Healing the wounds of September 11th, 2001
By Shahid Athar, M.D. -----
Forward by Sister Mary Margaret Funk
We’ve all been traumatized. As the months thin the memory we see in a
rearview mirror that the 9/11 yanked our insides out. We need a doctor who is wise, kind and
skillful. Dr. Shahid Athar has taken the
trouble to expand his practice as a physician specialized in endocrinology to
anoint wounds of our collective soul.
In this collection of his recent
writings he provides diagnosis, treatment and reflection on our condition. A rare gift is some one who can have a
current practice of patients and take on the body politic. Dr. Athar has practiced Medicine in Indianapolis
for 30 years. He’s respected for his
delicate diagnosis in balancing patient’s chemistry- as in diabetes. The
underserved, marginal folks know him for his outreach as a personal
physician. This one to one outreach is
accompanied by a huge heart of inclusiveness as a Muslim who can teach by both
word and example.
You’ll have to read the text to
appreciate his diagnosis, treatment and reflection but I want to give witness
that this physician’s view contributes to the keenest observations and deserves
our reading, dialogue and openness to shift limitations toward the direction of
his expanded heart. Let me share how Dr.
Athar’s views have changed me:
About diagnosis:
9/ll The West was ignoring the
strain of unbalance of power in the Arab world.
The roots of fundamentalism rise when options fail to create ways for
humans to live together in harmony under God on our planet. This happened to be Saudi Muslims; it could
have been other marginalized zealots.
The cause for war, terrorism and political despotism needs to be rooted
out at its source, i.e. hatred, greed and intolerance for ways people worship
God.
A secondary diagnosis about 9/ll
is that the cause is that we just don’t care enough for each other on this
planet. Where are our feelings for each
other? He boldly shares what it’s like
to be an American Muslim professional.
What’s it like to be Muslim today and where’s the
Muslim voice in our polity. In a
poem on “Am I A Terrorist?” he passionately
concludes: “No, we are Muslims and
humans just like you, seeking peace and justice and help from God.” Knowing Dr. Athar there’s a face to every
Muslim.
About treatment:
The world needs to understand
each other. Political views and
religious sensibilities are conditioned over many years. We must share our ways of being in the world
under God and accept differences and cross over boundaries of assistance. All of us must reduce suffering. This can be done by each of us boldly
sharing our faith and sharing our hands.
Dr. Athar has a clear, compelling way of sharing his Muslim way of
life. His ready quotes from the Koran
and his focused intellect guided by wise sayings of Mohammad and Islamic
scholars is neither pedantic nor evangelizing, but helpful and insightful. He solicits from me, as a Christian, a
similar practice: What’s does the Gospel
say to this? How can we live today and
what inspiration can our living faith awaken and sustain us in this time of
crisis. If you are
looking for a Muslim view that is balanced, articulate and compelling this book
of Dr. Athar will give voice to that aspiration.
His treatment for Muslims is the
prescription: --we
need to take charge of our religion as we take charge of our families, our
health and our lives. We should learn
Islam for ourselves as a religion of love, peace and tolerance and prove it by
our individual actions. I we want to be
counted as Muslim Americans, we must take all the concerns of Americans,
whether terrorism, anthrax, drugs, violence or even pollution as our own
concerns. We must show Islam by our
actins, not by speeches, videotapes and pamphlets. He takes it further: We must denounce all those who use religion
for their political gain and denounce political powers that wish to abuse the
religion of Islam. We must reclaim our
faith from the terrorist who hijacked it and also from the leadership who apologize
for them.”
About reflection:
After 9/11 the discourse
ricocheted to the political solutions. War, invasion of Iraq,
rebuilding of Afghanistan and Iraq. We tend to watch
the horses running around the track and place bets on horses that catch our fancy,
but fail to take note that there are other horses stepping into the gate to
wait for the sound of the gun. The polls
keep score. Unfortunately, war and
peace, sickness, death, poverty and religious intolerance aren’t a sport.