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Task Force Urges Greater Recognition, Involvement of Muslim Americans

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Task Force Urges Greater Recognition, Involvement of Muslim Americans

Jun 26, 12:10 AM

Current Headlines: CHICAGO _ Muslims in America must build better relationships with law enforcement, the media, and fellow citizens in order to overcome negative stereotypes and a nagging post-Sept. 11 backlash, a national task force asserts in a new report by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.

Preparing for the paper to be released Tuesday, the council's Task Force on Muslim American Civic and Political Engagement met off and on for 15 months and came to a consensus on many issues already swirling in the public debate.

By collecting the recommendations into one document, the task force of 32 civic leaders, corporate executives, academics and Muslim advocates from around the U.S. _ both Muslim and non-Muslim _ hope to provide a blueprint for more comprehensive discussions, task force leaders said in interviews.

Among the non-binding recommendations, the task force urged public and private partnerships to:

"Expand and recognize Muslim American contributions to national security."

"Improve media coverage and public understanding of Muslim Americans."

"Increase civic engagement among Muslim Americans."

"Build stronger Muslim American institutions."

"Cultivate the next generation of Muslim American leaders."

"It helps shape the debate of what should take place," said Farooq Kathwari, a task force co-chair and chairman who is also president, chairman and CEO of Ethan Allen Interiors Inc.

Task force representatives are scheduled to appear this week before the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs as it examines extremism in Europe. They hope to put their findings forth in numerous forums, public and private.

"This is in our national interest," said Lynn Martin, a task force co-chair and former U.S. secretary of labor.

Martin, a non-Muslim who is also a former five-term member of Congress from Illinois, said that the task force offered a unique opportunity for leaders from across the American spectrum to come together and tackle the challenges of Muslims.

"I learned this is not just a problem for Muslim Americans," she said. "It is important for all Americans."

With costs underwritten by five national non-profit foundations, the group met mostly in Chicago. But as part of other research, some task force members traveled to England and Spain to see struggles of Muslims abroad. Members also traveled to New York, Washington and Los Angeles.

While members had access to data and surveys done by other groups, the task force did not produce a statistical analysis of its own, the Chicago council said.

___

(c) 2007, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at http://www.chicagotribune.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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Task Force Urges Greater Recognition, Involvement of Muslim Americans
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