labeling” can cause depression in children in places like Hutto. Rogelio Nunez, Proyecto Libertad director, spoke of a long history in the Valley of government repression and urged the youth to study that history.

    Ben Browning, a young man who chained himself in civil disobedience against a detention center fence in Houston two months ago, discussed how our government displays a deep fear of people. It was an outstanding event.

    A Poem

    A third battle against evil is one by a local poet, Shirley Rickett. She doesn’t describe her poetry as a battle, but I count it as such. (Although I’ve seen her at peace rallies, at the feisty forum last week against the detention centers, and at last week’s No Border Wall event in Mission which rallied 300 people, she describes her poetry as quiet meditation, with an audience listening.)

    Rickett has researched the Holocaust and once received a grant to interview children of the Nazis in Europe. Like Kenneth Koym, mentioned above, she is concerned about children and confusion and labels. Her poetry and presentations find telling images: her own childhood confusion thinking “Pearl Harbor” was a girl’s name, young Oedipus feeling cursed, German children sewing yellow stars on their prettiest dresses.

    Here is a poem (in villanelle form), perhaps meditating on Hutto, Raymondville and Nazi camps, from Rickett’s recent collection:

    The Camps

    A prison that’s a melting pot:
    Whole families live among these camps,
    the people everyone forgot,

    or people no one knows about,
    employment for the poorest towns,
    a prison that’s a melting pot.

    Some say it’s true, no matter what,
    two-year-olds in uniform,
    the people everyone forgot.

    Child, lay your head upon this cot,
    never mind your will to play
    in prisons that are melting pots.

    ” ‘Catch and release’ didn’t work,”
    the mindless drone of bureaucrats
    on people everyone forgot.

    Tent or wall, barbed wire aloft:
    “Line up” several times a day,
    in prison that’s a melting pot,
    the people everyone forgot.