Thursday, December 29, 2005

Toy Shopping for the Needy on Christmas Eve 2005


12/24/2005 - Spent Christmas eve with a dozen CAIR volunteers at Metropolitan Ministries' Holiday center, Tampa, FL. We had the fun task of "Toy Shopping." The more I work with this organization the more respect I have for the awesome work they do.
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Wednesday, December 28, 2005

St. Pete Times Profile: Trying to Teach not Preach

Ahmed Bedier, who sparked a move to get Muslim holidays on the school calendar, works to promote understanding.

By SHERRI DAY, St. Petersburg Times, Published November 16, 2005


[Times photo: Ken Helle] Ahmed Bedier, Central Florida director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, walks his son Jacob, back left, and his friend Laith, front left, to class. Bedier's days are busy with media interviews, helping other Muslims and taking Jacob, 9, to school every morning.

TAMPA - He sat in a conference room at Tampa General Hospital, surrounded by Christian chaplains in training.

The lone Muslim in the group, Ahmed Bedier was there to teach.

"What comes to mind when you hear the word Islam or Muslim?" he asked, scanning the room.

No one answered, but he knew what they wanted to say.
It was okay to be offensive, he told them.

"Terrorists," several said at once.

Bedier smiled. Now they were getting somewhere.

"After that, what else?" he asked.

At ease, group members spit out responses.

"Oppressive," they said. "Aggressive." "Dangerous." "Uneducated."

Then it was time for Bedier, who is Central Florida director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, CAIR, to speak.

"Imagine if you put yourself in a Muslim's shoes in America these days, and you go to Wal-Mart and everybody thinks that about you. It's not a comfortable feeling."
Bedier, 31, had only just begun. He works daily to dispel stereotypes and seek equal treatment for Muslims who face discrimination.

Recently, his push to include Islamic holidays on the Hillsborough County public school calendar launched a national debate. In October, when the board voted to cancel all religious holidays, Bedier was at the forefront of the discussion again, urging restoration of Judeo-Christian holidays. Muslim inclusion, he said, should not harm others.

But Bedier isn't giving up. He has already vowed to try again next year.
Many local Muslims are glad he's on duty.
"He at least speaks and brings out their issues," said Mohammad Sultan, imam for the Islamic Society of Tampa Bay Area Mosque in Tampa. "They see at least some kind of hope."

* * *

Born to an economist and statistician in Cairo, Bedier (pronounced Beh-DEER) immigrated with his family to the United States when he was 8.
As a boy, he thought all Americans were rich. He knew about cowboys and oil tycoons from the television drama Dallas, which had aired in Cairo.
The family landed in West Lafayette, Ind., where Bedier's father worked as a researcher at Purdue University.

Bedier spoke Arabic and French but struggled with English. Other children made fun of him, calling him ugly names. He was often in the center of schoolyard brawls.

By high school, he found popularity. A running back for the football team, he envisioned a career in the National Football League. As his family moved from one agricultural research institution to another, Bedier soaked up American culture.
When his parents returned to Egypt, Bedier and one of his three younger brothers stayed behind. They felt at home.

By the time Bedier moved to St. Petersburg in 1994, he had almost forgotten his faith.
In St. Petersburg, he worked as an operations manager for a dental group and eventually opened a dental laboratory. He bought two apartment buildings.
By many accounts, he was successful, financially and otherwise. He enjoyed good food and spent hours at the gym. He drove a silver BMW 5 Series and fed his shopping jones at Saks Fifth Avenue.
But something was missing.

"I felt like I was living a fake lifestyle, like I was living to get pleasure because of what people would say about me or about what I had," Bedier said. "It wasn't fulfilling."
Seeking purpose, he began to spend more time at a mosque, the Islamic Society of Pinellas in Pinellas Park. In 2000, he vowed to read the Koran every day and committed to becoming an observant Muslim.

As Bedier's faith deepened, he questioned his decision to remain in a non-Muslim country. Around him were myriad temptations.

Ultimately, Bedier decided to stay - but to work on behalf of Islam and American Muslims. He volunteered at his mosque, which eventually led to work with CAIR.
His first brush with the media came after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The St. Petersburg Times called his mosque to learn how it felt to be a Muslim in America in such times. Bedier offered to share his view. When CAIR opened a Tampa office in December 2003, he became director.

He sold his business, got rid of the BMW and now listens to the Koran from the CD player of a Chrysler minivan.
"He's very strong in what he does," said Ibrahim Hooper, national communications director at CAIR's Washington, D.C., headquarters. "I wish I had him here in Washington, but then I don't know what we'd do in Florida."

* * *

Ask Bedier about an issue facing Muslims, and he can speak for hours. Probe him about himself, and he shows reserve.

He's happy to be in the background. He has been on television enough to want to share the spotlight with other Muslims.
Local religious and political leaders applaud his efforts.

"I've been able to see his heart and know that he really is looking for peace and understanding amongst people," said Rabbi Kate Fagan, a chaplain at Bayfront Medical Center in St. Petersburg.

Hillsborough County School Board member Doretha Edgecomb has learned that Bedier is not always as serious as his subject matter. In October, she watched him deliver lighthearted banter as emcee of CAIR's banquet.
"I was just really shocked," she said. "I had not seen that side of him. The next time we need a funny emcee, I'm going to remember him."

Bedier so impressed the Rev. William Baugh, director of pastoral care at Tampa General Hospital, that the minister invited him to conduct hospital-wide diversity training.
Even people who disagree with Bedier wind up speaking well of him.

Hillsborough County Commissioner Brian Blair, who supported the restoration of a Judeo-Christian public school calendar, calls him a "nice person" and a "gentleman."
"He smiles a lot, and he says he loves Jesus," Blair said, noting Bedier's explanation that Muslims revere Jesus, too.

After meeting Bedier, Pinellas Park resident Mike Allen temporarily withdrew an anti-Islamic display from his yard. It featured a toilet and a promise to flush the Koran to protest terrorism.
Allen said he took it down because he thought Bedier was a nice person.
"That Ahmed Bedier, he could charm the socks off a rooster," Allen said. "He doesn't raise his voice or fly off the handle. He's married and got kids and all that. He's not going to be strapping bombs on his kids. I'm sure he would never condone that."

Norm Gross, head of the media watchdog group Promoting Responsibility in Middle East Reporting, expresses admiration for Bedier's delivery, but questions CAIR's motives.
"We're asking questions that we'd like to get answers to, and we haven't been able to," Gross said. "What is his mission? Who funds him? Let them tell us."

Bedier said he has nothing to hide and maintains that he is simply an activist dedicated to integrating Muslims into the mainstream. CAIR's 31 local chapters are funded by private donors.

By no means, he says, does he or CAIR condone terrorism. Repeatedly, the organization has publicly denounced terrorist attacks.

Bedier sees himself as a regular guy. He is a car-pool dad who drives his son, Jacob, to school; a devoted husband who watches reality TV with his wife, Kelly; a father who must protect his family, including 2-year-old Amira, from harm.

As a precaution, he has an unlisted phone number and gets his mail at a post office box. Strangers once accosted his wife at Wal-Mart. Bloggers disparage him on the Internet.

Bedier accepts his call to activism and has no plan to back down.

"I'm doing it because I have to, not necessarily because I want to," Bedier said. "There's a lot of work that needs to be done, and Muslims are now feeling empowered. They know that somebody's got their back."

source: http://www.sptimes.com/2005/11/16/Tampabay/Trying_to_teach__not_.shtml

Monday, December 26, 2005

Ahmed Bedier on FOX News debating views of Munich the Movie

Ahmed Bedier, Council on American-Islamic Relations debates Rabbi Marvin Hier of the Simon Wiesenthal Center on Steven Spielberg's 2005 political thriller 'Munich' on FOX News Live.

The film raises questions about Israel's controversial reaction and policies following the assassination of the 11-member Israeli delegation to the 1972 Olympic games in Munich, Germany.

What sort of message does this film send? Watch and decide.

Saturday, December 17, 2005

Responding to the distortion: Bedier says "Nothing Immoral" About Islamic Jihad

Answering the distortions and Clarifying a comment made on the 12/07/05 live television show "Your Turn" on Tampa's FOX Affiliate WTVT.

As I mentioned in a previous post that aside from updating the blog world of my proactive bridge building activities, I would also use this blog for setting the record straight when it comes to personal attacks on my character. That's the purpose of this post, so if you're not interested in this sort of thing close your eyes now and hit the back button, otherwise please proceed to read the following:

Leading Anti-Muslim bashers like Joe Kaufman, Robert Spencer and Daniel Pipes continue to launch hateful campaigns directly and indirectly against my character. Recently they circulated and recycled a press release originally drafted by South FL radical Islamophobe Joe Kaufman that said [CAIR-FL SPOKESMAN SAYS "NOTHINGIMMORAL" ABOUT ISLAMIC JIHAD] of course the hate blog network was in overdrive forwarding and posting versions/links of the release on their sites like Danielpipes.org, Jihad Watch, up pompeii and others. They had a problem with a comment I made on a live 1/2 hour television show on the local Tampa Fox affiliate WTVT. The topic of the show that day was the aquital and mis-trial verdicts in the Sami Al-Arian trial.

Clearly normal individuals who listen to all my comments during the show, would find my comments moderate and balanced, but Kaufman and Pipes are not normal. So they dissect and take comments out of context and focus in on 2 word "Nothing Immoral." Kaufman uses the two words in heading of his slanderous release.

After I watched a recording of the program I thought that some critics may exploit a slip of the tongue I had in making that comment. So I took the proactive measure of sending a letter to the station's news director clarifying my remarks. In a letter to Philip Metlin, WTVT's News Director, sent a day before Kaufman sent out his release on the 12/13/05, I said the following:

["In a discussion of the recent verdict in the trial of Sami Al-Arian, the host said: "Take your CAIR hatoff for a minute, if he was associating with the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, doesn't that seem immoral, inyour opinion?"

I responded: "To a certain degree. Now, before 1995 there was nothing immoral about it."


I misspoke. What I meant to say was that "there was nothing illegal about it." Obviously, I clarifiedmy original comments immediately by saying: "In 1995, President Clinton signed the designationsaying it's illegal for an American or someone that's in America to deal with Palestinian Islamic Jihad.. .it maybe unpopular to have certain views, but it's not illegal."

As you know, CAIR is dedicated to building bridges of understanding between faiths (people). Wecondemn any form of hateful acts and hate speech. I believe it is unethical and immoral for anAmerican, or those living in our nation, to support or associate with any group that sponsors terrorism,and that includes the Palestinian Islamic Jihad."]


To see the full copy of the original 12/12/05 letter to WTVT click here

I made it very clear that I believe it is unethical and immoral to support or even associate with any terror and/or violent groups.

It's a shame that people like Kaufman and Pipes will continue to spread lies and try to tarnish the reputation of moderate individuals. People like them will simply not be satisfied until Muslims are not allowed to enjoy the same rights as others in our great nation.

Sunday, October 16, 2005

Walking for a Cure in Tampa: Making Strides Against Breast Cancer

DSC_9976
originally uploaded by Bedier.
It was a beautiful October morning in downtown Tampa. Some friends and I joined thousands of other participants in walking for a cure to support the annual Making Strides Against Breast Cancer campaign organized by the American Cancer Society. My daughter joined us too, and she had a blast.

Friday, October 14, 2005

Bedier Visiting Synagogue on Yom Kippur

This month a divine convergence is taking place, the sacred Muslim Month of Ramadan and the Sacred Jewish Month of Tishri are starting and ending at the same time. The High Holy Days for Jews around the world is started at the exact same time as the start of Ramadan. The Holiest day of the year for Jews is Yom Kippur (or Day of Atonement), what better way to spend this day than to visit a local Synagogue and learn from each other. I took the opportunity to visit a wonderful Clearwater, FL Synagogue Congregation Beth Shalom led by Rabbi David Weizman. Since I was observing a day in Ramadan and the congregation was observing Yom Kippur, it meant that we all were fasting and abstaining from food, drink and other activities ;). It was a wonderful time. Below is an article that was published in the St. Petersburg Times the next day. Rabbi Weizman and I pray that this would set an example for future bridge building between Muslims and Jews. The bottom line from our meeting is that we all learned how much we have in common.

Shalom & Salam , Ahmed Bedier
-------------------------------

Synagogue welcomes Muslim speaker

The director of a local Islamic group stresses the similarities of both religions during their observance of holy days.

By SHANNON TAN, Published October 14, 2005

CLEARWATER - Thursday was Yom Kippur, Judaism's holiest day, and it also happened to be one of the blessed days of Ramadan.

Ahmed Bedier, director of the Central Florida office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, was invited to speak at Congregation Beth Shalom. Rabbi David Weizman suggested that he speak on the afterlife, but Bedier had a different idea.

"We're all starving," Bedier noted, as both Jews and Muslims were fasting Thursday.
Religion can divide people or bring them together, Bedier said. He chose to unite the group Thursday by discussing the similarities between Judaism and Islam.
"We don't have to talk about whether to resolve the Middle East conflict today," he joked.
Bedier pointed out that both religions share a true belief in God. Muslims and Jews believe in prophets and messengers. They fast. They give alms. They pray.
He told a story about how the prophet Mohammed was told by God to pray 50 times a day. Then Mohammed met Moses, who pointed out that Jews pray only three times a day. After some negotiating, God agreed to let Muslims pray just five times a day.
Fascinated, the group of more than 35 people peppered Bedier with questions.
Why the name Ramadan? Are there religious differences between the Shiites and the Sunnis? Are all Muslims Arab? When you say praise Allah, is Allah God? What are your prayers like?
Bedier explained that Muslims have a washing ritual before praying if they perform an impure act such as going to the restroom or passing gas. He demonstrated how they face Mecca to pray.
What does the Koran say about the afterlife for Jews and Christians who don't accept Allah as God?
"It's not clear if they're going to hell or not," Bedier said. "Ultimately, God is the judge."
Leslie Freedman, 55, of Clearwater, said she was glad Bedier's talk was so positive.
"It was wonderful," she said. "I loved his openness."
It was the first time Bedier had visited a Conservative synagogue. Rabbi Weizman met Bedier at interfaith services in the aftermath of the tsunami and Hurricane Katrina. Since Weizman was unable to attend an interfaith celebration in St. Petersburg, he invited Bedier to speak at the Clearwater temple instead.
Bedier said he'd also like to invite rabbis to speak at local mosques.
"I would like to continue to reach out to other Jewish congregations in the area," he said. "We have to build those bridges of understanding."
Shannon Tan can be reached at shtan@sptimes.com or 727 445-4174.

source: http://www.sptimes.com/2005/10/14/Northpinellas/Synagogue_welcomes_Mu.shtml

Friday, February 11, 2005

VIDEO: Jamal Badawi & Ahmed Bedier discuss on Misconceptions about Islam

Dr. Jamal Badawi and Ahmed Bedier appear on 1-hour live cable show on the misconceptions about Islam.

Great program for those who have doubts on what Islam on violence, terrorism and war. Seperate fact from fiction. Watch it now by following the below link:





(c) 2005 Ahmed Bedier / Omar El-Maghrabi / Islam Show

Sunday, January 02, 2005

About Ahmed Bedier

Ahmed Bedier - Brief Bio

My name is Ahmed Bedier and I'm the Director of the Central Florida office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, aka CAIR. CAIR was established in 1994 to promote an accurate image of Islam and Muslims in America. CAIR has grown to become America's largest Muslim civil liberties and advocacy group, and is headquartered in Washington, D.C., with 31 regional offices and chapters nationwide.

I frequently lecture on Islam, media relations, civil rights, hate crimes and the Mideast. I have appeared in local and national media advocating and articulating the Muslim position on issues.

Concerned about a growing divide between faiths, I've worked to foster understanding among the different religions, by participating in local and national interfaith groups, and hosting interfaith dialogues. As a practicing Muslim who is fluent in Arabic, I hope to build bridges across ethnic, racial, political and religious lines.

Like CAIR, I have always and continue to unequivocally condemn all acts of terror, violence and hatred by any individual, group or nation. Regardless of where it takes place.

Disturbed by society's ignorance of Islam, I joined CAIR in 2002 (as a volunteer) to help be a voice of reason in the post 9/11 world. When the volunteer work became overwhelming, I joined CAIR as a full time director in 2003.

Since 9/11, I've been labeled by others as a spokesman or leader for the Tampa Bay and Florida Muslim community. In reality I don't see myself as a leader, but as someone who is struggling to please God by serving mankind.

WHY THIS BLOG?

The internet is a great source of information, but it is also a ruthless place of misinformation. God willing I hope to use this site to pass-on articles of interest, examples of my media work and to dispel any smears or attempts to defame my character or skew my words.