U.S.-Muslim engagement seen as key to security, prosperity

Baptist Press

Deep misunderstandings between the United States and Muslim communities around the world are causing serious problems, and solving them will require constructing “bridges of understanding,” says the president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission.

“Polls show there is a huge lack of understanding of Americans in the Muslim world. We need to broaden and deepen the understanding on both sides,” Richard Land said. “The U.S.-Muslim Engagement Project will galvanize every aspect of American society to engage the Muslim society.”

Richard Land

The U.S.-Muslim Engagement Project is a broad bipartisan coalition that recently completed 18 months of extensive research into the challenge of reversing extremism, increasing international security and improving relations with the Muslim community. The project’s 33-member leadership group included, among others, the ERLC’s Land, former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, former Texas congressman Steve Bartlett, and former Minnesota congressman Vin Webber.

The group, which had 11 Muslim-American members and was supported in its work by Search for Common Ground and the Consensus Building Institute, held a briefing Sept. 24 on its report – entitled “Changing Course: A New Direction for U.S. Relations with the Muslim World” – at the Rayburn House Office Building and a press conference at the National Press Club.

“This initiative is a serious, comprehensive, bipartisan effort that seeks to address a critical problem: The world Muslim community misunderstands Americans, and Americans misunderstand them,” Land said in a written endorsement. “This initiative lays out a detailed and comprehensive plan to vastly decrease that misunderstanding through a multi-faceted approach that will build constructive bridges of mutual understanding between Americans and the Muslim world.”

Project leadership has called for the next president of the U.S. to recognize the importance of improving U.S.-Muslim relations in his inaugural speech.

“The leadership group believes that we must elevate diplomacy for conflict resolution,” said Land, who is also a member of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. “The leadership group, the U.S. military and the U.S. public all recognize the limits of military force and the need for a more comprehensive set of tools to resolve conflicts with, and within, Muslim countries. Military force may be necessary but is not sufficient alone to defeat extremists in Muslim countries such as Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan or prevent attacks elsewhere,” he continued.

Land said U.S. military leaders are not averse to diplomatic, political and economic initiatives to aid in the isolation and defeat of Islamic extremists.

“By changing our approach, we will also help reverse the widespread perception of Muslims around the world that the U.S. is engaged in a ‘war on Islam,’?” Land said.

Contrary to popular belief, most Muslims are not supportive of extremists and terrorists, said Ingrid Mattson, president of the Islamic Society of North America. Like most Americans, they desire to experience democracy and freedom in their countries and communities.

“At best, only 5 percent of the worldwide Muslim community supports terrorists,” Land said. “In effect, what you have in these terrorists groups is a ‘death cult’ that has taken root within Islam.

“For instance, in Iraq 12 uniformed Iraqi police and military have been killed by terrorists for every one American uniformed service person who has been killed. These Iraqis have been killed because they refused to knuckle under to this death cult’s radical and twisted interpretation of Islam,” he said. “Americans need to understand this is a gross distortion of Islam as a whole,” Land stressed.

The need for improving governance is also crucial to building better relations between the U.S. and Muslim worlds.

Wood is an intern with the Washington bureau of Baptist Press.