Thinking Another Egypt in Italy


In the cafeteria of Collegio di Milano, there is a bunch of kids who master switching from fluent Arabic to impeccable Italian. Those kids are Italian Muslims and Italian Christians born in Italy with an Arab background. They do not know how much weight religion will play in the process of their identity formation yet, and probably they will never comprehend why in the homelands of their parents, on the other side of the Mediterranean Sea, people can take the life of other human beings in the name of religion.

But, these kids' parents, who immigrated to Italy 20–-30 years ago, are aware of these issues. They are worried the injustice and violence carried out for absurd, sectarian reasons in some areas of the Arab World would either set hurdles in Italy or be an excuse for some Arab immigrants to isolate themselves from native Italians or be a reason to cut off the ties, which are already weak, between Arab Christians and Arab Muslims who live in Italy.


Heartbreaking Incident

"When people die, it is always a heartbreak. When it happens just after a religious celebration, [this] is a tragedy for all," said Ben Issa, a representative from the Casa della Cultura Islamica di Milano (the House of Islamic Culture of Milano) in front of more than 100 people who gathered in the conference hall of Collegio di Milano to be part of a historic event called "Thinking Another Egypt," a meeting of Egyptian Muslims and Christians in the name of brotherhood, religious dialogue, and solidarity toward the six Copts who lost their lives on January 6, 2010, in Nag Hammady, Egypt.

The meeting was without politicians or religious leaders. It was for ordinary families who wanted to send a message of peaceful coexistence among religions and build bridges at a historic moment when many cultural walls are being built. "It is the first time I see so many Egyptian Muslims and Copts spending an afternoon together here in Milano," said Paolo Branca, professor of Arab literature at Catholic University of Milano and passionate protagonist of interfaith dialogue.

"Thinking Another Egypt" took place Sunday 24 in the conference room of Collegio of Milano, a prestigious university that last semester offered to its students a one-semester course about Islam. Its general director, Stefano Blanco, said the course was favored by the students. Blanco prides himself for having attended the World Education Summit that was held in Doha last November.

The promoter of the meeting was Casa della Cultura Islamica. Its president, Mahmoud Asfa, has been awarded last year the Ambrogino d'Oro, a prestigious prize given every year by the mayor of Milano on behalf of the city to distinguished men and women who excel in their fields. Asfa was recognized for his work in interfaith dialogue. Associazione Italo–Egiziana (AIE — Italian–Egyptian Association) and Vita Magazine were the other two co-promoters of the event.

AIE is a nonprofit association whose president is Muslim and secretary manager is Coptic. They are both from Egypt, and they settled in Italy more than 25 years ago. Vita Magazine is a weekly known as a guide to the nonprofit world in Italy. It publishes Yalla Italia, a monthly supplement written by Italian young generations with Arab origins.


"Hassan and Morqos"

Two Yalla Italia contributors, Rassmea Salah and Hassan Bruneo, along with an 8-year-old Moroccan boy started the meeting by reciting a piece of Jannat Al-Atfal (Paradise of Children), one of the most famous short stories by Naguib Mahfouz. After the performance, Branca, Issa, and Shafik Rafaat of the AIE greeted the guests and made outreaching speeches to the communities.

The lights then were turned off and the projector beamed on a big screen showing the movie Hassan and Morqos, a comedy starring Egypt's icons Omar Sharif and Adel Imam. The characters they play, Mahmoud and Paulos, are ordered by a top police officer to temporarily change their identities. As a result, Paulos took the personality of a popular Muslim preacher called Shaikh Hassan. Mahmoud, on the other hand, camouflaged as Morqos, a Coptic businessman.

"The fiction of the movie can't be applied here in Italy," said Samira, an Egyptian woman living in Milano. "I think civil society has to do more to defuse Muslim–Coptic tensions, no matter where we live." Rania, a teenager originally from Alexandria, does not believe that there are tensions among Egyptian immigrants of different faiths in Italy. "But I think there are people who do a good job to exploit religion for bad means," she said. "Those are not people of faith, even if they show a religious[ly] correct behavior. I also reject the idea of those who claim the world would be a better place without religions. Every faith, when practiced in a sincere and natural way, brings harmony among people, not despite but mainly because of people’s difference."


Milan: A Model for Religious Harmony?

Talking about difference, compared to 30 years ago, Milan now experiences a new model of harmonious citizenship that in other countries seems difficult. "If we look at the numbers of Arab immigrants in Italy" said Paolo Branca, "I can't help thinking that the opportunities to promote best practices and train great Arab–Italian communicators and cultural mediators could be unlimited. But, I regret finding both Coptic and Muslim communities not to interact. They keep to themselves instead of mixing with others; they consider their neighbors as competitors, not like potential collaborators; they tend to think that their social borders are defined by religion issues and religious language. It took me 25 years to gather in one place Muslims and Copts to talk and spend quality time together."

Indeed, based on government figures, there are more or less 70,000 Muslims living in Milano, 25,000 of whom are Egyptians. In 1970, there were only 3,390 Muslims living in the city. The Muslim population of Milano grew from 0.2 percent to 5.2 percent in 3 decades. Regarding Copts, Milano hosts 10,000 of them. "Muslims and Copts do not interact," said Branca. "They keep a safe distance. Every time I encourage their religious leaders to experiment new forms of coexistence and cooperation, they play the zero-sum game, or, as we say in Milano, one destroys in the night the work that another one had done during the day."


Future Horizons

"Thinking Another Egypt" was a wonderful event. Hend, a Christian woman, said she was moved by the harmonious atmosphere. "Despite the differences," she said, "we felt like we were Egyptians."

And for the future? "We have to repeat this format in another city with many immigrants, and then we have to reach out to the press," said Antonio Cuciniello, an Italian cultural mediator who worked in Egypt for four years.

Indeed, only one Italian newspaper, Il Sole 24 Ore, covered the event. This is typically the kind of news that the Italian press tends to ignore. For the last four years, for instance, a Muslim man and woman are used to pay the respect of the Muslim population of Milano to the Italian Jewish community remembering the Yom Ha Shoah, which is held every year. The Italian press keeps forgetting the Muslim testimonials commemorating the Shoah for the last four years, along with Jewish people of Milano.

Martino Pillitteri is the Media and External Relations Manager of VITA Group, Milano, Italy. He graduated from the Faculty of Communication Arts at Marymount Manhattan College in the United States of America. He is also the Editor-in-Chief of the project "Yalla Italia," a monthly publication written by Arab-Italians of second generation published within the weekly magazine VITA


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Iran Ready for Uranium Deal


CAIRO – Iran has expressed a readiness to send its low-enriched uranium abroad in exchange for more highly enriched nuclear fuel to produce medical isotopes, the Washington Post reported on Wednesday, February 03.

"We have no problem sending our enriched uranium abroad," Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told state television on Tuesday, February 2.

"We sign a contract. We give them 3.5 percent (enriched uranium) and it will take four or five months for them to give us the 20 percent (enriched uranium)."

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) proposed last October a deal whereby Iran would send about 70 percent of its low-enriched uranium to Russia and France in exchange for more highly enriched fuel to produce medical isotopes.

The 5+1 group, which comprises the five Security Council member states - the US, Russia, China, Britain and France – plus German, had set a December 31 deadline for Tehran to accept the proposal..

Tehran had insisted that the low-enriched uranium swap should happen on stages and was opposed to the 70 percentage.

Both Tehran and the UN nuclear watchdog said last week a deal on uranium enrichment was still possible.

Ahmadinijad sought to assure critics of the plan, which has drawn flaks in Iranian media, on fears that the enriched uranium would never be returned by the West.

"If we send our enriched uranium abroad and then they do not give us the 20 percent enriched fuel for our reactor, we are capable of producing it inside Iran."

The West accuses Tehran of developing a secret nuclear weapons program.

Iran insists that its nuclear program only aims at procuring power to feed an increasing local consumption.

Skepticism

Washington reacted with skepticism to Ahmadinejad statements.

"The deal is still on the table. We are not interested in renegotiating it," said State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley.

"We don't exactly know what Ahmadinejad said, but if he's prepared to say yes, that's good news."

The White House said Iran should convey its new position to the UN nuclear watchdog.

"If Mr. Ahmadinejad's comments reflect an updated Iranian position, we look forward to Iran informing the IAEA," said spokesman Mike Hammer.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday that Western diplomats were skeptical Ahmadinejad's comments marked a major shift by Tehran.

They suspect it was only an attempt to divide the Security Council's members.

In recent weeks, the US was rallying allies to approve a fourth round of sanctions against Iran, with China being the only stumbling block after Russia reportedly changed its position and became willing to support sanctions.

The Obama administration has also been escalating its rhetoric against the Iranian regime.

It was reportedly speeding up arms sales to Saudi Arabia and other Gulf allies and rapidly upgrading defenses for oil terminals in the Gulf region.

It has also boosted land- and sea-based missile defense systems in several Arab countries and around the Gulf.


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US Probes FBI Killing of Detroit Imam


CAIRO - The US Justice Department has opened an independent investigation into the killing of an imam during an FBI raid near Detroit last October, The New York Times reported on Wednesday, February 3.

"The civil rights division has received the FBI's report and is now conducting an independent review of the shooting," spokesman Alejandro Miyar told a news conference.

Luqman Ameen Abdullah, a 53-year-old local imam in Dearborn, near Detroit, was shot by FBI on October 28.

An autopsy, done in November but only released Monday, showed the slain imam had received 21 gunshot wounds, including shots to the head, abdomen, scrotum and back.

FBI agents said they opened fire and killed Abdullah after he shot a dog they sent into his home.

But according to the report of the autopsy, when an investigator from the Medical Examiner's Office arrived at the scene Abdullah's body was found on the floor of a semi-trailer full of flat-screen TVs with his wrists handcuffed behind his back.

It also showed that Abdullah had several abrasions on his hands, the reason of which could not be identified.

The findings raised many questions and demands from civil rights advocates and Muslim groups for an independent investigation.

At the time of the raid the FBI report described Abdullah as a "highly placed leader of a radical fundamentalist Sunni group" whose primary mission was to establish an Islamic state within the US.

Yet, the authorities were reportedly trying to arrest Abdullah on charges of conspiracy to sell stolen goods and illegal possession and sale of firearms.

Welcoming

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) welcomed the Justice Department's announcement.

"We welcome the decision to open a civil rights investigation of the imam's death," CAIR National Executive Director Nihad Awad told a news conference.

CAIR, the largest Muslim civil rights group in the US, has announced a series of Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests for materials, including surveillance videos, relating to the raid.

It has also requested copies of the autopsy photographs and results of a necropsy of the killed police dog.

The necropsy would be checked to confirm whether the dog was killed by bullets from a non-police weapon as investigators have said.

Awad paid tribute to the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee Chair Rep. John Conyers who had asked Attorney General Eric Holder to have the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division look into shooting.

"[We] thank Representative Conyers for his leadership in ensuring that all the facts in this troubling case come out."

The family of the slain imam is seeking a second autopsy and any video surveillance the government might have showing the deadly FBI raid.

Lawyer Nabih Ayad said they are concerned about reports of lacerations to Abdullah's hands and wonders if an FBI dog bit him before he allegedly fired back, killing the dog.

"It's really hard and it's really painful for me," said Amina Abdullah, the 36-year-old widow.

"I was shocked. I couldn't eat, and I couldn't sleep."


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Man Denied French Citizenship for Wife Burqa


PARIS – The French government has decided to deny the nationality to a man over allegations that he has forced his French wife to wear the face-veil.

"This case is about a religious radical," French Prime Minister Francois Fillon told Europe 1 radio on Wednesday, February 3, asserting he would rubberstamp the Immigration Ministry's decision.

"He imposes the burqa, he imposes the separation of men and women in his own home, and he refuses to shake the hands of women," Fillon added.

Immigration Minister Eric Besson issued a statement on Tuesday, February 2, saying he has signed a decree denying citizenship to a man whose French wife wears burqa.

"He was depriving her of her liberty to come and go with her face uncovered and rejected the principles of secularism and equality between men and women."

Besson said that during checks into the man's application, he had explicitly stated that he would never allow his wife to go out without covering her face.

It was not clear if the wife was forced to cover her face or it was her choice.

The name and nationality of the man was not declared.

Justice Minister Michele Alliot-Marie has called for denying Muslim men who force their wives to wear the full veil the citizenship.

According to the Interior Ministry, only about 1,900 Muslim women are estimated to being using face-veils in the country.

France is home to nearly seven million Muslims, the biggest Muslim minority in Europe.

Most French Muslims have North African backgrounds.

French Values

Premier Fillon insisted that the Immigration Ministry acted within the law in denying the man the citizenship.

"The civil code has for a very long time provided that naturalization could be refused to someone who does not respect the values of the republic."

This came only a few days after a parliamentary commission recommended a partial ban on face-veils in hospitals, schools, public transportations and government offices.

The recommendation is expected to be turned into a law denying burqa women state services such as work visas, residency papers or French citizenship.

Prime Minister Fillon even vowed to expel the man.

"If this man does not want to change his attitude, he has no place in our country," he said.

"In any case, he does not deserve French nationality."

In 2008, a court denied a veiled Muslim woman the nationality for being "too submissive" to her husband and that her religious rituals were "incompatible" with French values.

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