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Ground Zero 'No Mosque' Rally

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On Sunday, June 6, in the shadow of the Ground Zero construction site, with huge cranes looming overhead, an estimated 5,000 people gathered to show their opposition to the proposed ‘Cordoba House Mosque and Center.’ The protestors overflowed the corner of Church and Liberty Streets where a stage area and podium were constructed. The crowd peacefully filled the areas beyond the barriers, up into Zuccotti Park, the triangle area whose owner revoked the permit, and way past the corner along the Church Street blocks. And the terrific NYPD was there for what appeared to be for the protection of the protesters rather than needing to police them.

The mass of people held up signs and stood in the partial sunny streets for over 2.5 hours, listening to Pamela Geller, Robert Spenser and 18 people passionately speak about the “insult” this mosque is to them and Americans. The insensitivity of building a Mosque so close to Ground Zero is extremely painful to these people. Some of the speakers had lived in Muslim countries, were enslaved by “Sharia Law” and have run away. Others were emergency responders who survived the rescue operations; mothers and fathers who lost their children in the destruction; Europeans, Russians, Hindus all testifying about the horror of living along side “Sharia Law; residents of the area and politicians who are running for elections in 2010. The emotions ran very deep.

The premise at the heart of this is that America is still at war with the radical Islamic terrorists and there is the appearance of ‘Sharia Law’ in Europe and the signs of it creeping into America. These protestors are fighting a battle that is two-fold: stopping this mosque’s construction at Ground Zero and fighting the “politically correct” voices that are accusing them of bigotry. The question was asked: “ Does this opposition constitute bigotry?” The answer was definitively No. This rally does not represent an opposition to mosques being built in America, just to this one that Iman Feisel and his organization want to built over the ashes of 3,000 victims that filled the streets on 9/11. One might think that just this reality would be enough to stop the proposed mosque plan in its tracks. That Mayor Bloomberg, Charles Schumer and other NY political leaders would see this clearly as intolerance by the organizers of the ‘Cordoba House’ rather than by the people against this mosque’s construction. “It seems like we are living in the twilight zone.”  

Pamela Geller and her associates are committed to stopping this mosque from moving forward. They will hold another rally, seek ‘war memorial status, and if need be, they will use their bodies as shields to stop any bulldozers that come to tear down the Burlington Building.  It appears that the battle has just begun and they will not give up until the idea of a mosque on these grounds is stopped. 

For more details please check out Pamela Geller’s website: atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/



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    Total 7 comments
    • Anonymous

      Whats wrong with America,This is our land,our country,JUST SAY NO!

    • BIN Admin

      Some of “us” are Muslim, though.

    • Anonymous

      The Implications of Calling Cordoba House a “Mosque”

      Islam did not attack America on Sept. 11 — terrorists did. Peace-loving, law-abiding American Muslims suffered losses as great on 9-11 and in the months that followed as any honored with the moniker “9-11 families.” Not only did Muslims lose loved ones in the towers and as passengers on the planes that crashed that fateful day, but they also suffered the psychic trauma of all Americans. Furthermore, their losses were compounded by the absurd demonization of persons perceived to be Muslim, which resulted in a dramatic rise in random hate crimes, racial profiling, indiscriminate detention, and extraordinary rendition. Now, nine years later, American Muslims suffer by being branded unworthy of First Amendment rights because murderers once perpetrated unspeakable acts in blasphemy of the Muslim faith.

      All the hoopla over the so-called “Ground Zero Mosque” is yet another example of right-wingers’ ability to “mis-name” people, places, and issues to effectively advance their own agendas. A mosque isn’t being proposed for Ground Zero; more accurately, the Cordoba House is a community center, to be built at 51 Park Place (multiple blocks away from Ground Zero) by an organization currently located across the street at 45 Park Place that has been serving that community for years. Yet because of some persons’ ability to ‘mis-name’ people, places, and issues to advance their own agendas, these very real facts have become matters of dispute. So much so that the web editorial staff of Sojourners and I had to reinvestigate and come to terms with the veracity of my simple claim that what’s being proposed is not actually a mosque.

      Our research uncovered that in English “mosque” is used to connote any Muslim place of worship, whereas in Arabic a distinction is made between the size and function of mosques. So true to the stereotype of being generally uninterested in how other cultures speak of themselves, English-speakers seem to have conflated all places Islamic for linguistic convenience. It’s equivalent to calling all places having to do with Christian prayer — i.e. gardens, chapels, retreats, convents, monasteries — “churches.”

      It’s not altogether inaccurate in each instance, but there is value in more precise language. Moreover, we discovered that Park 51, the name of the community center under dispute, is a multi-purpose facilitate that will house a gym, an auditorium, a restaurant and culinary school, a library, art studios, child care, prayer/contemplation/worship space and a memorial for those who lost their lives on 9-11. All facilities will be open to the public, not just Muslims. We also found that the man behind Park 51, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, is the furthest thing from an opponent of Western culture, arguing in his most recent book that America is what an ideal Islamic society would look like because it is pluralistic and peaceful.

      All this was great information to have, but as Jeannie (web editor for Sojourners) and I discussed the matter, it occurred to us that the facts weren’t getting us any closer to the truth. The truth is that the real damage done by those so adept at ginning up such controversies is that they succeed in taking perfectly innocuous (yea, even noble) terms like “mosque” and defaming them to the point that the mere mention of the word conjures up anxiety. The real issue is not what the prayer facilities of Park 51 are called, but rather that by making so much of it, the very word “mosque,” and by extension, anything having to do with Islam, become disqualified and despised in the public square.

      Thankfully, America has a Bill of Rights that protects against such erosions of liberty. Yet the underlying nativist renegotiation of our nation’s best intuitions as articulated in this debate and the one over the Fourteenth Amendment is troubling. If Americans allow ourselves to be led any further down this road, we may find ourselves in such an emotive and irrational place that good sense and common decency can’t redeem us. As Keith Olbermann pointed out:

      “‘They came first for the communists, and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a communist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Jew. Then they came for me, and by that time, no one was left to speak up.” [Quoted from German theologian and Lutheran pastor Martin Niemoller.] … Niemoller was not warning of the Holocaust; he was warning of the willingness of a seemingly rational society to condone the gradual stoking of enmity towards an ethnic or religious group or more than one; warning of the building up of a collective pool of national fear and hate; warning of the moment when the need to purge outstrips even the parameters of the original scapegoating, when new victims are needed because a country has begun to run on a horrible fuel of hatred magnified, amplified, multiplied by politicians and zealots within government and without. Niemoller was not warning of a holocaust: He was warning of the thousand steps before a holocaust became inevitable.

      We pray often, “God bless America,” but if we spurn those blessings — the blessings of our best intuitions, the blessings of each other — with what are we left?
      by Melvin Bray 08-18-2010
      http://blog.sojo.net/2010/08/18/on-religious-liberty-and-the-american-experiment/

    • Anonymous

      In Support of the Cordoba House (Part I)
      by Valerie Elverton Dixon 08-17-2010
      http://blog.sojo.net/2010/08/17/in-support-of-the-cordoba-initiative-mosque-and-community-center/

      Loving in Spirit and in Truth: In Support of the Cordoba House (Part II)
      by Valerie Elverton Dixon 08-18-2010
      http://blog.sojo.net/2010/08/18/loving-in-spirit-and-in-truth-in-support-of-the-cordoba-house-part-ii/

    • Anonymous

      First Amendment Protects Muslims’ Right to Worship
      By: Mike Smith
      http://www.ethicsdaily.com/news.php?viewStory=16345

      Manhattan Mosque: Gesture of Neighborliness, Healing
      By: Michael Kinnamon
      http://www.ethicsdaily.com/news.php?viewStory=16536

      Why Conservatives Should Favor Manhattan Mosque
      By: Mark Whitten
      http://www.ethicsdaily.com/news.php?viewStory=16542

      Why We Must Welcome the Manhattan Mosque
      By: Pastor Bob Cornwall
      http://www.ethicsdaily.com/news.php?viewStory=16493

      Religious Literacy Will Prompt Tolerance of Islam
      By: Pastor Drew Smith
      http://www.ethicsdaily.com/news.php?viewStory=16498

      Mosques, Churches, Terror, and Love
      by Pastor Troy Jackson 08-17-2010
      http://blog.sojo.net/2010/08/17/mosques-churches-terror-and-love/

      Building Bridges to Strengthen Christian-Muslim Relations
      By: David McCollum
      http://www.ethicsdaily.com/news.php?viewStory=16283

      An evangelical supports mosque near Ground Zero
      By Pastor Bob Roberts, Jr.
      http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/eboo_patel/2010/07/religious_freedom-_for_all.html

      Pastor Bob Roberts: A conservative Christian for the Palestinians
      http://palestinenote.com/cs/blogs/news/archive/2010/06/18/bob-roberts-a-conservative-christian-for-the-palestinians.aspx

    • Anonymous

      Mosque Controversy Tests Our Convictions, Civility
      By: Mitch Carnell
      http://ethicsdaily.com/news.php?viewStory=16549

      With the dialogue concerning the construction of a mosque near Ground Zero heating up, I am reminded of a quote from Jonathan Swift: “We have enough religion to make us hate one another, but not enough to make us love one another.”

      The idea to construct a mosque in that location is insensitive to the feelings of the vast majority of Americans, and there is no doubt that a more suitable location could be found.

      As an American, I am about as patriotic as one can get. I get excited by the sight of our flag floating in the breeze, the playing of our national anthem, even the singing of “America the Beautiful.” As a Baptist, I am very deeply troubled by the implications of a denial to build the mosque near Ground Zero.

      It has not been very long in the march of history since Baptists were the ones denied a seat at the table. Our forebears were beaten, fined, jailed and driven out of Massachusetts because of their beliefs. We were and are ridiculed for our theology. We were the ones who fought hard for religious freedom both for those who believed and for those who didn’t. The fact that we struggled for the rights of those who do not believe is often forgotten.

      In the current political scene, candidates are forced to claim some kind of acceptable religious persuasion. Mitt Romney’s Mormon faith brought harsh criticism from other religious groups. In South Carolina, the Republican candidate for governor, Nikki Haley, was targeted because of her Indian parents’ Sikh faith. Even former president Jimmy Carter has had to defend himself against charges of anti-Semitism. The religious wars are never far beneath the surface.

      Both as Americans and as Baptists, we should know that an infringement on religious freedom – no matter how “justified” at the time, no matter how slight such an infringement appears to be – sets off an alarm that should not go unheeded. Today the issue is a mosque. Tomorrow it could be a synagogue, a Mormon temple or a Baptist church.

      We must never sacrifice our hard-won religious freedoms for the expediency of the moment, nor should we find devious means to deny others those same freedoms. The separation of church and state is a tremendous safeguard for both the church and the state. Each has benefited from the separation, and we should not use the state to disallow a religious institution.

      In the long term, if we allow the mosque to go forward, we will preserve those freedoms, and the world will come to see that we truly do believe what we claim to believe.

      Religious freedom requires hard choices and eternal vigilance. As the sides divide for and against the proposal, let’s make a real effort to remember who we are. Those of us who call ourselves Christians need to remember that our actions, including our language, must be Christ-like.

      We should expect to find disagreement within our circle of friends and in our congregations, but we must resist the temptation to demonize those with whom we disagree. Because the potential for disharmony is so great, we need to think through how we will respond to those with whom we disagree so that our witness for Christianity and our relationships are not compromised.

      Mitch Carnell is a consultant in organizational and interpersonal communication. He is the editor of “Christian Civility in an Uncivil World” and an active lay member of First Baptist Church of Charleston, S.C.

    • Anonymous

      Politicians Employ Hate and Fear to Oppose Mosque
      by Miguel A. De La Torre

      By denying others the inherent right to worship, as the Liberty of Worship monument reminds us, I devalue and debase my own faith and beliefs, de la Torre writes. (Photo: David Ball)

      I was recently walking down 14th Street in Washington, D.C., when I was stopped in my tracks by an inscription I read under a monument.

      At the Reagan Building, in the entrance to the U.S. Agency for International Development, is a massive statue of a woman reclining on what appears to be a Victorian couch. Engraved on the pedestal beneath the statue were the following words: “Our liberty of worship is not a concession nor a privilege but an inherent right.”

      As I stood there, staring at these words, I couldn’t help but think of the politically inspired controversy raging throughout the nation about building a mosque close to – not at – Ground Zero. It is obvious that the debate is designed to rally the xenophobic base to vote against a people who, according to the D.C. monument known as “Liberty of Worship,” have an inherent right – not a concession nor a privilege – to worship as their conscience leads them.

      Hate and fear, two powerful political motivators, are unabashedly and unapologetically being employed to rally the worst in Americans. To equate a mosque with terrorists is either the height of ignorance or depth of callous manipulation.

      Equating Al-Qaeda to Islam is like equating the Ku Klux Klan to Christianity. Both organizations may draw their inspiration from their respective faiths, but believers in each tradition would be among the first to disavow any connection between their faith and terrorists who claim to act in the name of that same faith.

      When we consider the past 2,000 years of blood-soaked Christian history, the millions upon millions who were slaughtered in the name of Jesus because they refused to accept our imposed faith (think of religious wars in Europe or the genocide of indigenous people here), we can conclude that those of us who follow the Prince of Peace as Messiah have much more from which to repent.

      Maybe that great modern-day theologian, Woody Allen, said it best: If Jesus were to return to earth, it would take him months to recover from throwing up over everything that has been done in his name.

      To deny people the inherent right to worship because extreme elements of their tradition misused their sacred texts and teachings to advocate mayhem and death would mean that neither Muslims nor Christians would ever be allowed to build any house of worship close to Ground Zero.

      And yet, close to Ground Zero there is a Catholic Church, in spite of its history of Crusades against Muslims or the Inquisition against fellow Christians. Also close to Ground Zero is the Dutch Reform Church with its own history of involvement with the slave trade.

      We can go down the list of every Christian denomination and find pages in our past that we wish would not exist, but they do. And it is important that Christians committed to the Gospel message of salvation and liberation continue to distinguish between the terrorists within their own faith, and believers in Jesus’ actions and words – just as true believers in Allah have made the distinction between Al-Qaeda and the teaching of the Quran.

      And yet, what should be a no-brainer – that all Americans should protect with their lives the freedom to worship, even if the religion is different from their own – has instead become a political hot potato used against the incumbent party.

      Politicians like Newt Gingrich make the false comparison that building a mosque next to Ground Zero is like building a Japanese shrine next to Pearl Harbor. Although the analogy may sound reasonable at first glance, it ignores the inherit biases, if not racism, of the statement.

      First, Pearl Harbor was attacked by a nation; and yes, I would agree that the nation of Japan should not build a monument by Pearl Harbor. The Twin Towers were brought down by a group of individual terrorists, not a nation, people or religion. And I agree that a group of terrorists should not be allowed to build a monument next to Ground Zero.

      But a mosque is not a monument; it is a house of worship. And it is not being built by foreign terrorists, but by Americans who happen to be Muslims and have an inherent right to worship the Creator as their conscience leads them.

      I am a Christian. I believe in the resurrection of my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. My conversion to Christianity radically changed my life and continues to do so. I am a Christian and not a Muslim by choice.

      Nevertheless, because of my faith, because of my belief in the Gospel message, because the very image of this God I worship resides in all humans, I will stand by my Muslim brothers and sisters and demand justice – and demand that the mosque be built.

      Not for their sake, not for the sake of political correctness, nor for some idea of pluralism, but for my own sake. By denying others the inherent right to worship, as the Liberty of Worship monument reminds us, I devalue and debase my own faith and beliefs. I participate not in the physical violence unleashed by the terrorists on 9/11, but in an institutional violence that is just as deadly, for it robs fellow humans of their sacredness and dignity.

      Those in power may succeed in preventing the building of the mosque. They may succeed in continuing to chip away at our freedoms due to their stringent ideologies and doctrinal beliefs.

      If they do, heaven help us, for they truly would continue to create a new America far from the principles of our four freedoms: freedom from want, freedom from fear, freedom of speech and, of course, the freedom to worship.

      Miguel A. De La Torre is professor of social ethics at Iliff School of Theology in Denver.

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