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Onjali Rauf

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Onjali Rauf,

Onjali Rauf

Opinion

We will be working together on behalf of others

Mitzvah Day is a call back to sanity, a call for two of the most persecuted groups in modern history to come together, writes Onjali Rauf, a young Muslim.

November 16, 2017 11:49
Laura Janner Klausner, Andrew Dismore and Onjali Rauf (far left) at Kentish Town Farm, Mitzvah Day 2015
2 min read

As we approach Mitzvah Day 2017, on and around this Sunday, November 19, it’s no exaggeration to say that it comes at a moment where ignorance, fear and intolerance seem to be rising like tidal waves.

We are seeing a rise in political racisms, embodied by the Alt-Right and Donald Trump, the open-air genocide of Muslims in Myanmar, and a sharp increase in Islamophobic and antisemitic language and attacks in the UK and across the world.

That is why, for me, as a young Muslim, Mitzvah Day — and its Muslim equivalent Sadaqa Day — is a call back to sanity, a call for two of the most persecuted groups in modern history to come together and remind both ourselves and people at large that, yes, we are different but we are united.

Muslims and Jews have our own traditions and practices and ways of being. But, at our core, we are humans bound by an unshakeable faith in One God: a God that places upon our shoulders an obligation to help our fellow humans no matter who they are or where they are from.

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