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Thursday, August 19, 2010 | return to: views, opinions


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Call him naive, but Imam Rauf is a man of peace

by Walter Ruby

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NOTE: This is one of our Two Views this week. For the second view,  <Click here>

 

Over the last few months, I have had a front-row seat to history.

Last May, I spoke at a public hearing of the Manhattan Community Board No. 1 in support of Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and Daisy Khan, the husband-and-wife team that initiated plans to build a 13-story Islamic community center two blocks north of ground zero.

I was there on behalf of the Foundation for Ethnic Understanding, which has worked with the group Rauf and Khan lead, the American Society for Muslim Advancement, in ongoing efforts to strengthen Muslim-Jewish relations in the United States and around the world.

Walter Ruby
Walter Ruby
In my testimony at the hearing, I said that since our organizations began cooperating three years ago, I have consistently found both Rauf and Khan to be unequivocally opposed to violence and terrorism and deeply committed to the American values of democracy and pluralism. These are values, Rauf argues in his book, “What’s Right with Islam,” that are intrinsic to Islam as well.

For this reason, our foundation has consistently supported Rauf’s effort to create an Islamic community center in New York that will serve as a high-profile platform from which to articulate that vision of peaceful and pluralistic Islam to Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Months ago, he and his wife told the president of our foundation, Rabbi Marc Schneier, that they hope to create a center for Muslim-Jewish dialogue at the Islamic community center, in cooperation with our foundation and the larger Jewish community.

Over the past three years, Rauf and Khan have taken part in an annual event sponsored by our foundation known as the Weekend of Twinning of Mosques and Synagogues Across North America, during which mosques and synagogues offer one-on-one programs focusing on and celebrating commonalities in our two faith traditions.

From what I have learned, when Rauf set out during the past few years to bring to fruition his decades-old dream of creating an Islamic community center with a strong interfaith component in New York City, he was never much concerned about where the center would be located.

Yet, when a space large enough to fulfill his vision became available two blocks from ground zero, he saw special significance in the site. He argued that building an Islamic community center there dedicated to nonviolence and mutual understanding among faiths would represent a deeply felt gesture of compassion and healing by the Muslims of New York to the entire New York community, including those who lost loved ones on 9/11.

In retrospect, Rauf can justly be accused of naivete for not perceiving that building an Islamic community center so close to ground zero would unleash the kind of firestorm of fear, loathing and anti-Muslim rhetoric that has erupted in recent weeks. From my conversations with him and his wife on the subject of the proposed center going back almost a year, it is clear to me that they never anticipated the kind of political backlash that has occurred.

Together with the American Society for Muslim Advancement and other moderate Muslim organizations, our foundation will continue to nurture a movement of Muslims and Jews committed to communication, reconciliation and cooperation.


Walter Ruby is the Muslim-Jewish relations program officer at the New York–based Foundation for Ethnic Understanding. He wrote this piece for JTA.

 

NOTE: This is one of Two Views. To read the opposing viewpoint from Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin of Georgia, <Click here>


Comments

Posted by Joshua
08/19/2010  at  09:55 PM
Imam Rauf's Idea of Muslim-Jewish Relations

Can we discern Imam Rauf’s idea of Muslim-Jewish Relations from his writings?
He will not recognize Israel’s right to exist or the right of Jews for self-determination and defense.
He will not condemn Hamas or Islamic terrorism.
So what is his idea of “relations”? He likes bagels? Jews are “tolerated” in the Muslim world as long as we we’re good little “ni—irs who don’t upset the ruling class? No thank you. Walter Ruby and Imam Rauf can begin by working toward Jewish-Muslim Relations that call on all Muslims to accept Israel and Zionism as a Jewish national right to self-defense. I’ll be happy to join the effort when they unequivocally do that,and renounce all Muslim violence against Jews everywhere.
- Joshua

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Posted by Jack Kessler
08/20/2010  at  10:08 AM
Speaking hypothetically.....

Suppose one wanted to build a Muslim victory monument near Ground Zero in New York, how would one go about it?

Well one couldn’t openly call it that.  But if one attached a mosque to one’s victory monument then one could play the ‘freedom of religion’ card. 

Once one had done that the useful idiots would come swarming out of the woodwork insisting on one’s right to build the victory monument.

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Posted by grf
08/20/2010  at  11:48 AM
To the two bigots above

Just how far away from ground Zero is good enough for you two enlightened gentlemen? Is anywhere in Manhattan too close for your lights? For you two of course all Muslims are exactly the same, all are fanatics bent on destruction, all 1 billion of them, (unless, of course, they kiss Israel’s tuchas first). This singular ignorance and stupidity is merely the mirror image of antisemitism.

Strikes me that you two and others like you are the “useful idiots,” bent on perpetuating the very ugly image of the US and Judaism that Bin Laden and others use as the face of the west.

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Posted by Jack Kessler
08/20/2010  at  01:08 PM
I am so impressed that

I am so impressed that GRF, though unable to make a counter-argument, has nothing more to offer than personal insult.  Had there been any question of the intellectual emptiness of the anti-Israel agitation, GRF lays it to rest.

Though unable to make an argument, he IS able to read minds.  He claims to know what my and Joshua’s private opinions are. 

As to his question about where would be far enough from Ground Zero, it is sufficient to point out that Manhattan Island is 13 miles long and more than 2 miles wide.

Governor Paterson offered a number of Manhattan sites in various places far enough away not to be identified with Ground Zero. 

All good places for a mosque.  None close enough to be identifiable as a Ground Zero victory monument.  Those were the sites the sponsors of the Ground Zero mosque turned down. 

If all they want is a mosque in which to practice their religion and not a victory monument, why turn down the alternate sites?

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Posted by grf
08/20/2010  at  03:50 PM
More ignorance from Jack

When the likes of Jack Kessler spew bigotry there is nothing left but to call it as such.

Since the Community Center, not a Mosque as Kessler insists, cannot be seen from Ground Zero, nor Ground Zero be seen from the community center it is hard to imagine how it can be “identified with ground zero.” No doubt Jack Kessler will demand that Ali Mohammed’s Falafel Shop (directly across the street from GZ) also be seen as a “Victory Monument,” and forced from the neighborhood. Then there are the strip joints and bars far closer to Ground Zero that by Kessler’s weird logic must also be “identified” with GZ and therefore sully the ground.

The fact remains that the Community Center is run by Sufi Muslims, which I know means nothing to Jack, but if he bothered to educate himself just once it might. That we have a Constitution here in the US that has something to say about religion that is important to many apparently means nothing to Jack either, but it is hallmark of the nation. No, Jack is concerned with beating his paranoid fantasy about a “Victory Mosque” which he has dredged up from the bottom of his small bigoted soul.

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