‘Allahu Akbar is not a terrorist slogan’: Just ordinary Islam.

The Grand Mufti of Australia and New Zealand Dr Ibrahim Abu Mohammed told SBS Arabic24 that there was a need to “end
misunderstanding” around the phrase Allahu Akbar, following the Sydney CBD stabbing which left one person dead. A Sydney man is accused of killing 24-year-old Michaela Dunn in a Clarence Street apartment before allegedly stabbing 41-year old Linda Bo at the Hotel CBD.Eyewitnesses allege that the man shouted ‘Allahu Akbar’ during the attack.
In the hours following the attack, it was reported by various Australian TV and online media outlets, including the ABC and Channel Nine, that the perpetrator had shouted a “terrorist slogan” during the

incident.

An image obtained from video on Tuesday, August 13, 2019, shows a man being arrested after a woman was stabbed in Sydney’s CBD.

The reports came despite NSW Police Commissioner Mick Fuller’s
clarification that the attack was “certainly not a terrorist incident”, adding that the man did have a history of mental health issues.

Allahu Akbar, which usually translated to ‘God is [the] greatest’, is a common Islamic-Arabic expression, recited by Muslims in many different situations, Dr Mohammed said.

“Allahu Akbar is what Muslims say to start praying, it is the slogan we [say] to leave the material world and enter a spiritual one,” he said.

“It is a slogan we say in our prayers so we keep our focus on Allah, to shift our focus from our material daily life to our relationship with God, which is a state of highest levels of cleanness and purity.

“I don’t think any educated person doesn’t know that all Muslims use this phrase in every prayer, at the beginning and end and during the prayer.”

File:
Scott Morrison with (L-R) Immigration Minister David Coleman, Foreign
Minister Marise Payne and Grand Mufti on 16 March 2019.

DrnMohammed said coverage of the stabbing was just one of a number of
occasions where the phrase was labelled a “terrorist slogan”.

“Amillion Australian Muslims say this phrase 200 times a day. How did it
turn from a phrase with such great meaning we say in joy and sadness,
and when we want to leave the material world to a spiritual one – to a
‘terrorist slogan’?” he said.

“For me, the ill-intentions are when people make a relation between the phrase ‘Allahu Akbar’ and terrorism.

“We should look at it as the glass half full, which the media don’t do.
They don’t look at the Muslims in the diaspora in general and in Australia particularly, [they are a] scientific, moral, and cultural addition to the society.”

Allahu Akbar and IS

References to the phrase have risen to prominence since 2014 during a period scholars refer to as the ‘IS era of Islamic radicalism’.

Since 2014, IS released a series of propaganda videos where the phrase featured prominently, in relation to attacks being planned and perpetrated.

During a number of attacks across the globe, committed and inspired by IS and other terror groups, the perpetrators have chanted the phrase, according to police reports.

File frame grab from video posted on Monday, March 18, 2019, by the Aamaq News Agency, shows an IS fighter firing his weapon.

Counterterrorism expert and Sydney University academic Mariam Farida said in many cases, the phrase was the final thing a perpetrator would chant before committing an attack, as a way of “dedicating” the act to god.

Despite drawing this link, Ms Farida said media organisations played a part in propagated the association between the phrase and terrorism, in an attempt to “attract viewers”.

“The media rushed in saying Allahu Akbar is a ‘terrorist slogan’, which might create fear for people following the news if they thought it is a terrorist attack,” she said.

“I think media outlets wanted to grab the attention of viewers, so when you say ‘terrorist slogans’ everyone will follow you, but in the long term, it has negative effects.

“I don’t blame the viewer in the Western world, but I wish they have this kind of awareness. The blame falls on the media that give inaccurate information and rush to blame a certain party without waiting for police reports like what happened in the Sydney stabbing.”

Dr Mohammed said terrorism is “based on ignorance, misinformation and ill-education”.

“How can we make terrorists our reference in classifying a certain phrase,” he said.

“The terrorist who uses this phrase before doing any action to harm others insult the religion he claims to be belonging to.”

CEO of the Federation of Ethnic Communities Council of Australia (FECCA),bMohammad Al-Khafaji, said he shared the Grand Mufti’s “frustration” over the “hijacking of a sacred phrase which is today associated with
terrorists”.

“The media has a responsibility and must exercise Lbcaution when reporting on these issues as they can influence the community’s attitude towards Muslims in Australia,” he said.

“This is a reminder that we have lot of work to do in the community to facilitate authentic relationships with the Muslim community to ensure people understand the religion, feel comfortable to ask questions and change the narrative around Muslims to something more positive. A great initiative which helps in breaking down these barriers is the National Mosque Open Day.”

‘Allahu Akbar is not a terrorist slogan’: Calls for media vigilance over labelling of Arabic phrase

2 comments

  1. Anyone who has read the koran or even anything about Islam knows this is all ordinary Islamic behaviour. But perhaps we should ditch the monika of Islam being the religion of the sword, and leave that for the Middle East. In the UK Islam is the religion of the acid attack and rape gangs, in Oz Islam is the religion of the knife attack, and in NZ it can be known as the religion of the Labour Party.

  2. “Allahu Akbar” does not mean “God is greatest” as is reported here. The literal translation is “Allah is greater”. Translating the name of Allah as “God”, implies that Allah is the God of the Bible – this is not true and should be considered offensive to Christians and Jews.

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