Communist China Defends Internet Censorship

Communist China’s Information Office of the State Council continues to defend censorship of the Internet, justifying it as “protection,” where the “Chinese government plays the leading role in Internet administration.”

In the latest report by that government, it states that the Communist Chinese laws prohibit dissemination of “contents subverting state power, undermining national unity, infringing upon national honor and interests, inciting ethnic hatred and secession”

It also indicates that government control of the Internet is also an “indispensable requirement for protecting state security and the public interest,” and indicates that its policies for “secure information flow” require that “no organization or individual” is allowed to spread information “subverting state power and jeopardizing national unification; damaging state honor and interests…”

The Communist Chinese government also requires Internet providers to ensure “Internet security management systems and utilize technical measures to prevent the transmission of all types of illegal information.”

As to international concern over the Communist Chinese government’s Internet censorship, it states that “Concerns about Internet security of different countries should be fully respected. We should seek common ground and reserve differences, promote development through exchanges, and jointly protect international Internet security.”

Image Illustrating Internet Censorship (Photo: Voice of America)
Image Illustrating Internet Censorship (Photo: Voice of America)

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Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) supports our universal human rights of equality and liberty for all people, including our rights to freedom of expression.  We urge those who seek to deny such universal human rights to understand that when they deny such rights for some people, they attack such unqualified universal human rights for all people.

R.E.A.L. reports on China

R.E.A.L. reports on Totalitarianism

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Related Media Reports:

AP: China says will keep blocking online content

Voice of America: China Defends Internet Censorship Practices

Reuters: China vows no let-up to state control of Internet

BBC: China defends internet censorship

AFP: China defends Internet ‘Great Firewall’

Bloomberg: China Spells Out Internet Restrictions After Google’s Exit

V3.co.uk: China defends internet censorship

NYC: Two New Jersey Men Arrested at JFK Airport Sought to Kill Non-Muslims

In NYC’s John F. Kennedy airport, two  New Jersey men were arrested and have been charged with planning terrorism .  The initial reports have indicated that the two men arrested, Mohamed Hamoud Alessa and Carlos Eduardo Almonte, were planning to join terrorist groups in Somalia, and were flying from JFK airport to Egypt en route to Somalia.  In Somalia, they planned to join the Al Shabaab, which has been linked to Al-Qaeda.  They planned to arrive in Cairo, Egypt, and then perhaps take a boat to Somalia.  They had previously been in Jordan in 2007, and AP reports that they unsuccessfully tried to get to Iraq in the past.

Police Photos of Mohamed Alessa and Carlos Almonte (Photo: Department of Justice)
Police Photos of Mohamed Alessa and Carlos Almonte (Photo: Department of Justice)

The criminal complaint against them has been unsealed and released to the press.  In the criminal complaint, Mohamed Alessa sought to better accused Fort Hood shooter Nidal Hasan in killing American soldiers.

The accused Alessa and Almonte had been training in an “outdoor facility in West Milford, New Jersey” and had been teaching military tactics to an undercover law enforcement officer in Jersey City, New Jersey.  The accused repeatedly listened to and played recording of American cleric Anwar al-Awlaki “promoting violent jihad and martyrdom.”  Anwar al-Awlaki, who is now believed to be in Yemen, has regularly praised terrorist organizations and was in contact with the Fort Hood accused terrorist Nidal Hasan.  In addition, the accused reportedly also watched videos by Adam Gadahn (aka Azzam al-Amriki) praising Nidal Hasan.

Inspirations for Mohamed Alessa and Carlos Almonte to Kill Non-Muslims: Anwar Al-Awlaki, Nidal Hassan, Adam Gadahn
Inspirations for Mohamed Alessa and Carlos Almonte to Kill Non-Muslims: Anwar Al-Awlaki, Nidal Hassan, Adam Gadahn

The criminal complaint also addresses the accused regularly discussing plans to “wage violent jihad” and join “violent jihadist groups operating in Somalia.”  In their discussions, they reportedly considered joining various “violent jihadist groups that were operating in Somalia, including Al-Shabaab, Hizbul Islam, and Ahlu Sunna wa’l Jama’a, ” but Almonte viewed that Al-Shabaab “is the main one… the main thing.”

The criminal complaint states that “On November 29, 2009, in Jersey City, New Jersey, in the presence of Almonte, Alessa stated, in part: “We’ll start doing killing here, if I can’t do it over there.”  Alessa also reportedly stated “A lot of people need to get killed, bro, swear to God… I have to get a… assault rifle and just kill anyone that even looks at me the wrong way, bro.  Nah, I swear to God, bro.  I wanna, like – I’m not – my – my soul cannot rest until I shed blood.  I wanna, like, be the world’s known terrorist… I swear to God.”  He also reportedly stated: “I’m gonna get a gun…. I’ll have more bodies on it – than the – than the hairs on my beard.  You know what I’m saying?  It’s already enough, you don’t worship Allah, so… that’s a reason for you to die… We’re being pushed by every corner of the earth, yanni.  They only fear you when you have a gun and when you – when you start killing them, and when you – when you take their head, and you go like this, and you behead it on camera, and you – you have to be ruthless bro.  I swear to God, bro.  Enough of this punk (expletive).  It’s that everyone has to be ruthless to – with these people.  We’ll start doing killing here, if I can’t do it over there.  I’m gonna get locked up in the airport?  Then you’re gonna die here, then.  That’s how it is.  Freaking Major-Nidal-shaved-face-Palestinian-crazy guy; he’s not better than me.  I’ll do twice what he did.”

According to the complaint, on November 30, 2009, Alessa instructed Almonte and the FBI undercover agent on how to kill a guard with a knife, and then Alessa told the FBI undercover agent “and whenever they think I’m leaving, they always think I’m gonna come back, yanni.  I leave this time, God Willing, I never come back.  I’ll never see this crap hole.  Only way I would come back here is if I was in the land of jihad and the leader ordered me to come back here and do something here.  Ah, I love that.”

The complaint also reveals Alessa talking to Almonte and the FBI undercover agent about saving up money for the trip to Somalia.   The complaint indicates that the duo planned to fly to Cairo, Egypt, and then considered various options on getting to Somalia, including taking a boat from Egypt to Somalia.  During the discussion on funds saved for the Somalia trip, Alessa reportedly told Almonte and the FBI undercover agent that about stealing equipment, saying “you get your weapons when you get there… and then, you kill non-Muslims and you take the spoils of war.  The leader gets them (referring to weapons), and distributes it amongst the ranks.  Best life.”

The duo frequently worked out, and according to the complaint “Alessa stated [on January 3, 2010] that stronger muscles mean bigger muscles which means killing more non-Muslims.”  On the same date, they listened to another lecture from Anwar al-Awlaki who “emphasized that an individual need not rely on others or have a leader in order to wage violent jihad.”

According to the complaint, on January 17, 2010, Alessa providing instruction to Almonte and the FBI Undercover Agent regarding: “(1) how they should love believers of Islam and hate non-Muslims; (2) the enemies of Allah, specifically: (a) the devil; (b) one’s self; (c) non-believers; (d) hypocrites; (e) Jews; and (f) Christians; and (3) the importance of waging violent jihad.”

THe FBI had been watching the accused for 4 years, and according to the criminal complaint, “On October 9, 2006, a member of the public (‘Individual 1’) who knows the DEFENDANTS sent a tip through the FBI’S website concerning the activities of the DEFENDANTS.  In that electronic message, Individual 1 stated” ‘every time they (referring to the DEFENDANTS) access the Internet all they look for is all those terrorist videos about the Islam holly [sic] war and where they kill US soldiers and other terrible things… They keep saying that Americans are their enemies, that everybody other than Islamic followers are their enemies.. and they all must be killed.”

The complaint also stated that a family member told law enforcement that the accused “watched a video on the computer about suicide vest bombs.”

Criminal Complaint

Criminal complaint against Mohamed Mahmood Alessa and Carlos Eduardo Almonte

List of media reports:

— New Jersey Star-Ledger: Two N.J. men arrested at JFK airport before boarding plane to join Islamist terrorist group, authorities say
New Jersey Star-Ledger reports: “Mohamed Hamoud Alessa, 20, of North Bergen, and Carlos Eduardo Almonte, 26, of Elmwood Park were apprehended at John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens before they could board separate flights to Egypt, where they were to start journeys to Somalia”
— “Officials said the suspects were not planning an imminent attack in the New Jersey-New York area but were believed to be joining with the terrorist fight against Americans in Somalia.”
— “Authorities said the men planned to wage jihad as part of a Somalia-based Islamist terror group called al Shabaab, an organization of several thousand fighters spread through Somalia’s southern region. Al Shabaab, whose full Arabic name means ‘Mujahideen Youth Movement,’ has had ties to al Qaeda since 2007, according to national security experts.”

New Jersey Star-Ledger: N.J. suspect charged in terror case told neighbors he’d be away on trip for six months

New Jersey Star-Ledger: Federal authorities charge 2 men from N.J. with pursuing dream of ‘holy war’ in Somalia
Star-Ledger: “Also according to the complaint, Alessa said he wanted to be more successful at waging jihad than the Fort Hood shooter. ‘He’s not better than me. I’ll do twice what he did.'”
— “He also said he would start his holy war in the United States if he couldn’t get overseas and then hauntingly foreshadowed his own apprehension. “We’ll start doing (killing) here, if I can’t do it over there. I’m gonna get locked up in the airport? Then you’re gonna die here, then.'”

AFP: Two charged with terror plot against Americans abroad
—- FBI Samuel Robinson: “The defendants discussed in substance and in part, violent jihadist groups operating in Somalia”

NY Times: 2 New Jersey Men Arrested on Terrorism Charges

Cliffview Pilot: “Locals charged with joining ‘holy war’ versus U.S.”
FOX News: Feds Unseal Terror Charges Against 2 NJ Men

NY Daily News report

AP: NYPD: 2 NJ terror suspects had tried to go to Iraq

CBS TV News Video

Stock Photo of Somalia Violent Extremists (ABDIRASHID ABDULLE/AFP/Getty Images)
Stock Photo of Somalia Violent Extremists (ABDIRASHID ABDULLE/AFP/Getty Images)

NYC: Terrorist Threats Continue in NY Post Mosque Articles’ Comments Section

On the New York Post website, at least one individual is continuing to use the reader “comments” sections to post terrorist threats calling for Americans to “blow up” the planned 45 Park Place, NYC mosque renovation, which has been called in the press the “ground zero mosque” (it is two blocks away from the “Ground Zero” 9/11 attack area).

As we reported on June 3, 2010, individuals have been using the NY Post reader “comments” section on articles about the 45 Park Place renovation and Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf to post hateful comments and to post open terrorist threats calling for the facility to be “blown up.”

We first noticed this in a NY Post article dated May 24, 2010, where a reader “Truthful” writes in the comments section that “I say let them build it and when that expensive beautiful building is built, someone should blow it up… 9when it is filled with people… What a fitting tribute to 9-11.”

May 24, 2010 - New York Post Reader Comment on 45 Park Place Mosque - Calling for Terrorist Bombing
May 24, 2010 - New York Post Reader Comment on 45 Park Place Mosque - Calling for Terrorist Bombing

On June 5, 2010, such threats were once again made on the NY Post website.  One of the individuals making such public threats calls himself “Truthful,”  “TheTruth15,” “Herman Muster,” and other screen names.

In the June 5, 2010 NY Post article, “Imam unmosqued – Ground Zero booster tied to sea clash,” by writer Andy Poltis, the New York Post links Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf as a member of a group Perdana Global Peace Organization that has provided funding for the Gaza flotilla.

The June 5 reader comments, below the article, calling for terrorism in NYC in the reader comments of the NY Post state that:
— “I know I’ve said this before, but I’ll say it again: After it’s built, blow it up. Preferable on a Friday afternoon…” and “I am… advocating death again”
— (graphic snapshots of hate comments – June 5, 2010 image 1, image 2, May 24)

June 5, 2010 - New York Post Reader Comment on 45 Park Place Mosque - Calling for Terrorist Bombing
June 5, 2010 - New York Post Reader Comment on 45 Park Place Mosque - Calling for Terrorist Bombing

Articles on Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and the 45 Park Place mosque have seen a wide range of hate comments in the New York Post reader comments section of the newspaper, in addition to the above blatant calls for terrorist violence.

Calls for violence by Americans against the 45 Park Place mosque have also included an open call for the bombing of the 45 Park Place mosque, during a broadcast from the KPRC-950 AM radio station by Michael Berry, a regular broadcaster with a daily program on that radio station.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) condemns such calls for hate and terrorism.

R.E.A.L. has reported these comments for abuse and is writing the author of the June 5 New York Post article on this, so that the New York Post can be more vigilant in reviewing comments on such articles.  We will update this post with any comments we hear back from the New York Post.

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Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) promotes our universal human rights for all people and for all Americans. We reject calls for hate and violence.  We reject calls to deny any of our fellow human beings their universal human rights, including their freedom of religion, freedom of conscience, and freedom of worship. We urge our fellow Americans to be consistently responsible for equality and liberty – for all people.

Choose Love, Not Hate.  Love Wins.

nyc-liberty


Rhode Island Synagogue Vandalized with Swastika, Racial Slurs

In Warwick, Rhode Island, the Temple Am David synagogue was vandalized by hate mongers putting graffiti including a backwards swastika and racial slurs on the synagogue.  A member of Temple Am David, Paula Oliveri, told news media that the synagogue works with the community and with Holocaust survivors.  The police are reviewing surveillance footage from the synagogue’s cameras.

If you have information regarding those responsible, you are urged to contact the Warwick Police Department: Phone Number: (401) 468-4200, Crime Stoppers Tip Line: 732-8477(732-TIPS).

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June 7, 2010 update: Two arrested in Synagogue vandalism
— WPRI reports
that Ryan N. Johnson and juvenile arrested for swastika and racial slur vandalism at Temple Am David
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The Associated Press reports that “Police Chief Stephen McCartney says if the vandalism is determined to be a hate crime, the perpetrator could face stiffer penalties. State Jewish leaders say the vandalism may have been sparked by the Israeli commando raid on a flotilla carrying humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip that left nine people dead.”

NBC 10 News asked Temple Am David Cantor Richard Perlman if the attacks may be linked to Gaza, and he told the NBC 10 News “I certainly hope that his has nothing at all to do with that. However, one would be silly to believe that that may not be a possibility. What’s going on in the Gaza is a terrible thing.”

(Note: From our experience in covering Nazi hate crime, it would appear that most committed Nazis involved in hate crimes usually know how to draw the Nazi swastika correctly, rather than “backwards,” suggesting that perhaps the vandal was someone other than a Nazi.)

NBC Channel 10 News Video Report

WPRI News Video Report

WPRI: “Synagogue vandalized with hate symbols – Swastika, racial slur spray-painted on temple”

Associated Press: “Racist graffiti found on Warwick synagogue”

Providence Journal: Swastika, racial slur spray-painted on exterior of Warwick synagogue

Providence Channel 10 News: Swastika spray-painted on temple

Warwick police are investigating the spray-painting of a swastika and part of a racial slur on the exterior of Temple Am David in Warwick, Rhode Island.  Notably, the swastika is "backwards" from a Nazi swastika. (Photo: The Providence Journal / Glenn Osmundson)
Warwick police are investigating the spray-painting of a swastika and part of a racial slur on the exterior of Temple Am David in Warwick, Rhode Island. Notably, the swastika is "backwards" from a Nazi swastika. (Photo: The Providence Journal / Glenn Osmundson)

Gaza: Hamas Raids, Closes Groups for Women and Children

Hamas has raided and closed groups designed to support charity efforts for women and children in Gaza, according to the Jerusalem Post: and according to the Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights.

Hamas raids, closes NGO offices
— Jerusalem Post:
“The NGOs raid on Monday were: Sharik Youth Institution, Bonat Al-Mustaqbal (Future Builders) Society, the South Society for Women’s Health, and the Women and Children Society.”
— “the Gaza-based Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights expressed outrage over the raids and called on the Hamas government to open an investigation.”

Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights Report:

— “Gaza Internal Security Break into Offices of Five NGOs; Confiscate Belongings:Al Mezan Condemns the Assaults, Calls for Respecting the Law”
— “Five non-governmental organizations (NGOs) were raided and some of their belongings were confiscated by persons who presented themselves as members of the Gaza internal security apparatus. When they broke into the NGOs offices, these persons did not provide their names. They did not have any documents from courts or any other authorized bodies that would enable them to lawfully search the NGOs offices. Al Mezan condemns these assaults against NGOs and views them with much concern. Al Mezan calls on the Gaza Government to initiate an investigation into these acts, ensure full respect of the law, and protect the right of NGOs to work freely.”
— “According to affidavits given to Al Mezan by persons employed by the NGOs, between 10am and 12am on Monday 31 May 2010, the Gaza Government’s internal security apparatus broke into four NGOs offices in the town of Rafah in the south of the Gaza Strip. The NGOs are: Sharik Youth Institution, Bonat Al-Mustaqbal (Future Builders) Society, the South Society for Women’s Health, and the Women and Children Society. The raiders searched the offices and made a list of the equipment and other belongings in the NGOs. Later, between 6pm and 8pm on the same day, a group of persons, who also identified themselves as from the internal security apparatus, went to the offices of the same NGOs and called the directors by telephone. They confiscated most of the equipment and belongings, including computers, faxes, cameras, part of the documents, reports as well as the keys to their doors. The security members informed the directors that their organizations were closed. They did not provide any reasons behind this decision.”
— “At approximately 3pm on Monday 31 May 2010, eight members of the Gaza internal security apparatus appeared at Sharik Youth Institution office in Gaza City. They searched the office and confiscated 18 laptops, two desktops, three digital cameras and three USB memory sticks. They also took some papers and lists of names. One of the Sharik staff members made a list of the confiscated equipment. He asked the security members to sign the list One of them signed; however, without writing his name on it.”
— “In a separate incident, at approximately, 8am on Tuesday 1 June 2010, a group of persons who identified themselves as from the internal security apparatus broke into and Palestinian Mini Parliament and the National Reconciliation Committee. They confiscated the keys to their doors and ordered them closed.”
— “Al Mezan views these assaults on NGOs and the way they were carried out without any respect to the law with great concern….Al Mezan asserts that attacks on NGOs violate constitutional rights under Article 26 of the amended Palestinian Basic Law. Article 26 of this law provides for Palestinians right to participate in public life, particularly by forming syndicates, unions, institutions, clubs and popular institutions.”

Hamas Security (Photo: AP)
Hamas Security (Photo: AP)
Sharik Youth Institution Sea Camp (Photo: Sharik Youth Institution)
Sharik Youth Institution Sea Camp (Photo: Sharik Youth Institution)
Sharik Youth Institution on International Women's Day (Photo: Sharik Youth Institution)
Sharik Youth Institution on International Women's Day (Photo: Sharik Youth Institution)

Freedom House Announces Worst for Human Rights – 9 OIC Nations, 5 Communist Nations, Burma, Eritrea, and Belarus.

Freedom House has announced its list of the “worst of the worst” human right violators in a report issued on June 3, 2010, which include three nations that are members of the U.N. Human Rights Council Saudi Arabia, Libya, Communist China, and Cuba).  The Freedom House list includes 9 Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) nations (Somalia, Sudan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Chad, Guinea, and Syria), 5 Communist nations (North Korea, Communist China, Cuba, Laos, and the territory of Tibet under Communist Chinese jurisidiction), Burmese/Myanmar, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, and Belarus.

Leaders of Some of "Worst" Nations for Human Rights:  OIC's Sudan President Omar Al-Bashir, Communist China's CCP General Secretary Hu Jintao, Burma/Myamar's Senior General Than Shwe
Leaders of Some of "Worst" Nations for Human Rights: OIC's Sudan President Omar Al-Bashir, Communist China's CCP General Secretary Hu Jintao, Burma/Myamar's Senior General Than Shwe

The Freedom House Press Release states that:

“Nine countries and one territory are judged to have the worst human rights conditions, receiving the lowest possible score of 7 (based on a 1 to 7 scale, with 1 representing the most free and 7 representing the least free) on both political rights and civil liberties: Burma, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Sudan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tibet.”

“An additional 8 countries and 2 territories score only slightly better, with a score of 7 in political rights and a score of 6 in the civil liberties category: Belarus, Chad, China, Cuba, Guinea, Laos, Saudi Arabia, and Syria.”

“The event included a release of the results by Freedom House director of advocacy, Paula Schriefer and remarks by Mr. Mamadi Kaba, President of RADDHO-Guinea, a leading Guinean human rights organization. Mr. Kaba is part of a delegation from Africa, sponsored by Freedom House, which is attending the Human Rights Council session to lobby for greater human rights in Africa. Of the 20 countries identified in the report, 6 are from Sub-Saharan Africa, including Guinea.”

“‘While it is shameful that three of the ‘Worst of the Worst’ regimes now actually sit on the Council (China, Cuba and Saudi Arabia) and a fourth (Libya) was just elected, we nonetheless call on the member states of the Council to fulfill their mandate and take actions to address the systemic abuses in these countries,’ continued Schriefer.”

“Since the Council was first established in 2006 to replace the widely discredited UN Commission on Human Rights, only a handful of ‘Worst of the Worst’ states — Burma, Guinea, Somalia, Sudan and North Korea — have been the focus of resolutions or special sessions by the UN body.”

Press Release: Freedom House Reveals the World’s Worst Human Rights Abusers

Full Report: Freedom in the World 2010 – Worst of the Worst

Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) Members

R.E.A.L. Reports on Communist Totalitarianism

R.E.A.L. Reports on Communist China

R.E.A.L. Reports on North Korea

R.E.A.L. Reports on Radical Extremism

R.E.A.L. Reports on Sudan

Wikipedia Report on Hu Jintao

Wikipedia Report on Than Shwe

Wikipedia Report on Omar Al-Bashir

Omar Al-Bashir (Photo: AFP/Getty Images)
Sudan's Omar Al-Bashir -- Architect of Genocide (Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

New York City Mosque Protest, Islam, and Religious Freedom

We stand in support of our universal human rights of freedom of religion, freedom of conscience, and freedom of worship for all people.

The “Stop Islamization of America” (SIOA) group has organized a June 6 protest in New York City against stopping a future “ground zero mosque.” While there have been plenty of angry editorials and petitions on this subject, the specifics of the actual “mosque” in New York City and the human rights impact of protesting a house of worship has received limited reporting.  Moreover, few seem to realize that this “mosque” has already been in place as an active worship center since at least December 2009.  This article will address five connected topics: (1) the reality of the “ground zero mosque,” (2) the priority of our universal human rights, (3) why denial of human rights affects everyone, (4) the plank of hate in our own eye, and (5) the important choices facing Americans.

I share this information not to criticize those who are concerned about this issue, but to ask them to seriously reflect on the consequences of protesting a  place of worship in America, and the message that it sends to the world.  As human beings, we are all imperfect and have made choices and mistakes that we regret, as I have and we all have.  But the grand message of the human experience is not only in where we have been, but most importantly where we are going to – and this is where our choices continue to allow us to shape our destiny, our future, and define our responsibility for equality and liberty.

The Reality of the “Ground Zero Mosque”

In December 2009, I first read about the July 2009 purchase of the former Burlington Coat Factory building on 45 Park Place in New York City by the Cordoba Initiative, led by Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and his wife Daisy Khan.  Both the New York Times and Der Spiegel reported in December 2009 how Imam Feisel Abdul Rauf had purchased the aged building and told the NYC mayor in September 2009 that they planned to convert it to a worship center and a cultural center.  According to the NY Daily News, the idea that Feisal Abdul Rauf has is to renovate the building based on a NYC YMCA style structure.  But the idea is not some “new” development.  Cordoba has owned the building for nearly a year, and the NYC mayor has known about this for 10 months. NYC Muslims have already been holding worship services there for 6 months and presumably continue to do so today.   So the idea of NYC protests to “stop” Muslims from having worship services is about 6 months too late.

Back in December 2009 (and presumably today), the former Burlington Coat Factory was nothing more than an outwardly grimy and dilapidated building, where some NYC Muslim worshipers (including street vendors) go during the day to pray.  In all of the dramatic Photoshop “graphics” of what this mosque and cultural center might look like someday, there has been very little reporting on what it actually is today.  So I have prepared a collage of some actual photographs, not graphic sketches, of what it actually looks like (based on published photographs in the NYC and world media from December 2009).  It is certainly possible some changes may have been made in 6 months, but as 45 Park Place has not yet been renovated, these photographs should essentially represent the reality today.  Americans deserve to know all of the facts to make balanced decisions.

Photos of the entrance

NYC: 45 Park Place - the "Ground Zero Mosque" Photos of  the Entrance - (Photo 1 and 3: Spiegel, Photo 2: NYT)
NYC: 45 Park Place – the “Ground Zero Mosque” Photos of the Entrance – (Photo 1 and 3: Spiegel, Photo 2: NYT)

Photos of the interior

Photos of Interior of "Ground Zero Mosque"  (Photos 1  & 2: Spiegel, Photos 3 & 4: NYT)
Photos of Interior of “Ground Zero Mosque” (Photos 1 & 2: Spiegel, Photos 3 & 4: NYT)

Photos of the building

NYC: 45 Park Place - the Reality (Left - Photo AP) and Idea  (Right)
NYC: 45 Park Place – the Reality (Left – Photo AP) and Idea (Right)

To those who plan to protest this on June 6 – is this really what you want to be protesting?

Do you want the world to see Americans protesting against what is today a dilapidated old building where some NYC Muslims have already been praying for the past 6 months?  Is this how you plan to honor yourself, your freedoms, and your country?

With the world watching, it is essential for Americans to use their resources and time to publicly demonstrate their commitment to our universal human rights – not to show the world that Americans are just as willing to deny such human rights of freedom of religion religion as others.

To those who are wondering where is “Ground Zero” in any these photographs, that’s a good question.  It’s not there, because the fact is that 45 Park Place is a good two blocks away from “Ground Zero,” or as one person has calculated about 600 feet (that’s roughly about two American football fields).  In the dense concrete jungle of New York City, two blocks might as well be a mile away in terms of visibility.  In terms of “hallowed ground,” it is a fact that a piece of landing gear from one of the 9/11 jets fell on 45 Park Place.  But in terms of preventing Muslims from praying in that area, the fact that Muslims have been praying there since December 2009 already shows that it really is impractical to decide where someone has the right to pray or worship.  Even if 45 Park Place was taken away from the Cordoba Initiative who would prevent Muslims from praying anywhere else in the area, even in cabs, as they go by the Ground Zero area?

The truth is that our universal human rights of freedom of religion, freedom of worship, and freedom of conscience not only apply to everyone, they apply everywhere – whether some like it or not.  Moreover, as people in nations around the world including Communist China, Pakistan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, and increasingly in the UK and Europe continue to find out – there is no way to prevent people from truly exercising their freedom of conscience – such universal human rights will exist no matter how others try to stop them.

The SIOA has a different picture of the area, one based on graphics artistry, rather than actual photography, designed to show the future plans for the 45 Park Place building with a backdrop of the attack on the World Trade Center buildings.  Now that you have seen the actual photographs as well as the planned redesign for 45 Park Place, let’s look at the SIOA graphic.  Apparently, according to the image by the SIOA graphic designers, the message they seek to convey is that people at the top floors on what the SIOA calls the future “monster mosque” at 45 Park Place will be able to look down upon the wreckage of the World Trade Center when they pray.   Let’s ignore the obvious point that the World Trade Center is supposed to be rebuilt, and let’s set aside the question of whether (and when) people praying at a rebuilt 45 Park Place would be able to “look down” on any WTC wreckage two NYC blocks away.  For the moment, let’s assume the SIOA is correct on all of the points of their argument.

If Americans “stop” Muslims from praying at 45 Park Place, what is to prevent them from praying at any other place in the “Ground Zero” area, or looking down on “Ground Zero” from any other part of the nearby NYC area buildings?  The answer is obvious.  There is nothing to prevent Muslims from praying anywhere at any time, or to prevent them from doing so in the sight of any part of “Ground Zero,”  just like Muslims have already been praying at 45 Park Place for the past 6 months (without protest).

SIOA Graphic Dramatizing 45 Park Place with Graphic of WTC Attack - NOT showing it is Two Blocks Away
SIOA Graphic Dramatizing 45 Park Place with Graphic of WTC Attack - NOT showing it is Two Blocks Away

So what exactly is SIOA protesting to stop?  Muslim worship services that have been taking place?  If the SIOA is only protesting that a larger mosque and cultural center is planned on being built, does that mean that they have been fine with the Muslim worship services that have already been taking place (and presumably continue to take place) since December 2009?  Or is it all of New York City that some seek to ban the building of mosques and Muslim worship, indeed all of America?  The reality is that extremist views on seeking to deny religious freedom ultimately break down into an absurd rejection of our universal human freedoms that even a totalitarian nation such as Communist China is ultimately incapable of consistently enforcing.

This demonstrates the lack of logic in protesting against others exercising our universal human rights, including our right to freedom of religion and freedom of worship, whether such protests take place in Indonesia, Pakistan, the United Kingdom, or the United States of America.

The facts are that no matter how much some protest, we cannot and we have no right to tell others how, where – and to who – they will pray.  Those who reject, disrespect, and defy such unqualified, universal human rights do not change the rights of all people, everywhere to such universal human rights.

Where Our Universal Human Rights Apply...
Where Our Universal Human Rights Apply...

Our Strongest Weapon in the War of Ideas – Our Universal Human Rights

You don’t sacrifice what is important for what is not.  If we are ever to honor the losses of Americans with diverse races, religions, and backgrounds who died on 9/11, we must stay focused on undermining the tactics of terrorism by unflinchingly staying on the front lines of the war of ideas.  Our fallen Americans deserve such commitment by us on the issues that really matter.

There are those who think that we will successfully struggle against terrorist tactics only by tactics of our own, whether they are military, law enforcement, immigration, foreign policy measures, or counterterrorism; such individuals continue to be unable to see the larger picture and the strategy that requires our consistent defense of our universal human rights and pluralism in a global war of ideas.  We cannot fight our way out of this global ideological struggle simply by bombing terrorist compounds, arresting criminals, deporting individuals, and appeasing religious extremists for counterterrorist intelligence.  We can’t negotiate our way out of this with those who play double-games with us and the enemies of freedom.   This existential struggle requires more than anger, muscle, or even cunning; it requires compassion, thinking, and our hearts.  It is that serious.  We can’t afford to keep bungling around with nonsense tactics while we continue to lose the war of ideas in America and around the world more and more every day.  Our world is at war, not just militarily, not just with terrorism, but the world is at war over the very idea of human freedom and human rights itself.

If we want to show respect to those who died on 9/11, we must understand that terrorist attacks continue to happen around the world every day to someone else, somewhere else in the world.  Such terrorist attacks are not a series of random, disconnected “isolated incidents,” as our tacticians would have us believe.  No matter who is the terrorist actor, such attacks are consistent in one important way – they are all based on hatred, and they are all based on defiance of our unqualified, universal human rights.  But whether it is a Christian church burned in Malaysia or a Muslim mosque burned in America, hate is hate, and those who defy our universal human rights seek the same ends – to force others to deny their freedoms.  Freedom of religion is not “a luxury,” it is a part of our strongest weapon of universal human rights in a world war of ideas – and in too many parts of the world, it is a defining human right that differentiates us from the enemies of our human rights.

If hate and denial of our universal human rights is the consistent message of our enemies, then if we choose hate and denial of our universal human rights for others here in America, we become no different than they are.    We become what we are fighting against.

Church Burned Down in Malyasia, Mosque Burned Down in United States
Church Burned Down in Malaysia, Mosque Burned Down in United States

What we can’t afford is to is throw away our strongest weapon in this war of ideas – our universal human rights that guarantees freedom of expression, that ensures freedom of the press, that demands equal rights for women, and that insists on freedom of conscience, freedom of religion, and yes, freedom of worship – not just for those like us and those we like – but for all people, not just in America – but everywhere.

To Americans, these are not “just” universal human rights, these are the very definition of America itself – “we hold these truths to be self-evident” that all men are created equal and that our inalienable human rights include life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.  That is what it means to be an American; it is the declaration of our identity.  If we want to do something about 9/11, if we want to effect change in the world, the first place to show that change is with ourselves and our lives.  We must live to show that we not only hold these truths to be self-evident, but that we will defend such truths of our universal human rights, and that our lives will show that we are responsible for equality and liberty – not just for some people, but for all people.

If we want to honor the 9/11 fallen, then it is our obligation to stay on the front lines of this struggle to consistently defend such universal human rights, and not allow ourselves to succumb to the weaknesses of fear and hate.  We must be stronger than that, we must be more American than that.

United We Must Stand – not only in our national defense of America’s homeland, but also in the defense of America’s identity and in defense of the rights that are inherent in our identity as human beings.

United-We-Stand

Denying Human Rights for One, Denies Human Rights for Us All

One might read this thus far and believe that I completely agree with Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and Daisy Khan, who are  behind the Cordoba Initiative’s efforts to renovate 45 Park Place.  In fact, I don’t agree with them on a number of key issues.

But when it comes to their universal human rights, it simply doesn’t matter. That’s the point – one that all Americans and those who respect our universal human rights should understand. Our basic human rights, as Americans and as human beings, extend to all of our fellow Americans and human beings – whether we agree with them or not.  When seek to support denial of universal human rights to some, including freedom of worship, we deny such universal human rights to all.  That is the point of “universal” human rights.  We can’t think that we can select who does and does not have such rights, without undermining such rights for everyone.

Perhaps next time it might be you and your faith that someone disagrees with and seeks to deny your freedom of worship, as we see in many parts of the world today.  If we support universal human rights, but we can’t set an example to defend them, who will?

For those who will inevitably ask, I have a number of disagreements and concerns with Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and Daisy Khan. Self-criticism and willingness to consistently defy religious extremists essential in any meaningful interfaith dialogue.   Such self-criticism of our views with which we seek to shape the world is not a weakness; it is our greatest strength in building relationships with our fellow human beings.  Such defiance against religious extremists is not a treason to our religions, but it is the foundational building blocks in a pluralist society.  If they seek interfaith relations, we need to see such self-criticism of Muslim views and defiance to religious extremists more often from Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and Daisy Khan.

In too much of the world, people’s human rights are suffering under Muslim religious extremists’  interpretation of “Sharia,” which in the Qur’an simply refers to choosing the “right path.”  “Sharia” is open to the interpretation of Muslim religious scholars and “students” from the Taliban (which means “students”) to those Muslims promoting secular democracy and human rights.  But when we hear about those who seek to implement “strict Sharia” invariably we hear from those who seek to deny our universal human rights.   This global issue between some Muslims’ religious practices and our universal human rights is an issue that all Muslim clerics and scholars should be addressing as their top priority. In April 2009, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf wrote a short article for the Washington Post trying to clarify it, but briefly dismissed the interpretation of Sharia by the Taliban and too many others in the world in one sentence as merely the views of ” ‘firebrand’ clerics.”  He then went on to explain how Sharia is comparable to the U.S. Declaration of Independence and is something that we should not fear.

If Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf is serious about “reforming” Sharia (my word), which may be one of the critical problems for Muslims in America and the world in terms of interfaith relations and addressing human rights, then this should be a focus of his.  Instead, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf dismisses the endless reports of human rights abuses rationalized by those under Sharia, with a very brief statement which essentially states “trust us” on what is likely the largest issue in interfaith relations in the world.  Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf ‘s “trust me” approach on Sharia is not enough in a world where violence and oppression continues every day rationalized by Sharia, nor is “trust me” enough in his calls for a “religious” solution in Afghanistan, where women continue to be oppressed by religious extremists and where Christians and other religious minorities are persecuted, including a reported recent call by an Afghan parliamentarian to kill Christians converts.

Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf has also stated that we must understand how terrorists think, and has blamed Christians as ones who have been responsible for mass causality attacks, stating: “The Islamic method of waging war is not to kill innocent civilians. But it was Christians in World War II who bombed civilians in Dresden and Hiroshima, neither of which were military targets.”  If Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf is concerned about building interfaith relations and respect for Muslims in America and around the world, he should be less defensive and less focused on what type of “methods of war” is blamed on different religions, and more focused on the methods of peace and human rights that we can all achieve together.  There are those in every religion that have been involved in war and violence.  There are those in every religion that have been involved in denying human rights.  But the question we must ask as human beings is where are we going in the future together in peace and in human rights?

Those promoting tolerance must reject a defensive style of appearing to appease those who would deny human rights and reject freedom.  Tolerance and pluralism is based on our shared, unqualified, universal human rights.  In September 2008, I wrote about the U.S.-Muslim Engagement Project, whose study results called for American engagement with the Muslim Brotherhood (whose motto is “jihad is our way”), whose study called for “engagement with political representatives of armed and activist movements,” whose study called for U.S. engagement with the FTOs Hamas and Hezbollah, and whose study stated that the U.S. should not expect that governments based on Sharia law would have limitations in human rights.  This study was endorsed and promoted by Republican and Democratic leaders of Congress, during the Bush administration.  Members of the leadership group that developed  the recommendations for this study, included Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and his wife Daisy Khan, along with 32 others from various religions, political views, and professions.    But in September 2008 as today, there has been little concern or debate on this study, its conclusions, or its bipartisan endorsement.

Daisy Khan also leads the American Society for Muslim Advancement (ASMA), founded by Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, whose mission is “building bridges between Muslims and the American  public.”  So in January 2009, it surprised me when I saw Daisy Khan’s summary of ASMA’s Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow (MLT) meeting to include the following poll results: “Are there Islamic values that are in fundamental conflict with Western Values? 61% – Yes.” How is publishing this promoting bridges between Muslims and the American  public?  In January 2009, the CSM had a follow-up news report on the ASMA MLT meeting where MLT members told the news media comments such as “it’s not an Islamic value to have absolute freedom. Islam puts boundaries on you,” and “It is freedom not to submit [to God’s will] that gives value to submission itself.”  While every religion puts “boundaries” on our activities, are these the types of message that Muslims want to send to the world on freedom – especially from its future leaders?

The same news report also reported ASMA’s Daisy Khan’s comments on the Muslim response to 9/11 as: “ASMA’s Khan said that after 9/11, Americans wanted to know why Muslims’ denunciations of the terrorist attacks were so muted. Although hundreds of Islamic religious leaders did condemn the attacks, they were not heard clearly because Islam has no central leadership, like Roman Catholicism’s Vatican.”  Is this an effective response to too many of those who distrust Muslims in America and around the world?  Rather than bemoan the lack of a “Vatican” for those of the Islamic faith in America, doesn’t it make more sense to call for build a responsible group of Muslims in America whose voice and leaders consistently reject violence, hate, and those attacking our universal human rights?

Moreover, I can understand the concerns of those who are worried about Saudi funds in a rebuilt 45 Park Place, especially given the history of the Saudi government in funding mosques that quietly spread extremism.  I can understand how other Muslims, such as M. Zuhdi Jasser, can question the wisdom of building a planned future 13 story cultural center in area sure to be a target for criticism.  Moreover, I would ask Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf to consider in the interests of the national healing between non-Muslims and Muslims, if it really makes sense to plan to announce the rebuilt Islamic cultural center at 45 Park Place, on a day when the nation  is mourning an act of war two blocks away, and if respectful modesty might build more bridges than giving the appearance of ignoring the feelings of those who continue to be wounded by the 9/11 attacks.

As I have pointed out, there are plenty of areas where I disagree with Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and Daisy Khan.  But whether I agree with them or not (and whether or not they agree with me), I respect them as my brothers and sisters in humanity.  I will defend their universal human rights, just like we must defend the universal human rights of all of our fellow human beings, including the right to freedom of worship.

I have summarized the points in the preceding paragraphs — not primarily to catalog how I disagree with Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and Daisy Khan — but to publicly demonstrate how we can disagree with others, while still defending their universal human rights, including and especially their right to freedom of religion, freedom of conscience, and freedom of worship.

I don’t have to agree with others to respect their religious freedoms and their right to worship.  Whether I agree with them or not, whether or not I share their religious views, whether I am critical of their positions or not — all of these have nothing to do with defending their universal human rights. They have a right to their religious center at 45 Park Place, whether I like it or not, whether I agree with them or not, and they have the same religious freedoms as every other American and every other human being.

In April 2010, I saw Muslim leader Dr. M. Zuhdi Jasser appear in a conference on diversity and human rights at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC.  Dr. Jasser spoke of his background and his experiences in America, but also about his commitment to challenging what he calls “political Islam.”   Dr. Jasser spoke of his commitment to challenging those who believe Islamic religious views should be imposed on governments and legal systems.   Dr. Jasser leads the American Islamic Forum for Democracy (AIFD) whose mission is “building the the future of Islam through liberty and freedom.”   His group is not the only one in the United States.   Other groups include the American Islamic Congress (AIC) that champions women’s rights, religious freedom and pluralism, and the Center for Islamic Pluralism.

To those who believe that Americans can start calling for the banning of mosques and who plan to protest against the building of mosques, I assert that we can’t afford to deny such universal human rights to American Muslims.    What next, will some call for banning the religious freedom of other Muslims such as Dr. Jasser, AIC leaders, and the CIP leaders?  And who has the right to decide what Muslims’ house of worship, we will call to ban and those we will not?

When we starting denying freedom of worship for some, we start denying freedom of worship for all.  There are 1.3 billion Muslims in the world who are watching to see how Americans will act on this.  In the global war of ideas, we need to show that we stand behind the courage of our convictions in our human rights and freedoms.  We must demonstrate that those of us committed to such human rights will stand with our Muslim brothers and sisters in defending their right to freedom of religion and worship.

Mohamed Yahya and Jeffrey Imm Grasp Hands in Solidarity Together on Lincoln Memorial Calling for Justice and Human Rights in Darfur
Washington DC: Muslim Mohamed Yahya and Christian Jeffrey Imm Stand in Solidarity to Challenge Genocide and Support Our Universal Human Rights

The Plank in Our Own Eye

While some are anxious to criticize Cordoba and its Muslim leaders for its plans at 45 Park Place in NYC, there is plenty of shame and disgrace among non-Muslims that we must not be silent about.

To begin with, there are the comments of hate and derision against Islam by political leader Mark Williams, who stated that Muslims worship a “monkey-god.” We have no place for such raw and vulgar hatred in American politics, but Mr. Williams has decided that this is his way of disagreeing with the 45 Park Place renovation.

I have seen similar comments of hatred in blogs and by anonymous posters, including one comment (still there) on a New York Post news story on its web site by a poster “Truthful” who states that “I say let them build it and when that expensive beautiful building is built, someone should blow it up… 9when it is filled with people… What a fitting tribute to 9-11.”  Nor has such blatant hate and open calls for terrorism been restricted to cranks and anonymous Internet posters.

On May 26, 2010, on American radio station KPRC-950 AM, radio broadcaster Michael Berry said regarding 45 Park Place, “I’ll tell you this — if you do build a mosque, I hope somebody blows it up,” and then restated this again, “I hope the mosque isn’t built, and if it is, I hope it’s blown up, and I mean that.” (audio file). What type of nation is America becoming when open calls for terrorist attacks on houses of worship are being treated as unimportant? Promotion of hatred has consequences.

A steady stream of anti-Muslim hatred throughout America has continued to inspire violence and bombings against Muslims and their mosques.   In May 2010, a Michigan mosque was vandalized twice in one week, and in Jacksonville, Florida, a terrorist sought to attack a mosque with 60 people inside with a pipe bomb and gasoline. In Tennessee, there has been “pro-Christian” vandalism of one mosque, and another mosque has been burned to the ground.

Hate in America: Florida Mosque Being Attacked by Bomber (L), Tennessee Mosque Burned Down by Terrorist (R)
Hate in America: Florida Mosque Being Attacked by Bomber (L), Tennessee Mosque Burned Down by Terrorist (R)
Tennessee: Hate in America defacing Mosque with "Christian" symbols and hate message (Photos: The Tennesseean)
Tennessee: Hate in America defacing Mosque with "Christian" symbols and hate message (Photos: The Tennesseean)

Is this type of cowardly hatred, what we will tolerate in the land of the free and the home of the brave?

Or will we say “enough” to hate?  Will we say “enough” to attacks on houses of worship?

In the 21st century, an important way for us to speak out is via the unregulated Internet.  We must recognize that some are using the Internet to promote hate and violence against all of our fellow human beings.  Such antagonism begins with the consistent promotion of intolerance of those of various religions, races, and other identity groups on too many web sites.

Regarding Islam, in September 2009, I wrote about the Stop Islamization of America (SIOA) group and international media reports in September 2009 of SIOA plans to disrupt a public worship service on the Capitol grounds in Washington DC.   I am not surprised to see the SIOA leading the June 6 protest against the 45 Park Place Muslim worship center, given its history of intolerance towards and rejection of Islam in totality.  Regardless of the words it uses, the message that SIOA has conveyed has been clear, it has not simply sought to challenge extremists among Muslims, it has been against all of Islam.  The current SIOA website shows its sister organizations, including the Stop Islamization of Europe (SIOE), which has a history of protesting against mosques in the United Kingdom and Europe.  At a recent SIOE protest chanting “no mosques in our streets,” a Nazi organization joined the SIOE march against a Danish mosque, and it wasn’t until the Nazi group went to raise a banner with a Nazi swastika on it in front of a photographer, that the SIOE broke off the march in Denmark.  This same SIOE leader will be one of the speakers at the June 6 NYC protest against the 45 Park Place mosque.

Human rights issues cannot be addressed by promoting intolerance.  Intolerance attracts more of the same, not those who care about human rights.

The plank in our eye also includes other houses of worship in America that openly promote intolerance and hate.  We have reported on the “Christian Identity movement” and its efforts to promote resurgent racism, including in houses of worship such as the Abundant Life Fellowship Church in Indiana.

We have reported on the Kansas Westboro Baptist Church that regularly promotes hate against Jews, promotes Holocaust Denial, and that protests Jewish synagogues, that praises the murder and shooting of police officers, that praises terrorist bombings against mosques, and that even praises terrorist bombings against fellow Christians.

But there is no one calling for closing these houses of worship, and even these houses of worship are protected with their universal human rights of freedom of religion, freedom of conscience, and freedom of worship.

The Florida-based Dove World Outreach center church, which formed an alliance with the Kansas Westboro Baptist Church, also has such universal human rights and freedom of worship.   While the Dove World Outreach center enjoys such freedom of religion and worship, it seeks to deny the same rights to Muslims and has led a nationwide campaign that “Islam is of the Devil” in high schools, churches, protest events, and a large sign that states “Islam is of the Devil” in front of its church.

This same Dove World Outreach center was part of a November 2009 protest event, in Columbus, Ohio led by the current Executive Director of the SIOA who is leading the June 6 protest in New York City.  At first, I thought that Dove World Outreach’s involvement was a random group that sought to gain publicity from the November Columbus event, until I saw their photographs posted on the website of the current Executive Director of the SIOA.

Dove World Outreach at November 2009 Columbus Protest Led by Current Executive Director of the SIOA (Photo 2: AtlasShrugs)
Dove World Outreach at November 2009 Columbus Protest Led by Current Executive Director of the SIOA (Photo 2: AtlasShrugs)

I then later saw appeals for funding for this same Dove World Outreach Center on the SIOA Facebook web site, and then further discovered that the Dove World Outreach Center was a supporter of the SIOA since its founding in 2009.

But we must defend the universal human rights of freedom of religion, freedom of conscience, and freedom of worship even of those houses of worship that are a “plank in our eye” as well.  While I may disagree with the racist views of the Abundant Faith Fellowship or the “Christian Identity,” I may disagree with the anti-Semitism and praise of violence by the Westboro Baptist Church, and I may disagree with anti-Muslim hate of the Dove World Outreach Center — my disagreement with their views does NOT give me or anyone else the right to deny their universal human rights — whether it is freedom of expression or freedom of religion and worship.

Our universal human rights apply to everyone, everywhere. That remains the heart of our argument in the world war of ideas with extremists and those who seek to deny our human freedoms – no matter what their religion is.

We can’t fight hate with hate.  We can’t fight intolerance with intolerance.  We can’t address human rights abuses by denying human rights for others.  Two wrongs don’t make a right.  This is something we all logically realize.  But we need to know this more than an surface level, this knowledge must be internalized into who we are and how we live our lives – responsible for equality and liberty.

together-for-humanity

The Choice to be Responsible and Uncompromising on Our Human Rights

There are important choices for Americans and our other fellow human beings on these issues. To those who are frustrated by the seeming lack of defiance to extremist views and the apparent lack of action on those who defy our universal human rights, there are actions that you can take.   Activist groups regularly have events and volunteer opportunities were our passions can be productively challenged to help change our world and educate our fellow human beings.

But the most important choice to effect change doesn’t begin with reaching someone else – it begins within ourselves.

The crisis point in the world war of ideas attacking freedom and human rights demands that we make a decision about ourselves as individuals.   Will we surrender to fear and hate, and seek to find “security” by denying others the rights that help define our very humanity?  Will we avoid such responsibilities as human citizens and simply hope that someone else does our job for us?   Or will we choose to stand up for our universal human rights – for all people – to demonstrate to the world what freedom is really about?

Our world, our fellow human beings, our future cries out for all of us to stand up and choose to be responsible for equality and liberty.  Our destiny as a human race demands that we recognize that there is no future in compromising on our unqualified, universal human rights.  We cannot compromise on our freedom of religion, freedom of conscience, and freedom of worship – no matter how much it might make some feel temporarily satisfied.

We will never be empowered by denying our fellow human beings their universal human rights, because what we take away from them, we also take away from ourselves.  We must not compromise on such human rights.

Living in Washington DC, I have seen more than my share of people compromising on our universal human rights, while the city has many monuments with marble inscriptions promoting such human rights.  The assumption that many people make is that such people who compromise on human rights are “bad guys.”  But that’s not true.  Many are decent individuals, even well-meaning individuals, who started off by making one compromise, then another, then another, and after a while, they came to believe that compromising on human rights was the way things got done.  Some believe that being uncompromising on universal human rights is not “practical.”  Some have even come to believe that compromising on human rights is the only way to lead and the only way to be popular.

But New Yorkers and all of us can choose another path.  While the 9/11 terrorist attacks still traumatize New Yorkers (as they have Washingtonians), and destroyed a symbol in New York’s skyline, another symbol of NYC’s skyline still stands proudly – the Statue of Liberty.  It is a symbol of liberty that stands for all people, of all ethnic backgrounds, all races, all genders, and ALL religions.  It is a symbol of our universal human rights that stands as a beacon and as an invitation to the world.

When you come to America, the first symbol you see is not crossed swords, but these outstretched, open arms of equality and liberty for all.  This is the America that so many of us are struggling to protect and defend.  Never forget that this is what we are really fighting for – not just American economic needs, not just American political or territorial needs – but the very truths that we hold self-evident that all human beings are created equal, with the universal human rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Yes we lost the World Trade Center and 3,000 of our fellow Americans to hate and intolerance, and we mourn their loss.  But let’s not also lose the symbol of freedom to the world, and let’s not lose the war of ideas against our human rights and freedom that defines not just who we are, but also who we will be.

nyc-liberty

The heart of the  world war of ideas is a challenge by those who seek deny such unqualified, universal human rights, and instead seek to promote “relativism” of freedom of religion, “relativism” of freedom of conscience, and “relativism” of freedom to worship.  This struggle of ideas against religious extremists seeks to deny such universal human rights and inalienable human freedoms for all people around the world.   We can never defeat those who seek to only offer “relative” human rights, by only offering “relative” human rights to others ourselves.

The world is watching to see if we really have the courage of our convictions on human freedom, or if our support for universal human rights is nothing more than lofty “words.”  In this war of ideas, never forget that history will not just judge those who fought against our universal human rights in other parts of the world and from extremist thinking, but history will also judge those of us who were too possessed by hate and by fear to defend our universal human rights and who knew better.

We must show the world that we will not live controlled by fear and hate.

We must show the world that we will choose love, not hate.

We must show the world that yes, we will stand fearlessly, with the courage that only compassion can inspire, as individuals responsible for equality and liberty.

Afghan women live in fear – CNN video

Afghan women live in fear – CNN video

— UN estimates that 1 in 3 women in Afghanistan experiences physical, sexual, or psychological abuse
— reports on woman who committed suicide to escape by burning herself alive
— interview with Rana Tarin (also spelled Roona Tahrin), head of women’s department who fears being killed, after replacing woman who was killed by Taliban
— women being taught to sow by Rana Tarin, then allowed to take sowing machine home – “the only safe place for a woman in Kandahar to work”
— CNN reporter Paula Hancock states that some women wearing the burqa for “reasons of becoming unrecognizable”
— women’s rights campaigner Shahidah Hussain does not dare to leave home without wearing burqa due to threats against her life
— threats are not unusual for Kandahar women who work, but now they feel unsafe working in their own homes

CNN video

See also R.E.A.L. postings:

Policy Against Terrorism Begins with Human Rights

R.E.A.L.’s Jeffrey Imm Protests the Taliban

Afghan Constitution, Women’s Rights, and the Taliban

Rana Tarin, head of women's department who fears being killed, after replacing woman who was killed by Taliban (Photo: CNN Clip)
Rana Tarin (also spelled Roona Tahrin), head of women's department who fears being killed, after replacing woman who was killed by Taliban (Photo: CNN Clip)
women being taught to sow by Rana Tarin, then allowed to take sowing machine home - "the only safe place for a woman in Kandahar to work" (Photo: CNN clip)
women being taught to sow by Rana Tarin, then allowed to take sowing machine home - "the only safe place for a woman in Kandahar to work" (Photo: CNN clip)
CNN reporter Paula Hancock states that some women wearing the burqa for "reasons of becoming unrecognizable" (Photo: CNN Clip)
CNN reporter Paula Hancock states that some women wearing the burqa for "reasons of becoming unrecognizable" (Photo: CNN Clip)
women's rights campaigner Shahidah Hussain threatened with death (Photo: CNN Clip)
women's rights campaigner Shahidah Hussain threatened with death (Photo: CNN Clip)

Maldives: Arrested Man “Reverts” to Islam — After Govt “Islamic Counseling” in Police Custody

In the Maldives, Mohamed Nazim has announced his “reversion” to Islam, after being taken into police custody after publicly announcing that he was not a Muslim on May 28, 2010.   As reported in our previous posting “Maldives: Man Attacked, Threatened with Death, for Freedom of Conscience,” Mohamed Nazim had announced that he was not a Muslim at a lecture by Zakir Naik (who widely calls for the death penalty for “apostates”), and then was promptly taken into police custody and given “counseling” by the Maldives government Islamic Ministry.  Mohamed Nazim made his public “reversion” to Islam at the Maldives government Islamic Ministry before journalists invited by the Islamic Ministry.

Mohamed Nazim was brought before Maldivian media to make a statement to the press about his “reversion” to Islam, while the police are still deciding whether or not to bring criminal charges against Mohamed Nazim for choosing his freedom of conscience.

A Maldivian lawyer previously told the Maldives press that Mohamed Nazim had to be given such government “Islamic counseling” before capital punishment charges were considered against Mohamed Nazim for “apostasy.”

Haveeru News stated that: “Mohamed Nazim, 38, repented and gave the ‘Shahaadha’ testimony before journalists at the Islamic Ministry Tuesday with a public apology.”  It quoted Mohamed Nazim as stating “And as that action was very much related to the feelings of all Maldivians, I believe that it was an agony for the Maldivian people. I deeply apologize for that to all the Maldivians. Along with that, I would like to say that the major misconceptions I had regarding Islam have been clarified. Therefore, I am now a Muslim. I want Maldivians to accept me as a Maldivian and as a child of this community.”

Maldives: While in Police Custody and Given Government "Islamic Counseling," Mohamed Nazim "Reverts" to Islam
Maldives: While in Police Custody and Given Government "Islamic Counseling," Mohamed Nazim "Reverts" to Islam

The Maldives Deputy Minister for Islamic Affairs Sheikh Mohamed Farooq told Haveeru News that Mohamed Nazim reverted to Islam “on freewill” (while in police custody).

The Minivan News also reported on the “reversion” of Mohamed Nazim while in police custody.  The Minivan News further reported that the Maldivian NGO the “Islamic Foundation” leader Jammiyyathu Salaf Sheikh Abdulla Bin Mohamed stated that there were “many people trying to introduce other religions to the Maldives underground” and that he would “release the names of these underground people at the appropriate time.”

On May 13, 2010, the Maldives was elected to be part of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC).

The Maldives constitution mandates that all citizens of Maldives must be Muslims.   A December 2009 study showed the Maldives (with a 99 percent literacy rate) to be in the top 5 percent of the worst nations for religious freedom. It is a nation that has been building its criminal law based on Sharia law, and whose Parliament bans non-Islamic houses of worship. There have been repeated reports on Maldives government publicly whipping of women and the Maldives is in the bottom rankings of nations with a global gender gap.

See also our previous posting “Maldives: Man Attacked, Threatened with Death, for Freedom of Conscience.”

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Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) promotes freedom of religion and freedom of conscience as our unqualified, universal human rights. We challenge those who deny such universal human rights, including the right to change one’s religion as defined in Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Article 18 of the UDHR reads: “Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.”

UK and Europe Mosque Protests

Everyone has a right to believe, a right to freedom of worship, and a right to freedom of conscience.  These are universal human rights that are rights for all people around the world, regardless of whether we agree with their religion or faith (or lack thereof). Because we support such unquestioned freedom of conscience in a world where attacks on houses of worship are routine acts of hate, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) is deeply concerned about the growing practice in the United Kingdom and Europe of protests at or against individual mosques.

In the United Kingdom, we are concerned about the recent protests and violence by protesters among the English Defence League (EDL) on April 3 and on May 2, 2010, and their efforts to block the mosque in Dudley.  While the EDL is pleased with their success in blocking the creation of a mosque in Dudley, the larger question that must be asked is what is the message the EDL is sending to the world on British commitment to freedom of religion?

Clashes: English Defence League protesters break through barriers during a demonstration through the streets of Dudley  (Photo: Daily Mail/PA Wire - David Jones)
Clashes: English Defence League protesters break through barriers during a demonstration through the streets of Dudley (Photo: Daily Mail/PA Wire - David Jones)

On May 28, 2010, the UK Guardian newspaper also reported on plans for future EDL protests at “Muslim centers,” including East London Mosque, Tower Hamlets, and Bradford this summer. The May 28 reports highlight a growing sense of anti-Muslim hatred, rage, and violence which is growing in the United Kingdom and which is targeting Muslims and Islamic houses of worship.

The UK Guardian reports and videos on an “undercover investigation” of the EDL shows supporters calling for hate against all Muslims, with chants such as “We All Hate Muslims,” use of racial slurs and profanities, and threats.  The reports allege that the EDL is increasingly becoming infiltrated with others who hate, including Skinheads, Combat 18 Nazis, and other racists.  Hate attracts hate.

The May 28 Guardian reports include:
“English Defence League: new wave of extremists plotting summer of unrest”
“English Defence League: Inside the violent world of Britain’s new far right”
“The English Defence League uncovered” – 11 minute video report

I strongly urge you to look at these reports, especially the video report, to fully appreciate this issue.

Where there is religious discrimination and hatred, often there is resultant violence and terrorism.   As with other houses of worship, there has been vandalism of mosques in the United Kingdom, one mosque attacked in Eccles on April 16, 2010, and another mosque building burned to the ground in Cradley in December 2009.

UK Mosque in Cradley (Photo: Express & Star) -- UK Mosque in Eccles (Photo: Manchester Evening News)
UK Mosque in Cradley (Photo: Express & Star) -- UK Mosque in Eccles (Photo: Manchester Evening News)

Any struggle or protest against religious extremism that uses hate and violence, attacks houses of worship, and attacks all individuals of one identity group without respect to diversity and individual views, is nothing less than a mirror image of another form of religious extremism.

The people in the United Kingdom must find organizations and leaders with credibility to speak out against such hatred, such violence, such intolerance, and who will be consistent in their support for our universal human rights, including our universal right to freedom of religion, worship, and conscience. One group that seeks to reach out to British Muslims and non-Muslims in a spirit of our shared human rights is the group British Muslims for Secular Democracy (BMSD.) In January 2010, when the anti-democracy religious extremist group Islam4UK sought to hold a march in Wootton Bassett, the BMSD promised to hold a counter-demonstration to show that other Muslims do not accept the anti-freedom, anti-democracy views of the Islam4UK group.  Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) promoted this statement by the BMSD to stand up to the Islam4UK extremists, but such acts of responsible protests and consistent commitment to our universal human rights do not get enough media attention.  This needs to change.  Too little media and public attention is given to those who pursue a human rights solution to extreme views, as opposed to those that promote hatred and reject human rights – whether it is the EDL or the Islam4UK.

Another group in the United Kingdom and Europe that is protesting mosques is the “Stop Islamization of Europe” (SIOE) group. The slogan of the SIOE group is that “Islamophobia is the height of common sense.”  In the United Kingdom, the SIOE has had two protests in front of Harrow Central Mosque in September 2009 and December 2009.  In the September 2009 SIOE protests at the Harrow mosque, there was violence between supporters and counter protesters, as SIOE protest supporters went to the mosque chanting “Muslims out.”  In the December 2009 SIOE protest at the Harrow mosque, the SIOE reportedly refused the opportunity to dialogue with leaders of the Harrow mosque.

The SIOE group also has other European divisions, as well as a sister group in the United States, the “Stop Islamization of America” (SIOA) group. One of these groups is the ‘Stop Islamiseringen af Danmark’ (SIAD) division in Denmark.

We are also concerned about the May 21, 2010 protests by the Stop Islamisation of Europe (SIOE) against a mosque in Aalborg, Denmark titled “no mosques in our streets.” The Aalborg SIOE/SIAD protest led by SIOE leader Anders Gravers was targeting a mosque in Aalborg because of reports that the mosque’s imam supports genital mutilation of women.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) shares the concern of challenging those who support abuse against women or any abuse of our universal human rights.  But we understand that two wrongs do not make a right, and that seeking to protest houses of worship is not the way to gain the support of others on human rights issues.  In fact, protesting houses of worship is a sure way to attract those committed to hate and violence.

The May 21, 2010 SIOE/SIAD march’s chant, however, was not about women’s human rights, but was to call for “no mosques in our streets.” Not surprisingly, we learned that the May 21, 2010 SIOE/SIAD protest was then joined by individuals representing a Nazi organization.  TV2 NORD reports that the Nazi organization DNSB (Danmarks Nationalsocialistiske Bevaegelse – Danish National Socialist Movement) joined the SIOE/SIAD protest at Aalborg against the mosque, and the Nazi protesters were led by Daniel Carlson.

According to TV2 NORD, the Nazi DNSB group sought to raise its own banner with the Nazi swastika as part of its participation in the SIOE / SIAD protest against the Aalborg mosque.  An embarrassed SIOE leader Anders Gravers then sought to remove the Nazi swastika banner from the protest march, which led to a scuffle.

Denmark: SIOE/SIAD March "No Mosque in Our Streets" Leads to Support and then Confrontation with Denmark Nazi Group
Denmark: SIOE/SIAD March "No Mosque in Our Streets" Leads to Support by and then Confrontation with Denmark Nazi Group when Nazi Swastika Banner Raised

Certainly, anyone who has ever been involved with a public activity or protest is aware of the challenges of unwelcome participants who may seek to “hijack” an event.  However, the lesson that SIOE should have learned is that its messages that “Islamophobia is the height of common sense” and “no mosques in our streets” are viewed as messages that Nazi groups can support.  This is why those who challenge religious extremist and anti-human rights activities must have a human rights message, human rights leadership, and human rights consistency, that groups like the SIOE and the EDL will never offer the public.

What has the SIOE learned from this humiliating experience?  Has it learned not to promote “Islamophobia”?  Has it learned that hate only attracts hate?  Has it learned that human rights issues cannot be addressed by promoting intolerance and hate?  Unfortunately, all that the SIOE has learned is that it needs to have another protest against the Aalborg mosque because the May 21 march was not satisfactory.  Like the EDL, the SIOE also has other protests against mosques planned for the summer of 2010, which it calls “hatecentrals,” while they cannot recognize the hatred in their own activities.  SIOE plans another protest against a mosque in Copenhagen on August 28, 2010.

SIOE’s leader Anders Gravers, whose Denmark event attracted the support of the Nazi party, will also be coming to America to join in a New York City protest on June 6, 2010 against a mosque in NYC.

Human Rights Begins with Human Freedoms

Both the EDL and the SIOE groups claim to be protesting such existing and planned mosques to protest “radical Islam,” and in the case of the SIOE on behalf of “democracy.”

But who is the “radical” when they seek to stop others from having freedom of worship?  What are the “democratic” values in seeking to intimidate others from seeking the right to believe at mosques?  How can anyone be promoting human rights by seeking to deny freedom of conscience at a house of worship?

Since many such protesters claim to be Christian, what type of example do they think they are setting for those oppressed Christians in other parts of the world whose churches are regularly protested, worship services disrupted, worshipers attacked, and even churches targeted for terrorism?  Are they determined to prove that they can be just as intolerant and disrespectful of our universal human rights regarding other people’s freedom of religion?

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) promotes freedom of religion, freedom of worship, and freedom of conscience as our unqualified, universal human rights. We challenge those who deny such universal human rights.

Religious freedom, freedom to worship, and freedom of conscience is defined in Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: “Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.”

There is no caveat to these inalienable human rights, no asterisks, no qualifiers.   Those who promote religious extremism of any kind may not respect these inalienable human rights.  But those who reject, disrespect, and defy such universal human rights do not change the rights of all people, everywhere to such universal human rights.

If we are to defend such human rights, we must be consistent in our convictions for all people, not just for some people.  We don’t have to like others, agree with others, or support other faiths – to recognize that the only way to fight for human rights is to be consistent in defending human freedom for all people, everywhere.   People that we like and people like us are not the only ones with a right to believe and a right to freedom of worship. People we don’t like and disagree with have a right to believe. We either support universal human rights or not – there is no “relative” human rights just for some people, some times, in some places.  But remember, even if we choose not to support such universal human rights, all people will still be entitled to them.

People in every part of the world of every faith have a right to freedom of worship.

We cannot struggle for human rights if we do not acknowledge and respect such basic human freedoms.

We cannot build any consensus of humanity to effect change based on hate and violence.

Choose Love, Not Hate.  Love Wins.