Certainly, hunger can bring out the worst in us. But it can also bring out the best.
— Hamza Yusuf
Hunger can bring out the worst in us.
Stop taking pictures and start experiencing life.
The thing I love most about going to a book store is the self-help section is the biggest section because Americans know we're screwed up. We know it. But we want to get better.
Ideas must counter ideas. You can drop all the bombs you want, but if you don't pull up weeds by their roots, they just grow back.
We want to counter the idea that Muslims and non-Muslims can't live together. This is not who we are or who we want to be.
The true object of war fought for God should always be peace.
The Jews would have us believe that God had this bias to this little small tribe in the middle of the Sinai Desert, and all the rest of humanity is just rubbish. I mean, that is the basic doctrine of the Jewish religion, and that's why it is a most racist religion.
Where you don't have people who have strong intellectual capacity, you get demagoguery.
As a Westerner, the child of civil rights and anti-war activists, I embraced Islam not in abandonment of my core values, drawn almost entirely from the progressive tradition, but as an affirmation of them.
Radicalization is very easy when you mock what people hold dear.
To be aware of others' accomplishments and the indebtedness we have to so many people is to appreciate and begin to respect all members of the human family.
For believers, both privilege and privation are a trial, and both demand responses: one demands service, and the other demands patience. The greatest privilege is to live well in flourishing lands; the greatest privation is to live in the midst of war, especially civil war.
Much to the chagrin of the staunchly secular among us, religion shows no sign of going away. Predictions of the demise of religion, faith, tradition - and even God - have consistently been proven wrong.
Americans are generally decent and fair people with a commitment to sense, but some of us, swept up by our passions, wade too far into a sea of sensibility.
I really believe that carpet-bombing, bombing civilian populations, is a form of terror - it's state terror as opposed to vigilante terrorism.
You don't fight ideas with bombs.
In being aware of others' hunger, we contribute to a more empathic world.
We must assert to the Abrahamic people that we are the last extension of the Abrahamic religion... There is no such thing as an Islamic tribe.
Live your lives. Go out; take walks amongst trees.
A lot of our leadership has become acutely aware of speaking more fairly, of speaking more balanced, of recognizing that hate speech in any form, even if it comes out of emotional anger, is dangerous.
We don't have any power other than our intellect and our hearts.
To the solace of his name, simply saying 'Muhammad' has an incredibly soothing effect on me.
Muslims are not ashamed of their Prophet's teaching about war. On the contrary, for us it is a great source of pride.
I've said some things about other religions that I regret now. I think they were incorrect.
All of the people are the dependents of Allah.
The Islamic tradition does show some areas of apparent incompatibility with the goals of women in the West, and Muslims have a long way to go in their attitudes towards women. But blaming the religion is again to express an ignorance both of the religion and of the historical struggle for equality of women in Muslim societies.
You can condemn and criticize religion... all those things are fine, but you can't mock and disrespect people.
All peoples have contributed to the overall progress and enhancement of human life.
The acquisition of knowledge - knowledge of both the world and of their own religion - will inoculate young people against extremist ideologies.
Whatever one thinks of the wisdom of building a mosque near Ground Zero, this controversy now affords us an immense opportunity to examine who we are as a people. It provides us with the opportunity to get back to our foundational ideals, which have always stood as a beacon for the rest of the world.
Reason cannot calm the storm of emotion, and emotion usually wins, until it settles down and allows reason to rise again and apologize on behalf of it.
I don't align myself with the West of the Muslim world. I align myself with what I perceive to be just and in accordance with my principles - the principles that I live my life by which are universal principles and that are embodied in the religion of Islam.
Corruption is rife in the Muslim world, and when it is coupled with the marginalization of religion, it manifests itself as frustration and becomes a fertile recruiting ground for extremism.
There are many ways to be hungry. One can hunger for love, or fame or social justice, but hunger for food seems to curb all other cravings.
Palestine is the issue, and until this issue is resolved, there can be no peace.
I think all this Facebook stuff should just stop!
I think the Hajj tends to reflect the state of the Ummah. That's one of the things about the Hajj is that you get to see the Ummah. It's a microcosm of the Ummah's condition.
Our duty is to be patient.
Every day, my love for Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him, increases.
God is much greater than anything we can imagine.
A tree grows. If you're staying the same, something is wrong. You're not alive.
We Muslims in the West, like Jews before us, grapple with the same issues that Jews of the past did: integration or isolation, tradition or reform, intermarriage or intra-marriage.
The entrenched beliefs many westerners profess about Islam often reveal more about the West than they do about Islam or Muslims.
The human family is a great one, and the Muslim branch is certainly worth knowing.
Our world is increasingly interdependent and pluralistic, and in order to ensure a civil future, we must get to know one another.
The greatest preventative to terrorism is Muslim religious literacy.
My great, great grandfather, Michael O'Hanson, fled the impending potato famine of Ireland and arrived in America in the early 1840s with his bride, Bridget. They headed for Philadelphia, the city of brotherly love and a mecca for Irish-Catholic immigrants then.
I think that the idea of a war on an abstract noun is unacceptable.
My alignment is with what I perceive as just and fair. If it's with the Muslims, then I'm with the Muslims, if it's with the West then I'm with the West. It's about justice and fairness.