Updated: Fri., Sep. 3, 2010, 8:29  AM  

 
 
More mosque revelations
Last Updated: 8:29 AM, September 3, 2010 
Posted: 11:59 PM, September 2, 2010 
 
So now it transpires that a key money- man behind the proposed Ground Zero  
mosque is a one-time supporter of a group shut down by the feds because it 
was a  front for Hamas.  
No wonder the mosque's principal imam, Feisal Abdul Rauf, refuses to  
discuss the project's finances.  
Or, for that matter, refuses to speak harshly of Hamas -- an Iranian  
cat's-paw that's long been one of the deadliest Islamist terrorist 
organizations  
operating in the Mideast.  
It was reported last night that Hisham Elzanaty -- an Egyptian-born  
businessman from Long Island -- provided a big chunk of the $4.8 million needed 
 
to buy the building that will be demolished to make way for the mosque.  
Among other things, Elzanaty runs a Bronx-based medicial supply company 
that  had to refund more than $300,000 in Medicaid payments in 2004-2005.  
In 1999, he donated thousands to the Holy Land Foundation, later shuttered 
by  the feds because of its Hamas ties.  
All of this is, as they say, enough to give one pause.  
But we doubt it will truly surprise any among the 71 percent of New Yorkers 
 found this week by Quinnipiac University pollsters to oppose the mosque.  
Mayor Mike and others think they are bigots, but most seem to have asked -- 
 and answered to their own satisfaction -- a fair question:  
How close to the scene of that deadly Islamist attack on America is too 
close  to build a mosque?  
Answer: The proposed site was close enough to have been hit by a 
landing-gear  assembly from one of the crashed airliners on 9/11 -- and that's 
way  
too close.  
They're also nervous about the project's backers -- even before Elzanaty  
popped up -- deciding that, with those folks involved, anywhere might  be too 
close.  
As The Post reported yesterday, Rauf has been catching iffy tax breaks 
since  1998 for an organization run from his wife's Upper West Side apartment.  
How'd he do it? By telling the IRS the one-bedroom digs were actually a  
mosque where 500 people prayed daily.  
These are only the latest revelations about the mosque's backers, who've 
run  up a cumulative record of petty crime, slumlording and tax-scamming.  
And that's being generous.  
Rauf, who's due back in New York this weekend after a long trip abroad, has 
 plenty of explaining to do to the people he's been thumbing in the eye for 
 weeks.  
First there is Elzanaty's role, of course.  
Then there's the elephant in the room: Whence the $100 million needed for 
the  mosque?  
And then there is this.  
At a forum in Dubai on Tuesday, Rauf appeared to call the 71 percent of New 
 Yorkers who oppose his project religious "extremists."  
"The battlefront . . . is not between Muslims and non-Muslims," he said. 
"It  is between moderates [and] extremists and radicals of all faith 
traditions."  
We'd guess 71 percent of New Yorkers would include a representative  
cross-section of "all faith traditions."  
Are they "extremists" for opposing the mosque?  
New Yorkers hardly ever agree on any thing -- but they agree it's  
inappropriate.  
Are they "radicals?"  
If Rauf thinks so, then New York ain't the town for him.  
Nor is there room for his mosque at Ground  Zero.


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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