Protester disrupts Washington cathedral’s first Muslim prayer

A Muslim prayer service being held at the Washington National Cathedral for the first time was briefly disrupted by a protester Friday afternoon.

“Jesus Christ died on that cross over there!” a woman said loudly, immediately after beginning announcements were made. He is the reason why we are to worship only him. Jesus Christ is our lord and savior!”

As she spoke, a man attempted to touch her arm, but she moved away from him several times. She continued in a loud voice, “We have built, and allowed you here in mosques across this country. Why can’t you worship in your mosque, and leave our churches alone?”

The protester was then escorted out of the cathedral, News4’s Kristin Wright reported. She allowed two men to remove her without incident, but she raised her voice once she was taken to an adjoining space.

The historic cathedral held Friday’s service to help foster more understanding and acceptance between Christians and Muslims around the world.

Continue reading

TV show alleging veterans were insulted sparks protest

Houma gas station signAs a woman fueled her car Tuesday afternoon at the Road Runner Discount gas station in Houma, another driver pulled up, window down, with a message.

“Are you aware there has been an incident in which an American soldier was cursed out and those people are very anti-American? You should be aware of it, and getting your gas somewhere else. We don’t need anybody who is anti-American,” she said as the station’s clerk walked toward her car.

“These are lies,” the clerk pleaded. “Ma’am, please don’t hate me because I look like a Muslim. Please do not hate me for this,” his hands gesturing to his tanned complexion, black hair and brown eyes.

The gas station was the scene of a protest Wednesday sparked by a local television program’s hour-long news and talk show claiming a clerk insulted all U.S. military veterans last week. The store’s owner and cashier say the claim is fueled by racism and are considering a lawsuit claiming HTV host Martin Folse insinuated the store was selling synthetic marijuana and funding terrorism abroad, an assessment Folse denies.

On Monday, Folse took the desk of his evening news call-in show “Bayou Time,” which he regularly hosts on HTV-10, the station he owns. He prefaced the retelling of the alleged insult by highlighting previous “exposés” he’s participated in with Terrebonne Parish sheriff’s deputies busting convenience stores with “foreigners” selling synthetic marijuana and drug-like “bath salts.”

“I don’t have to tell you by looking at the pictures that he was not born in Terrebonne Parish,” he told viewers as clips ran of a convenience store clerk being handcuffed last year. “The reason I say that is we are asked not to profile when we do news stories, but when I tell you this story about the veteran, you will understand that they are profiling us.”

He then recited the account of local surgeon and Army veteran Phillip McAllister, who Folse at first refused to identify.

Efforts to reach McAllister at his office Tuesday and Wednesday were unsuccessful. Folse initially invited The Courier and Daily Comet to interview McAllister at HTV studios Wednesday but later said that would not be possible.

Folse played McAllister’s audio account of the incident on HTV Wednesday night. In it, McAllister said he stopped by the Road Runner to purchase gas and snuff. The clerk was confused by which type of snuff McAllister had ordered. McAllister claims the clerk became upset with him. As he exited, he heard the clerk make a comment.

“I turned around and asked him what he said, at which time he told me that I was a (f***ing ***hole),” McAllister claims in the recording. “I then reminded him that he was able to speak to people that way because of veterans who had sacrificed much for this country. He then informed me that I was a (f***ing ***hole) as a veteran like all veterans,” McAllister claims in the recording. McAllister, whose practice is advertised on HTV, then left the store.

In his TV report Monday, Folse offered a similar story and added that McAllister described the clerk as being “of Middle Eastern descent.” But the clerk, a 25-year-old who said he emigrated from the south Asian country of Nepal five years ago to study civil engineering, claims McAllister is lying. The man wished to withhold his name, saying he is concerned about his safety. “I didn’t even know what the word ‘veteran’ is until this,” the clerk said. “I’m still learning English.”

The clerk claims confusion over the snuff led McAllister to say either “you people” or “Arabs” “don’t know how to serve Americans.” To which the clerk admitted he replied: “If you think that, you are a f***ing ***hole,” repeating that statement before McAllister left the store. “I am living in the United States, the land of opportunity. Why am I going to say I hate veterans?” the clerk said, insisting his insult was directed at what he saw as a racist man and nothing more.

Continue reading

CAIR video calls out Fox News’ faux ‘condemn Islamic extremism’ challenge to Muslim leaders

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today issued a public video response to Fox News for demanding that an American Muslim leader come on the network to condemn “Islamic Extremism” and then failing to interview a leader who accepted that challenge.

On October 6, Fox News Host Greta Van Susteren issued an on-air challenge, stating:

“So here’s my offer. I will give any Muslim leader of national or international stature the platform right here ‘On the Record’ to condemn Islamic extremism and to make a call to arms of every Muslim leader of every mosque to do the same. Condemn Islamic extremism.”

Despite CAIR’s immediate agreement to have its National Executive Director Nihad Awad appear on her program to repeat the American Muslim community’s consistent condemnation of religious extremism and terrorism, Van Susteren’s producers changed the terms of the challenge and ultimately dropped Awad’s appearance.

Continue reading

In St. Paul anti-Islam graffiti, FBI investigation sought

St Paul anti-Islam graffiti

Someone used motor oil to paint an anti-Islam message in St. Paul’s West Seventh neighborhood, leading a civil liberties group Thursday to call on the FBI to investigate it as a hate crime.

The case led to strong condemnation from the neighborhood, including a resident contacting the Council on American-Islamic Relations, Minnesota (CAIR-MN).

The man reported someone had written “(Expletive) Islam” using motor oil near the driveway of a home, and said several Muslim families live in the neighborhood, according to Lori Saroya, CAIR-MN executive director.

St. Paul police received an anonymous call Oct. 28 at 3:26 a.m. about graffiti at Milton and Juno avenues. CAIR-MN contacted the FBI on Thursday.

The federal agency is aware of the incident, has been in consultation with the St. Paul Police Department and will continue to be, said Kyle Loven, a local FBI spokesman. “We’ll examine the situation to see it meets the threshold of a federal hate crime,” Loven said.

It’s not known whether the people who live in the house where the graffiti was scrawled outside in large letters are Muslim, Saroya said, though she noted that the message wasn’t necessarily targeting them. It was written to be facing out to the street and other homes. “That’s sending a message outwards into the neighborhood,” Saroya said. “It’s very concerning.”

A post on a neighborhood Facebook page about the case drew many comments, most saying the graffiti was unwelcome in the neighborhood. Residents tried to contact the people who live at the house where the graffiti had been left outside, and someone dropped off flowers.

Continue reading

Islam Center of Tucson under siege

Islamic Center of Tucson vandalismTUCSON — A religious place of worship is under siege by UA [University of Arizona] students living next door. Caught on camera, the vandals strike on weekends and late nights. There have been dangerous near misses at the hands of what some say are “drunken antics by students”.

The Islamic Center of Tucson is a place of worship and a community center for all Muslims in Southern Arizona. Within the last year, it has become a place that has been disrespected, which has left the members of this community humiliated.

Kamel Didan is the vice chairman of the center. “We’ve had people come in at the door multiple times and urinate in our door,” he said. The man was caught on camera in broad daylight as students walked by. “This was absolutely was the worst weekend,” said Didan.

On the Sunday of UA’s Homecoming Weekend, the community center attendees couldn’t even get into the parking lot and the children couldn’t play basketball. “We literally found like a war zone,” he said. “It was unbelievable, glass chunks, as big as a baseball and then as little as like maybe the fingertips all over the place.”

A car had its windows broken. Didan said it’s all because of students living in the high rise apartments next to the mosque. Again, all caught on camera. “Dropping bottles full of whiskey on cars, and on literally people.”

Didan showed the apartment manager of level the damages. He says he does this on a weekly basis. In the 25 years the mosque has been here he said they’ve never had this much trouble.

Continue reading

Muslims across America, Europe face renewed 9/11-style scorn amid ISIS’ violent campaign

Muslims in America and Europe say discrimination against them has seemed more pronounced after the Islamic State terrorists beheaded American and British journalists and aid workers. Hate-filled remarks on social media have also become more prevalent, especially since 9/11, when Facebook and Twitter did not yet exist.

New York Daily News, 7 November 2014

Alabama ‘bans’ Sharia law amid fears it could violate American rights

New York anti-Sharia protest
Sharia hysteria in New York, August 2010

Sharia law has been “banned” by Alabama in the US – even though it has never been part of the state’s legal system.

Under the “American and Alabama Laws for Alabama Courts Amendment”, it is now illegal for judges to apply any foreign law if it violates citizens’ existing rights.

Voters passed Amendment One on Tuesday, which despite being worded to encompass any foreign law, sprang from a specifically anti-Sharia bill first proposed almost four years ago.

Senator Gerald Allen’s original attempt, the “Sharia Law Amendment”, targeted Islamic laws but was dropped after a similar move was blocked in Oklahoma because it was found to unconstitutionally limit religious freedoms.

In a 2011 interview with the Anniston Star, Mr Allen claimed the measure as necessary to “protect” the current legal system but seemed unable to define Sharia. “I don’t have my file in front of me,” he said. “I wish I could answer you better.”

The paper found that the bill’s definition of Sharia – “a form of religious law derived from two primary sources of Islamic law: the divine revelations set forth in the Koran and the example set by the Islamic Prophet Muhammad” – was almost identical to the current Wikipedia entry on the subject.

Continue reading

Islamic chant pulled from San Diego high school choir concert

A San Diego-area high school choir program changed an upcoming concert lineup after a parent complained that one of the selections showed religious elements.

Mt. Carmel High School has asked the school’s choir director to remove an Islamic Chant from the Thursday evening concert program. The choir director told NBC 7 that the concerned parent does not have child in the Classical Choir Ensemble.

Earlier in the week, the high school principal and assistant principals talked with their choir group and let them share their opinions, according to one of the students in the choir ensemble. On Wednesday, the students were told to remove the Islamic Chant called “Zikr” and a Korean Chant because it couldn’t be directly translated.

Choir student Alyssa Marine said the songs were connected throughout the concert to show how America is diverse. “It kinda just sucks because they just like kinda hated just that one song and that one religion and I just thought that was kinda messed up,” Marine said.

Continue reading

Posted in USA

Shots fired at California mosque

Islamic Society of the Coachella ValleySomeone opened fire on a mosque in Coachella early Tuesday and the shooting is being investigated as a possible hate crime.

At about 5 a.m., investigators were called to the Islamic Society of the Coachella Valley, 84-650 Avenue 49, according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department.

They determined several shots were fired at the building and a Toyota Corolla that was parked outside. Two bullet holes were visible in front of the mosque and two in the car.

The mosque was occupied at the time of the attack, but no one was injured, according to the Greater Los Angeles Area office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-LA), citing police sources. One worshiper said four people were inside.

Investigators surrounded the one-story building with yellow tape and blocked westbound lanes. Other details haven’t been released and investigators ask anyone with information to call (760) 863-8990.

CAIR-LA is calling for an FBI investigation.

Continue reading