I/III.
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2017447,00.html

<http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2017447,00.html>
Friday, Sep. 10, 2010
Christianophobia: The Lesson of Terry Jones
By Tim Padgett

Even ogres can serve a purpose. The "Reverend" Terry Jones has at least
shown us the ugly consequences of the Islamophobia that was this summer's
political fad — by turning the tables. How does it feel to be caricatured as
a nation of Koran-burning radicals? Americans were appalled to find that a
solitary religious bigot and his tiny congregation of 50 pseudo Christians
had hijacked our global image. We squirmed as a warped little corner of
America's Judeo-Christian culture colored the entire country in the eyes of
the world — the way Americans let a warped little corner of Islamic culture
color all Muslims, even Muslim Americans.

Let's not point fingers: Jones was everybody's Frankenstein, starting with
the media, my own profession. When it came to Jones and his so-called
church, the Dove World Outreach Center, in Gainesville, Fla., we affirmed
all those Onion.com lampoons that show today's media ready to hype any
obscure idiot playing with matches as an important story. One of our biggest
journalistic sins was helping right-wing demagogues like Newt Gingrich and
Sarah Palin turn the "Ground Zero mosque" story into a disgraceful midterm
wedge issue — and thereby encourage delusional, attention-starved
hatemongers like Jones to build their bonfires of intolerance. Jones, in
fact, insists that he suspended his Koran conflagration, which he'd planned
for Saturday to mark the 9/11 anniversary, because he was told the New York
mosque and cultural center would be moved. The mosque's imam denies that any
such deal was struck, and Jones is now thinking aloud about rekindling his
stunt.

We can't pin everything on 24-hour news or 24-hour Newt. Another summer
lowlight was watching New Yorkers — supposedly among the world's most
enlightened citizenries — expose their anti-Muslim underbelly. In a New
York *Times* poll last week, two-thirds of them opposed the mosque near
Ground Zero, one-fifth admitted to animosity toward Muslims, and one-third
pegged Muslims as being sympathetic to terrorism. It's understandable at
first to sympathize with New Yorkers who argue that a mosque near Ground
Zero is insensitive — until you realize that what they're really saying is
that all Muslims are like the ones who brought down the Twin Towers. And
that's no better than a Muslim in Jakarta insisting that all Christians are
like Terry Jones. (See a brief history of lower Manhattan's diversity and
conflict.) <http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2017344,00.html>

One of the only positive things to take from this debacle is the realization
that the genuinely enlightened city was Gainesville, which has roundly
rejected Jones. Far from being the Bible Belt backwater that northerners
like New Yorkers would assume it is, it's a progressive college town (home
to the University of Florida) known for its green ethos, for electing an
openly gay mayor this year — and for its strong interfaith climate. The Dove
center recently complained on its website that Gainesville "may have more
'coexist' bumper stickers ... than anywhere else per capita." (Jones went to
Dove in 2008 after being kicked out as the pastor of its sister church in
Cologne, Germany, in part because of his messianic condemnation of Germany's
tolerance toward Muslims.) (See how Gainesville turned against the
book-burning 
pastor.)<http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2016804,00.html>

When Mayor Craig Lowe was elected this year, Jones and his Dove devotees
stood on Gainesville's streets holding signs that read "No Homo Mayor."
These are the kinds of losers the media has inflated on the current-events
roster these days — to the point at which no less than U.S. Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates had to personally call Jones this week and plead with
him not to burn Korans, as the act has the potential to inflame Muslim
extremists and put U.S. troops in Afghanistan at risk.

Let's hope Gainesville's interfaith attitude now spreads. Maybe the Jones
scare will prompt more Christian, Jewish and Muslim congregations to hold
joint Father's Day services that honor their common ancestral link to
Abraham — and remind Christians that burning a Koran means torching a text
that mentions Jesus in reverential terms almost 100 times. My Muslim friends
are as chagrined to see the misogynistic, homophobic leadership of Saudi
Arabia define their Islamic identity as I am to see the misogynistic,
homophobic leadership of the Vatican define my Catholic identity. And yet we
find understanding in commiseration: just as they appreciate the spiritual
debt that Islam owes Jesus, I recall that were it not for great Muslim
thinkers like Ibn Rushd (called Averroes by the admiring Europeans) who
conveyed classical learning to great Christian thinkers like Thomas Aquinas,
my faith would have remained mired in the medieval mud.

So what can American Christians outraged by Jones' hatefulness do? Stop by a
local mosque today and wish the people well as they celebrate 'Id al-Fitr,
the end of the holy month of Ramadan (and try one of the great sweets). Or
for that matter, wish Jewish people well as they celebrate the High Holy
Days that began Wednesday evening with Rosh Hashanah. But most of all,
remember how lousy it felt this week when the world equated you with Terry
Jones.

II.
http://www.voanews.com/english/news/Florida-Pastor-Now-Says-No-Quran-Burning-Ever-at-His-Church---102691294.html?utm_source=voa_news-twitter-account&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=twitterfeed

Florida Pastor Now Says No Quran Burning 'Ever' at His Church
VOA News11 September 2010

 A Florida minister whose tiny congregation had threatened to burn copies of
the Islamic holy book on September 11 now says his church will "never" stage
such an event.

The Reverend Terry Jones flew to New York and appeared on NBC-TV's *Today
Show Saturday.* He said his 50-member church had succeeded in exposing what
he called the "dangerous" and "very radical" element of Islam.

Jones' church, called the Dove World Outreach Center, generated worldwide
condemnation when it announced plans to burn copies of the Quran on the
anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks against the United
States.  The pastor flew to New York Friday and tried to meet with the imam
in charge of the proposed construction of an Islamic center near where the
World Trade Center stood before the attacks.  But that meeting did not take
place.

U.S. President Barack Obama said the Quran-burning plan would endanger
American troops overseas, tens of thousands of them in Muslim countries.
Mr. Obama appealed for religious tolerance, and said the United States is
"not at war against Islam," but "against terrorist organizations that have
distorted Islam."

Critics have said the proposal to locate a mosque near the World Trade
Center site is disrespectful to those who died on September 11, 2001.
Supporters say it would help bridge differences between the West and the
Islamic world.
III.
http://www.voanews.com/english/news/Afghans-Continue-Protests-Against-Threat-to-Burn-Quran-102685874.html

Afghans Continue Protests Against Threat to Burn Quran

11 September 2010

Afghans continued protests Saturday against a U.S. pastor's threat to burn
copies of the Quran.

The Associated Press reports protesters have set shops and police
checkpoints on fire in eastern Logar province's capital, Puli Alam.

And Reuters news agency says several thousand people gathered in three
district in northeastern Badakhshan province.

On Friday, thousands of Afghans across the country demonstrated their
outrage at the preacher's insistence on burning Islam's holy book.  At least
eight people were wounded in the protests.   The preacher has since called
off Saturday's planned burning.

The obscure Florida pastor, Reverend Terry Jones, arrived in New York late
Friday.

His plans have created an international firestorm and prompted leading
political and religious figures to issue statements condemning the plans.

Top U.S. officials had warned the pastor that the Quran burning could
provoke Islamist violence and put U.S. soldiers' lives in danger.

<http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2017447,00.html>--
Peace Is Doable

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