CNN
Opposition to a proposed mosque near Ground Zero swelled into a furor this week after its planners on Aug. 3 passed the last municipal hurdle barring them from building it. New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg spoke passionately in defense of the project. “Let us not forget that Muslims were among those murdered on 9/11 and that our Muslim neighbors grieved with us as New Yorkers and as Americans,” Bloomberg said in a speech that day. “We would betray our values and play into our enemies’ hands if we were to treat Muslims differently than anyone else.”
Muslims pray during the ‘Islam on Capitol Hill 2009′ event at the West Front Lawn of the U.S. Capitol on September 25, 2009 in Washington, D.C.
Bloomberg’s predecessor didn’t agree. The former mayor of New York City, Rudy Giuliani, claimed that the project, which is partially intended to be an interfaith community center, would be a “desecration,” adding that “decent” Muslims ought not object to his opinion. Other GOP politicians and talking heads who have far less to do with the events of 9/11 – or, for that matter, New York – have joined the chorus, arguing in some instances that a mosque near Ground Zero would be a monument to terrorists.
Such Islamophobia is unsurprising in the post-Cold War age of al-Qaeda and sleeper cells. And Islam, of course, has long been a bogeyman for the West. For centuries, a more advanced, more powerful Islamic world haunted the imagination of snow-bitten Christendom. When the Spanish arrived in the Americas, they brought the language of the Reconquista with them, sometimes referring to Aztecs and Mayans as “Moors” and to their ziggurats as “mosques.” The Sultanate of Morocco was the first government in the world to recognize the existence of an independent United States, in 1778. But it was America’s naval expeditions to North Africa – the two early-19th century Barbary Wars – that first marked the U.S.’s arrival on the global stage and crystallized a new American patriotism at home.
The early history of Muslims in the U.S. was a lonely one. While there are isolated reports of “Moorish” sailors and even an Egyptian dwelling in corners of the colonies, the first significant populations were slaves from West Africa. Bilali Mohammed was born in Guinea in roughly 1770 and died in 1857 on a plantation on Sapelo Island in Georgia, leaving behind a 13-sheaf document in Arabic. It’s a treatise of religious jurisprudence specific to the society of Muslim West Africa and one of the earliest classic slave narratives. Abdulrahman Ibraheem Ibn Sori, like the literary figure of Oroonoko in Aphra Behn’s famous 1688 novel of the same name, was royalty from a Guinean kingdom before being abducted and whisked away to slavery in Mississippi. As word of a lettered, regal “Prince of Slaves” spread across the country, Ibn Sori won allies and friends and was eventually freed in 1828 by an order from President John Quincy Adams. He left the U.S. for the former slave republic of Liberia in Africa but died of fever soon thereafter, never to return to the land of his birth.
Most Muslim African slaves were far less lucky, and memory of their varied cultural heritage dissipated over generations of enslavement. Black Islam would be revived in the first half of the 20th century as a creed of empowerment and redemption. The Nation of Islam, founded in 1933, sought to step away from the indignity of the past with a wholesale rejection of the predominantly white, Christian nation that surrounded them; to this day, the website of the now much diminished group identifies black Americans as descendants of a “Lost Nation of Asia.” For prominent activists like Malcolm X, Islam was a badge of otherness, of distinction and pride in the face of old injustices.
On the sidelines of these struggles, other Muslims were more than happy to try to fit in. By the end of the 19th century, immigrants from the Ottoman Empire began settling in pockets across the U.S. Some of the first active Muslim congregations in the country began in towns like Cedar Rapids, Iowa (led by Lebanese), and Biddeford, Maine (led by Albanians). In 1926, Polish-speaking Tatars opened one of the first mosques in Brooklyn. By the latter half of the 20th century, the majority of Muslims moving to the U.S. were from South Asia and Arab states. Today, there are an estimated 7 million Muslims living in the U.S., from myriad communities and all walks of life. To speak of them in generalities would be pointless.
Nevertheless, since 9/11, a spotlight has fallen on American Islam and the potential extremists in our midst. There are villains: from Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, the blind Egyptian imprisoned for life for his involvement in the 1993 World Trade Center bombings, to New Mexico-born Anwar al-Awlaki, an Islamist lecturer who is thought to have preached to a few of the 9/11 hijackers and is now in hiding in Yemen, the first U.S. citizen to wind up on a CIA targeted kill list. Curiously, a conspicuous number of U.S. jihadists have come from non-Muslim backgrounds, like the “American Taliban” John Walker Lindh, who grew up in a prosperous San Francisco suburb, and David Headley, a half Pakistani born in Washington who, before allegedly planning the Mumbai terrorist attacks in November 2008, was running a bar in Philadelphia. Concerted Homeland Security measures seem to rope in occasional terrorism suspects – like the 14 arrests this week of U.S. residents allegedly linked to the al-Shabab militant group in Somalia. But many Muslim communities have come under siege, facing a barrage of media scrutiny and xenophobic bluster.
In this context, figures like Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf – the Arab-American cleric behind the mosque project near Ground Zero – stand out. A consummate moderate who has made a career preaching about the compatibility of Islamic and American values, Rauf has been cast as a dangerous radical by the mosque’s opponents. Few of them are moved by the name of Rauf’s proposed building: Cordoba House, named for the city in Spanish Andalucia where Muslims, Jews and Christians once co-existed for centuries in an extraordinary flourishing of culture and science. In these times, the richness and diversity of Muslim experience, in the U.S. and elsewhere, seem far from the minds of most Americans.
Tags: al-qaeda, American patriotism, Arab-American cleric, bombings, Culture, GOP politicians, Islam on Capitol Hill, Islamophobia and the 'Ground Zero Mosque' Debate, Minicipal hurdle, Planners, powerful Islamic world, War
August 9, 2010 at 4:39 pm |
thank you for this enlightening article
August 29, 2010 at 1:29 am |
I just read a comment on an atheist website that has the best statement on this controversy I have heard yet.
Plus, has anyone looked at the Ground Zero site lately? It’s trashed. It’s gross. If this is supposed to be a memorial, a place for people to come to remember, mounds of dirt and scaffolding is not going to do the job. It truly worries me that our politicians and citizens are too busy being worried about a religious group trying to practice hope and love and peace (which IS what Islam teaches), than to memorialize a site they consider oh so sacred.
See http://lovedilemmas.blogspot.com/2010/08/10th-post-new-york-mosque-balogna.html
September 29, 2010 at 1:18 pm |
you know,i was born and raised in good ole usa,..and i am 53 years old …and as of 9-11, i really thought i knew america,i was raised a catholic.and went to church with great faith,…but since 9-11,i have learned a great deal more about america,i always knew of the jewish and christian,faiths as well as the protestants,as well as the athiest..but this muslim era has taken me by the seat of my pants,…i have been trying to cpme to terms with this religeon.and i do agree there are good and bad in all of life …and i know of false accusals.i was a ward of the state for almost 26 years of my life,and i must say that what i learned about the muslims i met along the way while in there,.was they became muslims for the purpose of hate ,,they seemed to of been ashamed of who they really were.,so they convert to muslims,…changing their identities.well i am a firm believer 1st an american always an american.and never be ashamed of it,no matter what the cost.so now when i see this dispute over a mosque at a grave site,..is so disrespectful to every american born,real americans,..not a converted race or converted religeon,..i myself agree in victory showings..like when the super bowl is won the teams have a parade to celebrate,…i feel the muslims are doing the same thing with the destruction of the twin towers,and all those people who were raised americans they were proud to be americans,…i feel deeply that the people involved in this mosque building plan are not proud americans,but rather converted and bias to our great country,…it seems people like them are not happy unless they can bring hate and destruction every where they go…it seems they come here and use americas rights to do what they want..i say earn those rights and not by just getting a green card and thinking they have the same rights we true americans have earned…in closing,..if they dont like america…get the hell out,…and destroy their own countries…i love my country…so no there should never be a mosque at ground zero,…nor any where in america,…their ways of life should never ever be considered for the usa. thank you for your time and hope for your knowledge to realize we are the greatest country on earth..amen…