A'isha
Miss Schoolteacher
Condemning violence in general? Happens all the time. But condemning particular acts of violence perpetrated in the name of Islam? Much rarer. And unfortunately, it's the latter that counts. If you're sharing a label with a sociopath, and you don't seem to be doing anything to stop him or be particularly bothered by his actions, that reflects poorly on you, no matter how angelic your own behavior may be.
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I just skimmed an Al Jazeera article about a Taliban suicide bomber killing 21 people at a restaurant in Afghanistan yesterday. Their selected "this is a tragedy" quote? Ban Ki-moon's press secretary. What do you think that says to the non-Muslim world about what the religion as a whole actually thinks about the violence?
President Hamid Karzai condemned the attack, and called on US-led NATO forces fighting in Afghanistan "to target terrorism" in the country.
Pakistanis Unite in Outrage Over Girl’s Shooting by Taliban
Aitzaz Hasan: Tributes to Pakistan teenager killed when he stopped a bomber
Fort Hood killings: Treachery at Fort Hood
Not in My Name
Where Was God on September 11th?
Woolwich beheading: Pakistani Muslims condemn brutal murder of British soldier by Wahhabi terrorists in London
Does something equivalent exist for the Muslim world?
http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/features/articles/promoting_islamic_non_violent_solutions/
http://www.musawah.org/get-involved/links
If so, why do you think it's not heard or listened to wide enough to impact the violence?
I think it is, but it's a slow, difficult process because of all the various factors that are behind terrorism and other violence done in the name of Islam. It also isn't a uniform process, since violence is local and regional and fluctuates based on what's happening in once place versus what's happening in another.