How UAE Water Aid can potentially help 2 billion Muslims

The campaign couldn’t have come at a better time than this, as the Muslim World suffers a horrid and unprecedented hijacking of our religion

Faisal J. Abbas
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The recently launched UAE Water Aid campaign is aiming to assist 5 million people in desperate need of clean water around the world, but the actual beneficiaries might well be the entire global Muslim population of 2 billion people.

This would certainly be the case if we look deeper into the noble and human essence of this campaign, launched by HE Sheikh Mohammad bin Rashid al-Maktoum of Dubai as a nationwide charity initiative marking the beginning of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

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See also: Al Arabiya News supports UAE Water Aid, here is how you can help

In fact, the campaign couldn’t have come at a better time than this, as the Muslim World suffers – perhaps now more than ever – a horrid and unprecedented hijacking of our religion by vicious extremists who have done nothing for Islam except tarnish its image and create misunderstanding and hatred.

water aid pic
water aid pic

Unfortunately, the Muslim World has come to a point where it has to decide, once and for all, where it stands in terms of direction, ideology and practices.

On one hand, we have the evil likes of ISIS and al-Qaeda, who will not hesitate to decapitate people of other faiths, or even their own, if they disagree with their terrorist practices of killing, grabbing land and consolidating power for nothing except for their own agenda.

The campaign couldn’t have come at a better time than this, as the Muslim World suffers – perhaps more than ever – a horrid and unprecedented hijacking of our religion

Faisal J. Abbas

On the other hand, you have those genuinely good people who are have opted to support a campaign like UAE Water Aid - a campaign which is truly borderless, as it pays no attention to race, color or religious belief of its beneficiaries.

As such, by supporting this campaign we would in other words be helping to save the lives of millions of people of all faiths and races who would have otherwise died of thirst or diseases related to the lack of clean water. Surely, such actions better reflect Islam as a religion of peace and tolerance than the despicable, horrific acts that the likes of ISIS falsely undergo in the name of the religion.

See also: Humanitarian hydro-aid: Is water scarcity drowning the Mideast?

Indeed, according to charity Water.Org there are 780 million people around the world who lack access to clean water (that is more than 2.5 times the population of the USA), while 3.4 million people die every year from a water related disease (and a child dies every 21 seconds from the same reason!)

Infographic: UAE water aid
Infographic: UAE water aid

As such, choosing which version of Islam to support is a decision for us make; and with nearly 90 million AED raised already during the first nine days of UAE Water Aid (which already covers the needs of nearly 70% of the 5 million people targeted by the campaign), I think the people in the UAE has clearly given an indicator of where their heart lies.

There are 780 million people around the world who lack access to clean water (that is more than 2.5 times the population of the USA

Faisal J. Abbas

The one thing I would really like to see is how the British or American press will cover the results of this noble campaign when it surpasses – as I expect – its target by the end of Ramadan.

Surely saving the lives of 5 million people around the world must be a story worth writing about, and given all the negative stories about Islam and Muslims in international press, I think it is only fair that initiatives like UAE Water Aid get their fair share of column inches.

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Faisal J. Abbas is the Editor-in-Chief of Al Arabiya English, he is a renowned blogger and an award-winning journalist who is working on an upcoming book on Arab Media. Faisal covered the Middle East extensively working for Future Television of Lebanon and both Al-Hayat and Asharq Al-Awsat pan-Arab dailies. He blogs for The Huffington Post since 2008, a recipient of many media awards and a member of the British Society of Authors, National Union of Journalists, the John Adams Society as well as an associate member of the Cambridge Union Society. He can be reached on @FaisalJAbbas on Twitter.

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not reflect Al Arabiya English's point-of-view.
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