Community
"Community outreach and Islam go hand in hand," says Mohsin Kamran, president of the Ahmadiyya Youth Association. With events like their annual blood drive for the Canadian Red Cross and handing out informational pamphlets on Islam downtown, the Ahmadi youth are active members in the Calgary community.
Young Calgary Muslims invite public to spread Islam's message of peace
published by the Calgary Journal on Oct. 7, 2014 Canada's largest association of Muslims and a Calgary Muslim youth group are speaking out against extremism with their performance of Muhammad: The Astonishing Story of the Prophet. The play — sponsored by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama'at (AMJ) and their youth association — is part entertainment and part education, teaching Muslims and non-Muslims about the peaceful lessons of Islam and the Prophet Muhammad. It also featured a a history of the religion and showed how many pivotal figures in Christianity and Judaism are connected to Islam. "This is the purpose of having this event, to show that Islam has nothing to do with extremism," says Mohsin Kamran, president of Calgary's Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association. This is the first time the play will be held in Calgary and comes at a crucial time for our city's Muslim community. A few Muslim Calgarians have gained attention in the news for theirextremist activities — including Damian Clairmont who was reportedly killed while fighting in Syria earlier this year and Salaman Ashrafi, suspected of killing over 30 people in a suicide bombing in Iraq last November. "Unfortunately these Canadian kids are joining radical groups," says Kamran. "This is the struggle we have, to present a beautiful picture of Islam, the true picture." Umair Khan, Imam at the Baitunnur Mosque in Calgary, says that the media focuses on the negative acts of a small group of Muslims, which paints a negative picture of Islam. "If you look at (extremist groups) flags it's all based on religion," says Khan. "It has Allah, then the name of the prophet Muhammad. And one of the reasons we're doing this event is for the non-Muslim community members and for the Muslim youth to understand that is not the way the prophet Muhammad spread his message." Khan says that community outreach and charity are integral to the Muslim faith. Khan, Kamran and the youth group all take part in public awareness campaigns, writing letters to newspapers, handing out literature in the downtown core and going door-to-door in outlying communities. |
Their goal is to let the public know that Islam teaches peace, acceptance and not to fear words like Muhammad, Islam and Jihad. "Jihad means 'struggle' – the internal struggle," says Khan. "Our Jihad in this era is through the pen. It's an intellectual Jihad. If people are attacking Islam through the media, then let's pick up our pens and retaliate with the teachings and knowledge of the Quran." While the Ahmadiyya Youth Association is active in the community, Kamran says they shy away from protesting with signs and placards. Kamran says that taking steps to educate and inform, like putting on this play, are the only ways to fight extremists who prey on Muslim youth. Kamran says he is confident that this performance could have changed the minds of young Calgarians who have joined these extremist groups. "If a kid like Damian or Ashrafi would have watched a show like this, that would not be the case," says Kamran. "Today they would be alive." |