Tiger Woods: The Ebb and Flow of Fame and Fortune

Oops!  We had to remove the hero profile you’re looking for because it will soon appear in our new book Heroic Leadership: An Influence Taxonomy of 100 Exceptional Individuals, to be published by Routledge in 2013.

Our contract at Routledge required us to remove many of our profiles on our blog at this time.  But we do have other hero profiles and information about heroes on the menu bar located on the right side of this page.  Check it out!

In the mean time, please accept our apologies.  Here is more information about our new book.

You can click here to return to our HERO home page.  And thanks for visiting!

— Scott Allison and George Goethals

The Proud Muslimah: Promoting Islam as a Religion of Peace and Tolerance

By Scott T. Allison and George R. Goethals

For decades, especially since the 9/11 attacks, the Islamic faith has been viewed by some people to be a religion of hatred and violence.  The fact that the vast majority of Muslims are gentle, law-abiding citizens belies this criticism.  One young Muslim woman has made it her mission to publicize illustrations of the inherent goodness of Islam.  On her blog, The Muslimah Soapbox, she calls herself simply the Proud Muslimah.  The purpose of her blog is straightforward.  She writes, "I am a Muslim woman from Madison, Wisconsin who is on a mission to help spread that Islam is a progressive religion of peace and tolerance."

The Muslimah's Soapbox dispels many negative stereotypes of Islam.  In one blog post, the Proud Muslimah sets the record straight about women in Islam, noting that the faith permits women the right to education, to work, to receive equal pay, to vote, and to enjoy the same rights and protections as women in the free world.  "So many Americans picture countries like Afghanistan, Iraq and Saudi Arabia as the poster countries for Islam and assume that how they treat their women is at the fault of the religion itself," she says, emphasizing the progressive stance of Islam in gender relations. The Proud Muslimah laments how images of women being mistreated in a few Arab nations are "being used to attack a religion which does not support" such mistreatment.

In another blog post, she condemns people who use Islam "to cause hate and murder in the name of Allah," and she urges "more Muslims to try to think of ways to spread peace in the name of Islam. Go out and volunteer, start a study group, hold a picnic, start a blog, ask the cultural anthropology departments in your universities about allowing you or a friend to give a lecture on Islam. Do anything you can to open the eyes of your community. It starts small, my friends, but even if you can enlighten one person, that's one person who wont be grabbing their pitchforks if another atrocity were to happen in the name of our faith again."

One recent addition to the Proud Muslimah's blog is a feature called Muslims Who Make a Difference.  She writes: "Every month, I want to provide a small article about a Muslim who is doing their part to make the world a better place for Muslims and non-Muslims alike. I feel this is incredibly important," she says.  The goal of this feature is to put "the spotlight on a different Muslim individual every month who actively does what they can to represent the love and peace that Islam truly stands for."

The first person whom the Proud Muslimah believes makes a difference is Ibrahim Abdul-Matin, a well-known environmentalist, author, and speaker.  Abdul-Martin is described as "a steward of the earth" and author of the important book Green Deen: What Islam Teaches About Protecting the Planet. "Abdul-Matin urges people to understand that environmentalism is rooted deep into our religious responsibility," she writes. His goal is to emphasize that it "is our responsibility to make sure that we are being stewards of the planet. It goes so much further than political affiliations and whether you are Buddhist, Muslim, Hindu, Christian, Jewish, or Athiest.  It is your job to do what you can" to be environmentally responsible.

In our opinion, the Proud Muslimah is performing a heroic service by enlightening the world about the positive contributions of Islam as a faith and about Muslims who are making the world a better place.  In a time of heightened cultural divisions, the Proud Muslimah is building bridges, illuminating the true loving core of the Islamic faith, and encouraging healthy, productive connections among all the world's people.  We applaud her work, support her cause, and eagerly await her future blog posts.

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Do you have a hero whom you would like us to profile?  Please send your suggestions to Scott Allison at sallison@richmond.edu.

Christa McAuliffe: Lost Hero of the Space Shuttle Challenger

Oops!  We had to remove the hero profile you’re looking for because it will soon appear in our new book Heroic Leadership: An Influence Taxonomy of 100 Exceptional Individuals, to be published by Routledge in 2013.

Our contract at Routledge required us to remove many of our profiles on our blog at this time.  But we do have other hero profiles and information about heroes on the menu bar located on the right side of this page.  Check it out!

In the mean time, please accept our apologies.  Here is more information about our new book.

You can click here to return to our HERO home page.  And thanks for visiting!

— Scott Allison and George Goethals

Mikhail Gorbachev: A Revolutionary Hero in the Kremlin

Oops!  We had to remove the hero profile you’re looking for because it will soon appear in our new book Heroic Leadership: An Influence Taxonomy of 100 Exceptional Individuals, to be published by Routledge in 2013.

Our contract at Routledge required us to remove many of our profiles on our blog at this time.  But we do have other hero profiles and information about heroes on the menu bar located on the right side of this page.  Check it out!

In the mean time, please accept our apologies.  Here is more information about our new book.

You can click here to return to our HERO home page.  And thanks for visiting!

— Scott Allison and George Goethals

Heart Wrenching Heroism at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant

Oops!  We had to remove the hero profile you’re looking for because it will soon appear in our new book Heroic Leadership: An Influence Taxonomy of 100 Exceptional Individuals, to be published by Routledge in 2013.

Our contract at Routledge required us to remove many of our profiles on our blog at this time.  But we do have other hero profiles and information about heroes on the menu bar located on the right side of this page.  Check it out!

In the mean time, please accept our apologies.  Here is more information about our new book.

You can click here to return to our HERO home page.  And thanks for visiting!

— Scott Allison and George Goethals

VCU and Butler: Heroes Shifting the Balance of Power in NCAA Basketball

By Scott T. Allison and George R. Goethals

Almost inevitably in life one sees a clash between top dogs and underdogs, between the "haves" and the "have-nots".  NCAA basketball features such a division. There are the "Big Six" conferences that have traditionally dominated the college basketball scene, schools comprising the Big East, the Big Ten, the ACC, the Big 12, the Pac 10, and the SEC.

The remaining non-Big Six teams, representing over 80% of college basketball, are underdog schools who are given little respect and little chance of ever prevailing over their Big Six brethren.

But the past two NCAA tournaments have witnessed a shift in the balance of power, along with a slowness of the Big Six and the national media to recognize it.  More and more, the underdogs are kicking sand in the faces of the Big Six.

Last year, Butler University from the little-known Horizon League came within a whisker of defeating Duke for the national championship.  And in this year's Final Four, Butler is joined by VCU from the Colonial Athletic Association, making half the Final Four non Big Six teams who are still, somehow, viewed as underdogs.

It is very clear that the Big Six, along with the major media outlets who cover them, are fiercely resisting the notion that their era of dominance is over.  It is human nature for those in power to have blinders when it comes to acknowledging that their power has weakened.  Denial is indeed a powerful psychological force.

Heroes are people who prevail even when others don't believe in them.  VCU's fabulous journey to the Final Four was fueled, in part, by the disrespect shown them by the basketball elite who continue to overestimate the Big Six and underestimate the parity that now exists across the basketball landscape.

A lesson can be learned here:  Beware hubris.  Human history is replete with stories of powerful entities whose demise was caused, in part, by their inability to recognize when their power has eroded.  Butler's near-miss last year should have put a dent in the massive hubris on display among NCAA basketball media moguls.  But it didn't.

Either Butler or VCU has to win the national championship for the Big Six to finally admit that they aren't so big anymore.  As we work in the city of Richmond, we're rooting for VCU.

Go Rams!

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Do you have a hero that you would like us to profile?  If so, please contact Scott Allison at sallison@richmond.edu.