NY gov slammed for 'westernized' Muslims  comment
(AP, August 27, 2010) 
Albany, USA - Muslim leaders in the United States are criticizing Gov. 
David  Paterson for his description of the developers of an Islamic center and 
mosque  planned near ground zero as peaceful, "almost westernized" Muslims. 
The Muslim Public Affairs Council said Paterson mischaracterized the sect  
known as Sufi and his comment suggests other Muslims are a problem, although 
he  made no criticism of Islam or any branches of it. 
For weeks, the Democratic governor has defended Islam as a peaceful 
religion  and has said the developers have a constitutional right to build an 
Islamic  center and mosque a couple of blocks north of the World Trade Center 
site. He  also has emphasized the Sept. 11 terrorists were extremists and 
weren't  indicative of the religion. 
Opponents say the mosque should be moved farther away from where Islamic  
extremists destroyed the World Trade Center and killed nearly 2,800 people,  
while supporters say religious freedom should be protected. 
Paterson, who has offered the developers state resources if they decide  
they'd prefer another site farther from ground zero, said in radio and  
television interviews Thursday that he had researched Sufi Muslims and they are 
 
"not like the Shiites," the second-largest branch of Muslims and the majority 
in  Iraq. 
"They're almost like a hybrid, almost westernized," he said. "They are not  
really what I would classify in the sort of mainland Muslim practice." 
Paterson's use of "mainland" apparently was intended to be "mainstream." 
Paterson didn't immediately respond to a Friday request for comment on  
criticism of his remarks. 
Islam contains several streams that vary according to their interpretation 
of  the Quran and Islamic law and their approach to worship, among other  
differences. Sunnis and Shiites, the followers of Shia Islam, are the two 
major  Muslim groups whose spirituality has had a wide-ranging influence in 
Islam over  centuries. 
The Muslim Public Affairs Council, which calls itself a public service 
agency  working for the civil rights of American Muslims, issued a press 
release 
about  Paterson's comments that said "while his attempt appears to have 
been an effort  to voice support" for the project's organizers, "his statement 
sent a very  negative message." 
The group called Paterson's comments an "offensive mischaracterization." 
"Governor Paterson's remarks reveal his disappointing lack of understanding 
 about Islam and Muslims," the group's Washington, D.C., office director, 
Haris  Tarin, said in the statement. "By calling Sufi Muslims 'westernized' 
and unlike  'mainland Muslim practice,' is he suggesting that all other 
Muslims - and  specifically Shia Muslims - are the problem?" 
Whether intended or not, Paterson's remarks implied that Sufis were the 
only  peaceful Muslims, an affront to American Sunnis and Shiites who reject  
extremism.

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