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View Full Version : Bigots in "America's heartland" telling Muslims Americans they're "not welcome"



Adi Shankara
9th August 2010, 05:50
http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/Global/story.asp?S=12945130


By TRAVIS LOLLER
Associated Press Writer
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. (AP) - Muslims trying to build houses of worship in the nation's heartland, far from the heated fight in New York over plans for a mosque near ground zero, are running into opponents even more hostile and aggressive.

Foes of proposed mosques have deployed dogs to intimidate Muslims holding prayer services and spray painted "Not Welcome" on a construction sign, then later ripped it apart.

The 13-story, $100 million Islamic center that could soon rise two blocks from the site of the Sept. 11 attacks would dwarf the proposals elsewhere, yet the smaller projects in local communities are stoking a sharper kind of fear and anger than has showed up in New York.

In the Nashville suburb of Murfreesboro, opponents of a new Islamic center say they believe the mosque will be more than a place of prayer. They are afraid the 15-acre site that was once farmland will be turned into a terrorist training ground for Muslim militants bent on overthrowing the U.S. government.

"They are not a religion. They are a political, militaristic group," said Bob Shelton, a 76-year-old retiree who lives in the area.

Shelton was among several hundred demonstrators recently who wore "Vote for Jesus" T-shirts and carried signs that said: "No Sharia law for USA!," referring to the Islamic code of law. Others took their opposition further, spray painting the sign announcing the "Future site of the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro" and tearing it up.

In Temecula, Calif., opponents brought dogs to protest a proposed 25,000-square-foot mosque that would sit on four acres next to a Baptist church. Opponents worry it will turn the town into haven for Islamic extremists, but mosque leaders say they are peaceful and just need more room to serve members.

Islam is a growing faith in the U.S., though Muslims represent less than 1 percent of the country's population. Ten years ago, there were about 1,200 mosques nationwide. Now there are roughly 1,900, according to Ihsan Bagby, professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Kentucky and a researcher on surveys of American mosques.

The growth involves Islamic centers expanding to accommodate more Muslims - as is the case in New York, California and Tennessee - as well as mosques cropping up in smaller, more isolated communities, Bagby said.

A 2007 survey of Muslim Americans by the Pew Research Center found that 39 percent of adult Muslims living in the United States were immigrants that had come here since 1990.

"In every religious community, one of the things that has happened over the course of immigration is that people get settled and eventually build something thatsays, 'We're here! We're not just camping,'" said Diana Eck, a professor of Comparative Religion at the Harvard University. "In part, that's because those communities have put down roots in America and made this their home."

Before the demonstration in Murfreesboro, a fundraiser was held for the new community center. Children behind a folding table sold homemade wooden plaques, door hangers and small serving trays decorated with glitter and messages like, "Peace," "I love being a Muslim" and "Freedom of Religion."

Mosque leader Essam Fathy, who helped plan the new building in Murfreesboro, has lived there for 30 years.

"I didn't think people would try that hard to oppose something that's in the Constitution," he said. "The Islamic center has been here since the early '80s, 12 years in this location. There's nothing different now except it's going to be a little bigger."

Bagby said that hasn't stopped foes from becoming more virulent.

"It was there before, but it didn't have as much traction. The larger public never embraced it," he said. "The level of anger, the level of hostility is much higher in the last few years."

The Murfreesboro mosque is one of three planned in the Nashville area that have drawn recent scrutiny.

Zuhdi Jasser, president of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy, a nonprofit that advocates for reform and modernization of Islam, said opposing mosques is no way to prevent terrorism.

Neighbors didn't want his family to build a mosque in 1979 in Neenah, Wis., because they didn't understand who Muslims were.

"If the Wisconsin mosque had not been allowed to be built, I, at 17, might have put up walls and become a different person," he said. "If we start preventing these from being built, the backlash will be increased radicalization."

A study by professors at the Duke University's Sanford School of Public Policy and the University of North Carolina backs up Jasser's statement. The study found that mosques, religious bookstores and other communal associations that bring Muslim-Americans together helps prevent radicalization.

In Murfreesboro, Imam Ossama Bahloul said the center has hired a security guard for Friday prayer services and a security camera constantly pans the parking lot and doors. Their fears are not without cause.

Two years ago, several men broke into the Islamic Center of Columbia, about 30 miles southwest of Murfreesboro, and torched it with molotov cocktails, stealing a stereo system and painting swastikas and "White Power" on the front of the building.

Bahloul said he hopes the controversy will die down with time. He said the situation has been hardest on the children.

"The second generation is facing a huge challenge because they did not think even for a second before that someone would say, 'You are not welcome.'"

Red Commissar
9th August 2010, 06:00
Yeah, I heard about these developments in Tennessee and other areas as well.

I don't think it takes much to see there's ton of islamophobia in the United States, and certain politicians and media figures certainly don't help but rather fan those flames.

Of course they deny they are bigots and claim they are merely "concerned" citizens. Yet actions such as these prove otherwise.

A Revolutionary Tool
9th August 2010, 06:16
Where in California is this? I want to show up with a poster saying "This is not a Christian Nation" or something if it's nearby. That's if they ever try to protest again. Maybe get an anti-racist/anti-fascist organization involved because this is just ridiculous. I swear next time there is a church being built I'm going to protest it just to be a dick.

NGNM85
9th August 2010, 08:51
Although I'm opposed to building mosques, temples, churches, etc., (We already have far too many.) in general, I find this sort of bigotry deplorable.

IllicitPopsicle
9th August 2010, 10:03
Where in California is this? I want to show up with a poster saying "This is not a Christian Nation" or something if it's nearby. That's if they ever try to protest again. Maybe get an anti-racist/anti-fascist organization involved because this is just ridiculous. I swear next time there is a church being built I'm going to protest it just to be a dick.

Temecula, CA. It's on the 15 heading south towards San Diego. I used to live there. It's despicable. I didn't think they were so right wing.

Comrade Gwydion
9th August 2010, 10:57
The 13-story, $100 million Islamic center that could soon rise two blocks from the site of the Sept. 11 attacks would dwarf the proposals elsewhere, yet the smaller projects in local communities are stoking a sharper kind of fear and anger than has showed up in New York.

I read somewhere that it was actually a 13-story, $100 million community centre, with just one floor being an Islamic Prayer Centre, while the others held stuff like yoga, art-classes and whatever

Kiev Communard
9th August 2010, 11:09
It's such a hypocrisy. I wonder how these obscurantists would react if some Native Americans had showed up near their church with posters telling "Yankee Protestants unwelcome, they stole our land. They're not a religion, they're a militaristic group". Of course, in this case those Native Americans would be slightly more correct :D.

Communist Guy
9th August 2010, 17:24
This is a disgrace. Everyone has the right to believe in any religion they want.

Since the fall of communism, Islam has been the main target of the discrimination and the biased media.

The Media make them look bad.
Extremists make the moderates (who are generally good people) look bad.
etc.

People seem to judge Islam on the taliban and on crazy extremists which is not the case.
Islam, contrary to popular belief gives a lot of rights to women, more so than many other religions. The crazy things that happen in 'Muslim countries' do not at all represent Islam or the Quran.

And this maybe be going slightly off topic but I think saying that Islam and leftism are incompatible is wrong.

There are many Islamic leftist groups around as the majority of Muslims are very leftist.

Islam, for example, bans interest, which only serves to make the rich richer.

It is obligatory in Islam to give 2.5% of your wealth (only if you are able to pay it eg. someone who has nothing gives charity by being kind and good to people) a year to charity. In fact this is one of the Five Pillars of Islam.

But back onto topic:

Telling anyone they're not welcome anywhere is wrong (except for maybe telling a boy hes not welcome in the girls bathroom :blushing:).

InuyashaKnight
9th August 2010, 17:54
Damn it!

The Red Next Door
10th August 2010, 02:53
No wonder most Christian missionaries get their head fed to them on a plate full of hate.

the last donut of the night
10th August 2010, 02:56
Although I'm opposed to building mosques, temples, churches, etc., (We already have far too many.) in general, I find this sort of bigotry deplorable.

It's more than deplorable. It's not something to be disappointed over. It's something that we have to destroy.

FreeFocus
10th August 2010, 02:58
It's such a hypocrisy. I wonder how these obscurantists would react if some Native Americans had showed up near their church with posters telling "Yankee Protestants unwelcome, they stole our land. They're not a religion, they're a militaristic group". Of course, in this case those Native Americans would be slightly more correct :D.

Slightly?