http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/08599201179800/print

 

Does America Have a Muslim Problem?

By BOBBY GHOSH / DEARBORN Bobby Ghosh / Dearborn Thu Aug 19, 6:05 am ET 

 

You don't have to be prejudiced against Islam to believe, as many Americans
do, that the area around Ground Zero is a sacred place. But sadly, in an
election season, such sentiments have been stoked into a political issue. As
the debate has grown more heated, Park51, as the proposed Muslim cultural
center and mosque two blocks from Ground Zero is called, has become a litmus
test for everything from private-property rights to religious tolerance. But
it is plain that many of Park51's opponents are motivated by deep-seated
Islamophobia. 

 

The proposed site is close not just to Ground Zero; it's also a stone's
throw from strip clubs, liquor stores and other establishments typical of
lower Manhattan. Muslims have been praying in the building for nearly a
year, a fact that has got lost in the noise of the protests. But since early
August, it has been the scene of frequent demonstrations, with signs saying
things such as "All I Need to Know About Islam, I Learned on 9/11." The
husband-and-wife team behind Park51, Imam Feisal Rauf and Daisy Khan, seem
stunned into paralysis: while opponents cast them as extremists sympathetic
to al-Qaeda, they have given very few interviews themselves. Pressure is
mounting on the couple to move their center to a less polarizing location.
(See TIME's photo-essay
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/us_time/storytext/08599201179800/3727
4940/SIG=11vdkhfgn/*http:/www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1725413,00.
html> "Muslim in America.") 

 

The controversy has also brought new scrutiny to other examples of
anti-Islam and anti-Muslim protests, raising much larger questions: Does
America have a problem with Islam? Have the terrorist attacks of 9/11 - and
other attempts since - permanently excluded Muslims from full assimilation
into American life? 

 

Although the American strain of Islamophobia lacks some of the traditional
elements of religious persecution - there's no sign that violence against
Muslims is on the rise, for instance - there's plenty of anecdotal evidence
that hate speech against Muslims and Islam is growing both more widespread
and more heated. Meanwhile, a new TIME-Abt SRBI poll found that 46% of
Americans believe Islam is more likely than other faiths to encourage
violence against nonbelievers. Only 37% know a Muslim American. Overall, 61%
oppose the Park51 project, while just 26% are in favor of it. Just 23% say
it would be a symbol of religious tolerance, while 44% say it would be an
insult to those who died on 9/11. (See
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/us_time/storytext/08599201179800/3727
4940/SIG=120vo5m0o/*http:/www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2010923,00
.html> "Why the GOP Should Avoid the Mosque Issue.")

 

Islamophobia in the U.S. doesn't approach levels seen in other countries
where Muslims are in a minority. But to be a Muslim in America now is to
endure slings and arrows against your faith - not just in the schoolyard and
the office but also outside your place of worship and in the public square,
where some of the country's most powerful mainstream religious and political
leaders unthinkingly (or worse, deliberately) conflate Islam with terrorism
and savagery. In France and Britain, politicians from fringe parties say
appalling things about Muslims, but there's no one in Europe of the stature
of a former House Speaker who would, as Newt Gingrich did, equate Islam with
Nazism.

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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