Rais Bhuiyan's story is told
at:
"From Violence to
Healing"
Rais Bhuiyan
From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rais Bhuiyan
Rais
Bhuiyan
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Born
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Residence
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Nationality
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Bangladeshi /
American
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Occupation
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Technology professional
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Religion
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Website
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Rais Bhuiyan (Bengali: রইস ভূঁইয়া) is a Bangladeshi American working as a
technology professional in Dallas.[1] He
was an officer in the Bangladesh Air Force. He was a student of Sylhet Cadet College. He went to New York to study computer
technology.[2] After
the September 11 terror attacks, Mark Anthony
Stroman shot Bhuiyan, attempting to kill him. Bhuiyan was saved from brain
damage, but lost sight in one of his eyes.[1]
Bhuiyan gained media attraction after revealing that he will appeal to
court to save Stroman from the death penalty. He told MSNBC, "I'm trying to do
my best not to allow the loss of another human life. I'll knock on every door
possible".[1][3] He
said, "In Islam it says that saving one human life is the same as saving
the entire mankind. Since I forgave him, all those principles encouraged me to
go even further, and stop his execution and save another human life".[4] He
has started a movement for saving Mark named World Without Hate and
currently working withAmnesty International.[4]
Hate crime victim
Bhuiyan had moved to Texas from New York as it was cheaper and a friend had
offered a partnership at a gas station.[2] After
the September 11 attacks, day laborer Mark Anthony
Stroman went on a killing spree against people who he viewed as Arab due to a
vision he was seeking revenge against the 9/11 attacks. On Sept. 15, 2001,
Waqar Hasan, a Pakistani immigrant, was killed in Dallas. Bhuiyan begged his
partner at the gas station to increase security, something he refused to do.[2] On
September 21, 2001, Stroman walked into Bhuiyan's gas station, and while
Bhuiyan was handing over the money asked, "Where are you from?"
Before he could answer, Stroman shot him in the face with a shotgun.[2] Bhuiyan
ran to the barbershop next door, and a man in the shop called 911.
Aftermath
While the police were investigating the shooting, Indian immigrant Vasudev
Patel was killed in Mesquite, Texas on October 4, 2001.[2] Stroman
was soon captured and called TV stations from his jail cell to talk about how
he was a patriot for killing the men.[2] He
sent a letter to a friend from prison in 2002, saying the attacks were revenge:
"Here sits the Arab Slayer. For what he did, we should make him our
mayor," he wrote. "… Patriotic, yes indeed, a true American, a
special breed."[1]
Bhuiyan was left with no money and had to go deeply in debt to restore his
vision, "I had to go through several surgeries and finally the doctor
could save the eye, but the vision is gone, and I'm still carrying more than 35
pellets on the right side of my face," he says. "Once I touch my
face, my skull, I can feel it's all bumpy. It took several years to go through
all these painful surgeries one after another one."[2]
Despite these hardships, motivated by his Islamic faith, Bhuiyan forgave
Stroman and took up the cause of preventing his execution.[5] Stroman
would go on to repudiate his white supremacist beliefs. In an interview with
the New York Times, he wrote: "i have The Islamic Community
Joining in [my legal defense]...Spearheaded by one Very Remarkable man Named
Rais Bhuiyan, Who is a Survivor of My Hate. His deep Islamic Beliefs Have gave [sic] him the strength to Forgive the
Un-forgiveable...that is truly Inspiring to me, and should be an Example for us
all. The Hate, has to stop, we are all in this world together."[6] They
reconciled before Stroman's death. Hours before Stroman's execution, Bhuiyan
spoke with Stroman, over the phone, for the first time since the shooting.
"I forgive you and I do not hate you," he said. Stroman responded
"Thank you from my heart! I love you, bro.... You touched my heart. I
would have never expected this." Bhuiyan replied: "You touched mine
too."[5]
Mark Anthony Stroman was executed on July 20, 2011.[7] Earlier
that day, Bhuiyan's lawyers had lost a final appeal in federal court to stay
Stroman's execution.[5]
References
1.
^ a b c d Huus,
Kari (June 3, 2011). "A victim of 9/11 hate crime now fights
for his attacker's life". MSNBC. Retrieved July 19, 2011.
2.
^ a b c d e f g Cordell,
Anya (2011). "Close Up:Rais Bhuiyan, survivor".
executionchronicles.org. Retrieved July 19, 2011.
3.
^ Daily Mail Reporter (June 3, 2011). "Victim blinded in a post-9/11 hate
crime now fights for his attacker's life". London: Daily Mail.
Retrieved July 19, 2011.
4.
^ a b NPR
Staff (2011). "9/11 Hate-Crime Victim Seeks To Save
His Attacker". NPR.
Retrieved July 19, 2011.
5.
^ a b c Serrano,
Richard A. (October 21, 2011). "Finding forgiveness on death row". Los
Angeles Times.
6.
^ Williams, Timothy (July 18, 2011). "The Hated and the Hater, Both Touched
by Crime". New York Times.
^ "Texas Man Executed for Killing Middle
Eastern Store Clerk". Fox News. July 20, 2011.
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