In the case of Islam, there is undeniably much to be scared of and it is not necessarily Islamophobic to point this out. For instance, the 9-11 hijackers were Jihadists and crashed airplanes into the World Trade Center because of their religious beliefs. In Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan and other countries, women are treated worse than pets at an animal shelter. It seems that countries ruled by Islamic law are repressive, backward, cruel and living in another century.
For example, in Afghanistan on Sunday, the Taliban ordered a couple stoned to death after they eloped. Clearly, these are not nice people and anyone promoting such barbarism should be vehemently opposed.
If anyone from this aforementioned crowd of terrorists and tyrants tried to open a Mosque next to Ground Zero in New York City, I would understand the heated opposition. If Islamist sympathizers pledged to erect a monument celebrating 9-11, I’d say they should be turned down. I also would not support in this space an intolerant Saudi Arabian-backed Wahhabi Madrassa that trashed America.
However, the group behind the controversial Islamic Community Center has no connection to terrorism and nothing in common with radical Islamists. They have gone out of their way to explain the project and mollify fears. The center represents an olive branch to other faiths and hopes to promote a peaceful brand of Islam.
Indeed, the project’s Imam hails from the moderate Islamic sect of Sufism, which is widely despised by America’s jihadist enemies. They hate this form of Islam so much that fundamentalists have intimidated many of its followers and attacked its shrines in the Middle East and Southeast Asia.
In regard to this mosque, Islamophobia is real and being spewed by frightened people who probably think Ramadan is a dinosaur in the movie Jurassic Park. Opponents of the building are asking questions, but purposely not listening to the answers, which would have assuaged their concerns. They are intentionally painting all forms of Islam with a broad paintbrush and failing to differentiate what each sect actually teaches its followers.
Memo to protesters: Osama bin Ladin does not represent all of Islam, any more than Rev. Pat Robertson is a spokesman for all of Christendom. Don’t you get it?
Predictably, much of the overheated political rhetoric is coming from politicians, such as Newt Gingrich, who is exploiting this issue in his early audition for the 2012 presidential race. “Nazis don’t have the right to put up a sign next to the Holocaust Museum in Washington,” said the former House Speaker. “…There’s no reason for us to accept a mosque next to the World Trade Center.”
Well, there is one good reason: The United States Constitution promises freedom of religion. Furthermore, Gingrich’s loaded example is an emotionally charged, non sequitur. The Nazi’s killed six million Jews. Obviously the goal of a sign denying this tragedy would be to explicitly antagonize Jewish people. It is insulting and unconscionable to compare such butchers to a group of liberal-minded, peaceful Muslims who want to build a center with a swimming pool, performing arts center and include board members of other faiths.
Quite frankly, Gingrich sounds more like a radical Mullah than the promoters of the Islamic Center. For instance, the former House Speaker has proclaimed that America’s woes are the result of “a secular assault on God.”
Would Gingrich prefer a non-secular, Christian version of Iran in The United States? The genuine threat we face is not radical Islam, but religious extremism of all stripes, including that preached by Gingrich.
Those who are mindlessly attacking this mosque are doing exactly the opposite of what should be done to stop terrorism. When we bash moderate Muslims, we alienate youth and make them more susceptible to online Jihadist recruiters. These extremists can say, “see, no matter how mainstream your religion is, it will be rejected. Fight back against such humiliation by joining our group.”
Building this mosque will also play well internationally where we are already spending millions of dollars to win over skeptical Muslims. Most people will likely see this as a monument to America’s religious pluralism and our would-be detractors might think, “wow, this is a great nation and this is what true freedom looks like.”
Finally, one cannot help but notice how anti-gay activists are trying desperately to link gay people to this controversy. One way is to claim that marriage equality will break down all morality and lead to Muslim harems in the U.S. Another tactic is to corner liberals and force them to choose between gay rights and religious freedom by saying, “let’s test the Muslims by building an Islamic gay bar next door to this community center.”
Let’s not forget that in order to conquer, our homegrown extremists must first divide. It is obvious that they are capitalizing on this issue to gain power. It is up to us not to let them get away with this cynical political, election-year ploy.
(Here is Newtie sounding like a Mullah)
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Yes.
I still recall in the weeks immediately following 9/11 when I was back there (I am native to Manhattan and was on the closed off area with a group the next week)–that we had a suspicion that it was Afghanis. I was on my way into the city by bus and went by an Afghani restaurant in Jersey and that had closed down under the hatred. We jumped to conclusions, we had found our enemy, our devil—it was wrong—but we rallied because we NEED a devil.
We are not good at listening once we have a target and we don’t get it right in the passions of our moment. Of course I have heard the above BUT it almost no longer matters to most people–they have decided based on passions fueled by the hate of the devil dejour.
Gingrich does not care about anything but trying to be President. Why folks don’t see that is beyond me.
The argument is not about the legal right to build it, they have that but it remains insensitive at the very least to build it so close. Here is a dissenting Muslim view from Canada.
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/sports/Mischief+Manhattan/3370303/story.html
For God’s sake, it’s a cultural center! I am curious to hear members of the AMERICAN Muslim community on this and not those designated to speak by the folks at Fox.
Bob, the issue is that this is a false controversy drummed up by Fox News and conservative bloggers. It’s a local issue and should remain such. The mosque isn’t even on ground zero.
The wingnuts are just worried that they might run into a Muslim during their annual hadj to their holiest site, which they usually pronounce “Groun’ Zurruh.”
It is also a Mosque. “1,000 to 2,000 Muslims are expected to pray at the mosque every Friday” said Daisy Khan who is on the board of the Cordoba Initiative.
And no, it’s not “insensitive.”
It’s an old Burlington Coat Factory in a neighborhood that already HAS a Muslim population, which HAD a Muslim population before Wingnut Christmas, and the proposed center is run by a freaking Sufi.
There are few things less threatening on this planet than a bunch of Sufis getting together. The Whirling Dervishes? Sufis.
You would think this country would Get Over It at some point. 9/11 was a traumatic event, yes, ESPECIALLY for New Yorkers. But this mentality that “after 9/11, everything changed!” has got to go. Otherwise, al Qaeda truly does win.
I did not say it was at ground zero. I did not say it should be stopped by law. I defend their right to build it. It is private property. I said, and still believe, it is insensitive. I did not get that from FOX News or the blogosphere. It’s my own opinion and I don’t see why it is a false controversy at all. My opinion has nothing to do with Newt’s unless you are going to oppose all opponents just because that’s Newt’s position.
“Bob, the issue is that this is a false controversy drummed up by Fox News and conservative bloggers… It’s a local issue and should remain such. The mosque isn’t even on ground zero.”
It’s only insensitive if you buy into the idea that we’re at war with Islam, which George W. Bush spent 7 years trying to say we weren’t.
To call it insensitive, seriously, is just like blaming all Jews for an Israeli foreign policy decision, or blaming lovey-dovey UCC Christians every time Pat Robertson shoots off his mouth. And yes, the people building this center are sort of like the UCC of the Islamic faith.
Why does Governor Patterson want them to move it then?
Because Paterson is an idiot.
And he’s pandering, just like all the other politicians are.
1. It’s not a mosque, it’s an office building.
2. The neighborhood already has two pre-existing Islamic centers — each of them a few rooms in office buildings.
3. It’s not two blocks away, it’s almost five blocks away if you measure according to the size of a normal city block and the difficulty of navigating lower Manhattan’s streets.
4. It’s insensitive and inhospitable of self-styled “Christians” to treat neighbors with such outrageous disrespect and blind bigotry.
5. We have spent literally trillions of dollars propping up Islam in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Saudi Arabia.
6. The catastrophe of 9/11 is tragic, but it pales in comparison to the hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians who have been killed in Iraq, which had nothing to do with 9/11. The 9/11 death toll also is significantly lower than the toll of innocent American soldiers whose lives were wasted in Iraq — where no war should have been fought in the first place.
In conservative Christian-speak, the WTC was a Tower of Babel. So it is shocking that the Christian Right chooses to worship the lost towers and wage war against the Muslim people of faith in Manhattan who have worked for the past decade to FIGHT Islamic terrorism.
[...] on Wayne’s excellent piece on why he supports the Cordoba House community center in Manhattan, it’s useful to understand [...]
Patterson probably wants them to move – if he does – because of that right-wing noise machine. See folks, unfortunately this is how powerful it is. AND how dangerous too.
I agree with you and support the building of the Islamic Center. Our cherished freedom of religion does not just apply to those promoting homophobia.
First unrepentant homophobes came after gay people; then they came after Latinos; now they go after Muslims. Which group of Americans is next in this immoral agenda/power trip of radical, hateful conservatives? And is that really the way we want America to be?
Gingrich (and Karl Rove) are extremists who know how to play to the lowest common denominator of the basest of humanities feelings. People who are influenced by his kind of rhetoric are unthinking authoritarians whose sole purpose in life is to make themselves feel better by blaming others for their fortune in life instead of looking in the mirror and figuring out how they, themselves, got in their situation. These people do no reflect on their inner beings and see everything through a prism of religious dogma that has squashed any rebellion, any questioning of authority, and which makes them vulnerable to the likes of the Gingrich’s of the world. It’s sad, but that is exactly what the Nazis counted on when they began their march into the Bundestag.
These people are like the UCC of Muslims? I’m not familiar with their beliefs. What are their thoughts on gay rights? I assume your comment means that our community is welcome?
I really don’t have too much info on that, Jack, but I’ll check into it.
But I would remind you that not every issue should be reduced to a group’s position on gay rights. There’s often a lot more nuance to be considered.
Islam, like Christianity, is manifestly anti-gay.
[...] to an archaic country known as the financier of fundamentalism, most people were fixated on the “Ground Zero Mosque” spectacle, where an Imam of the moderate Sufi tradition wanted to create a community center dedicated to [...]
[...] of Muslim-bashing over the Park51 center, the writers at Truth Wins Out spoke out strongly about why we supported the building of the center. But quite simply, the above piece is why. Because any time one [...]