German president defends school veil ban

German President Christian Wulff wrapped up a trip to the Gulf states on Monday, with a question-and-answer session at the University of Doha in Qatar. Wulff answered a veiled student’s question with a defense of a ban on burqas in German schools.

“The conscious decision to cover yourself up clashes with the duty of the state to educate its children,” he said. “Showing your face is part of a free society.”

A person wearing a burqa in Europe appeared to be calling into question the equality between men and women, Wulff said. “But we don’t want to question this equality.”

Deutsche Welle, 28 February 2011

Why are we not challenging violent Islamism in our schools?

George ReadingsThe question is posed by George Readings of the Quilliam Foundation in a piece for Comment is Free, the purpose of which is to defend Quilliam’s policy of uncritical support for state surveillance of Muslims.

Given the inflammatory character of his charges, you might have thought that Readings would feel it necessary to present some very convincing evidence to substantiate the claim that support for violent Islamism is indeed a serious problem in Britain’s schools and that teachers are refusing to counter it.

Yet Readings provides just three examples to back up these accusations. He refers to the report that Hasib Hussain, one of the 7/7 bombers, made “supportive references” to al-Qaida in his exercise books but was nevertheless regarded by his school as a model student. He also offers a personal anecdote: “When I was at school in Birmingham, one of my contemporaries – a boy of 11 – regularly stated his desire to blow himself up outside the Israeli embassy. Teachers largely stood by bemused.” The third example is that of the “Christmas Day bomber” Umar Abdulmutallab, whose youthful support for violent Islamism consisted in expressing sympathy for the Taliban – at a school in Togo, west Africa.

And that’s the sum total of Readings’ evidence in support of his thesis that sympathy for violent extremism is rife among Britain’s Muslim pupils and schools are standing by allowing it to happen. But this is par for the course with Quilliam, who have never allowed facts to stand in the way of anti-Muslim scaremongering.

Another example that comes to mind is Ed Husain’s baseless claim that Britain is threatened by the development of Islamic ghettos where Muslims are particularly liable to be drawn towards terrorism. However, Husain’s drivel appeared in the Daily Mail, a paper with a long record of anti-Muslim propaganda. Reading’s piece has been published by the Guardian, from whom we might have expected a greater sense of responsibility.

Melbourne: anti-Islam campaigners claim Muslim prayer group will ‘strike terror into the hearts of local residents’

A row has broken out in a Jewish-dominated area of Melbourne over a Muslim prayer group that meets in a council-owned hall.

The St Kilda Islamic Society has held Friday prayers at the facility for years, but the council now wants to change the venue’s permit to formalise the arrangement. That council decision has given opponents of the prayer group the opportunity to get vocal.

The prayer group started in 2008 with a group of Melbourne taxi drivers who were looking for a place to worship. They began meeting at the Alma Road Community House in Melbourne’s inner south-east, an area recognised as a Jewish enclave and does not have a local mosque.

These days about 35 men attend Friday prayers, including Qaiser Mohammed. “They think that we are going to occupy this place. We are here for one hour [a week], just for the Friday prayer,” he said.

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Southern Poverty Law Center lists anti-Islamic NYC blogger Pamela Geller, followers a hate group

Manhattan blogger Pamela Geller and her posse of anti-Islamic protesters have been branded a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Stop the Islamization of America was included in the civil rights organization’s annual roundup of extremist groups – a rogue’s gallery that includes everything from the Ku Klux Klan to white supremacists and Nazis.

Geller’s group was one of the most vocal opponents of the proposed Islamic Center near Ground Zero.The group was also behind ads that were placed on city buses urging Muslims to leave “the falsity of Islam.”

New York Daily News, 25 February 2011

Update:  See “Pam Geller on ‘hate group’ label: ‘A badge of honor'”, TPM, 1 March 2011

Murfreesboro Islamic Center opponent backs anti-sharia bill

Kevin Fisher, one of the plaintiffs suing Rutherford County for approving the future Islamic Center of Murfreesboro, issued the following statement in support of Murfreesboro Republican state Sen. Bill Ketron’s bill to make following Shariah Law a felony in Tennessee:

“I believe the legislation banning Shariah law, sponsored by Sen. Bill Ketron and Rep.Womack (Rockvale community Republican Rep. Rick Womick), is a wonderful example of putting the needs and best interests of the community above divisive politics.”

Daily News Journal, 23 February 2011

Muslim Brotherhood slams Cameron’s ‘arrogance’

Reuters reports that senior Muslim Brotherhood leader Essam el-Erian has “slammed what he described as ‘British arrogance’, saying Prime Minister David Cameron had interfered in the country’s politics during a visit to Cairo this week. Cameron did not meet with the Brotherhood during his trip, and British officials said this was to highlight the fact that Islamists were not the only alternative to Mubarak. ‘Egypt finished with the British occupation 65 years ago’, Erian said.”

Protest and counter-protest over King hearings

Peter King protestA heated protest rally and counter-demonstration took place Tuesday outside the Massapequa office of US Rep. Peter King, R-Seaford, over his plans to hold Congressional hearings on homegrown Islamic terrorism. More than a hundred protestors on both sides of the issue gathered outside the Seaford Republican’s Park Boulevard office to voice their opinions on King’s controversial stance on American Muslims.

Opposing what they call the “demonizing of our Muslim American neighbors,” among the crowd gathered outside the office were the Catholic organization Pax Christi, the Islamic Center of Long Island, the Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives, the Interfaith Alliance of Long Island, and the Muslim Peace Coalition.

Sister Jeanne Clark of Pax Christi lead a group that delivered a letter to King’s office, signed by approximately 80 Long Island religious leaders, asking King to ensure his hearings are fair. “We’re here to stand in solidarity with the Muslim community on Long Island,” Clark said. “We think that Congressman King’s hearings are misguided…that they’re creating a more toxic atmosphere and alienating people.”

Imtiaz Rahi, a Muslim protestor, said he personally finds King’s allegations deeply offensive. “Peter King believes that Muslims and the mosque managements are not cooperating in the investigations,” Rahi said. “This is not true…we are loyal citizens.”

Shaik Ubaid, co-chair of the New York chapter of the Muslim Peace Coalition, said he just wants balanced and impartial treatment for his people. “King is painting the Muslim community with a broad brush,” he said. “We want the hearings to be held in a very scientific way, instead of inviting Muslim-bashers to come and say stupid things.”

In turn, an equally passionate counter-protest gathered outside of police-erected barriers, yelling anti-Muslim and pro-American slogans at demonstrators and waving Gadsden flags high in the air.

The famous yellow flags, displaying a coiled snake and the phrase “Don’t Tread On Me,” have recently become known as an adopted symbol of the American Tea Party movement and at least one sign at the protest referenced the Tea Party, although the counter protestors Patch spoke declined to say if they were affiliated with any organization.

“We’re here to support Peter King, and those people are against Peter King,” said one of the counter-protesters, who declined to be named. “He wants to investigate the people who are behind the mosques, and find out who all these people are, and he wants to question where all the money’s coming from, and these Muslims are against that.”

Another King supporter, who asked to be identified only as Janet, said that this has been a long time in coming. “I think Representative King is doing the right thing, investigating the radical Muslims,” she said. “They’re here…they have terrorist cells, and this should have been done a long time ago. I was wondering why it wasn’t since 9/11. It doesn’t make sense.”

The two opposing groups shouted at each other throughout the protest, and while the situation was tense at times, the presence of Nassau County police officers kept things peaceful.

The Muslim Peace Coalition’s Shaik Ubaid alleged that many of the angry and vocal counter-protesters were, in fact, not local residents. “We expected it – these are people who are bussed in,” he said. “In a climate of fear and insecurity, it’s very easy to hate-monger.”

King remained defiant in the face of the protest. “The Long Island region has a population of almost three million people, barely 100 showed up to protest the hearings,” he said in a statement. “I will not be intimidated, I will not back down, the hearings are going forward.”

Patch.com, 22 February 2011