How do you know "it's infuriating to the terrorists"?
Because their stated goal is to make all Muslims hate the west. And this kind of tolerance gives lie to his claim that Christians are hostile and violently opposed to Muslims.
How do you know "it's infuriating to the terrorists"?
Will the ground zero mosque be a Sunni or a Shiite mosque? :think:
The intent of the builders is so obvious it is hard to explain why people deny it. The Cordoba Mosque is named after a city in Spain where conquering Moors replaced a church with a mosque. It will be built where a building was destroyed by the landing gear of an attacking terrorist plane. The intent is obvious.
The Cordoba House was supposed to be a monument to religious tolerance, an homage to the city in Spain where Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived together centuries ago in the midst of religious foment. ....
Is it legal to park a house boat there?
Been a rough couple of weeks for the bigots, um?
Catholics are bigots by tradition.
For the record, I am completely intolerant of Islam and don't believe in "religious freedom."
Religious freedom is the antithesis of the gospel.
The intent of the builders is so obvious it is hard to explain why people deny it. The Cordoba Mosque is named after a city in Spain where conquering Moors replaced a church with a mosque. It will be built where a building was destroyed by the landing gear of an attacking terrorist plane. The intent is obvious.
Link
The Cordoba House was supposed to be a monument to religious tolerance, an homage to the city in Spain where Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived together centuries ago in the midst of religious foment. ....
One thing I know about sufism is that it is a sect of Islam so callous that it will stick its finger in the eyes of victims, by building a mosque near ground zero.
One of its tenets is that pain, brings one closer to God.
Also some Islamist terrorists call themselves Sufis.
The Sufis have been infiltrated.
Kind of like a hitman, listing his religion as a Quaker, to avoid
suspicion.
Of course you do know the history of Buddhism includes terrible violence and murder.......Right?
Catholics are bigots by tradition.
For the record, I am completely intolerant of Islam and don't believe in "religious freedom."
Religious freedom is the antithesis of the gospel.
......
No mosque is going up at ground zero. The center would be established at 45-51 Park Place, just over two blocks from the northern edge of the sprawling, 16-acre World Trade Center site. Its location is roughly half a dozen normal lower Manhattan blocks from the site of the North Tower, the nearer of the two destroyed in the attacks.
The center's location, in a former Burlington Coat Factory store, is already used by the cleric for worship, drawing a spillover from the imam's former main place for prayers, the al-Farah mosque. That mosque, at 245 West Broadway, is about a dozen blocks north of the World Trade Center grounds.
Another, the Manhattan Mosque, stands five blocks from the northeast corner of the World Trade Center site.
To be sure, the center's association with 9/11 is intentional and its location is no geographic coincidence. The building was damaged in the Sept. 11 attacks and the center's planners say they want the center to stand as a statement against terrorism.
....
Irrelevant. But, yes, it's legal.
Good. :up:
I suppose Muslims would view Koran burning as inflamatory? Maybe even declare a fatwa against the burners?
bybee Hmmmmmmm
Not to mention that the Great Mosque of Cordoba had been [re]taken over from the Muslims by Christians and to this day is Catholic: The building houses The Cathedral of Our Lady of the Assumption. Oh, I just mentioned it. The last time Cordoba was conquered (during the Reconquista), it was by Christians, and it was the Muslims who were conquered. Now it's a very diverse city. The Great Mosque remains Catholic.
That's a very big difference from saying that "The Cordoba Mosque is named after a city in Spain where conquering Moors replaced a church with a mosque."
In April, more than one hundred Muslim visitors staged a protest by unrolling their prayer rugs inside the site and beginning to pray. When security tried to remove them, the protest got violent and two were arrested.
According to Cordoba's Bishop, Demetrio Fernandes, this incident shows it is impossible to share a house of worship. It would be like sharing a wife between two husbands, he told CNN.
"Would they be happy to do the same in any of their mosques?" he asked. "Absolutely not. Because I understand their religious feeling and they have to understand ours as well. The religious feeling is the deepest one in the human heart, so it is not possible to share."
Bishop Fernandes points to the basilica of San Juan in Damascus as an example of a Christian site that has been converted into a mosque.
"We wouldn't think of asking for the Damascus mosque, because it belongs to the Muslims and for them it is an emblematic place.
"It is [the same] for [Christians] because the San Juan's basilica is very important to us, but we understand that history doesn't go back. It only goes forward. So, it doesn't make sense to ask for the Cordoba [cathedral] to convert it into a mosque, it doesn't make sense because history is irreversible," he said.
Escudero insists this is not about winning a victory for one religion or the other.
He said: "They pretend that we are trying to conquer the mosque again. That's not the intention at all. We want it to be a place where anyone -- whether Muslim, Christian or Jew -- can do his meditation or his internal way of worshipping, or praying or whatever he wants to call it."
You can if the same place is symbolic of 2 things. They are choosing to focus on one aspect and you another. If they have ill motives and are trying to conceal them, using a name "Cordoba Initiative" is not a very subtle way of doing it. So instead of being ignorant or trying to declare victory, they are either ignorant or their motives aren't as nefarious as you think. And since I've seen no good evidence that they are trying to declare victory.....Either the developers are embarrassingly ignorant or they are making a statement of victory. You cannot build a Sharia mosque with the name Cordoba, symbolic of a Muslim victory, on the site where a building was destroyed by the landing gear of an attacking plane and expect people having suffered 911 to think "Oh how wonderful."
I'm not sure what you mean by political, but they have Muslim-Western relations in mind. This isn't JUST about building a mosque/cultural center.Even if their intentions are not political, which I doubt,
What do you want to see them say to show this? :squint: As I've said before, they may be naive for not seeing the controversy, but perhaps they don't see it as a violation of the golden rule since any offense taken by this mosque is based on misconceptions. We aren't fighting Islam. Not all Muslims are held responsible for the attacks. And Rauf has spoken against the attacks. He's been there for years. They already hold some services in the building, I believe.There is this problem of the golden rule. Any person capable of true compassion would know that they don't inflict their good intentions on another. I have not read anything from the developers that indicate they are even aware of the golden rule.
Honestly, I'm not sure they have been yelling about rights.The idea of not wanting to hurt others is completely dominated by the demand for "rights."
And what obligations are those? Should all Muslims stay 500 feet from ground zero? Should they not talk about it? Should they submit themselves to mistreatment because of what some Islamic extremists did?Not once have I read about Muslim "obligations" concerning 911.
The issue is simple. Those that are ignorant of the Golden Rule demand "rights." Those that are aware of it become aware of their human obligations to the needs of others and would not seek to impose a mosque at the site of an attack by Muslim Terrorist planes. They would just build somewhere else.
This issue reveals those ignorant of "feeling" the Golden Rule..