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Muslim Convert
Running For Congress
Keith Ellison, a state lawmaker from
Minnesota who converted to Islam as a college student, aims to become the first
Muslim elected to the United States Congress.
By FREDERIC J. FROMMER, The Associated Press, Friday, September 22, 2006
WASHINGTON -- When Mohamed Ghabour
heard that a Muslim candidate, Keith Ellison, was running for Congress in
Minneapolis, Ghabour turned to a sister-in-law who lives in Minnesota for a
scouting report. "She said he's a good man," recalled Ghabour, a Muslim
pediatrician from the Tampa, Fla., area. "That's all I needed to hear."
Ghabour contributed $999 to
Ellison's campaign, joining other Muslim-American donors who are pinning their
hopes, and their dollars, on Ellison becoming the first Muslim elected to
Congress.
Ellison, a state lawmaker who
converted to Islam as a college student, would also become the first black
elected to Congress from Minnesota. He is the Democratic nominee in an
overwhelmingly Democratic, Minneapolis-area House district that is about 13
percent black, according to 2000 census data. The current congressman, Democrat
Martin Sabo, is retiring.
Ellison, 43, stressed that he's
just a "regular Muslim," not a religious leader or scholar.
"Muslims want to express
themselves in American life _ just like all other Americans do," Ellison said in
an interview. "I think that it's very encouraging that while some people seek
extremism, American Muslims are seeking inclusion and engagement in the American
body politic."
As of Aug. 23, the latest filing
period, Ellison had raised $317,000, but it's not certain how much of that came
from Muslim contributors. Ellison raised $15,000 to $20,000 last month at a
fundraiser with Muslim business owners in Minnesota, and a July fundraiser by
young Muslim Capitol Hill staffers in Washington brought in about $5,000,
according to Ellison's campaign manager, Dave Colling.
Interviews with donors suggest
Muslims from all over the country have sent money to Ellison's campaign, both to
help elect a Muslim and because they like his stance on the issues.
"I'm Muslim myself, and so I think
that's important, but more important than that is his bringing people together
across religious, racial and age spectrums," said Jeffrey Hassan, a lawyer from
Brooklyn Park, Minn., who has give Ellison about $800. "I think that's more
important than the fact that he's Muslim."
Sameh Shabaneh, an engineer from
Woodbury, Minn., who gave Ellison $1,000, cited the candidate's support for the
environment, removing troops from Iraq, and preserving civil liberties.
Parvez Ahmed, chairman of the
Council on American-Islamic Relations, a civil rights group, said Ellison's
election would be a milestone for Muslim Americans.
"Every other community wants
someone from their community to be part of the mosaic that represents the
country," said Ahmed, who teaches finance at the University of North Florida and
gave Ellison $500. "He would be a voice for people who don't have representation
in Congress."
Republicans are trying to make an
issue of a contribution from another Council on American-Islamic Relations
official _ executive director Nihad Awad, who gave Ellison $2,000.
In a fundraising letter last week,
state GOP Chairman Ron Carey said Ellison has received "financial support from a
self-identified supporter of Hamas."
That was a reference to Awad's
1994 statement that he preferred Hamas to the Palestinian Liberation
Organization. In an interview, Awad said that was before the group engaged in
suicide bombings and was designated a terrorist organization by the State
Department.
"I don't support Hamas today,"
Awad said. "My position and CAIR's position is extremely clear _ we condemn
suicide bombings. We are mainstream American Muslims."
It's not the first time Ellison's
associations _ past and present _ have provided fodder for the campaign. A day
after Ellison won the Democratic primary last week, his underdog GOP opponent,
Republican Alan Fine, said he was "offended as a Jew that we have a candidate
like this running for U.S. Congress."
Fine cited Ellison's past ties to
the Nation of Islam, a black Muslim group led by Louis Farrakhan, who has a long
history of harshly criticizing Jews, gays and other groups. Ellison has since
denounced Farrakhan and was endorsed by a Jewish newspaper in Minneapolis.
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