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Muslim Americans Making a Difference
Category: Muslims in America
Posted: Saturday, February 09, 2008

From http://www.islamicity.com/articles/Articles.asp?ref=IC0607-3054

 On Wednesday, July 26, Democratic Congresswoman from California Ms. Maxine Waters recognized the significant contribution of a Muslim-American founded community health center in Los Angeles on the floor of the House of Representatives.

 University Muslim Medical Association(UMMA) clinic was established by Muslim graduate and medical students at UCLA and Charles R. Drew University to provide community service to the public at large. During the past ten years,  UMMA community clinic has provided free and low cost health care to the residents of South Los Angeles.

 Congresswoman Maxine Waters spoke at UMMA's 10th Anniversary Community Festival on July 9, 2006, where she praised UMMA's 10 years of service and Muslim-American identity. The festival was accompanied by a series of proclamations issued by the Los Angeles City Council and the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors in recognition of the Clinic's service to the community.

 Just blocks from the flashpoint of the 1992 civil disturbances, UMMA was founded in 1996 to revitalize a beleaguered region in the aftermath of the civil turmoil that rocked the city. This effort sprang from an unanticipated source: Muslim-American students. Acting on the teachings of their faith, these college and medical students transformed an abandoned, dilapidated building into a vibrant Clinic that would be the medical home for thousands in the local community.

 Ten years later, UMMA's impact is felt on the national and local levels. Nationally, UMMA was the first free medical clinic founded by Muslim-Americans in the United States. To Muslims, UMMA Clinic exemplifies core Islamic tenets of mercy, compassion and social justice. As a local nonprofit organization, UMMA welcomes everyone who walks through its doors regardless of faith. In fact, of its 15,000 regular patients, 95% are not from the Muslim community.

 "I always get treated like a person at UMMA, not a number, but like a human being," said an  UMMA patient, whose husband, children and grandchildren all come to UMMA for their medical needs.

 By serving the people of Los Angeles with dignity and compassion, UMMA bolsters Los Angeles' existing network of charitable, social services organizations. UMMA Clinic is a one-of-a-kind institution, in touch with the pulse of the local community and applying the principles of the Islamic faith shared by over 1.2 billion people worldwide.

 "UMMA continues to serve as a vital institution in this great city's infrastructure, improving the lives of thousands of its citizens. Civic leaders and policy makers have taken note of this fact, and we are honored by their recognition, "said Dr. Mansur Khan, a co-founder and Board Member of the UMMA Community Clinic.

For more information visit UMMA website at: http://www.ummaclinic.org

 

1.  According to the Sunan of Abu Dawud, the Prophet said, “I prohibit killing four creatures in this earth: ants, bees, hoopoes and sparrow-hawks.”

2.  See Nora Belfedal, “Honey: the Antibiotic of the Future, part 3: Healing ‘Bee Venom.’” Islamonline, November 15, 2001.

3.  See Annemarie Schimmel, And Muhammad is His Messenger: the Veneration of the Prophet is Islamic Piety (UNC Press, 1985), p. 285.

4.  Ibid., p. 102-104. The latter idea is attributed to the twentieth-century Indian poet Nabibakhsh Baloch.

5.  See, for example, the section on medicine in Sahih Bukhari. Among other things, the Prophet Muhammad prescribed honey for abdominal trouble.

6.  See Belfedal, “Healing Bee Venom.”

1.  Found in Imam Malik’s Muwatta'
     and Imam Ahmad’s Musnad

1.  Both these ahadith, and the quote from Imam Nawawi, are taken from Ahmad ibn Naqib al-Misr’s Reliance of the Traveller; in Arabic with facing English text, commentary and appendices edited and translated by Nuh Ha Mim Keller,
 Revised edition, 1994. Beltville, Md: Amana Publications in the section on Commanding the Right and Forbidding the Wrong and the section on Holding One’s Tongue.

1.  Qur’an 3:103.

2.  Moustafa Styer’s translation, except I have replaced his translation the technical term fuqara as poor, with the word ‘devout’, for the sake of clarity in the context of this article.

 The term ‘poor’ does not denote actual financial destitution, rather, it means one who has abandoned attachments to worldly things and become rich in their attachment to Allah. 

 This state cannot be achieved except through sincere devotion.

See Moustafa Styer “Reflections of the Beloved”.

3.  The legal rulings of Islamic law are generally
     that a thing is considered obligatory,
     recommended, neutral, disliked, or prohibited.

1.  Consumers Union Education Series. (1995).
     Captive Kids: Commercial Pressures on Kids at School.
     Yonkers: Author.

1.  Quoted in Keller, Nuh Ha Mim; translator and editor.
     The Reliance of the Traveller:
     The Classic Manual of Islamic Sacred Law cUmdat al-Salik
     by Ahmad ibn Naqib al-Misri. 1994.
     Beltsville, MD. Amana Publications. Page 41.