It is disheartening to see the Sunni-Shiite divide is occurring at a place where diversity is so highly cherished:
Last year, a Sunni student at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor sent a screed against Ashura to the Muslim Student Association’s e-mail message list. The document had been taken off SunniPath.com, one of many Web sites of Islamic teachings that Shiite students said regularly spread hate disguised as religious scholarship.
Azmat Khan, a 21-year-old senior and political science major, said that she, like other Shiites on campus, was sometimes asked whether she was a real Muslim.
“To some extent, the minute you identify yourself as a Shiite, it outs you,” Ms. Khan said. “You feel marginalized.”
I was never active in the association while I was an undergraduate at Michigan. I have always been disinterested in religious activities since I was a teenager and so, the active inactivity is easily comprehensible. In fact, I think I became a member through sheer accident.
The only time when I could be seen at the Muslim Students’ Association-organized event was during Ramadan, when the association organized fast-breaking event at the Wedge Room of West Quad. And from time to time, when classes or World of Warcraft started to demand the usual time slot for Friday prayer up north, or the cold and the wind was simply absolutely intolerable, I chose to do my Friday prayer together with MSA-organized congregation at Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union.
Through my limited experience with the MSA, I do not remember hearing the divide as pronounced as reported by the NYT.
4 replies on “[1079] Of the Sunni-Shiite divide at Michigan”
Well, by virtue that I was a member and an alum of both MSA and Michigan, it concerns me more than it concerns you, if you wanna play “issue ownership”.
I do not have to be one to know what you are.
Sorry but were you a member of that association or a Michigan alum?
Do not think that it should concern you anyway, since you happen to be neither.