http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/post-911-some-us-muslims-pray-in-christian-churches/462529

Post 9/11, Some US Muslims Pray in Christian Churches
Carlos Hamann | August 31, 2011




Alexandria. In a Catholic church located in the shadow of Mount Vernon, the 
estate of George Washington, the first US president, a group of Muslim faithful 
roll out their prayer rugs each week and kneel to pray to Allah.

Polls show that Islam in the United States is mistrusted and associated with 
violence, and Christian churches actively helping Muslims remain the exception 
10 years after the September 11 terrorist attacks.

Yet inspired by their reading of Biblical passages, some US Christians are 
increasingly reaching out to the Muslim community.

“People true to their Christian faith try to achieve peace in the world,” said 
Father Tom Ferguson at the Good Shepherd Catholic Church in Alexandria, 
Virginia. “Hospitality is the first step toward getting to know one another.”

Hundreds of area Muslims have been meeting at a hall in his church since August 
to pray while their new mosque is being built.

Ferguson and flock welcome the guests — but they are fighting an uphill battle 
to re-define Muslims as friendly.

Prominent conservative US Christians have loudly pilloried Islam, including 
evangelist Franklin Graham, who called Islam a “very evil and wicked religion,” 
and televangelist Pat Robertson, who claims Islam is really a violent political 
system.

According to the Pew Research Center, 40 percent of Americans believe Islam is 
more likely than other religions to encourage violence, a jump from 25 percent 
in 2002.

Conservative politicos routinely denounce phantom Muslim plots to impose 
Islamic Shariah law in the United States. In November Oklahoma voters even 
voted to block judges from considering Islamic or international law when 
preparing a ruling.

This in a country where, according to Pew, 78 percent of its 308 million 
residents are Christian, nearly two percent Jewish, and just 0.6 percent Muslim.

“Rarely has the United States seen a more reckless and bare-knuckled campaign 
to vilify a distinct class of people and compromise their fundamental civil and 
human rights than the recent rhetoric against Muslims,” reads a recent report 
on violence against Muslims by the Southern Poverty Law Center, a group that 
monitors hate crimes.

Bible Belt Love for Islam

Rev. Steve Stone had no fear of Shariah when he hung a banner outside the 
Heartsong Church in Cordova, Tennessee, last year welcoming his neighbors at 
the Islamic mosque being built across the street.

The town is located outside Memphis, in a region known as the US “Bible Belt.”

“At the time I only knew one Muslim, and I was a bit queasy in the stomach,” 
Stone said.

He persevered, inspired by the Biblical parable of the Good Samaritan. “Jesus 
taught us to be a good neighbor,” Stone said.

Danish Siddiqui with the Memphis Islamic Center said his group was “surprised 
when we saw the welcome sign.”

And when Stone offered them his church’s main worship hall at no cost while the 
mosque was built “it took us off guard — we weren’t expecting this kind of 
response.”

Not everyone agreed with Stone, and 20 Heartsong members left the church. But 
his community’s feedback otherwise was “90 percent positive.”

The story was covered by several international TV networks, and mail — 
overwhelmingly positive, Stone said — flooded in from around the world.

Heartsong and the MIC have since held joint food drives and a joint 
Thanksgiving meal. On Sept. 11 they plan to hold a joint blood drive “as a way 
to give life together,” said Stone.

Islam has been in the Americas for centuries, brought originally by enslaved 
Africans during colonial times.

Today, roughly one-third of Muslims are US-born, mainly African-Americans. 
One-third is from south Asia — Pakistan, India and Indonesia — and one-third 
comes from Arab nations and places like Turkey and Iran.

Akbar Ahmed, a professor at the American University in Washington, found a mix 
of experiences among Muslims when he visited 100 mosques for his 2010 book 
“Journey Into America: The Challenge of Islam.”

Islam in America is hardly monolithic, he says: there are liberal Sufi mystics, 
conservative Wahabis, and Imams preaching a variety of Sunni and Shiite Islam 
thought.

In general, Ahmed said, US Muslims are insecure, fearful of the future and with 
weak leadership.

Fear of hate crimes and “concern for a Norway-type massacre ... are always on 
our mind,” said Naim Baig, a member of the Northern Virginia chapter of the 
Islamic Circle of North America.

“The hateful rhetoric toward Muslims is not diminishing,” he said. Yet Baig and 
his group have not lost faith in his country.

In mid-2010 his group knocked on the doors of Aldersgate United Methodist 
Church in Alexandria, just outside the US capital, seeking to rent a room large 
enough for 300 people while their mosque was built.

Aldersgate’s lead pastor, Reverend Dennis Perry, pondered the request. “Our 
thought process was, ‘what’s the Christ-like response?’ ” he said.

Aldersgate leaders eventually agreed to let the Muslims them use their room at 
no cost, and when Perry informed his congregation one Sunday “there was 
applause,” he said. “Eighty percent of the congregation supported the decision.”

But there was also some pushback. “One small group believed we had invited 
terrorists into the building, and was convinced they would blow up the church 
one day with all of us inside,” he said. Perry could not convince them 
otherwise, and five families left Aldersgate.

Another group, quoting the Bible, believed that Christianity and Islam were 
competitors, and Muslims were idol worshipers. Perry quoted different Biblical 
passages to assuage their fears.

Their talks were “as much about their identity as Christians as their political 
ideology,” Perry said.

When the story of Aldersgate inviting the Muslims appeared on a conservative 
Christian Web site, he received “all kinds of perverted, ugly e-mails” from 
critics.

Perry however received strong support from his congregation, including from 
high-ranking military veterans that had served in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“We are not going to be afraid. We are going to create a world of peace,” said 
Perry.

Like in Tennessee, Aldersgate and the ICNA have collaborated on food drives and 
held joint social events.

In August the Muslim group moved to the nearby Good Shepherd Catholic church.

“Our faiths teach goodness and kindness toward other faiths,” said Baig. “We 
recognize that we are all American and that we have to live together.”

Agence France-Presse


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