Friday, August 27, 2010

BREAKING NEWS: CAIR-Chicago - Taxis to Remove Anti-Islam Ads
White Supremacists Find Common Cause with Pam Geller’s Anti-Islam Campaign

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CAIR Releases Toolkit for 9/11 'Day of Unity and Healing'
Guide for Muslim community leaders supports educational, outreach initiatives

(WASHINGTON, D.C., 8/26/10) -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) today released an online toolkit designed to help Muslim communities organize proactive local educational and outreach initiatives tied to events such as a "National Day of Unityand Healing" on the upcoming anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks.

SEE: 'Teachable Moment Community Response Guide' Toolkit

The toolkit, called a "Teachable Moment Community Response Guide," offers guidance, tools and resources to help Muslim communities respond to specific current events such as the end of Ramadan Eid al-Fitr holiday occurring near September 11, the upcoming "Burn a Koran Day" by a church in Florida, the anti-Muslim bigotry generated by the smear campaign against a planned Islamic community center in Manhattan, and the ongoing tension and misunderstanding surrounding the building or expansion of mosques nationwide.

SEE: Fearful Muslims Downplay Holiday Set to Fall on Sept. 11
Fla. Faith Leaders: Book-Burning Has No Place Here
CAIR: NY Attack On Muslim Cabbie Spurs Calls To Cool Rhetoric (NPR)
CAIR: Drunk Shouts 'Terrorists,' Urinates on Mosque Rugs
CAIR-NY: 9/11 Families, Others Rally in Favor of NYC Mosque
Beyond New York, Mosques Draw Protests

"We hope this toolkit will help local community leaders as they plan the many spontaneous outreach and educational initiatives that are being scheduled in response to the new challenges faced by American Muslims," said CAIR National Executive DirectorNihad Awad. "Each community should utilize the contents of the toolkit to respond in a proactive way to the unprecedented wave of hate-mongering targeting Islam and American Muslims."

Awad said the toolkit also includes verses from the Quran about how Muslims should respond to harassment and abuse, recommendations for hosting open houses at mosques, tips on working with media professionals, and statements of support from national religious and civic groups and leaders.

It cites chapter 41, verse 34 of the Quran, which states:

"(Since) good and evil cannot be equal, repel (the evil deed) with one that is better. Then you will see that he with whom you had enmity, will become your close friend."

CAIR is America's largest Muslim civil liberties and advocacy organization. Its mission is to enhance the understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties, empower American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and mutual understanding.


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