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NEW YORK: It is "unethical,
insensitive and inhumane" to oppose the
planned mosque near ground zero, more than
50 leading Muslim organizations said
Wednesday as they cast the intense debate as
a symptom of religious intolerance in
America.
The imam behind the project, meanwhile, was
preparing to return to the US after a
taxpayer-funded good will tour to the
Mideast, where he said the debate is about
much more than "a piece of real estate."
Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf sidestepped questions
about whether he would consider moving the
$100 million mosque and Islamic community
center farther from where Islamic terrorists
flew two planes into the World Trade Center.
Instead, he stressed the need to embrace
religious and political freedoms in the
United States.
Leaders of the Majlis Ash-Shura of
Metropolitan New York, an Islamic leadership
council that represents a broad spectrum of
Muslims in the city, gathered on the steps
of City Hall to issue a statement calling
for a stop to religious intolerance and
affirming the right of the center's
developers to build two blocks north of the
site of the 2001 terrorist attacks.
"We support the right of our Muslim brothers
who wish to build that center there," said
Imam Al Amin Abdul Latif, president of the
Majlis Ash-Shura. "However, the bigger issue
and the broader issue is the issue of ethnic
and religious hatred being spread by groups
trying to stop the building of mosques and
Islamic institutions across the country."
This is the first time that the council as a
body has spoken out on the weeks-old debate
over the proposed center.
"When the issue became hotter and hotter,
and people made more statements against the
mosques, then we decided to get involved in
it," said Syed Sajid Husain, secretary
general of the council. He said the process
of bringing together the leaders to agree on
a statement also took a handful of meetings.
Leaders of the council said they were
calling attention to what they claimed was
an anti-Islamic climate, and that the
development of a center near ground zero is
simply one example.
They also cited a suspicious fire that
damaged construction equipment at the site
of a future mosque in Tennessee that is
being investigated by the FBI, and the
successful opposition to the proposed
conversion of a property owned by a Catholic
Church into a mosque and community center on
Staten Island, a New York City borough off
the southern tip of Manhattan.
Rick Lazio, a Republican candidate for
governor of New York who has opposed the
mosque in lower Manhattan, has said
criticism is "not an issue of religion."
Like many critics, he has said it is an
issue of being sensitive to the families of
9/11 victims and transparency regarding the
center's funding.
A Quinnipiac University poll released
Tuesday showed 71 percent of New Yorkers
want the developers to voluntarily move the
project.
Islamic leaders on Wednesday said they would
support a move to another location, if
that's what the imam and his supporters
choose to do. But they emphasized that
Muslims also were killed in the terrorist
attacks and were first responders.
"We declare unethical, insensitive and
inhumane, the notion that our
co-religionists are not entitled to the
respect of a place of worship according to
their faith, near the location where men and
women of our religion worked, lived and died
— just like other people," the group's
statement said in part.
The group is not associated with the planned
Islamic center but is representative of a
significant number of New York Muslim
leaders.
Rauf has been on a US State
Department-sponsored interfaith tour of the
Middle East for several weeks and is
currently in the United Arab Emirates, said
State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley,
speaking to reporters in Washington, D.C.
Rauf was expected to return to the US on
Thursday.
The imam told a group that included
professors and policy researchers in Dubai
on Tuesday that the dispute over the mosque
"has expanded beyond a piece of real estate
and expanded to Islam in America and what it
means for America." Rauf is named as a
director of a recently formed nonprofit
organization spearheading efforts to raise
money for the project, along with a core
group of developers that own the property
where the center would be established. The
developers say they are negotiating with the
city to reduce and pay back over $225,000 in
back taxes owed on the property.
Early plans for the Islamic center near
ground zero call for a swimming pool, a
Sept. 11 memorial open to the public and a
prayer space.
Source:
http://islamic-world.net
Date:2010/09/12
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