A mosque rises over Ground Zero. And fed-up New Yorkers are crying, "No!"
A chorus of critics -- from neighbors to those who lost loved ones on 9/11 to me -- feel as if they've received a swift kick in the teeth.
Plans are under way for a Muslim house of worship, topped by a 13-story
cultural center with a swimming pool, in a building damaged by the
fuselage of a jet flown by extremists into the World Trade Center.
The opening date shall live in infamy: Sept. 11, 2011. The 10th anniversary of the day a hole was punched in the city's heart.
How the devil did this happen?
Plans to bring what one critic calls a "monster mosque" to the site of the old Burlington Coat Factory building, at a cost expected to top $100 million, moved along for months without
a peep. All of a sudden, even members of the community board that
stupidly green-lighted the mosque this month are tearing their hair
out.
Paul Sipos, member of Community Board 1, said a mosque is a fine idea -- someplace else.
"If the Japanese decided to open a cultural center across from Pearl
Harbor, that would be insensitive," Sipos told me. "If the Germans
opened a Bach choral society across from Auschwitz, even after all
these years, that would be an insensitive setting. I have absolutely
nothing against Islam. I just think: Why there?"
Why, indeed.
A rally against the mosque is planned for June 6, D-Day, by the human-rights group Stop Islamicization of America. Executive director
Pamela Geller said, "What could be more insulting and humiliating than
a monster mosque in the shadow of the World Trade Center buildings that
were brought down by an Islamic jihad attack? Any decent American,
Muslim or otherwise, wouldn't dream of such an insult. It's a stab in
the eye of America."
Called Cordoba House, the mosque and center is the brainchild of the American Society for Muslim Advancement. Executive director Daisy Khan insists it's staying put.
"For us, it's a symbol, a platform that will give voice to the silent
majority of Muslims who suffer at the hands of extremists. A center
will show that Muslims will be part of rebuilding lower Manhattan,"
said Khan, adding that Cordoba will be open to everyone.
"We were pleased to see that the community welcomed us as an asset to lower Manhattan," she added. "The community board approved it."
Not so fast.
The Financial District Committee of Community Board 1 seems to have
gotten ensnared in a public-relations ploy by mosque-makers. At a May 5
meeting, the committee gave the project an enthusiastic thumbs-up. But
boards have zero say over religious institutions.
Board chair Julie Menin, blind-sided by the move, predicts "this will be overturned by the full board" later this month.
But the damage is done.
Wounds that have yet to heal are now opening, as mosque opponents are branded, unfairly, as bigots.
"The worst tendency is the knee-jerk, emotional, angry, hateful
response to acts of violence and war," said Donna Marsh O'Connor, who
lost daughter Vanessa on 9/11 and supports the mosque. "I think it's
racist tendencies."
Many more feel like Bill Doyle -- doubly maimed as he's forced to defend himself against charges of prejudice.
"I'm not a bigot. What I'm frightful about is, it's almost going to be another protest zone. A meeting place for radicals," said Doyle, whose son, Joseph, was murdered on 9/11.
"It's a slap in our face!" said Nelly Braginsky, who lost son Alexander.
Unclear is how the mosque will raise the $100 million-plus it needs.
"We would be seeking funding from anyone who would help," Khan told me.
"Seeking maybe some bonds or something like that." At the May 5
community board meeting, she displayed a sign with names like
"Rockefeller Brothers Fund" and "Ford Foundation," which observers
believed meant money is coming from those organizations. But Khan says
those groups merely gave money in the past, and no funding is yet in
place.
There are many questions about the Ground Zero mosque. But just one answer.
Move it away.
Tags:
"in a building damaged by the
fuselage of a jet flown by extremists into the World Trade Center."
Your kidding me right? you don't actually believe the 911 commission
do you?
Oh ok, I guess I misunderstood (I was thinking it might be sarcasm) and found itNo I don't believe the 911 commission story. I do believe that 911 was an inside job, but the article writer obviously does not. That's really not the point here, I was just pointing out how ridiculous and screwed up it is for them to be building a mosque at ground zero, that's all.
ricoyung said:"in a building damaged by the
fuselage of a jet flown by extremists into the World Trade Center."
Your kidding me right? you don't actually believe the 911 commission
do you?
"Destroying the New World Order"
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