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Unexpected Partners: Muslims Helping Haiti
6 February 2010By Wajahat Ali
Haiti is experiencing unimaginable suffering from its
devastating earthquake, with more than 150,000 dead
and one to three million individuals displaced.
Individuals, groups and governments from around the
world have stepped in to do what they can. United by
their religious tradition of charity, Muslims have
emerged as effective partners in aid and relief work.
The international effort to aid Haiti by individuals,
Islamic
relief organizations and the governments of
Muslim-majority countries reflects a proactive
generosity and empathy espoused by the Prophet
Muhammad and the teachings of the Qur'an. Charity, in
fact, is one of the five obligations for Muslims, and
Muslim organizations have been working alongside other
faith-based groups to fulfill this duty.
Islamic Relief, one of the most respected and
successful
disaster
relief charities in the world, has used
technology, new media and social networking sites to
mobilize people. Along with "Seekers Digest", a
popular Muslim community blog run out of Canada,
Islamic Relief hosted the "Muslim Online Haiti
Fundraiser" and raised over $100,000 in two
hours. The organization also used its existing
partnership with the Mormon Church to send hygiene
kits and temporary shelters to Haiti, in addition to
pledging a total of $2.5 million.
Islamic Relief also sent an
emergency response team to directly assist
victims in Haiti. These
Muslim
aid workers have been updating a daily blog
with sobering first-hand accounts of the tragedy.
Assisting Islamic Relief, Muslim American artists and
community activists convened to put on a concert in
New York City, hosted by the
Inner-City Muslim Action Network (IMAN), and
used the opportunity to raise donations for Haiti. In
Chicago, IMAN partnered with a local synagogue and
church to raise aid money.
Governments and non-governmental organizations (NGO)
of countries that are more often known as recipients
of aid have also reached out. Two Pakistani NGOs, Al-Khidmat
Foundation and
Edhi Foundation, are mobilizing relief efforts
to help Haitians despite the country's own political
and economic volatility. Both organizations have
considerable expertise in this area due to the massive
2005 earthquake that killed nearly 80,000 in northern
Pakistan. The Edhi Foundation has already pledged
$500,000 to assist Haiti.
Speaking on Haiti's catastrophe, the president of Al-Khidmat
Foundation, Niamatullah Khan, said, "Islam exhorts us
to help those who are in trouble.... Humanity comes
first."
In the Middle East,
Dubai Cares, a non-profit dedicated to ensuring
education for young children, is providing immediate
assistance to 200,000 children in Haiti through its
international partners who are already on the ground.
And the governments of Bahrain,
Kuwait,
Morocco
and Turkey have each pledged $1 million in aid, in
addition to sending cargo planes filled with medical
supplies, food, tents and blankets.
Iran
donated 30 tons of humanitarian aid, including food,
tents and medicine through its Red Crescent Society.
And Palestinians, through the Red Cross, have begun an
effort to send donations.
Furthermore, Lebanon sent a plane with 25 tons of
tents and three tons of medical supplies. And
Indonesia, the most populous Muslim nation,
sent $2.1 million in aid. "As a country that has been
itself devastated by a similar situation, we are
absolutely saddened by what's happening in Haiti,"
Indonesian Foreign Minister
Marty
Natalegawa said at an
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
meeting in
Vietnam.
"We call on the ASEAN community, including ourselves,
of course, to do what we can do to assist them."
According to Habiba Hamid, a Fellow of the Centre for
the Study of
Global
Governance at the
London
School of Economics, this pattern of charity is
not an aberration but the norm for Muslim communities.
She says, "Without [Muslim countries], we would not
have the United Nations World Food Program (WFP)
today, which is proving critical in Haiti currently."
In 2008, when the WFP issued an urgent call for funds
in light of increased food and fuel prices that raised
global hunger and
poverty levels,
Saudi
Arabia pledged $500 million, leading the WFP to
recognize
King
Abdullah as a "Champion in the Battle Against
Hunger."
Although the journey to rebuilding Haiti is long and
painstaking, Muslim relief efforts worldwide prove
that sometimes our most reliable and effective
partners in humanitarian endeavors are not always the
ones we expect.
Wajahat Ali is a Muslim American of Pakistani descent.
He is a playwright, essayist, humorist and Attorney at
Law, whose work, "The Domestic Crusaders" is the first
major play about Muslim Americans living in a post
9-11 America. His blog is at
http://goatmilk. wordpress. com/
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