Islamophobes target reading list at Brooklyn college

How Does it Feel to be a ProblemIn New York City this week, an institution is being accused of using Islam to subvert American culture – but this time, it’s on the other side of the East River.

The controversy over Brooklyn College’s Common Reader program doesn’t hold a candle to the Ground Zero mosque debacle – thankfully, Sarah Palin has yet to tweet on the subject – but it’s gotten more than a few people riled up in the past few days. The most riled might be Bruce Kesler: the conservative blogger and Brooklyn College alum wrote the college out of his will when they assigned Moustafa Bayoumi’s How Does It Feel To Be A Problem? Being Young and Arab in Americato all incoming freshmen.

Then there’s the National Association of Scholars, a conservative group that’s already leading an attack on college reading lists across the country. They were quick to support Kesler: “[the book] aims to establish Arab and Muslim Americans as victims and indict American society for making them so.” It all fits perfectly with the growing sentiment that Muslims – led by President Obama, of course – are working to destroy America, but it’s cloaked in the guise of a real academic debate.

It’s a shame that Moustafa Bayoumi’s book, a thoughtful and highly regarded portrait of the group living with this growing antagonism, has to be at the heart of it.

Elizabeth Minkel at the New Yorker Book Bench blog, 1 September 2010

Pamela Geller joins NSS and Richard Dawkins in promoting Pat Condell’s Islamophobic rants

Pat Condell and Pamela Geller

Pamela Geller is evidently to be counted among the admirers of British “comedian” Pat Condell. She has posted his latest rant against the “Ground Zero mosque” on her website Atlas Shrugs to help promote the Stop Islamization of America demonstration in New York next week at which Geert Wilders will be a featured speaker. So has Jihad Watch, the website of her fellow right-wing Islam-basher and co-leader of SIOA Robert Spencer (“Condell’s commentary is passionate, articulate, wide-ranging, and hard-hitting”). And today David Horowitz’s FrontPage Magazine follows suit (“Don’t miss Pat Condell’s new hard-hitting video on the stunt Islam is trying to pull off in America”).

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FBI defends invitation to Robert Spencer

Spencer and Geller3The FBI is defending its invitation to a prominent critic of Islam in America, who is also one of the leaders of the fight to stop a downtown Manhattan mosque and Islamic Center.

The Council on American Islamic Relations complained late last month that Robert Spencer, who runs the Jihad Watch site and is co-founder of Stop the Islamization of America, had spoken to the Tidewater Joint Terrorism Task Force, a combination of state, federal, and local law enforcement centered in Norfolk, Virginia.

“Our nation’s law enforcement personnel should not receive training from the head of a hate group that seeks to demonize Islam and to prevent American Muslims from exercising their rights as citizens,” said CAIR National Communications Director Ibrahim Hooper, who also noted that Spencer and blogger Pamela Geller recently published a book subtitled, “The Obama Administration’s War on America.”

But the chief division for the Norfolk FBI field office, Phil Mann, defended the invitation to Spencer.

“We invite speakers who represent a variety of viewpoints and the special agent in charge of the Norfolk office has invited local Muslim leaders to speak to his staff. That doesn’t mean we endorse our adopt the view of any particular speaker,” Mann said. “Broad knowledge is essential for us to better understand and respond to the threats that we face. Knowledge also helps us defeat ignorance and strengthen relationships with the diverse communites that we serve.”

Spencer wrote on his blog that his meeting with the FBI had been “encouraging.” “I met many conscientious agents determined to understand the jihad threat and resist it in all its forms,” he wrote.

Ben Smith at Politico, 31 August 2010

The FBI’s response has been hailed by Pamela Geller under the headline “FBI Refuses to Cave to Criminal, Hamas-linked, Muslim Brotherhood Proxy, CAIR. Stands By Spencer”.

9/11 families’ group says Geller’s anti-mosque protest disrespects victims, calls on participants to withdraw

The rally set for the ninth anniversary of Sept. 11 against the Ground Zero-area mosque, which is being organized by conservative blogger Pamela Geller, is drawing opposition from a key 9/11 victims’ families group that is asking that the event’s date be moved and, if it isn’t, that participants back out.

The word from “Where to Turn,” a group that was launched by Staten Islander Dennis McKeon – who is not a victims’ relative himself but who started a clearinghouse of information related to the attacks and to Ground Zero with Staten Island families – came in an email to their list.

The email says that “such activities …disrespect the memories of our loved ones on this sacred day at this sacred site.”

The email notes there’s an anti-mosque rally planned and also says there are reports of a pro-mosque rally being put in place – and Where to Turn is opposing both. (This is the first I’d heard of a pro-mosque event for that day).

Maggie Haberman at Politico, 30 August 2010

Majority of Republicans believe that Obama wants to ‘impose Islamic law around the world’

According to Newsweek opinion poll, a majority of Republicans believe that President Barack Obama “sympathizes with the goals of Islamic fundamentalists who want to impose Islamic law around the world”. 14% of respondents said that it was “definitely true”, while 38% said that it was probably true – bringing the total to 52%. 33% were prepared to concede that the accusation was “probably not true”, but only 7% said it was “definitely not true”. In addition, 59% said they believed the president favoured “the interests of Muslims over other groups of Americans”.

(Full poll results here.)

Via the Huffington Post, 30 August 2010

For the sort of hysterical right-wing misinformation campaign that has influenced Republican supporters’ views on Obama and Islam, see Bartholomew’s Notes on Religion, 31 August 2010

Update:  See also Adam Serwer’s comments at The Plum Line blog.

Challenging Islamophobia in the US

Is America Islamophobic“Depending on the poll one consults, anywhere from 54 percent to 61 percent, and as many as 68 percent of Americans, oppose the building of an Islamic community center two blocks from ‘Ground Zero’, the site of the World Trade Center. Polls, of course, are notoriously inaccurate measures of public opinion.

“Depending on the framing of the question, the positioning of a question among a series of others, the sample population, and other factors, one might expect different results. Nevertheless, a majority of the public seems to be opposed to the construction of the Islamic center, known as the Cordoba House or Park51 Project.

“What do we make of this? Has the U.S. as a society taken a precipitous turn against Muslims? Or as the cover of Timemagazine asks, ‘Is America Islamophobic’? We might also ask if the U.S. is becoming like Europe – where several nations, with popular support, have taken actions such as banning the veil in schools, putting a halt to the construction of minarets, etc.?”

Excellent article by Deepa Kumar, analysing the campaign against the “Ground Zero mosque” and outlining a strategy for the US Left.

MRzine, 31 August 2010

And, speaking of “Ground Zero mosque” polls, the New York Post has the results of the latest one. (Full poll results here.)

Faith groups call on Obama administration take action against anti-Muslim hate

As invective about the proposed Islamic center in Manhattan gets uglier, the Reform movement has joined with several other faith and advocacy groups in calling on the Obama administration to take stronger measures to “protect millions of American Muslims” and to take stronger steps to protect religious freedom in today’s overheated political climate.

The coalition, representing the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, the Interfaith Alliance, the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty and Muslim Advocates met with Justice Department officials yesterday and urged the administration to make a strong statement “underscoring the federal government’s commitment to religious freedom, condemning hate crimes and other forms of harassment and discrimination targeting the Muslim and other faith communities, and stating that the Department of Justice will hold perpetrators accountable.”

The group also wants the DOJ Civil Rights division to lead a “coordinated federal response to the backlash” against Muslim-Americans, and to “direct its Community Relations Service (CRS) offices to to act to defuse tensions where incidents have already occurred and in areas where incitement activities are expected to take place, such as Gainesville, FL where a church is planning to burn copies of the Quran on the anniversary of September 11.”

Also on their list of suggestions: making better use of the recently passed federal hate crimes law and creating a Civil Rights Division hotline for reporting hate crimes.

The Jewish Week, 31 August 2010

See also ABC News, 31 August 2010

Threats, intimidation part of investigation of arson at Murfreesboro Islamic Center site

Not WelcomeThreats and intimidation are part of a widening investigation into the vandalism at the site of the planned new Islamic Center in Murfreesboro.

“We are not going to stand for these intimidation tactics in our community,” said Claire Rogers of Middle Tennesseans for Religious Freedom.

Sheriff’s deputies are now patrolling the mosque construction site every hour, 24 hours a day.

This increase in scrutiny came after a piece of heavy equipment owned by Ole South Excavating of Murfreesboro was set on fire Saturday. The company is clearing land for the new Islamic Center.

NewsChannel 5 has learned that the vandalism happened after the center received an ugly, threatening voicemail earlier in the week. The caller disparaged Islam and then said, “You need to get out of the country now.”

There’s also evidence outlined in a police report that someone vandalized two back loaders also owned by Ole South at an entirely different location. That incident also happened early Saturday morning. Some believe this is an effort to try to intimidate contractors into not working on the project. Ole South’s owner says he will continue to honor the contract.

News Channel 5, 30 August 2010

See also TPM, 31 August 2010

Via Michael Tomasky

Vigil in support of Murfreesboro Islamic Center meets opposition

Murfreesoboro vigilMark West believes in freedom of religion. That belief brought West out Monday night to a candle light vigil in support of local Muslims in front of the Rutherford County Courthouse. It also inspired the lifelong Baptist to make a donation to the building fund for a new mosque near Murfreesboro.

West was among about 150 people who attended Monday’s night’s vigil, organized in response to the recent fire at the construction site for the new mosque. Many in the crowd held candles or signs proclaiming such messages as “We’re all in this together” and “My God is not a bigot.” They also joined in singing “We Shall Overcome.”

The gathering came two days after a fire of suspicious origin damaged construction equipment at the site of the planned mosque. Organizers said the vigil was intended to encourage mosque supporters and opponents to demonstrate for a community free of violence, arson and other such activities.

On the outskirts a small but vocal group of mosque opponents made their presence known. Collier Hopson drove his pickup to the vigil. In the back was a plywood sign bearing the spray-painted words “No Mosque.” He said that local Christians have a right to build churches. But mosques should be banned, he said. “I don’t support their beliefs,” he said. “No one wants them here.”

Kimberly Kelly agreed. She said that she is afraid of Muslims and that the violence from Iraq and other countries could come to Murfreesboro. She said if the fire at the mosque site was arson, as many suspect, Muslims deserved it. “I think it was a piece of their own medicine,” she said. “They bombed our country.”

Mosque opponents and supporters squared off for some heated debate during the vigil. Rachel Weese told Hopson and two of his friends that their views were un-American.

The Tennessean, 31 August 2010

See also Nashville City Paper, 31 August 2010

And Gail Kerr’s column in The Tennessean, 31 August 2010