[R-G] Canadian military visits BC mosque
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Wed Oct 15 21:45:53 MDT 2008
Canadian military visits BC mosque
Wed, October 15 2008
http://www.asianpacificpost.com/portal2/c1ee8c441cfdb50b011d028536d300e2_Canadian_military_visits_BC_mosque.do.html
Imaad Ali and Tarikm Kadri copy A controversial visit by the Canadian
military to a mosque in Metro Vancouver drew dozens of curious
spectators - and a number of people who questioned the Armed Forces
strategy of courting the Muslim community while Canada’s war in
Afghanistan continues on into its seventh year.
“The problem we all have is potentially being sent to Afghanistan,”
noted one young observer at Burnaby’s Al-Salaam Mosque and Education
Centre last week.
“The problem we all see is the blood of our brothers and sisters on
our hands.”
Master Corporal Tarik Kadri, a Canadian Forces diversity recruiter who
is also Muslim, was keen to emphasize to the small crowd that the
military visit was not intended to recruit people.
“It’s a Town Hall event, and our objective here is to maximize
exposure to Canadian Forces within the Arab and Muslim community,” he
said, at the top of a PowerPoint presentation last Wednesday that
listed the career and education opportunities offered by the military.
As of March 2008, according to its own figures, 2.7 per cent of the
Canadian Forces is composed of visible minorities – a figure far short
of its 9.1 per cent goal.
Crowd shot copy“If we want to change the Canadian Forces to be more
diverse, then it’s your option to join,” Kadri continued.
But the meeting was marked by a polite if slightly combative
atmosphere which came to brief but vivid life when the doors swung
open early during Kadri’s presentation, and three young Muslim men
entered bearing flyers that read: ‘End Canada’s War in Afghanistan –
Bring the Troops Home!’
Kadri thanked the protesters for stopping by as a murmur of unease
swept through the room.
Kadri was followed by Lt. Wafa Dabbagh, an Egyptian-born Palestinian
and a 12-year veteran Navy reservist who recently returned from a
stint as personal assistant to Canada’s Task Force Commander in
Jerusalem.
Dabbagh wore a Navy-designed hijab, or Muslim head covering for women,
during a talk that focused on religious sensitivity issues inside the
Forces.
“Ninety-five per cent of my experience in the Forces is positive, and
the other five per cent that isn’t positive is personal,” said
Dabbagh. “I don’t think in any job you’ll find that everybody likes
you.”
With the evening’s question-and-answer period underway, discussion
turned almost immediately to the spectre of racism in the military.
One attendee – 47 year-old Saleem Bhamji – described to the crowd his
own experiences in the Canadian Army.
“The main reason I left was because of the racism in my unit,” he
said. “The talking about Muslims, the Palestinian issue, what ‘dogs’
they are… I’m happy to hear that things are changing, but I hope they
really are.”
Bosnian émigré Adnan Krupic, 25, gave voice to the dominant issue of
the evening – namely the recruitment of Muslims to fight Muslims in a
faraway war which is projected will cost Canada $18.1 billion or more
by mission’s end in 2011.
“Your method of recruitment is to try to put young Muslims at ease,”
he noted. “But the problem we all have is potentially being sent to
Afghanistan. The problem we all see is the blood of our brothers and
sisters on our hands.”
Master Corporal Takri responded: “The Canadian Forces doesn’t decide
where we go, it’s the Government of Canada.
“I know that doesn’t make things any better, but I just want to
clarify that to you.”
Added Major David C. Blake-Knox: “There are certain missions where
they won’t take people from certain ethnic backgrounds because of the
possible conflict.”
The event was organized by Imaad Ali, Youth Director at the Mosque,
who told the South Asian Post: “Basically a lot of people, when they
think about the military, they think about Afghanistan. In fact, there
are 63,000 soldiers in the Canadian Forces and only 2,500 are deployed
in Afghanistan.
“There are over 10,000 missions they’ve gone on for search and rescue,
for example. So I think that misconception is that the Force is all
about fighting. They don’t see the other side of it.”
Ali said this is the first event of its kind involving the Canadian
military reaching out to Muslims at their mosques.
He said he is not aware of the Canadian Armed Forces going in to any
other temples, or churches in pursuit of fighting men and women.
Ali added that the primary thrust of inviting the military to the
mosque was “career opportunities,” but he conceded that some community
members were “suspicious.”
“There was a little opposition,” he said. “But the vast majority did
support it.”
Those who attended were divided by the end. Twenty-one year-old Fatima
Yasin and her sister both left clutching some of the Armed Forces
proffered paraphernalia.
Fatima commented that it was “curiosity, mostly,” that brought them to
the mosque.
“I think there’s been a lot of controversy surrounding this whole get
together so I wanted to know what it’s about,” she said. “And I think
a lot of my misconceptions have been cleared up.”
Others were less convinced, demonstrating that whatever the intentions
of the event, the Afghanistan issue trumped any other concerns.
“Why would you send your soldiers into harms way knowing you can’t
win?” said Habib Kandahari, 24, speaking to the Post as the room
emptied.
“I’m totally against it. Having spent two weeks in Kandahar city, the
only sign of Canadian construction was a garbage can with a Canadian
flag on it.”
The Canadian Armed Forces is planning futher military missions in
Metro Vancouver-area mosques, including a possible visit to Richmond’s
Jami’a Mosque this week, although the mosque did not return calls by
press time to confirm the date and time of the event.
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