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	 Indispensable "Islam On Line" Must Not Fail
	 
	By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, April 12, 2010 
	   A widely popular Islamic website has been, until very recently, 
	an undisputed success story. IslamOnline arrived at a time that millions of 
	Muslims needed a common platform and a unifying outlet. Here was a website 
	that neither shunned nor alienated. Its influence was upbeat and positive, 
	rather than destructive or divisive. While it wasn’t an apologetic outlet, 
	it reached out to patiently and progressively present Islam and Muslim 
	issues to the world. These were understood and communicated by hundreds of 
	scholars and qualified journalists, who toiled day and night from their 
	Cairo offices.    Then something happened to abruptly bring the noble 
	mission to an end. The success story suddenly became a terrible nightmare 
	for hundreds of IslamOnline’s principled employees. The website 
	(IslamOnline.net) remained online, but it was barely updated. Instead, 
	videos were circulated on youtube, showing tired-looking IslamOnline staff 
	chanting in the lobby of their building in Cairo. They were demanding the 
	return of their editorial freedom and rights. They were calling for justice. 
	These bright journalists, some of the finest in the region, should have been 
	sitting behind their computers screens writing, editing and managing ‘live 
	dialogues’ between inquisitive readers and learned scholars. Instead they 
	were seated on the floor with signs and banners, shouting in coarse voices.
	   Something had gone horribly wrong.    Hadeel al-Shalchi tried 
	to explain in a recent Associated Press report: “The Qatari government has 
	forced out the moderate leadership of a popular Islamic Web site and plans 
	to reshape it into a more religiously conservative outlet, former employees 
	of the site said.”    According to the AP report, “The site was thrown 
	into turmoil…when the owners attempted to change its approach, prompting 350 
	of its workers in Cairo to go on strike. Management in Doha then cut off 
	their access to the site and have been updating it with news articles but 
	not the diverse content IslamOnline is known for, said the former 
	employees.”    IslamOnline is funded by al-Balagh, a Doha-based 
	company. Al-Balagh was headed by well-respected Sheik Youssef al-Qaradawi, a 
	most sensible and judicious religious authority. He is known, and much 
	liked, for his progressive views on Islam. Al-Qaradawi is also very popular 
	among Muslims around the world, not least because of his daring political 
	views, his strong anti-war, pro-resistance stances and moral clarity on many 
	issues. In short, al-Qaradawi is the antithesis of religious clerics who 
	would do as they are told.    A striking IslamOnline editor described 
	to me how the crisis developed. It sounded something similar to a coup: the 
	Sheik was removed from al-Balagh, the site’s directors were relegated, a new 
	management was installed (in fact imposed), and even the website passwords 
	were changed so that employees could no longer access it. Devastated and 
	enraged by the unwarranted moves, about 350 employees went on strike - only 
	to find themselves subject to legal investigation by some company lawyers 
	for exercising what is universally accepted as a fundamental right. The 
	editor tells me that they were harshly criticized in particular for their 
	uncompromisingly courageous coverage on Palestine and Gaza. Indeed, 
	IslamOnline had worked tirelessly to bring greater awareness of the struggle 
	in Palestine, to Muslim and non-Muslim readers alike.     
	Following the tragic events of September 11, few websites have played the 
	vital role that IslamOnline has. Its editors did not serve the cause of 
	fanatics, with their dreadful interpretation of the world and themselves, 
	and nor did they adopt the mouthpiece position in favor of Arab governments. 
	Equally important, they did not try to falsify a ‘moderate’ position to 
	please any government - Arab or any other. Instead, they truly reflected and 
	genuinely expressed the views of mainstream Muslims from all walks of life, 
	and from all over the world. It was truly an impressive feat to see such an 
	independent editorial line emerging from one Arab capital and largely funded 
	by another.    But it seemed too good to be true - thus the terrible, 
	chaotic and devastating changes that brought this vital to a standstill. The 
	very means of presenting an eloquent Muslim voice to the world has been 
	threatened.   The story of IslamOnline is being presented as that 
	between rival Arabs: governments, groups and individuals. Reductionist 
	terminologies– such as conservatives vs. moderates - are once again 
	permeating the often predictable Middle East discourse. Many questions still 
	remain unanswered.    In fact, the story of IslamOnline pertains more 
	to media freedom and editorial independence in Arab countries than much of 
	the above. The struggle is between the self-serving politicking few, and 
	hundreds of media professionals - brilliant and inspiring young women and 
	men who made up the staff at IslamOnline. For them, IslamOnline was not just 
	another job. It was a mission, a calling even, and millions of readers 
	around the world appreciated their work, every word of it.    One can 
	only hope that IslamOnline will find its way back, with its current 
	employees and current editorial line intact. The success story must not be 
	allowed to end. Individual ambitions cannot stand in the way of this rare 
	generational mission that is now simply indispensable.    - Ramzy 
	Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an 
	internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is "My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story" (Pluto Press, London), now available on Amazon.com. 
	  *****   Watch Aljazeera's documentary about my latest book: My 
	Father was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story. (Pluto Press; Palgrave 
	Macmillan, 2010). The subtitled program is available at YouTube in two 
	parts: Part I &
	
	Part II. Then, check out this short film (in
	English and
	Arabic) 
	about the book. The book is available from
	Pluto 
	Press (UK),
	
	Amazon UK and
	
	Amazon. 
	  
	 
       
       
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