Terrorist accusation stuns Nashville mosque

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — During congressional hearings looking into whether some mosques are breeding grounds for Muslim extremists, a Memphis father said the Al-Farooq Mosque led his son down that very path. Melvin Bledsoe said he noticed a big change in his son after he joined the Mosque.

Carlos Bledsoe, who changed his name to Abdula Hakin Muhamad, is accused of shooting three army recruiters in Little Rock, Ark. One of the soldiers died from his injuries.

Al-Farooq Mosque officials were stunned when they heard the accusation that Muhamad became an extremist after joining the mosque. “I think it’s baseless and Mr. Bledsoe has limited knowledge of his son,” said Mohamad Shukri, a mosque spokesman.

Shukri remembers Muhamad as a normal young man who played basketball with other young members of the mosque. “He was just one of these kids, and all of a sudden he disappeared,” said Shukri. What happened to the former Tennessee State University student after he left the mosque is unknown.

Shukri is also concerned that his mosque is being blamed for the actions of one person. “Demonizing our faith because of one person is bad for Americans. America is suppose to protect everyone. It’s unfair and absurd, because it puts a community in danger and opens the door to suspicions in our community,” said Shukri.

Mosque officials told Channel 4 News that hate fliers are frequently found posted on the building. The latest flier was particularly disturbing. “It says that Muhamad is a dog, Islam is the enemy,” said Shukri.

WSMV Nashville, 16 March 2011

Read the statement by the Al-Farooq Islamic Center in response to Bledsoe’s accusation here.

For an earlier example of anti-Muslim bigotry directed against the mosque see here.

Update:  LoonWatch draws our attention to this article by Sarah Posner.

CAN and ACT! for America protest against Feisal Abdul Rauf

Chapel Hill, North Carolina — Calling Feisal Abdul Rauf an “imposter imam” who “would again victimize the families of 9/11” by building the Ground Zero mosque in Manhattan, retired New York City firefighter Tim Brown labeled the building a Muslim “victory tower” that should never be built at the site where nearly 3,000 people died.

Brown found a receptive audience for his comments at the Carolina Inn on Wednesday night, delivered as part of a free program offered by the Christian Action Network and ACT! for America.

About 60 people applauded in support of GOP U.S. Rep. Peter King’s congressional hearings on Islamic radicalism. They jeered to express their scorn over Rauf’s contention that the U.S. Constitution is Sharia law compliant. And they dabbed their eyes during the screening of the emotional documentary movie “Sacrificed Survivors: The Untold Story of the Ground Zero Mega-Mosque,” which focused on families of 9/11 victims.

Brown, a decorated first responder whose fire unit colleagues perished in the World Trade Center rescue, said the radical Islamic terrorists who “smashed the planes into the buildings and killed nearly 3,000 innocent people … have the same belief and same ideology as Imam Rauf, who is speaking across campus right now. They just have different ideas on how to impose that ideology in America, Sharia law.”

“Imam Rauf says the United States Constitution is Sharia compliant”, Brown said. “They fell for that in England. They fell for that in France, and they fell for that in Germany, and all three of them now say multiculturalism is a failure.”

Durham Herald Sun, 17 March 2011


Over the road at the University of North Carolina, nearly 600 people came to listen to Feisal Abdul Rauf speak. CAN and ACT! held a protest outside the lecture hall after the end of their own poorly attended meeting and a counter-demonstration was organised by the International Socialist Organization.

Republican politician compares sharia to polio

Shariah, or Islamic law, is like an infection that could quickly spread and undermine Missouri’s judicial system, and a proposed state constitutional amendment is the way to stop it, the bill’s sponsor told a House committee yesterday.

Rep. Don Wells, R-Cabool, said his measure, which has more than 100 co-sponsors, is like a vaccine. “Did you get a polio vaccine?” Wells asked during an exchange with Rep. Jason Kander, D-Kansas City.

“So Shariah law is like polio; it is a terminal disease?” Kander asked.

“Absolutely,” Wells said.

When making decisions, state courts shall “uphold and adhere to” the Missouri Constitution and laws, the U.S. Constitution and laws, and if necessary, the law of other states when guidance is needed. “The courts shall not look to the legal precepts of other nations or cultures,” the proposal says. “Specifically, the courts shall not consider international law or Sharia law.”

Shariah law guides Muslims in food and moral choices, prayer and, when used as a judicial system, can result in harsh punishments. And radical Muslims want to force it on nonbelievers, Wells said. “Shariah law is being pushed right now,” Wells said. “A few weeks ago, there was a cleric pushing Shariah law, and he said that is what the law should be throughout the whole world. This is push back. … It is a statement that we don’t want this in Missouri.”

Under questioning from the outnumbered Democrats on the committee, Wells said he sees no reason why anyone would be offended by his bill specifying that a Muslim form of law was banned in Missouri. “I am not anti-Muslim, people, believe me,” Wells replied. “This is a protective law, opposed to an oppressive law. Do you not realize how oppressive Shariah law is?”

Vanessa Crawford, representing Missouri Immigrant and Refugee Advocates and several other groups, said the bill shows how little many Americans understand about Muslims living in their communities. “For American Muslims, what Shariah is is a prescription for course of action during daily life,” she said. “They are not trying to subvert the law. This bill does nothing except trying to score political points off of fear-mongering. And that undermines the basic values of American democracy.”

The committee did not vote on the proposal. The chairman, Rep. Stanley Cox, R-Sedalia, said he was “taking it under consideration.”

Columbia Daily Tribune, 17 March 2011

Judge hears arguments in right-wing lawsuit to block Park51

'Ground Zero mosque' opponents3
‘Ground Zero mosque’ protest in August 2010

A State Supreme Court judge heard arguments Tuesday in a lawsuit meant to block development of Park51, the proposed mosque and Islamic center near Ground Zero. But he often seemed skeptical of arguments made by the plaintiff and suggested he did not want to challenge the authority of city administrators who had cleared the way for the controversial project.

The lawsuit was brought forth by the American Center for Law and Justice, a Washington, D.C.-based group that fights for conservative causes and has argued that a mosque near Ground Zero would be “deeply offensive to many Americans.”

An attorney for the ACLJ, Brett Joshpe, was joined in court by attorney Jack Lester, who represents the plaintiff, firefighter and September 11 first responder Timothy Brown. Arguing the other side were attorneys Virgina Waters, representing the city, and Adam Leitman Bailey, who represents Park51 developer Sharif El-Gamal.

Lester told the court that the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission had made an “arbitrary and capricious” decision when it declined to designate 45-47 Park Place as a landmarked building last summer. The address marks the location which will house Park 51, and landmarking would prevent developers from proceeding with their plans.

He also argued that the building, located two blocks from the World Trade Center, deserved to be landmarked because it had weathered the September 11 attacks, and because landing gear from the planes had dropped onto the building. “That building is a monument to that day because of what happened that day, because of its proximity,” said Lester.

Judge Paul G. Feinman, referring to a map showing buildings affected by the World Trade Center attack, noted that “a fair number” of buildings had been damaged. “Are every single one of those buildings to be landmarked?” he asked Lester.

One of the central issues of the lawsuit is the “standing” of the plaintiff, and whether he is in a position to bring a challenge in a neighborhood where he neither works nor resides. According to the complaint, Brown “is an American hero whose courage and bravery on September 11, 2001, exemplifies the American ideal.”

But Feinman suggested the connection between Brown and 45-47 Park Place was insufficient. “It’s not like he went into this building to carry out a rescue operation,” said Feinman.

In his closing arguments, attorney Bailey, who represents El-Gamal, said “the 800-lbs. gorilla in the room is freedom of religion,” and argued that the ACLJ’s true aim was to block construction of a mosque.

WNYC, 15 March 2011

Pastor who gave controversial prayer in Minnesota Senate also bought anti-Muslim ads

Granite City Baptist Church advertThe Associated Press reports that a Christian prayer on the Minnesota Senate floor on Monday made non-Christian members of that body uncomfortable. Pastor Dennis Campbell’s prayer was highly Christian, as opposed to the nonsectarian prayers that were commonplace under DFL control.

“We pray, lord, that you help us show reverence to the Lord Jesus Christ,” Campbell prayed. “Jesus said, ‘I am the way and the truth and the life’. In the name of the Lord Jesus Christ our savior, we pray.” That prayer sparked non-Christian members of the Senate to cry foul, the Associated Press reports.

Rep. Arlon Lindner, instead of acquiescing, attacked those members. “You know, we’re told there’s one God and one mediator between God and man. That man is Jesus Christ. And most of us here are Christians. And we shouldn’t be left not able to pray in the name of our God… And if you don’t like it, you may have to like it. Or just don’t come. I don’t come sometimes for some prayers here… We have that privilege, and you need to exercise it. But don’t impose your irreligious left views on me.”

Following that statement, an ethics complaint was filed against Lindner, one of many in his career in the Minnesota Legislature.

Pastor Campbell came under fire for religious intolerance last summer when his church took out ads in the St. Cloud Times. “What happens when Moslems take over a nation?” asks Campbell in the ad. “They will destroy the constitution and force the Moslem religion on the society, take freedom of religion away, and they will persecute all other religions.”

The ad also said, “Moslems seek to influence a nation by immigration, reproduction, education, the government, illegal drugs and by supporting the gay agenda.”

He later said he is not a racist and that he was simply trying to convert Muslims to Christianity.

Minnesota Independent, 15 March 2011

Fox falls for ‘Islamic ban on padded bras’ hoax

Fox NationA Fox News website has picked up a hoax story about an Islamic council in Pakistan protesting the use of padded and colorful bras and presented it as fact.

The story was illustrated with a picture of a woman’s mid-section and carried the headline “Pakistan: Islamic Clerics Protest Women Wearing Padded Bras as ‘Devil’s Cushions’.” The lead of the Fox Nation story, which sources the piece to the Indian news website sify.com, reads:

“The Council of Islamic Ideology in Pakistan has protested the use of padded and colourful bras by Muslim women, and recommended that Pakistani Muslim researchers should try to invent an innerwear that makes female assets unnoticeable.”

The problem is, if one takes the time to track the story back to its source, the whole thing is an obvious Onion-style satire – a fact first pointed out by Arif Rafiq of the Pakistan Policy Blog.

Fox Nation is an openly conservative news and opinion aggregation site that is part of the Fox News network. It’s not clear what sort of editorial standards are applied to the site, which carries a mixture of hard news and catnip for conservative readers (sample headlines: “Democrats politicize tsunami” and “The President’s afternoon: A round of golf”).

Fox Nation commenters, for their part, reacted to the bra story with outrage. “If I was a woman – anywhere in the world, I’d be taking a close look at Islam and what it meant for me,” wrote commenter rebubinca.

A “louisiana_mom” replied: “How can anyone in their right mind defend this religion/cult is beyond me. The silence of NOW and other women’s rights organizations speak volumes as to where their true loyalties are (and it is not for the rights for women). I cannot believe anyone in the 21st century would even entertain the thought of allowing Sharia Law into any Western county.”

Salon, 14 March 2011

Orange County Republicans urged to act against Councilwoman who called for Muslims to be killed

Deborah_PaulyThe longtime leaders of Orange County’s Republican Party were given a rude awakening in January when Villa Park Councilwoman, and self described “blended” Tea Partier, Deborah Pauly, bested establishment candidate Jon Fleischman in the election for first vice chair of the GOP Central Committee.

Just how rude this awakening could end up being for the party’s establishment became apparent in mid February when Pauly stood outside of a Muslim charity event in Yorba Linda and said to cheering protestors: “Make no mistake my friends, these who are assembling are enemies of America.” She added: “I know quite a few Marines who would be very happy to help these terrorists to an early meeting in paradise.”

Such vitriolic comments made by Pauly can be heard in a video put together by the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), that, in a matter of days, went viral.

Continue reading

Appeals court reinstates case by Californian Muslim woman forced to remove headscarf in courthouse

A federal appeals court unanimously reinstated a lawsuit Tuesday filed by a Muslim woman who accused Southern California jailers of violating her religious freedom when they ordered her to take off her head scarf in a courthouse holding cell. An 11-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals also said plaintiff Souhair Khatib had the right to wear the scarf unless jailers can show it was a security risk.

Khatib filed the lawsuit in 2007 against Orange County. She had been jailed for several hours in November 2006 after a judge revoked her probation for a misdemeanor welfare fraud conviction. A trial court judge and a three-judge appeals court panel previously dismissed the lawsuit, saying holding cells aren’t covered by a federal law protecting the religious practices of prisoners. They held it was impractical in transitory settings such as a holding cell to honor religious practices normally allowed in more permanent institutions such as prisons.

But the 9th Circuit judges rejected that argument while allowing the case to proceed. The court did say the county can still argue that security concerns required Khatib to remove her head scarf, if it can prove the order “was the least restrictive means of furthering a compelling government interest.”

Khatib and her husband had appeared in Orange County Superior Court to ask for an extension of a deadline to complete community service, which was a requirement of their probation. They were jailed in a cell adjacent to the courthouse. During booking, jailers ordered a tearful Khatib to remove her head scarf, and she spent the rest of her time in the cell covering her head with a vest.

Associated Press, 15 March 2011