President Barack Obama's remarks supporting the right to
build an Islamic center that includes a mosque near Ground
Zero reverberated across the country, nationalizing a
passionate debate over the project. The dispute is the most
prominent in a series of debates around the country where
Muslims have sought to build mosques. From New York to
California, opposition to mosque building is a constant
reality. Aspiring and elected politicians are rabid in their
determination to exaggerate the inappropriateness of the
mosque so near Ground Zero.
Shamefully, Republican leaders and right wing media
pundits have made it their objective to use the "Park
51" issue not only to
attack Islam,
Muslims but also to debase President Obama's popularity
and speciously as a tool in the upcoming midterm elections.
Gratefully, a few Republican leaders have sided with what's
right. Mayor Bloomberg of New York City and New Jersey
Governor Chris Christie have decided that scapegoating
American Muslims was in fact too costly for the party's
political chances. The words of the Governor, breaking away
with statements of others from his party, are an assurance
that America will readjust its moral focus and find more
productive venues to discuss the issues of the day.
Supportive statements from the President and other officials
are very reassuring to American Muslims and those who hold
sacred the US Constitution. These reassurances play a
critically needed role in convincing our friends (and foes)
around the world that America treats all of its citizens
equally, without prejudice. That its commitment to the
struggle for human and democratic rights is genuine, the
enjoyment of which is availed to all of its citizens.
We categorically reject the notion that
mosques are somehow spoiling the American landscape much
like a cellular tower, a porn shop, or a nuclear reactor.
NIMBY, “not in my backyard”, has been the weapon anti-mosque
advocates have used. Hypocritically, they differentiate
between what is right and what's legal. American Muslims and
their places of worship are an integral part of America’s
pluralistic fabric. Their contributions, commitment, and
patriotism have stood the test of time.
American Muslims have suffered plenty as a result of the
911 attacks. They lost their loved ones in the rubble of the
WTC disaster and collectively suffered from never ending
humiliation, suspicion, and denial of their religious and
civil rights. While I genuinely grieve with the families of
9/11 victims, I refuse to accept the baseless charge of
insensitivity to their feelings. It was not fellow American
citizens who brought this catastrophe upon our nation.
American Muslims were the intended target just as American
Christians and Jews. Building a mosque anywhere in America
is not an expression of indifference or dominance. It is
only but an affirmation of our rights (and our growing
population needs.)
It needs restating that America’s war on terror is
against Al-Qaeda and not Islam. Al-Qaida is a group of
terrorists using a distorted form of Islam and they have
killed by far more Muslims than Christians combined. To
suspect every Muslim, especially fellow citizens who are
Muslims, as somehow connected to this bastardized form of
Islam is itself a terrible distortion of America core
values. To say that Muslims who have prayed within 12 blocks
of Ground Zero for 27 years cannot pray in a neighborhood
because it is too close to Ground Zero is to say the Muslims
who died at the World Trade Center were not the same as the
rest of the victims that horrific day.
At times I have almost suggested that Americans Muslims
forgo their constitutionally-protected right in the hope of
easing the tension; removing the doubt and forging a lasting
camaraderie with the rest of society. But what about the
feelings of American Muslims who now feel perpetually
condemned to a life of suspicion and exclusion? Alas, I,
sometimes say that, after all, the site is not God-mandated
and I am sure similarly appropriate sites can be found to
accommodate the multi-goal plans of Park51.
But I realize that such concessions will "proof" the
opposition's allegations about our faith and our community;
will render guilt-by-association an acceptable tactic.
Above all, in the end, our capitulation will hurt the
foundations of our constitutional democracy which most
spectacularly protects religious freedom from both private
and official infringement. And so it was George Washington's
famous words to a Jewish congregation over two hundred years
ago: "All possess alike liberty of conscience and immunities
of citizenship. It is now no more that toleration is spoken
of, as if it was by the indulgence of one class of people,
that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent national
gifts."
Therefore, our community's mandate is to persevere. There
is an understandable impulse to just to look the other way
at the anti-Muslim sentiments to dismiss the grandiose
mobilization claims as just one more fringe right-wing nut
job. Not because the “claims” are anything other than
preposterous, but rather because there is far too much
public belief in these preposterous assertions for anyone
concerned with public education and mobilization to so
carelessly write them off. And with the clear links between
Islamophobic and prejudicial treatment of certain American
citizens, the implications cannot be easily dismissed.
Those who hate American Muslims believe we are lesser
citizens, deserving second class treatment. While their loud
voices seem to echo throughout the national landscape,
thankfully, the anti-Islam folks will see victory as but an
illusion. Their fight is fundamentally against the American
constitution. If Muslims are the target now, who is next?
And there will be a next target if we as a nation do not
defend our Bill of Rights and the Constitution.
America's past ma be redemptively promising. We are the
new alien intruders, much the way Chinese, Japanese, Jews,
Catholics and other ethnic and religious groups have been
perceived by past generations. Opponents of the American
Muslims ought to learn from our history that, the sooner we
accept the newcomers onto our soil, the sooner they are
likely to end up being willing and productive
participants in American society. American Muslims
pray this awakening. Meanwhile Arab and Muslim Republican,
feeling
betrayed and outcast by their party's elite, may now
have the needed motivation to en masse abandon their party.
As I hoped in my last post, there will come a day soon
when American mosques will be American as apple pie. And
America will be the better for it.
Aref Assaf, PhD. President of American Arab Forum, a
think-tank specializing in Arab and Muslim affairs.
www.aafusa.org