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Dr. Al-Arian
Spends 29th anniversary of Arrival to United States in Prison
May 21, 2004
On May 21, 1975, Dr. Sami Al-Arian immigrated to the United States
from Egypt, where his family lived as Palestinian refugees. The
commemoration of the anniversary of this event brings to memory
the reasons immigrants throughout history came to America for safe
haven from the tumultuous political and social environs in their
native lands. It is disconcerting to witness that the many rights
and freedoms enshrined in the U.S. Constitution, Bill of Rights,
and historical legacy, currently find themselves set aside as the
government continues its unjust prosecution of a select minority
based on its ethnic and religious background.
At age 17, Sami
Amin Al-Arian arrived to the United States and instantly embraced
its cultural norms and values. His first civics class at Southern
Illinois University included discussion of what the professor termed
"the two D's" of American democracy: due process and dissent,
a lesson he would come to appreciate in the course of life in America.
He fell in love with the political atmosphere, where one could not
be punished for expressing his opinions, and where civic involvement
was encouraged.
In 1979, Sami
married Nahla Al-Najjar, another Palestinian refugee, who would
become the source of love and support for her family as they faced
the trials in later years. A year later, the couple had their first
of five children. Nahla and the five children are American citizens.
Upon receiving
his PhD from North Carolina State University in computer engineering,
Dr. Al-Arian accepted a teaching position at the University of South
Florida in Tampa, where he would become a tenured professor. His
academic accomplishments at USF were manifold.
He authored
a number of articles in his field as well as chapters in textbooks.
He also won a number of research grants for USF's engineering department.
He was given a number of accolades, including two prestigious teaching
awards. In all of their evaluations, colleagues and students expressed
their utmost respect and admiration for Dr. Al- Arian's work in
the classroom.
Aside from his
professional career, Dr. Al-Arian also devoted much time and energy
to the building of civic institutions to enhance the life of the
growing American Muslim community. He has played an integral role
in founding and expanding some of the largest national organizations,
including the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) and the Muslim
Students Association (MSA). Locally, he founded the Islamic Community
of Tampa Bay at the Al-Qassam mosque, one of the largest in the
Bay area.
Perhaps what
he is most proud of, however, is establishing the Islamic Academy
of Florida (IAF), a fulltime school that offered students the highest
quality education while instilling them with a sense of moral duty
to their community and country. Graduates of IAF have gone on to
some of the top universities in America and most have received scholarships
and acceptance to honor programs.
Dr. Al-Arian
was also heavily involved in human rights work, especially with
regard to his native Palestine in an effort to relieve the suffering
of Palestinians at the hands of the Israeli occupation. He was outspoken
in opposition to Israeli policies and eager to inform the American
public of the plight of Palestinians in order to effect positive
change.
Among his many
activities, Dr. Al-Arian actively worked to bridge the divide between
East and West. He promoted interfaith dialogue individually and
institutionally, in an effort to establish peace, tolerance, and
understanding between faiths. Through this work, Dr. Al-Arian developed
many important friendships which continue today.
He also became
recognized as a moderate leader of the American Muslim community,
receiving invitations to speak at numerous churches, synagogues,
and even U.S. Central Command at the MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa.
By the mid-1990s,
Dr. Al-Arian's activities would come to entail the latest civil
rights struggle in American history, and the emerging national effort
to end the unjust detention of Arabs and Muslims for years without
trials by the use of secret evidence. Through tremendous efforts,
including coalition-building, grassroots mobilization, and congressional
lobbying, Dr. Al-Arian would come to be recognized as "one
of the country's leading advocates" of the new civil rights
movement, according to Newsweek magazine.
Having lived
in the U.S. for over two decades, he was steeped in the American
civil rights tradition and was a strong believer in fighting for
change through the designated avenues. Furthermore, Dr. Al-Arian
worked hard to empower and enfranchise the American Muslim community
on the local and national levels, encouraging Muslims to vote and
run for office.
Dr Al-Arian's
arrest on February 20, 2003, at the behest of Attorney General John
Ashcroft (who credited the Patriot Act for making it all possible),
was the height of injustices witnessed by Dr. Al-Arian in his nearly
thirty years as a law-abiding resident who loved his country; a
country where he lived nearly twice as long as he had anywhere else;
a country that upheld his values and beliefs more than any other;
a country where he raised his family to live, learn, work, and contribute
to its betterment.
Since his detention
fourteen months ago, Dr. Sami Al-Arian has witnessed firsthand the
gravest of injustices, never thought imaginable, as he endures solitary
confinement, unnecessary and humiliating strip searches, being shackled
during the occasional phone call, and denied visits from friends
or the right to even touch his loved ones. His treatment at the
hands of prison officials at Coleman Penitentiary or the frequent
transgressions by the magistrate judge have left many Americans
wondering if justice is indeed possible under such a cloud of fear,
hatred, suspicion, and paranoia.
Dr. Al-Arian,
however, maintains his unshakeable faith that the system will ultimately
live up to its time tested legacy of fairness, in spite of the current
conditions. His love for the country that welcomed him as a teenager,
and nurtured him as a young man has not yet been tarnished by its
current loss of identity. Through him, it has lived up to its promise
for three decades, and through him, it will restore it once again.
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