Connecticut Muslims told to remove headscarves at roller rink

A Connecticut woman says a roller rink’s request that she either remove or cover her traditional Muslim head scarf was discriminatory.

Marisol Rodriguez-Colon of Windsor tells WTIC-TV that she and her sister-in-law went to the Ron-A-Roll indoor rink in Vernon on Sunday for her niece’s birthday party. She says inside, a woman who identified herself as a manager, told them they would have to either remove their hijabs or wear helmets. She was told the rink has a policy prohibiting headwear.

Rodriguez-Colon said removing her scarf was “not an option,” and they left.

Rink management issued a statement reiterating the no headwear policy and saying helmets are offered for safety purposes.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations says it has filed a complaint with the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities.

Associated Press, 24 November 2010

See also CTnow.com, 23 November 2010

Update:  See “Connecticut roller rink defends policy on headscarves after Muslim woman complains”, Fox News, 24 November 2010

Tucson: Eviction notices served on students after beer and liquor bottles thrown at Islamic Center

Islamic Center of TucsonFour residents of the Level – a high-rise apartment that primarily houses University of Arizona students – were served eviction notices after management concluded objects were thrown from their balcony onto the Islamic Center of Tucson.

The notices were served Thursday after video from the center and mosque shows objects thrown from a balcony that all four male residents share, said City Councilman Steve Kozachik, who is working to make sure the rowdy behavior stops. “I am less concerned with the sensitivity of these kids than people on the ground dodging a whiskey bottle,” Kozachik said.

For more than a year, the mosque and center’s property has been pelted by beer and liquor bottles, among other objects, thrown off balconies of three high-rise apartment complexes by intoxicated students, Kamel Didan, vice chairman of the board of the Islamic center, has said in earlier interviews.

The mosque is at 901 E. First Street, east of North Tyndall Avenue and south of East Speedway. A total of about 1,200 to 1,500 tenants live in the three complexes situated around the mosque.

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Fired Muslim workers reach settlement with DHL

Logo DHL Global Mail

HEBRON, Ohio — DHL Global Mail has reached an agreement with Somali Muslims who say they were fired from the company’s Hebron facility in 2013 because they took a break for evening prayer, The Enquirer has learned.

The Cincinnati chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-Cincinnati) on Thursday announced the settlement with DHL over religious accommodation complaints brought by 23 Muslim workers in October 2013.

Booker Washington, staff attorney for CAIR-Cincinnati, said the agreement “brings the case to a satisfactory close and recognizes the needs and rights of all parties.”

CAIR-Cincinnati officials said they could not reveal details of the settlement or answer whether workers had regained their jobs or received a financial settlement.

Muslim workers who sorted mail DHL said management reversed a policy that had allowed flexible break time for workers to say required evening prayers. Fired workers, three of them full-time employees of DHL and the others part-time who help through two temporary service agencies, said they had been allowed to pray by previous supervisors. The prayers took about five minutes, workers said.

The workers filed complaints with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that alleged DHL Global Mail fired the group for exercising their legally protected religious rights.

“We welcome this settlement, which represents a mutually agreeable resolution of this case,” CAIR attorney Washington said.

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Muslim cemetery vandalized; Bosnian refugees fear hate crime

Snohomish County cemetery vandalismThe Bosnian community in Western Washington was shocked to find headstones and memorials destroyed at their Snohomish County cemetery.

The refugees who escaped bloody violence in their home country now fear hate has driven vandals to target the place where their loved ones are laid to rest. “They’ve died in peace, they can’t rest in peace,” said Meliha Babic. “This is unacceptable for any place to have your headstones turned over and your grave site vandalized.”

For the Islamic Community of Bosniaks in Washington State, the Bear Creek Cemetery near Maltby is their final resting place.

Babic’s mother and uncle’s bodies are buried at the cemetery. She said her uncle’s headstone was toppled and smashed some time after the weekend. “He came here to escape that, to start a new life and to live in a safe area, and now look what’s happening,” she said.

But it’s what wasn’t damaged that has this immigrant community worried they have been targeted because of their faith. “We have two parts of the cemetery, one Christian, one Muslim,” Babic said. “It seems like all of the damage was in the newer part where the Muslim Bosniaks were buried.”

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Graffiti attack on Santa Cruz mosque

Santa Cruz mosque graffitiBlack graffiti of the Star of David was found on the front door of a mosque in Live Oak on Wednesday, and Santa Cruz County sheriff’s deputies are investigating it as a hate crime.

Spray paint of the star, which is a Jewish symbol, and above it the number “26” were written on a white front door of the Islamic Center of Santa Cruz at 900 17th Ave. early Wednesday morning, said Santa Cruz County sheriff’s Sgt. Mitch Medina.

Medina said “night vision” surveillance images show what appears to be a woman in a hooded sweatshirt spraying paint. The letters “SC” appeared on the left torso of her sweatshirt. Deputies said they were unsure of her height, weight and other features.

“She had something covering the bottom half of her face,” Medina said. It was not clear to what the “26” referred, he said.

Safaa Ibrahim, a board member of the Islamic Center of Santa Cruz, said the graffiti might have been related to Tuesday’s attack at a Jerusalem synagogue. Five people were killed with meat cleavers and a gun including three rabbis with joint United States citizenship, according to news reports.

“We strongly condemn any violent acts as a means to achieve religious or political beliefs,” Ibrahim said Thursday. “Our thoughts and prayers go out to the victims and their families on both sides of the conflict to reach peace. We would like to send a message to the person or persons who attacked our mosque, that reciprocating acts of hostility or intimidating innocent people will not make the wrong right.”

Ibrahim said the mosque had “rarely experienced such acts of hostility” in its 20 years in Santa Cruz County. Other faith leaders expressed their support and concern after it was reported, Ibrahim said.

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Minnesota GOP official defends ‘frag ’em’ comment, says Muslims must accept Jesus or leave the US

Jack Whitley Facebook comment (1)The chairman of a county Republican Party in Minnesota who believes that big government is actually a form of satanic “witchcraft” is not backing down from controversial comments he posted on his Facebook page about Muslims.

Big Stone County Republican chairman Jack Whitley said he opposed waterboarding terrorists because he believed that Muslim “parasites” should be killed. “I am opposed to waterboarding muslim terrorists because it is a waste of resources,” he wrote Wednesday on Facebook. “They are muslims, they are terrorist, we know where they are from, we know where their buddies are, we know where thier mosque’s are, we know millions of these parasites travel to Mecca every year and when…FRAG ‘EM! Simplicity. I love when it all comes together!”

The comments were first reported by the Bluestem Prairie blog.

Whitley said Thursday that he would not apologize for his remarks. He said Muslims should either convert to Christianity or leave the United States.

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Amid criticism, Texas fails to OK new textbooks

Roy WhiteThe Texas Board of Education couldn’t muster the votes late Tuesday to grant preliminary approval for new history and social studies textbooks for classrooms across the nation’s second-largest state, failing to act amid stinging criticism of the proposed books from both the right and left.

Academics and some liberal-leaning activists have complained for months that many of the books up for adoption overstate the influence of religion on early American democracy, including exaggerating biblical figure Moses’ importance to the founding fathers. But conservative groups worry that many of the same books promote pro-Islam values.

The Republican-controlled board tried to pass nearly all of the 100 books and lesson software it was considering, but that failed 5-4 with four abstentions. One member wasn’t present. “The abstentions have it,” joked Thomas Ratliff, a Mount Pleasant Republican.

That sets up a potentially tense final vote Friday, when the board will have to approve the books or miss the deadline to get them to the state’s 5 million-plus public school students by September 2015. Texas is such a vast textbook market that much of what is produced here can end up influencing materials used in other states.

Board members stressed that they still have time to successfully pass books – but also conceded that no one expected Tuesday to end with no action taken.

The failing vote came after hours of public testimony, where the board heard many of the same complaints about the books that it has for months – that the texts present political and religious beliefs and ideologies as facts.

MerryLynn Gerstenschlager, vice president of the influential conservative group Texas Eagle Forum, said books should describe the “forced wealth distribution” imposed by the United Nations via misleading propaganda about climate change.

Retired school teacher Anthony Bruner warned that they would indoctrinate students with communist tenants. “I’ve tried to be a good, patriotic citizen and tried to protect the young people,” said Bruner, who is aligned with a conservative group called Truth in Texas Textbooks.

That organization used dozens of volunteers to raise more than 1,500 complaints about the books. It noted that the achievements of President Ronald Reagan were omitted from some while arguing that others ignored Islam’s occasional glorification of violence – including beheadings.

Roy White [pictured], a retired Air Force pilot and Truth in Texas Textbooks’ chairman, said he supports all religions but “the political side of Islam, the part that threatens you and me … that’s not a religion.”

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Why a woman drove to Washington from Tennessee to protest Muslim prayers at the National Cathedral

Christine Weick harangues Muslim worshippersSeveral hundred Muslims held Friday prayers in Washington’s National Cathedral last week, a first for the well-known Episcopal church.

Some people are very, very unhappy about it. Among them: A Michigan woman named Christine Weick, who sneaked into the cathedral during the private service to tell the worshipers to “leave our churches alone.”

A day later, Weick spoke to the conservative news site World Net Daily, which called her “a folk hero of sorts for thousands, if not millions, of Christians.” Weick, who said she lives out of her car, told WND that she read about the prayer service on Drudge Report days before it happened.

“My blood began to boil as I read the comments of how this is to be such a wonderful event and how religious tolerance can, for the first time, be shown in our nation’s capital,” she said of the news coverage in advance of the interfaith service.

She was staying in Tennessee at the time and drove hundreds of miles to find a way into the service and, she said, to do something about it.

Although the event was closed to the public and all guests had to pass through security, Weick made it in without any trouble, she said. Once seated, she said, “it hit me … I had such an angst come over me. Seeing these Muslims sitting on their rugs ready to bow to a god, causing such an abomination in the house of the Lord.”

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Houston: Parents object to anti‑Muslim bigot teaching their children

Angela BoxBreast squeezing, profanity spewing, Muslim baiting Angela Box is by obvious personal design quite the spectacle on the cable access show “Tommy’s Garage.”

“I am so sick of the bacon haters coming here and demanding we bend to their culture,” said Box in a recent episode, referring to Muslims.

And in this country where free speech is sacred, Box’s expression is simply an indisputable right.

But just as sacred is the privilege of parents to object when they deem the calculated public behavior of a 3rd grade teacher is bigoted and a potential threat to their kids.

“We all understand that she is entitled to her views and opinions, but it goes back to the classroom. How are the kids being treated in the classroom when the very people that you have such a disdain for, their kids are in your classroom,” said Ladonna Begelton, a parent with two children at Ray Daily Elementary where Box teaches.

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