A vote of confidence
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Alex Coolman
COSTA MESA -- In a humble office building on Airport Loop Road, as jet
engines bellow like distant monsters, Mohammad Taqii holds a voter
registration form in the air.
“There’s a very important bill coming up,” he tells the assembled
crowd, the congregation of the Islamic Education Center of Orange County.
Both men and women are in their stocking feet. The women are draped in
colorful shawls that cover their heads and shoulders.
Taqii tells them about a bill -- it’s Proposition 38, although he
doesn’t name it -- that could potentially make it easier for parents to
send their children to specially oriented schools.
Prop. 38 would offer taxpayer-funded vouchers up to $4,000 for
students who attend private schools.
Parents who want their kids to get a Muslim education, Taqii says,
should think about what the proposition could mean for them.
“All Muslims need to go and send their voice to say no or yes to that
bill,” he says.
It’s a remarkably political message for what is basically an afternoon
prayer meeting. But for the last month, Islamic community leaders -- here
in Newport-Mesa and throughout the country -- have been making an effort
to make sure their people know the importance of participating in the
political process.
Maki Al-Nooh, a congregation member who is helping to coordinate the
education center’s voter drive, said this year’s registration effort is a
more organized affair than what’s been done in the past.
The center, which has been in its current location for about three
years, has started to generate a large and consistent following of
between 500 and 600 families, Al-Nooh said. Now is the time for that
constituency to become more engaged in the political process.
The Muslim population hasn’t always been as well represented as it
could be, Al-Nooh said, because some segments of the population are
recent immigrants or are here only to attend school. But for those who
are here to stay, becoming registered is, in his opinion, an important
part of becoming a responsible member of society.
“In order to invoke change,” he said. “We have to follow the process.”
The emphasis for Islamic leaders is not on advocating specific votes
or endorsing particular candidates, but simply on highlighting the
importance of weighing in on issues that are likely to concern Muslims.
Ahmad Haidary, an Irvine resident who picked up a voter registration
form after Taqii spoke, said the question of school choice was very
significant to him.
“That’s the main issue, actually,” he said.
Haidary, an advocate of Prop. 38, said many Muslims he knows have
similar political views.
“Most of us, we vote for Republicans,” he said.
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