Fight over mosque is bigotry in disguise
BY AREF ASSAF
Daily Record
Monday, September 24, 2007
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The unprecedented public uproar over the planned Rockaway mosque has been partly
premised on the false view that American Muslims are responsible for acts
committed by other Muslims anywhere in the world and, as such, should be denied
a place of worship.
It is most unreasonable to blame every Muslim for the crimes committed by some
in their faith. We do not blame every Christian for the Crusaders' wars, for the
Spanish Inquisition, for slavery and for the Holocaust. American Muslims are by
far the most moderate of Muslims since the greatest majority has nothing to do
with terrorism. Their household income is among the highest in the nation due to
their work ethics, devotion to educational excellence and family values. Their
crime rate is among the lowest because they are law-abiding citizens and their
faith dictates much of their lives.
The outrage against the mosque has little to do with the declared objections;
traffic concerns and loss of tax ratable. It has a lot to do with denying Muslim
citizens the same rights bigots take for granted.
Other objectors, while appearing civil and constrained, are no less intolerant.
Muslims may have a mosque and worship their God, but not in my back yard. NIMBY
used to describe people's reactions to garbage dumps, a porn shop, or a nuclear
reactor. In Rockaway, it now includes a Muslim place of worship. Since when is a
place of worship so disdained with such virulent opposition? This is a place
where alcohol is never consumed, where no music is ever played, where no immoral
acts are ever tolerated. It will be, however, a place for spiritual healing, for
quiet and retrospect prayers, and a welcoming place for inter-religious outreach
and volunteerism.
The 20 Muslim families in Rockaway and indeed the Muslim community in Morris
County have been here for decades, paying their dues and diligently enhancing
the quality of life for all. They have also been praying in rented halls and
other humble places. All they are asking for is a place of their own.
The Morris County Muslim community will not simply wither away if Rockaway
rejects their mosque application. Their existence is not predicated on a rented
or owned place of worship. The mission of the newly founded Islamic Center of
Morris County is steeped in building a tolerant, pluralistic society. Interfaith
dialogue, community outreach and volunteerism are core objectives of our
organization.
Irrefutably, the great majority of Muslims oppose, condemn, and dissociate
themselves from the rhetoric, agenda and acts of the extremists amongst them.
When people cry Muslims' "silence" in the face of terrorism, it is indeed the
silence of the victim so overwhelmed by the savagery inflicted by extremists
professing their faith.
Our condemnation of terrorism has been unequivocal and unconditional. The reason
our fellow Americans do not hear our cries of condemnation is partly our fault
for not being so media savvy and proactive. But more importantly, it is the
mainstream media and the powers behind it that have muffled our otherwise
deafening opposition to and dissociation with terrorists. Furthermore, the media
silence about moderate and pluralistic Muslims then filters, or better, refracts
through the prejudice of bigots in the media audience, who seek to turn the war
against terror into a war against all of Islam, and thus, against all American
Muslims.
The tax and traffic concerns, while legitimate, are in reality a clever
camouflaging of selfishness, bigotry and moral contradictions. It bears
witnessing the immortal words of Prophet Muhammad: "A man's faith is never
complete until he wishes for his neighbor that he desires for himself."
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Aref Assaf, of Denville, is president of the American Arab Forum. Reach him at
Aref@ aafusa.org.
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