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TELEVISION DOCUEMENTARY ..."MUSLIMS" MAY 9TH 9PM

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TELEVISION DOCUEMENTARY ..."MUSLIMS" MAY 9TH 9PM
Saffiyah
04/24/02 at 11:54:33
[slm]

I received this from an e-group, and since I'm from the UK i won't be able to watch it so when it comes on let us know the feedback inshallah!

Muslims
Thursday, May 9, at 9pm PBS 120 minutes


The events of September 11 left many Americans asking how such
atrocities could be perpetrated in the name of religion:
specifically, the religion of Islam. Yet even as U.S. opinion polls
reflect a collective sense of mistrust toward a religion few
Americans know much about, Islam continues to be one of the fastest
growing religions in the United States and around the world today.

What does it mean to be a Muslim? How does their faith shape their
lives, identities, and politics? Does Islam deserve its reputation
as a patriarchal, authoritarian, and anti-Western religion? And what
role does militancy play in the Muslim world?

FRONTLINE and the Independent Production Fund join forces to explore
these and other questions in "Muslims," a special two-hour film
investigating the different faces of Islam's worldwide resurgence.
Reporting from Iran, Nigeria, Egypt, Malaysia, Turkey, and the
United States, FRONTLINE tells the stories of Muslims struggling to
define how Islam will shape their lives and societies.

"With tensions between Islam and the West at an all-time high, there
is a need for a new perspective on Muslims and Islam," says Alvin H.
Perlmutter, executive producer and director of the Independent
Production Fund. "Through portraits of Muslims around the globe, we
reveal the many diverse interpretations of Islam as well as the
struggle to adapt to the modern world."

"Muslims" traces the social, historical, and political roots of the
renewed interest in Islam worldwide, beginning at Cairo's Al Azhar
Mosque-the oldest university in the world. It is here that viewers
meet Sheik Abdul Mauwith, an Islamic scholar who staffs the phones
of Al Azhar's Fatwa committee, responding to Muslims wanting to know
what is right and wrong under Islamic or Shariah Law. In a society
increasingly shaped by Western influence, he encourages Muslims to
hold fast to the traditions of Islam.

The film places the Sheik's conflict in a global context: across the
Islamic world, Muslims are challenged by the political, economic,
and cultural influence of a dominant West.

"Some Muslims have become very conscious of the fact of dominance,
and they have become exclusive," says Malaysian political scientist
Chandra Muzaffer. "They have become inward looking-they have become
reactive and sometimes very aggressive."

"After the end of colonialism…people have attempted to return to
their roots, as it were, to give life to their earlier cultures,"
adds Akbar Muhammad, associate professor of history at The State
University of New York at Binghamton.

In Nigeria, "Muslims" explores this desire for a more Islamic
society. Dr. Datti Ahmad, president of the Supreme Council on
Shariah, argues that for Muslims, Islam is everything. "Islam is our
culture…we have no other culture," he says. "Anything that is un-
Islamic you find is not accepted."

In the predominantly Muslim north of the country, an increasing
number of states have reintroduced full Shariah Law, with its
deterrent punishments of amputations, floggings and executions. "In
the West, I think the emphasis is on human freedom," explains lawyer
Muzzammil Hanga. "The overall emphasis in Islamic law is on communal
harmony."

Hanga challenges the West's perception of Islam. "With the event of
September 11," he says, "the West is frantically trying to establish
two worlds: the forward looking Western world, and [its perception of a] backward, uncivilized Islamic world."

"Muslims" also travels to Iran, where viewers meet Hadi Semati, a
professor of political science at Tehran University. Once a young
revolutionary, Semati is now an adviser to Iran's President Khatami
and an advocate of greater social freedom and political reform.

"Revolutions are really good for basically taking care of bad
things, but the other question is whether they can build the
positive side, " Semati says. "One could argue that we haven't been
all that successful in bringing to life what we wanted-economic well-
being and a sense of community, a sense of belonging."

The struggle between Muslim traditionalists and those favoring a
more contemporary interpretation of the faith is being waged across
the Muslim world. In Malaysia, feminist Muslim activist Zainah Anwar
is caught in the conflict. Despite the rising influence of
Malaysia's Islamic Party, which actively encourages women to veil
and put their family before their career-Anwar is adamant that Islam
is not a patriarchal religion.

"We found that it is not Islam that discriminates against women,"
Anwar says. "It is not the verses in the Quran, it is the way that
these verses have been interpreted by men, living in patriarchal
societies who wish to maintain their dominance, and their
superiority and control over women."

For Muslims in the United States, meanwhile, a reassertion of their
identity has led to confrontations with other ethnic and religious
groups-particularly since September 11. In the Chicago suburb of
Bridgeview, for example, an angry crowd shouting anti-Muslim slurs
marched toward the local mosque. For many in the community, the
event highlighted the intense frustrations Muslims experience as
they strive to develop an American Muslim identity.

"The only thing I know how to be is an American…an American Muslim,"
says one Bridgeview man. "When somebody questions my loyalty to this
country, it's frustrating because I am an American-I was born and
raised here."

The principal of a Muslim school in Illinois, Safaa Zarzour is
hopeful that American Muslims can be an example for Muslims around
the world. "I look at Muslims in the United States as being in a
very unique position to be able to produce a model for how Islam can
be lived [alongside] other religions and other people," he claims.

In closing, the film examines the form that Islam may take in the
future. In Iran it discovers a vigorous debate about the role of
religion in modern society. "Islam gives you a direction, gives you
a light, so to speak," Hadi Semati concludes. "You don't have to
necessarily solve every question in your life by Islam."

Following the broadcast, visit FRONTLINE's Web site, at
www.pbs.org/frontline, for extended coverage of this story,
including:

Expanded profiles and video of Muslims featured in this documentary
and reports on how their faith shapes their lives, identities and
politics;

What do Muslims believe? A primer on the fundamental tenets of the
Islamic faith;

Frequently Asked Questions about Islam, and the social and political
aspects of its history;

A selection of readings, analyses and links on Islam and the forces
of modernity and globalization confronting the faith;

A Teacher's Guide, maps, statistics, and more.
"Muslims" is a FRONTLINE co-production with the Independent
Production Fund. Major funding for "Muslims" has been provided by
The Pew Charitable Trusts and The William and Mary Greve Foundation.
Additional funding has been provided by the Lilly Auchincloss
Foundation and The Fetzer Institute.

The writers and producers are Graham Judd and Elena Mannes.

The senior producer is Martin Smith.

Alvin H. Perlmutter and Anisa Mehdi are the executive producers for
the Independent Production Fund. David Fanning is the executive
producer for FRONTLINE.

FRONTLINE is produced by WGBH Boston and is broadcast nationwide on
PBS.

Funding for FRONTLINE is provided through the support of PBS
viewers. National sponsorship is provided by EarthLink® and NPR®.

FRONTLINE is closed-captioned for deaf and hard-of-hearing viewers.

Press contacts for FRONTLINE:
Erin Martin Kane [erin_martin_kane@wgbh.org]
Chris Kelly [chris_kelly@wgbh.org]
(617) 300-3500
FRONTLINE XX/May 2002
Re: TELEVISION DOCUEMENTARY ..."MUSLIMS" MAY 9TH 9
Caraj
04/30/02 at 16:01:16
I would very much like to see this
Does anyone have any idea on the Pacific west coast in the US what
channel it will be on?

Re: TELEVISION DOCUEMENTARY ..."MUSLIMS" MAY 9TH 9
Kathy
05/01/02 at 08:25:39
[slm]

On May 8th I will be speaking to a conference of public school teachers- do you think I should mention that this is on?

Has anyone heard what the spin will be- negative or positive?
Re: TELEVISION DOCUEMENTARY ..."MUSLIMS" MAY 9TH 9
muqaddar
05/01/02 at 12:33:29
[slm]

pbs usually does ok stuff
avoid cnn and rupert murdochs Fox which are virulently islamophobic

as in all cases don't use non-muslim sources for your knowledge of islam
be aware of propaganda techniques , eg subliminal (command words etc)
and the old two step  8)
Re: TELEVISION DOCUEMENTARY ..."MUSLIMS" MAY 9TH 9
pakiprncess
05/03/02 at 14:46:12
[quote author=Caraj link=board=kabob;num=1019663674;start=0#1 date=04/30/02 at 16:01:16]I would very much like to see this
Does anyone have any idea on the Pacific west coast in the US what
channel it will be on?[/quote]

i recieved an email, as well....hope this helps, inshallah :)

FRONTLINE and the Independent Production Fund present "Muslims," a two-hour examination of one of the fastest growing religions in the world today

Thursday, May 9, at 9pm, 120 minutes (Check your local listings)
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/muslims/
Re: TELEVISION DOCUEMENTARY ..."MUSLIMS" MAY 9TH 9
jannah
05/04/02 at 02:53:25
Ok for any Albanyians I just sent an email to the list: this will be on at that same time May 9th 9PM on PBS here and also on May 16th, 9PM .. that should be channel 17 for most ppl, 11 I think for cable.


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