American Muslim Agenda

American Muslim Agenda This book, The American Muslim Agenda, is a primer, a blueprint, and a roadmap for American Muslims to consider.

ONE NATION UNDER GOD- THROUGH INTERFAITH MARRIAGES Recently, I had the honor of officiating a unique wedding in New York...
09/08/2024

ONE NATION UNDER GOD- THROUGH INTERFAITH MARRIAGES

Recently, I had the honor of officiating a unique wedding in New York. The groom's parents were Sikh and Hindu, while the bride's parents were Muslim and Christian. The ceremony beautifully incorporated elements from all four religions, a testament to the unity and shared values of the couple and their families. These weddings, with their diverse faith traditions, are a powerful demonstration of people coming together under the divine guidance of their respective creators.

It's heartening to note that 419 couples, despite their diverse races, ethnicities, and religions, have chosen to unite as one nation under God. This is a powerful testament to the unity that transcends our differences.

Additionally, 35 marriages were between individuals of the same race, religion, and ethnicity.

In today's wedding, the groom was French, and this is a familiar story in Canada and the US, where people from diverse backgrounds come together in marriage.

I admire the bride's parents for their open-mindedness. They didn't impose their cultures and religions on their children but instead instilled in them the values of their faiths, which the couples followed wholeheartedly.

In America, parents trust their children to make decisions that bring happiness to everyone. While religion holds significance, it has also become deeply personal. Religion doesn't serve as a barrier; as the poet Iqbal wrote, "Religion does not create barriers between humanity."

Drs. Fatima & Mike Ghouse
Wedding Officiants of America
www.InterfaithMarriages.org
www.MuslimWeddingOfficiant.org

WEDDING PLANNERS and IIf you hire a wedding planner, the weddings go flawlessly. Our team of seasoned professionals has ...
07/21/2024

WEDDING PLANNERS and I

If you hire a wedding planner, the weddings go flawlessly.
Our team of seasoned professionals has a wealth of experience working with clients across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. We've orchestrated weddings in every setting imaginable, from the sandy beaches of Cancun to the bustling cities, ensuring every detail is perfect.

Drs. Fatima and Mike Ghouse
Wedding Officiants of America
www.InterfaithMarriages.org

EMERGENCY HOSPITAL WEDDING A few days ago, my wife and I were in the emergency ward of a hospital to officiate a marriag...
07/07/2024

EMERGENCY HOSPITAL WEDDING

A few days ago, my wife and I were in the emergency ward of a hospital to officiate a marriage. The bride's mother was in her last days and had expressed her desire to see her daughter in a wedding gown marrying a prince charming.

The couple was concerned and wanted to fulfill their mother's wish. They called me to come right away. I had a Nikah ceremony (Muslim wedding) set up with a small gathering, so I called them and explained the situation. They offered to hold the ceremony the next day. It's heartwarming to see people always wanting to do good. It has happened a few times in the last 15 years. I love the humanity in all of us.

We entered the room and gathered around Mom's bed. She could barely speak but was pleased. It was bittersweet but beautiful to fulfill her wishes by officiating the wedding in such difficult circumstances.

It was the third hospital wedding I have officiated. One was in Dallas for a Spanish father, and my wife was the translator. The other was in New Orleans, and today, it was in Washington, D.C. Both individuals have passed away since then. Rest in peace. However, I have forged deep, enduring connections with the couples since then. Just so you know, the picture of the woman is not of the same person.

Drs. Fatima & Mike Ghouse
Wedding Officiants of America
email: [email protected]
www.InterfaithMarriages.org
www.ceremoniasenespanol.com
https://muslimweddingofficiant.org/

DIVERSITY OF MIKE GHOUSE - YOURS?If you can shed the bias towards others, you'll love the connections with every human t...
07/03/2024

DIVERSITY OF MIKE GHOUSE - YOURS?

If you can shed the bias towards others, you'll love the connections with every human that God or his systems have created. This creates a sense of freedom and brings meaning and joy to life. Embracing and respecting how people dress, eat, and practice their beliefs becomes an enriching experience.

Here is my diversity, and I hope you can write about yours and share or at least think about it. The other day, while driving home, my mind ran a reel of all the people I have worked with for over 50 years. Each person's name came with a clear face. I was happy like a baby when he walked three steps without falling. I distinctly remember my grandchildren's happy faces.

I grew up in a diverse environment, thanks to my parents. My father, who was the mayor of our town, and I, along with my sister, celebrated festivals across different religions, including Hindu, Christian, Jain, and others. I carried on this tradition with my children, taking them to various places of worship in Dallas, including the LGBTQ church and Pagan gatherings. My mother conversed weekly with a Zoroastrian lady, while my father and maternal grandfather regularly discussed Shia-Sunni theology. I absorbed much of this diverse knowledge in pluralistic terms (respecting the otherness of the others).
In addition to this, my father's flour mill attracted people from various backgrounds, including Adivasis (tribals), Gypsies (Banjara/ Khandari), Dalits, Sikhs, Christians, and Hindus, all of whom came to get their grains (wheat, millet, and rice) ground. As a teenager working with my dad, I learned to respect the diversity of our community by listening to and asking questions of these diverse individuals who stayed in our mill for over an hour. I was probably 14, and every year, a Kandharni came to the mill with a baby hanging on her side; she was so beautiful, she spoke Pushto, and I couldn't communicate with her, but I was infatuated and interested in her, she looked similar to that famous Afghan girl on Time magazine several centuries ago.

During my teenage years, I engaged in interfaith dialogues with Christians, Hindus, and Muslims, including my college professor, Dr. A. Ramachandra, and Fakhru Bhai, a weaver in these conversations. Both of them had expertise in Hinduism and Islam.

Friday was spent at the Mosque, and Saturday nights were spent singing Bhajans (Hindu devotional songs) at the Hindu temple on my street in Yelahanka, my hometown. Every Wednesday, I went to the Mahabodhi Center for Buddhist teachings, and once a month, I went to the Church.

I worked as an admin in a catering college called Food Craft Institute in Bangalore. There, we interacted with students from many countries and enjoyed different foods daily, over 200 cuisines in one year for three years. There is a lot of diversity in cuisines and cultures.

I worked in Saudi Arabia as deputy controller of the largest ($5.3 billion) project in the mid-70s for Fluor Arabia in Shedgum and Dhahran. It was a gas gathering project converting into Liquified Natural Gas - I managed 5 sites. I interacted with 44 nationalities from South and South East Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americans who worked there. I loved their different accents in English, and now I can hear anyone speak English and understand it fairly easily.

Between Food Craft Institute and Fluor, my ability to hear and pronounce different names and listen to different accents has increased tremendously in communicating with anyone.

I have gained enriching experiences in various facets of real estate, including home building, leasing, mortgage brokerage, and property management (50 years). Throughout that time, I have had the opportunity to build six new homes and reside in diverse neighborhoods before finally settling in an all-Black community in Southeast Washington, DC.

Within the Center for Pluralism, I have taken the initiative to organize and lead four annual events featuring workshops exploring 12 distinct religions and engaging radio shows. Do seminars on 12 different faiths and produce and anchor 780 hours of radio shows on religions. Dallas Morning News has published about 250 articles on interfaith and over 100 articles in the Huffington Post. Over 300 newspapers have published my work across the world. I aspire to encapsulate these remarkable experiences in a book.

One of the most fulfilling aspects of my life has been officiating over 400 weddings between individuals from different faiths (9), races (4), and ethnicities (over 50). Additionally, I have liaised with more than 500 families to ensure seamless and joyous wedding celebrations. These experiences have also allowed me to travel to over 50 cities across America and Canada and even partake in destination weddings in Mexico, with plans for Spain and other locales shortly. Additionally, I have conducted Nikah (Muslim wedding) ceremonies over Zoom in Sweden, Norway, the UK, Germany, New Zealand, and India (India: three Muslim-Hindu and one Sikh-Muslim).

I believe embracing diversity enriches life and brings a profound sense of joy and meaning. It fosters an environment where we can appreciate and celebrate the distinctive ways people express themselves through their attire, culinary traditions, or spiritual beliefs. By learning to respect and acknowledge the uniqueness of others, we pave the way for harmonious coexistence, thus diminishing conflicts and giving rise to viable solutions. This, to me, is the epitome of pluralism at the Center for Pluralism.

The above is a summary. God willing, I plan to write a book in the hope that it will provide insights into the joy of living in peace "with a bias towards none (Lincoln)." I know that we are tested when genocides are happening around when tyrants harass their people. I feel that I can answer my grandkids that I have made every effort, spoken, written, and continue to write to do my share of Tikkun Olam, Islah al Alam, or repairing the world to restore Dharma. You will not believe this: I am a bold, assertive man who dealt with Sean Hannity on Fox News and many extremists who spoke in rallies, yet I did not have the guts to tell two women that I was interested in them; I am glad it all happened for my good.

I am 72 and on dialysis, and I am thankful to God every morning that I am alive and active, put in more than 8 hours a day, even on my Dialysis Day. My greatest happiness is my wife; she did not hesitate to be friends, knowing that I was on dialysis. She believed that I would get a kidney transplant, and she got someone she knew who was the best fit, but she chose to go with another guy for money two weeks before the transplant. The doctor has assured me that I should get the transplant this year, as I have crossed five years now. My wife, Fatima, is a God's blessing; we love our life together and appreciate our families, friends, and well-wishers. A motivational message for you. In football, the quarterback launches the ball precisely to the running back. The running back's singular purpose is to navigate through the field, overcoming obstacles and opposition and aiming to reach the coveted end zone. Despite the physical challenge of being tackled by formidable opponents, including dragging or piling up on him, the running back remains unwavering in his determination to reach the end zone.

You can imagine how tough it is—like on the football field, life throws us unexpected challenges. Fatima and I have decided our end zone is harmony and happiness. We have an unwavering determination to keep reaching this end zone (Harmony) every time we are tackled.
Set your end zone to be happiness and harmony.

Mike Ghouse
Thank you.

Mike Ghouse

Cell/Text: (214) 325-1916

Dr. Ghouse is an Interfaith Wedding Officiant. A Muslim, Pluralist, activist, speaker, author, and a social scientist. President/ Center for Pluralism, Director/ World Muslim Congress, and partner at InterfaithMarriages.org - Google search for more

MY FIRST BAHAI-MUSLIM WEDDING It is my first Bahai-Muslim wedding and my seventh Persian wedding. I’m waiting to do a Zo...
07/01/2024

MY FIRST BAHAI-MUSLIM WEDDING

It is my first Bahai-Muslim wedding and my seventh Persian wedding. I’m waiting to do a Zoroastrian interfaith wedding so I can proudly say that I have officiated weddings of all major religions, a reward for 28 years of Pluralism and interreligious service.

It was so good to hear the groom’s mother recite Bahai prayers. After officiating so many marriages, I can say the essence of all marriages is the union of two souls, as the Quran says (30:21). No conversion is ever required by religion itself. Still, all our cultures promote it, which is acceptable.

The Bahai officiant did a fabulous job, too; the essence was similar. He said that all of us are working to support an emerging interfaith community. Indeed, it is something I am working on, inviting all the interfaith and in*******al couples to dinner in each one of the cities to get to know each other and together develop an interreligious community and guide interfaith children.

The Bahai faith resonates with me, and his sermon was beautiful. As of now, I have officiated joint weddings with Catholic and Protestant Pastors, Hindu Pandits, Jewish Rabbis, Bahai, and yes, Muslim Imams and other officiants. Look it up on our site,

Indeed, if we can learn to respect and accept the otherness of others, conflicts will fade, and solutions will emerge. The most important outcome is living in harmony with fellow humans.

God bless America and all other nations where they accept each other as dignified fellow humans and let them marry whoever they fall in love with no filters.

Please note that some people do not like the change and are trying to crash our websites; if it is down, it will be back up within the same day. We have great website managers. Let me know if you need their service.

Drs. Fatima & Mike Ghouse
Wedding Officiants of America
email: [email protected]
www.InterfaithMarriages.org
www.ceremoniasenespanol.com
https://muslimweddingofficiant.org/

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Weddings beyond filters of religion, race, or ethnicityI'm addressing the challenges and experiences of organizing inter...
06/23/2024

Weddings beyond filters of religion, race, or ethnicity

I'm addressing the challenges and experiences of organizing interfaith and in*******al weddings involving Desi, Asian, and African communities.

At each wedding, you learn something new; this particular wedding in Texas was terrific. The bride and groom labeled the candles with their names, bought flowers from Wal-Mart, and sewed beautiful garlands. They say doing things together was a joy instead of assigning them to others.

It was my 415th wedding, and even though I have officiated so many, I practice and rehearse for each wedding, which is custom-made for each couple. I want to make it memorable for them to be their dream wedding and for families to feel comfortable with the new norm of interfaith marriages and hear the essence of their faith in the ceremony.

Thus far, marriages have occurred between people of 9 faiths (Zoroastrian is yet to come), four races, and over 50 ethnicities worldwide. 35% of the marriages are between Hindus and Muslims, and 30% between Christians and Muslims; the rest are between all others, including Jews, Sikhs, and Atheists. In contrast, about 10% of the Nikah ceremonies have occurred among Muslim groups like Shia, Sunni, Ahmedi, and Sufi, as well as their variants like Hanafi, Shafii, Maliki, Hanbali, Twelvers, Lahori, etc. I consider all of them to be Muslims, acknowledging their uniqueness and including their family traditions. As a Muslim, I do not judge other's faith; it is between them and God.

About half of the interfaith weddings are between White people and Desis, and the number of marriages between Desis and Latinos is increasing as well. About 25% of the marriages are between Desi.
Hindu boys and Pakistani girls, Bangladeshi girls and Indian boys, and vice versa. Despite a ban on Pakistani individuals from getting visas to India, they continue to marry each other and hope one day, the Governments in both nations will drop the idiotic practice of not giving visas to American-born kids. I will appeal to the new coalition government to consider visas for people from each other's countries.

Neither India nor Pakistan is their home, and clearly, India does not marry Pakistan, nor does Islam marry Hinduism; individuals in love marry each other.

I am proud of all these individuals who marry each other without any filters or barriers. If this trend continues, we will achieve the goal of each religion, which is to make us all humans.

Drs. Fatima and Mike Ghouse
Interfaith Wedding Officiants
email: [email protected]
www.InterfaithMarriages.org
www.ceremoniasenespanol.com
https://muslimweddingofficiant.org/
# # #

MODESTY & WEDDING SUITS Islam, a belief system, was designed to foster inclusive societies where everyone, regardless of...
06/20/2024

MODESTY & WEDDING SUITS

Islam, a belief system, was designed to foster inclusive societies where everyone, regardless of race, ethnicity, faith, or culture, could feel secure and at peace. When people embraced this system, they were not required to alter their names, dress, food, or any other cultural practices, emphasizing Islam's inclusivity.

The fundamental beliefs are:
1) That there is a causer-creator of the universe who is referred to by many names, including God.
2) Everyone should be accountable for his (or her) actions, and no one goes scot-free.
3) He (she) cares about what surrounds him: the entire universe.

Of course, everything we do in life is based on rituals, which are the stepping stones to achieving anything. Islam is no different; it has five pillars, three of which are rituals to imbue equality in our minds, hearts, and souls; one of them is about caring for fellow humans, and the other is a pledge that one believes in God and the prophets, Muhammad (pbuh) being the last prophet for them.

The above is my understanding of verse 62 from Sura Baqarah, chapter 2 of the Quran, supported by the most outstanding contemporary Muslim scholar, Mohammad Asad.

In most interfaith marriages, women wear different costumes per their culture, which is acceptable.

Modesty, a concept deeply influenced by religious beliefs, varies from culture to culture. In most Muslim societies, a full-length abaya (dress), saree, or Shalwar kameez with full-length sleeves is considered modest; however, in Western societies, a sleeveless blouse and knee-length skirt are deemed modest, as opposed to immodest mini-skirts and low cut blouses.

Drs. Fatima and Mike Ghouse
Interfaith Wedding Officiants
www.InterfaithMarriages.org
www.ceremoniasenespanol.com
https://muslimweddingofficiant.org/

Interfaith officiant details issues Dr. Mike Ghouse, a U.S.-based social scientist and interfaith wedding officiant, has...
03/07/2024

Interfaith officiant details issues

Dr. Mike Ghouse, a U.S.-based social scientist and interfaith wedding officiant, has officiated at some 244 marriages, including 14 Muslim Nikah ceremonies and 230 Muslim Interfaith Marriages.

Dr. Mike Mohamed Ghouse and his wife, Dr. Mylord Rupa Reyes-Tosta. (Handout photo)

Ghouse, a Muslim, is married to Rupa Reyes-Tosta, a Catholic. He said they have been married for the past three years and have chosen not to convert to each other’s religion.

Rupa Reyes-Tosta has kept her last name. They currently have five children and five grandchildren from different spouses.

Without delving into his marriage, Ghouse, 70, said of the marriages that he officiated: “125 weddings were Christian-Muslim, and out of all the 29 who converted, 18 were Christians who chose to reverse out of their own free will, despite my pushing them to remain in their faith.”

Ghouse said he has officiated interfaith religious weddings in the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, India, Malaysia, and Pakistan. He said he plans to conduct a wedding ceremony in Cancun, Mexico.

“I have officiated in most of the states within the United States,” he said. I have not conducted weddings in Nigeria, but I have officiated for Nigerian Americans, most African Americans, Asians, Latinos, Middle Eastern, and European Americans. I am waiting to officiate for Antarctician-Americans.”

Ghouse said the “key challenges” to Christian-Muslim marriages “were attacks on social media and nasty calls, including death threats. Three or four Muslims condemned me to hell on Facebook for marrying Muslim girls with non-Muslims. A few Muslims cite verse 2:221 from the Koran to criticize me, and I challenge them to think and reflect on the verse, which the Koran calls for in about 50 verses. They are stuck with what is dished out to them as if they can't think.”

He added: “I did not block anyone; I believe in absolute free speech.”

Ghouse said most of the barriers in interfaith marriages come from the families of Muslim women.

“Back in 2009, one of my friends was frustrated,” he said. “His son graduated from law school, and his sweetheart was his classmate, so they wanted to get married. They got married by a judge, sans the bells and whistles of a typical marriage in either tradition. All hell broke loose; neither the [Catholic priest] nor the Imam from the mosque wanted to officiate the wedding unless one converted to the other’s faith in their place of worship.”

Ghouse said that, as a Muslim, he has “chosen to officiate the weddings of such couples to reflect the essence of the bride and groom’s religious and cultural traditions.”

“I laud such couples who embrace genuine humanity by respecting the otherness of others and accepting each other’s uniqueness,” he added. “If the team prefers to give that little extra joy to the religiosity of their parents, relatives and friends, the sermon will include reflections and the essence of the faiths of the couple. I am blessed to have performed some uniquely beautiful combinations of weddings from different faith traditions.”

Link https://religionunplugged.com/news/2023/9/11/manigerian-interfaith-christian-muslim-couples-face-challenges-throughout-their-marriage
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Vicky Abraham is an investigative journalist based in South Africa and has reported for the Mail & Guardian, City Press, Assist News, the Nation newspaper in Nigeria, and Nation Media Group in Kenya.

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