On the ‘mosque’ at Ground Zero

A modest proposal to end the debate

by John Parisella on Monday, August 23, 2010 12:38pm - 0 Comments

Wanting to grasp a firsthand understanding of the debate surrounding the Park51 Muslim community centre (a much more accurate term than a mosque), I visited the site and was greeted by two young pro-mosque demonstrators arguing in favour of religious tolerance and First Amendment rights. They were articulate, passionate, and answered all my questions. Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a leading supporter of the project, would have been proud. Gradually, opponents began to show and peacefully voiced their displeasure with the project. Meanwhile, some of the faithful were praying inside the existing building.

I then made the two-block walk from the Park51 site to Ground Zero. Let me point out that, from the site itself, there is no direct view of Ground Zero. Even once constructed, there would be no direct view of Ground Zero, even from the roof. When you walk to the closest intersection, heading west to Barclay street, you arrive at a corner where you can see construction cranes at Ground Zero. It is at this point that you grasp the proximity of the proposed project and you can better comprehend the opposition to the project. But you can also readily understand the dilemma facing not only New York City, but all of America. The issue is no longer local and it may even have global ramifications, as people everywhere have come to be interested in how the battle plays out.

The debate has heated up recently with Barack Obama rightly intervening in defense of constitutional principles and values, New York Governor David Paterson trying to find a compromise between constitutional rights and the sensitivities of 9/11 victims, and politicians from both major parties trying to seek political advantage or political cover. The spectre of Islamophobia is now the subject of numerous newspaper articles and magazines covers. Polls are showing growing opposition to the community centre, both in the country and in the city, and some individual construction workers have voiced their reluctance to work on the site. Union leaders, dealing with an anemic economic recovery, are avoiding all comment, but there’s a clear discomfort.

The promoters of the project have every right to move ahead, but their opponents seem to have the edge in organizing a resistance that may not be in the spirit of the constitution, yet is legitimate in its own way. Supporters are correct to argue that the War on Terror is not meant to be a war against Islam and it was not Islam that destroyed the twin towers—it was Al Qaeda, using Islam to justify terror. But having spoken with those who lived through 9/11, it is clear the wounds have not healed. To many who lost loved ones (and some were of the Muslim faith ), Ground Zero is sacred shrine. Some remains were never found.

Obama, Bloomberg, Republican Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey, and many others including prominent local faith leaders are on the right side of this issue. The U.S. has gone to war and lost so many loved ones in the defense of liberty and the values that emanate from their Constitution. But sometimes time has a way to lessen the pain and open the way to a reasonable accommodation—a familiar term to Canadians—or, better still, understanding and acceptance. A recent article in the New Yorker related how some American Muslims feel about the growing controversy. The views were not unanimous. Some fear the controversy is being used to prevent the building of other mosques elsewhere in the United States, while others are concerned about extreme statements by mainstream opponents like Newt Gingrich, who clumsily compared Islam to Nazism. Many see it as a test of acceptance and integration within the American mainstream of life.

Maybe it is time for an old-fashioned time out. The solution should ultimately be local and possibly incremental. For instance, the project could be repositioned as an interfaith community center with a mosque included and construction could be delayed until the memorial at Ground Zero is completed on the 10th anniversary of the attack. Such a proposal would be consistent with the basic Constitutional principles that allow the project to go forward and may help solve the dilemma at Ground Zero.

[John Parisella is currently serving as Quebec's Delegate General in New York City]

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  • Nadine Bennett

    Whether or not there is freedom of religion…we don't condone criminal acts within that freedom. We oppose those criminal acts and find justice for them. Is there justice for families who lost loved ones? Would we examine any group that espouses criminal acts and hatred and bring them to a measure of the law? Since when does freedom of religion enable people to do harm? If the Mafia were told to kill any one who refused their organizational rules…would we see that as being a crime? Even if no one was harmed? Would police be called to intervene or at least investigate? Well that is what Islam says. Kill ALL the infidels. Come on people…use your heads. This is not about a mosque…this is a statement to the world that Islam can do what it wants and will use the constitution to enforce and promote it's ideologies. Stand up to this obvious misuse of the constitution.

  • The Canadian

    Why doesn't everyone just stay in their own country. All these issues I keep hearing about only make me believe that anyone born into the country they have been born in should almost stay there. Having Muslims build in America and US build in the Middle East is only progressing the problem. The middle east should back off from the west and the west should back off from the east. All problems in this world stem from everyones own opinions. I say let the Middle East do what they want…..in the Middle East. And the Americans do what they want….in America. Why is everyone in the world trying to bring they're ideas and stupid religions everywhere they go. Religion is non-sense, a social crutch that only weakens and oppresses the masses.

    There is a difference from being a spritiual person and a religious goon. I have lost faith in humanity because everyone on this Earth is UNCONSCIOUS about EVERYTHING.

  • Anonymous

    Because Al-quaeda killed in the name of Allah, and because Al-quaeda is Muslim, therefore Muslims are evil is like saying all Catholics are evil. During the crusades, thousands of Catholics burned, pillaged, and killed in the name of the Pope. Also, the K.K.K. spreads white supremacy "in the name of Christianity." You can’t make a blanket statement like this; it just is not true. Yet people are so upset over the actions of a small group of religious extremists and then blaming the entire religion. Most religions talk of peace, but many have had times of violence where they killed in the name of their Lord; almost all religions have some sort of extremists.

    To sum things up: you cannot paint all Muslims with the same brush.

  • Anonymous

    How far away is "at ground zero?" Where would it be "right" to build a mosque? 3 blocks away? 5 blocks away? 10? Where do you draw the line? Rather than saying Muslims "can't" build a Mosque there, how about finding them a place they "can."

    Religious tolerance is the way to the future, a place New York doesn't seem to be headed right now.

    • Leo

      Atheism is the wave of the future. Get over mythology. Civilization has supplanted mythology as any historical record of mankind will tell you; all gods in every generation were false imaginative story books for the uneducated who had nothing but belief to rely on, including religious exorcisms for neurological epilepsy attacks. Still practiced today for god's sakes.

  • Leo

    The distance factor was a comment as a reply to those who keep saying that the building site IS NOT at Ground Zero.

    The distance from the site is not the issue for me. ANY TRIBUTE MOSQUE dedicated to the hijackers is a scourge on the whole world and should never be built anywhere, except perhaps Mecca.

    To meet logical demands, not emotional demands as you characterize it, would be to ban building of any new places of religious worship to the supernatural. Mythology is supplanted.

  • Mike T.

    YAY! or BOOO!

    (I'm not sure what I was supposed to find fault with there).

  • A_READER_

    Christiane Amanpour !?!?!?

    Pffft – she lies.

  • Wascally Wabbit

    Calling out Mike T Mr. Pearce and others that come here sans facts! Typical Conservaitve position!
    Christiane Amanpour interviewed two women yesterday who care deeply about this project (and neither was named Emily!)
    Daisy Khan is the wife of the Imam who is leading this Community Centre Venture. The other lady was a Rabbi who leads the nearby Jewish community Council – both have been working for several years to make this project work.
    They are BOTH well aware that hysteria – whipped up by racist elements – would emerge during this process. The Rabbi pointed out how many times the proposed building of Synagogues was opposed in the past in America – in New York and close to this location.
    They are both committed to ensure that no radical elements ride pickaback on this project – and that for example – fundraisers is transparent and isn’t used by any overseas agencies to attempt to buty control.
    Yet Rabble Rousers like Gingrich and Beck and O’Reilly of Fox News act like caricatures of propagandists of an era we thought was long past – whether they wore white sheets or jackboots – and Amercians who ought to know better – salute!

  • Sohail

    Appleby: Occupied Territory is NOT Israeli Land. UN, US, and the world has agreed. Only the Evangelical Christian Scum and Israelis think that any land that Israel takes over by force is Israeli land.

  • PreachJohn

    Then, by your twisted thinking, contrary to the great body of International Law, Canada should revert to all Native claims of aboriginal ownership?
    And please watch, Mr. Blasphemer, just who you call Scum.

  • Oliver

    Then it's a good thing you're not in the armed forces anymore.
    You're a discredit to your unit, your country and your flag.

  • nickisuz

    "On Sept. 11, the landing gear assembly of one of the planes used in the attack crashed through the roof of what was then a Burlington Coat Factory." Don't kid yourself….this mosque is at ground zero.

  • A_READER_

    Given where your merit usually resides no surprising finding your class down there.

  • John D

    Don't kid yourself, this centre is in an old coat store

  • MarionKl

    They should at least try to settle all claims in an appropriate manner.

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