Another act of vandalism directed against Islamic Center of Murfreesboro

Murfreesboro Islamic Center highway signIslamic Center of Murfreesboro volunteers who pick up trash on Bradyville Pike encountered something they can’t clean – black spray paint on their adopt a highway sign.

The culprit covered up the word Islamic on the ICM sign near mile marker 26 on a portion of state Route 99 southeast of Murfreesboro.

The act of vandalism is the latest in a string of vandalism directed at the congregation and its plans to build a new mosque on Veals Road, which is off Bradyville Pike. In January 2010, a vandal spray painted “Not Welcome” on the congregation’s sign announcing its future site. Another sign on the site was later broken in half and someone torched construction equipment on the site last summer.

To make a difference in the community, the ICM entered into a contract with the Tennessee Department of Transportation to volunteer four times this year to clean up two miles of Bradyville Pike between mile markers 24 and 26, said ICM member Ihsan Ansari. He led a group of seven members in early April in cleaning trash from the road and its ditches even before the state, at no cost to the Muslim congregation, erected a pair of signs acknowledging that the ICM adopted this portion of the highway.

Ansari was upset to learn on Friday that one of the adopt a highway signs had been vandalized. “It shows there are people who are ignorant of what Islam is,” Ansari said. “They just have hatred in their blood. They have hatred for Islam. It doesn’t deter me from doing any more volunteer service. I definitely will plan another pick-up event. Hopefully, the sign will be replaced. Hopefully, their outlook can be broadened and opened up.”

Daily News Journal, 21 May 2011

Posted in USA

Muslims targeted in US terrorism cases, report says

CHRGJ reportU.S. government tactics in pursuing domestic terrorism cases target and entrap Muslim community members and fail to enhance public safety, according to a report released Wednesday by a human rights center at New York University’s law school.

The government’s use of surveillance, paid informants and invented terrorism plots prompts human rights concerns, according to the report by NYU’s Center for Human Rights and Global Justice. The authors examined three high-profile cases in New York and New Jersey that they said raised questions about the role of the FBI and New York Police Department in creating the perception of a homegrown terrorism threat.

In the cases, each of which resulted in convictions and lengthy sentences, informants pretending to be Muslims pushed ideas about violent jihad and instigated plots that law enforcement later foiled, the report says. The researchers urged the FBI and NYPD to revise guidelines that govern such investigations.

Los Angeles Times, May 19 2011

See also CHRGJ press release, 18 May 2011

Download the report here

Ketron distributes anti-Muslim DVD to win backing for bill

Losing Our CommunitySen. Bill Ketron has distributed a DVD to his fellow senators that claims Nashville Muslims radicalized a Memphis man who shot an Army recruiter after converting to Islam.

Ketron said the video shows why his Material Support for Designated Entities Act, which gives law enforcement officials in Tennessee the power to declare a person or group a terrorist organization, is needed.

The video makes many claims that are vague or misleading, and local Muslims say it shows that Ketron’s bill is targeted at them, despite his statements to the contrary.

The 16-minute video titled “Losing our Community” was produced by the Boston-based Americans for Peace and Tolerance and the Tennessee Freedom Coalition.

It focuses on members of the Islamic Center of Nashville, where Abdulhakim Muhammad, who was born Carlos Bledsoe, worshipped for a time while he was a student at Tennessee State University. Muhammad later shot and killed a soldier at a military recruiting center in Arkansas, saying his actions were justified because U.S. soldiers were killing Muslims in the Middle East.

Daily Herald, 19 May 2011

See also “Smear tactics behind terror bill”, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, 19 May 2011

Judge rules against Murfreesboro mosque opponents

Murfreesboro mosque protestA judge has ruled that construction of a new mosque in Rutherford County does not harm the residents who sued the county to stop it. The judge did allow plaintiffs to pursue claims the county violated an open meetings law in approving the site plan for the mosque.

Plaintiffs’ attorney Joe Brandon Jr. had argued that the mosque violated his clients’ constitutional rights, claiming that the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro’s members were compelled by their religion to subdue non-Muslims.

In a ruling issued Tuesday, Chancellor Robert Corlew dismissed most of the complaints raised by the 17 plaintiffs, except for claims that the county violated the state Open Meetings Act by not providing proper notice for the meeting at which the mosque site plan was approved. The court has not set a date to hear the open meetings complaint.

“Our families and children have gone through a lot,” said the mosque’s spiritual leader, Imam Ossama M. Bahloul. “I think we can all agree that we should concentrate on common goals, and we’ve tried to be friends with everyone, even with those opposed to the project. It’s obvious this Muslim community did not harm anyone.”

Design plans for the mosque are being finalized, and building permits are being sought, Islamic Center spokesman Saleh Sbenaty said.

Tennessean, 20 May 2011

See also “Mosque foes dealt setback”, Daily News Journal, 20 May 2011

And “Fighting mosques in the name of freedom”, Los Angeles Times, 19 May 2011

Protestor calls for Miami mosque to be ‘razed to the ground’

Mosque should be razed to the groundThe South Florida Imams accused of terrorism were arrested right in front of their mosques, disrupting the neighborhoods around them. Monday night, one of those neighborhoods saw more commotion.

Mosque protester Mark Dubynsky says standing outside the Flagler Mosque in West Miami-Dade with a sign demanding the mosque be razed to the ground was about self-expression. “This is not about hate, this is about not keeping a shrine that promotes hate in the neighborhood,” he told CBS4’s Natalia Zea.

Mosque worshipper Samad Nassirya feels differently. “That’s a threat, he’s threatening us,” he told Zea.

Dubynsky drove from Palm Beach to the mosque to make a statement, after the mosque’s imam Hafiz Khan was arrested and charged with funneling money to terrorists. “I think if your leader, your church, your mosque is supporting terrorism then I think that building, that mosque needs to be torn down,” said Dubynsky.

Nassirya called police Monday evening, saying Dybynsky and his sign were scaring fellow Muslims away from their evening prayer service. “People come here five times to pray and now all the women and children are scared to come here and we’re gonna lose all our people,” he said.

Nassirya is especially upset, because he doesn’t believe the allegations against his imam. “It’s ridiculous. He’s a saintly man, he’s a saintly man.”

CBS Miami, 16 May 2011

Via Islamophobia Today

Cf. “Does the arrest of an imam and his sons reinforce stereotypes of Muslims?”, South Florida Sun Sentinel, 17 May 2011

Arson attack on Houston mosque

Houston mosque arsonA fire was set at a mosque in southwest Houston, and the suspected arsonists were caught on surveillance video.

An automatic alarm went off early Saturday at the Madrasah Islamiah off Bintliff. When firefighters arrived, they saw smoke and quickly worked to put the flames out.

The surveillance footage is brief, but it’s one of few clues investigators have to go on. Awni Kussad, an elder at the mosque, says the video shows what appears to be two young men going to the back of the building, carrying what may be a can of accelerant. The suspects are seen in the video running to a getaway car.

“If you have a problem with the mosque and you like to build fires, we can go build a little fire somewhere. If you want to ask me or find from me what we are all about, we’d be happy to talk to you,” Kussad said. “Don’t just come and burn a place – any place for that matter – and run away like that.”

The alarm sounded when glass was broken, but there was also someone staying inside the mosque who called 9-1-1.

The crime didn’t stop a group of men from Sunday evening prayer. In the next room, the smell of smoke remained and you can see burn marks across the room.

Kussad says fortunately firefighters were able to stop it before much structural damage was done. “It’s not really a lot of damage,” he said. “It’s more moral damage than anything else.”

KTRK, 16 May 2011

Update:  See “CAIR asks FBI to probe Texas mosque arson as hate crime”, CAIR news release, 16 May 2011

Sindy interviews Geller

Pamela Geller UndeadThe Independent on Sunday carries a lengthy interview by Robert Chalmers with Pamela Geller (“American patriot or extremist firebrand?”). You might think this is a bit excessive for a woman who, as Charles Johnson of Little Green Footballs is quoted as saying, “has a very long record of absolute lunacy, mixed with bigotry and racism”.

Nor is the interview the hatchet job you might have hoped for. Chalmers does conclude the piece with a warning that Geller is acting “a magnifying glass capturing, focusing and intensifying the blinding prejudices of her compatriots … and directing them towards a pile of kindling”. But the main thrust of the interview is to present Geller as a personally charming right-wing eccentric.