Seorang President beragama Kristen(Liberal) memberikan dukungan
nya kepada pendirian Mesdhid di Ground zero New York yg ditentang oleh
golongan2 Kristen Konservative Radikal.karena ada pembunuhan lebih kurang 3000 
oleh Islam Al Qaida....

Apakah HTI,FPI,FUI,JAT dan Ulama2 wahabi-salafy masih menetang
kedatangan Obama di Indonesia nanti?

Cobalah pikir dua kali, perlihatkan akhlaq al quran,akhlaq yang MULIA
kpd masarakat International....

Lihatlah akhlaq Obama yang sangat mulia dari sisi ALLAH,dimana
dia sangat mendukung Konsitusi USA dan kemerdekaan beragama di Amerika.

Apakah Saudi.Iran, Indonesia,malaysia, dan negara2 Islam lainnya dapat
memberikan kemerdekaan kpd umat Non Islam untuk mendirikan tempat2 sucinyauntuk 
beribadah  kepada Tuhan masing2? apakah masih berbuat diskriminasi dan tidak 
adil kpd umat non Islam?

ALLAH sangat benci kpd golongan2 agama yg tidak berlaku tidak adil.

Rasulullah saw berlaku adil kpd semua agama,ini dalilnya;

Allah tiada melarang kamu untuk berbuat baik dan berlaku adil terhadap 
orang-orang yang tiada memerangimu (kesemua golongan2 )karena agama dan tidak 
[pula] mengusir kamu dari negerimu. Sesungguhnya Allah menyukai orang-orang 
yang berlaku adil. QS.60:8.

"Aku beriman kepada semua Kitab yang diturunkan Allah( Taurat,Injil, Al quran ) 
dan aku diperintahkan supaya berlaku adil di antara kamu (yahudi,nasrani, 
mukmin ). QS 42:15.

Jadi FPI cs yang menetang pendirian2 Gereja di Indonesia sesungguhnya FPI itu 
adalah golongan2 yang Radikal yang tidak mentaati perintah ALLASH diatas itu 
dan tidak mengikuti sunnah Rasul. Benar bukan?

salam


Barack Obama, the US president, has backed a proposed mosque and Islamic 
community centre near the site of the former World Trade Centre in New York 
that was destroyed in the September 11 attacks.

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2010/08/201081422058404426.html

He said the country's founding principles demanded no less for the project 
which has sparked debate around the country.

For several weeks, opponents of the plan in New York City have publicly 
protested against it claiming it is an insult to the memory of nearly 3,000 
people who died in the 2001 attacks.

Obama gave his support to the mosque during an annual White House dinner 
marking the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, weighing in on the controversy for 
thefirst time. in depth Background: Prayer hall or provocation?

"Let me be clear. As a citizen, and as president, I believe that Muslims have 
the same right to practice their religion as anyone else in this country," he 
said.

"That includes the right to build a place of worship and a community centre on 
private property in lower Manhattan, in accordance with local laws and 
ordinances.

"This is America, and our commitment to religious freedom must be unshakable," 
Obama added.

Respecting differences

The White House had not previously taken a stand on the mosque, which would be 
part of a $100m Islamic centre two blocks from what has become known as Ground 
Zero.

Obama has tried to reach out to the global Muslim community since taking 
office, and the over 100 guests at Friday's dinner included ambassadors and 
officials from numerous Muslim nations, including Saudi Arabia and Indonesia. 
Al Jazeera's Rosiland Jordan reports on the debate surrounding the proposed 
centre

"Our capacity to show not merely tolerance, but respect towards those who are 
different from us, and that way of life, that quintessentially American creed, 
stands in stark contrast to the nihilism of those who attacked us on that 
September morning, and who continue to plot against us today," he said.

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, an independent who has been a strong 
supporter of the mosque project, welcomed Obama's words as a "clarion defence 
of the freedom of religion".

But top Republicans including Sarah Palin, the former 
vice-presidentialcandidate, and Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House 
of Representatives, have already announced their opposition.

The Cordoba Initiative, the group behind the project, describes it as 
aMuslim-themed community centre with a view of making it a hub for 
interfaithinteraction, as well as a place for Muslims to bridge some of their 
faith's own schisms.

The mosque has won approval from local planning boards but faces legal
challenges.

Opponents, including some relatives of the victims of the September 11 attacks, 
see the prospect of a mosque so near the destroyed trade centre as an insult 
tothe memory of those killed. Some of the victims' relatives, however, are in 
favour. 

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