Signal, No Noise

September 2, 2010

Catholic Church defends male-only priesthood

Filed under: Britain,Christianity,Europe,Northern Europe,Religion — mungurk @ 06:19

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Catholic Church defends male-only priesthood

Barring women from being Catholic priests is not the result of sexism 2,000 years ago, it’s because women cannot fulfill a basic function of the priesthood, “standing in the place of Jesus,” a leading British Catholic thinker argued Monday.

“This teaching is not at all a judgment on women’s abilities or rights. It says something about the specific role of the priest in Catholic understanding – which is to represent Jesus, to stand in his place,” argued Father Stephen Wang in a statement sent out by the Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales.

It’s rare for the Catholic Church to defend its fundamental positions in this way.

Wang was responding to the announcement that campaigners for female priests will plaster posters on London buses next month during the pope’s visit to London.

The ads read “Pope Benedict – Ordain Women Now!” and will be on 15 double-decker buses running in some of London’s main tourist areas, including Parliament and Oxford Street, said Pat Brown, a spokeswoman for Catholic Women’s Ordination (CWO).

The group spent “in excess of 10,000 pounds” ($15,500) on the ads and is hoping donations will help make up at least part of that cost, Brown told CNN Friday.

Wang rejected both the tone and the content of the ads, saying that while an atheist ad campaign last year was “hesitant and ended with gentle exhortations,” this one ends “with a shout.”

And it’s based on a fundamental misunderstanding, said Wang, the dean of studies at London’s main seminary for Catholic priests, Allen Hall.

Pope John Paul II declared in 1994 that the church has no authority to ordain women, a position confirmed a year later by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who is now Pope Benedict XVI. At the time, Ratzinger was the head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the arbiter of Catholic Church dogma.

Wang called the late pope’s position “surprising,” saying John Paul had meant he did not have the power to change “something that has been such a fundamental part of Christian identity from the beginning.”

The bottom line is that Jesus chose 12 men – and no women – to be his apostles, Wang argues.

The choice was “deliberate and significant, not just for that first period of history, but for every age,” Wang says.

Men and women are equal in Christianity, he continues, but “this does not mean that our sexual identity as men and women is interchangeable. Gender is not just an accident.”

He compared the role of a priest to that of an actor playing King Arthur or British soccer star Wayne Rooney in a movie.

“No one would be surprised if I said I wanted a male actor to play the lead,” he said, admitting the analogy was “weak.”

But, he said, “it shouldn’t surprise us if we expect a man to stand ‘in the person of Christ’ as a priest, to represent Jesus in his humanity – a humanity that is not sexually neutral.”

The Catholic women’s group says that in addition to its bus campaign, it plans to hold a vigil September 15, the day before the pope’s visit, outside Westminster Cathedral.

The group also plans to demonstrate at Lambeth Palace, the official London residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury – the head of the Church of England – during his meeting with the pope.

And members plan to hold a banner along the route of the popemobile, the secure vehicle which carries the pope, in London.

Pope Benedict plans to visit England and Scotland September 16-19. It will be the first state visit to the United Kingdom by a pope, according to the British Foreign Office. John Paul’s trip in 1982 was officially a pastoral visit.

CNN’s Richard Allen Greene and Melissa Gray contributed to this report.

August 29, 2010

Tear gas sprayed outside funeral that Westboro church was protesting

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,North America,Religion,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 21:26

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OMAHA, Neb. | An Omaha man was arrested Saturday on suspicion of spraying tear gas into a crowd of mourners and protesters outside a funeral for a Marine killed in Afghanistan.

The protesters were from the Topeka-based Westboro Baptist Church, run by Fred Phelps. Members of the church believe the deaths of U.S. troops are God’s punishment for the nation’s tolerance of homosexuality.

Investigators think George Vogel, 62, sprayed tear gas from an industrial-size dispenser as he drove past First United Methodist Church just before 10 a.m. At least 16 people, including a police officer, were sprayed, Omaha police spokesman Michael Pecha said.

Vogel’s truck was stopped near the scene, and he was arrested. It appears that he was targeting the protesters, Pecha said. Vogel faces 16 misdemeanor charges of assault and one count each of felony assault of an officer and child neglect.

Police officers were at the church for the funeral of Marine Staff Sgt. Michael Bock. Pecha said officers were assigned to monitor a protest by the Phelps group.

Neither the protesters nor the Patriot Guard Riders, whose members try to shield mourners from such protests, was thought to be involved in the tear-gas incident.

Author: More teens becoming ‘fake’ Christians

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,North America,Religion,USA — mungurk @ 18:23

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By John Blake, CNN
August 27, 2010 8:57 a.m. EDT

(CNN) — If you’re the parent of a Christian teenager, Kenda Creasy Dean has this warning:

Your child is following a “mutant” form of Christianity, and you may be responsible.

Dean says more American teenagers are embracing what she calls “moralistic therapeutic deism.” Translation: It’s a watered-down faith that portrays God as a “divine therapist” whose chief goal is to boost people’s self-esteem.

Dean is a minister, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary and the author of “Almost Christian,” a new book that argues that many parents and pastors are unwittingly passing on this self-serving strain of Christianity.

She says this “imposter” faith is one reason teenagers abandon churches.

“If this is the God they’re seeing in church, they are right to leave us in the dust,” Dean says. “Churches don’t give them enough to be passionate about.”

What traits passionate teens share

Dean drew her conclusions from what she calls one of the most depressing summers of her life. She interviewed teens about their faith after helping conduct research for a controversial study called the National Study of Youth and Religion.

The study, which included in-depth interviews with at least 3,300 American teenagers between 13 and 17, found that most American teens who called themselves Christian were indifferent and inarticulate about their faith.

The study included Christians of all stripes — from Catholics to Protestants of both conservative and liberal denominations. Though three out of four American teenagers claim to be Christian, fewer than half practice their faith, only half deem it important, and most can’t talk coherently about their beliefs, the study found.

Many teenagers thought that God simply wanted them to feel good and do good — what the study’s researchers called “moralistic therapeutic deism.”

Some critics told Dean that most teenagers can’t talk coherently about any deep subject, but Dean says abundant research shows that’s not true.

“They have a lot to say,” Dean says. “They can talk about money, sex and their family relationships with nuance. Most people who work with teenagers know that they are not naturally inarticulate.”

In “Almost Christian,” Dean talks to the teens who are articulate about their faith. Most come from Mormon and evangelical churches, which tend to do a better job of instilling religious passion in teens, she says.

No matter their background, Dean says committed Christian teens share four traits: They have a personal story about God they can share, a deep connection to a faith community, a sense of purpose and a sense of hope about their future.

“There are countless studies that show that religious teenagers do better in school, have better relationships with their parents and engage in less high-risk behavior,” she says. “They do a lot of things that parents pray for.”

Dean, a United Methodist Church minister who says parents are the most important influence on their children’s faith, places the ultimate blame for teens’ religious apathy on adults.

Some adults don’t expect much from youth pastors. They simply want them to keep their children off drugs and away from premarital sex.

Others practice a “gospel of niceness,” where faith is simply doing good and not ruffling feathers. The Christian call to take risks, witness and sacrifice for others is muted, she says.

“If teenagers lack an articulate faith, it may be because the faith we show them is too spineless to merit much in the way of conversation,” wrote Dean, a professor of youth and church culture at Princeton Theological Seminary.

More teens may be drifting away from conventional Christianity. But their desire to help others has not diminished, another author says.

Barbara A. Lewis, author of “The Teen Guide to Global Action,” says Dean is right — more teens are embracing a nebulous belief in God.

Yet there’s been an “explosion” in youth service since 1995 that Lewis attributes to more schools emphasizing community service.

Teens that are less religious aren’t automatically less compassionate, she says.

“I see an increase in youth passion to make the world a better place,” she says. “I see young people reaching out to solve problems. They’re not waiting for adults.”

What religious teens say about their peers

Elizabeth Corrie meets some of these idealistic teens every summer. She has taken on the book’s central challenge: instilling religious passion in teens.

Corrie, who once taught high school religion, now directs a program called YTI — the Youth Theological Initiative at Emory University in Georgia.

YTI operates like a theological boot camp for teens. At least 36 rising high school juniors and seniors from across the country gather for three weeks of Christian training. They worship together, take pilgrimages to varying religious communities and participate in community projects.

Corrie says she sees no shortage of teenagers who want to be inspired and make the world better. But the Christianity some are taught doesn’t inspire them “to change anything that’s broken in the world.”

Teens want to be challenged; they want their tough questions taken on, she says.

“We think that they want cake, but they actually want steak and potatoes, and we keep giving them cake,” Corrie says.

David Wheaton, an Atlanta high school senior, says many of his peers aren’t excited about Christianity because they don’t see the payoff.

“If they can’t see benefits immediately, they stay away from it,” Wheaton says. “They don’t want to make sacrifices.”

How ‘radical’ parents instill religious passion in their children

Churches, not just parents, share some of the blame for teens’ religious apathy as well, says Corrie, the Emory professor.

She says pastors often preach a safe message that can bring in the largest number of congregants. The result: more people and yawning in the pews.

“If your church can’t survive without a certain number of members pledging, you might not want to preach a message that might make people mad,” Corrie says. “We can all agree that we should all be good and that God rewards those who are nice.”

Corrie, echoing the author of “Almost Christian,” says the gospel of niceness can’t teach teens how to confront tragedy.

“It can’t bear the weight of deeper questions: Why are my parents getting a divorce? Why did my best friend commit suicide? Why, in this economy, can’t I get the good job I was promised if I was a good kid?”

What can a parent do then?

Get “radical,” Dean says.

She says parents who perform one act of radical faith in front of their children convey more than a multitude of sermons and mission trips.

A parent’s radical act of faith could involve something as simple as spending a summer in Bolivia working on an agricultural renewal project or turning down a more lucrative job offer to stay at a struggling church, Dean says.

But it’s not enough to be radical — parents must explain “this is how Christians live,” she says.

“If you don’t say you’re doing it because of your faith, kids are going to say my parents are really nice people,” Dean says. “It doesn’t register that faith is supposed to make you live differently unless parents help their kids connect the dots.”

‘They called when all the cards stopped’

Anne Havard, an Atlanta teenager, might be considered radical. She’s a teen whose faith appears to be on fire.

Havard, who participated in the Emory program, bubbles over with energy when she talks about possibly teaching theology in the future and quotes heavy-duty scholars such as theologian Karl Barth.

She’s so fired up about her faith that after one question, Havard goes on a five-minute tear before stopping and chuckling: “Sorry, I just talked a long time.”

Havard says her faith has been nurtured by what Dean, the “Almost Christian” author, would call a significant faith community.

In 2006, Havard lost her father to a rare form of cancer. Then she lost one of her best friends — a young woman in the prime of life — to cancer as well. Her church and her pastor stepped in, she says.

“They called when all the cards stopped,” she says.

When asked how her faith held up after losing her father and friend, Havard didn’t fumble for words like some of the teens in “Almost Christian.”

She says God spoke the most to her when she felt alone — as Jesus must have felt on the cross.

“When Jesus was on the cross crying out, ‘My God, why have you forsaken me?’ Jesus was part of God,” she says. “Then God knows what it means to doubt.

“It’s OK to be in a storm, to be in a doubt,” she says, “because God was there, too.”

Arson Suspected in Tennesee Islamic Center Fire

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,Islam,North America,Religion,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 17:21

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Arson Suspected in Tennesee Islamic Center Fire

By KEVIN DOLAK

A fire early Saturday morning at the construction site of a new Islamic Center in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, is being investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Officials say that the incident was an arson attack.

“It is absolutely heartbreaking,” Camie Ayash, spokeswoman for the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro told ABC affiliate WKRN News 2 in Nashville. ”This has absolutely set fear throughout our community.”

The older members of the congregation were very affected by this,” she added. ”We had a man say this morning ‘God forbid someone come and try to attack me.’”

Police and the fire department in the Nashville suburb responded to a call at the site at approximately 1:30 a.m. Saturday morning and extinguished the fire. One construction vehicle was significantly damaged, while several others were doused with an accelerant but not set ablaze. It is suspected that a passerby scared off the suspects.

August 24, 2010

Catholic Church, U.K. govt in bomb cover-up: Report

Filed under: Britain,Christianity,Europe,Northern Europe,Religion,Terrorism — mungurk @ 16:55

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Catholic Church, U.K. govt in bomb cover-up: Report

CLAUDY, Northern Ireland – The U.K. government, the police and the Catholic Church colluded to protect a priest suspected of involvement in a 1972 bombing in Northern Ireland that killed 9 people, a report said on Tuesday.
The Police Ombudsman’s eight-year probe revealed a cardinal was involved in moving Father James Chesney out of British-ruled Northern Ireland, highlighting anew the way the Church hierarchy shielded priests from allegations of criminal activity.
The inquiry showed former Secretary of State for Northern Ireland William Whitelaw had a private meeting with Cardinal William Conway, the head of the Catholic Church in Ireland, in which they discussed the possibility of transferring Chesney.
“I accept that 1972 was one of the worst years of the ‘Troubles’ and that the arrest of a priest might well have aggravated the security situation,” Police Ombudsman Al Hutchinson said. But “the decision failed those who were murdered, injured and bereaved in the bombing.”
No one was ever charged or convicted for the triple car bomb attack on the rural village of Claudy. Those killed included a 9-year-old girl and two teenage boys.
Chesney, a priest in a neighbouring parish, always denied any involvement, though the police had intelligence that he was the South Derry leader of republican guerrilla group, the IRA, and a sniffer dog found traces of explosive in his car when he was stopped at a checkpoint in September 1972. He died in 1980.
The current head of the Catholic Church in Ireland, who has been under pressure to resign over his role in concealing sex abuse cases, denied the Church took part in a cover-up.
“He (Cardinal Conway) was faced with an impossible situation but his primary consideration would be the prevention of any further acts of violence,” said Cardinal Sean Brady.
One of the relatives of those killed told reporters that she had been told the priest had continued his IRA activities after being transferred to Donegal in the Irish Republic in 1973.
“This is an absolute disgrace. It is an absolute outrage,” said Tracey Deans, whose grandfather was killed. “I would like to know how many more people suffered because of him.”
“A VERY BAD MAN”
July 1972 was the bloodiest month in the bloodiest year of three decades of conflict in Northern Ireland and the Claudy bombings came six months after British soldiers shot dead 13 unarmed civilians in a civil rights march in Londonderry.
A photograph of a Catholic priest waving a blood-stained handkerchief in front of a fatally wounded marcher being carried through the city was the defining image of “Bloody Sunday.”
The police may have feared that arresting a priest over the Claudy attack could have triggered a fierce backlash among Northern Ireland’s minority Catholic population.
The British government made an historic apology two months ago for “Bloody Sunday” and the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Owen Paterson, said on Tuesday he was “profoundly sorry” that the victims of Claudy had been denied justice.
Calls for a South African-style truth commission into the decades-long conflict is unlikely given the still shaky concord between groups that want to keep Northern Ireland part of Britain and those that want a united Ireland.
A senior police officer wrote in Nov. 1972 that, rather than arrest Chesney, “our masters may find it possible to bring the subject into any conversations they may be having with the Cardinal or Bishops at some future date . . . “
Conway’s protection of Chesney echoed action by the Catholic Church to shield priests from allegations of child sex abuse.
Scandals over the abuse and the cover-ups have helped topple the Church from its once dominant position in Irish life.
The key police officers in the Claudy bombing are now dead but the ombudsman said that had they been alive their actions would have been investigated.

© Copyright (c) Reuters

July 19, 2010

4-Year-Old Boy Dies During Exorcism

Filed under: Christianity,Eastern Europe,Europe,Religion,Russia — mungurk @ 21:18

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4-Year-Old Boy Dies During Exorcism

15 July 2010
The Moscow Times
A 4-year-old boy sickened with pneumonia died in the Primorye region after being made to participate in an exorcism by a Korean shaman, news reports said Wednesday.

The parents of the child asked shaman So Dyavor, 59, and her husband, Kim Sende, 62, to perform a ritual to exorcise “evil spirits” that they believed were plaguing him, the local news web site Primamedia.rureported.

The child stopped breathing during the ritual in the local village of Sergeyevka on Saturday.

No traces of violence were found on the boy’s body, and forensic pathologists on Wednesday had not established what killed him.

It remains possible that the boy’s pneumonia was the cause of his death, a police spokesman told RIA-Novosti.

The tabloid Tvoi Den identified the boy as Dmitry Kazachuk and said he arrived in Sergeyevka with a delegation of relatives that included his mother, aunt, uncle and grandmother.

The family intended to request help for the grandmother, who has diabetes, but So Dyavor told them that the entire family was jinxed and the boy had put a curse on them, the report said.Nobody was present in the room when the shaman performed the exorcism on the boy, it said, without commenting on the role of So Dyavor’s husband in the incident.

The local branch of the Investigative Committee has opened a criminal case into suspected negligent homicide, which is punishable by up to three years in prison, but has not charged anyone, Interfax said.

June 15, 2010

62′ High Statue of Jesus Completely Wiped Out by Fire After Lightning Strike

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,North America,Religion,USA — mungurk @ 06:58

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Last Updated: 5:41 am | Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Lightning strikes, destroys large Jesus statue in Monroe

BY JENNIFER BAKER • JBAKER@ENQUIRER.COM • JUNE 15, 2010

MONROE – Lightning struck and ignited a fire late Monday that destroyed a 62-foot-tall statue of Jesus Christ with his arms stretched toward the skies, according to Monroe police.

“It burned to the ground. The whole statue is gone,” said Kim Peace, a police dispatcher.

The large “King of Kings” statue was a Butler County landmark since it was erected in 2004 outside Solid Rock Church, 904 N. Union Rd., along northbound Interstate 75 in Monroe just north of the Ohio 63 exit.

Fire crews were called to the church at 11:15 p.m. after several people phoned 911 to report the blaze as a severe thunderstorm swept through Greater Cincinnati, producing a spectacular lightning show, Peace said.

“The lightning was just amazing,” she said, wryly adding: “It was a lot of fun in here last night.”

When fire crews arrived, they found the statue fully involved and an adjacent amphitheater burning. The fire extended into the attic of the amphitheater, destroyed equipment, before fire crews contained it, Peace said.

No injuries were reported. Fire officials are expected to release a damage estimate after 10 a.m. Tuesday.

As fire gorged the iconic statue, several motorists along I-75 pulled over to photograph the sight.

That prompted troopers from the Ohio State Highway Patrol to respond and patrol the area to prevent a traffic jam and potential accidents, according to the patrol’s Lebanon post.

May 29, 2010

Right-wing radio host ‘hopes’ NYC mosque gets blown up

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,Islam,North America,Religion,USA — mungurk @ 12:01

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Right-wing radio host ‘hopes’ NYC mosque gets blown up

By Daniel Tencer
Friday, May 28th, 2010 — 5:27 pm

The US’s largest Muslim advocacy group has filed a complaint with the FCC over what it says is a Houston radio talk show host who “advocated bombing a proposed New York City mosque.”

In a statement released Thursday, the Council on American-Islamic Relations said Michael Berry of KPRC 950 AM “made a call to violence” when he said he hoped someone would blow up the mosque being proposed for a location in lower Manhattan, near the site of the 9/11 attacks.

During an argument with a caller who supported the mosque’s construction, Berry said, “You can’t build a mosque at the site of 9/11. No you can’t. No you can’t. And I’ll tell you this — if you do build a mosque, I hope somebody blows it up. … I hope the mosque isn’t built, and if it is, I hope it’s blown up, and I mean that.”

Download audio of Berry’s comments here (WAV file).

“Calls for acts of violence against houses of worship must never be tolerated or excused,” CAIR National Executive Director Nihad Awad said. “We ask the FCC to demonstrate that incitement to violence is never acceptable on our nation’s airwaves.”

Story continues below…

In a statement on the KPRC Web site, Berry denied that he advocated terrorism against a house of worship, and said CAIR was trying to intimidate political opponents into silence.

“This is how CAIR intimidates people into silence,” he said in the statement. “They want to scare people into believing that having differing opinions will cost you your job.”

But CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper told the Houston Chronicle that his group isn’t calling for Berry’s firing because “then we’re accused of censorship and stifling his free speech.” But he said he wanted to see Berry’s employer take “some action” in response to the incident.

“While I stand by my disagreement of the building of the mosque on the site, I SHOULD NOT have said ‘I hope someone blows it up,’” Berry wrote on the KPRC site.”That was dumb, and beneath me. … For that, I apologize to my listeners.”

CAIR notes that Berry “has in the past been a guest host for nationally-syndicated broadcasters like Mark Levin, Sean Hannity and Bill O’Reilly.”

The group said Berry’s remarks were “of particular concern” as they came shortly after the pipe-bombing of a Florida mosque earlier this week.

A Muslim group known as the Cordoba Initiative is planning to build a mosque inside a former Burlington Coat Factory building two blocks from the World Trade Center site. The 13-story building was damaged during the 9/11 attacks.

Earlier this month, a New York City community planning board approved the plan, stirring up opposition from some residents of the city and from conservative commentators around the country.

2006: Jerry Klein’s radio experiment called for Muslims to wear crescent moons or be tatooed

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,Islam,North America,Religion,USA — mungurk @ 11:42

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Jerry Klein’s 2006 radio experiment

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

On November 26, 2006, radio host Jerry Klein of WMAL 630 AM (covering Washington DC, Northern Virginia and Maryland) had a program that was “focused on public reaction to the removal of six imams, or Islamic religious leaders, from a US Airways flight.”[1] (See Flying Imams controversy). In an effort to gauge his audience’s reaction, he said that force should be applied to ensure that all Muslims in America wear “identifying markers. …I’m thinking either it should be an arm band, a crescent moon arm band, or it should be a crescent moon tattoo. …If it means that we have to round them up and do a tattoo in a place where everybody knows where to find it, then that’s what we’ll have to do.”[2][1]

The response was overwhelming and “the phone lines jammed instantly”. Klein later stated that “The switchboard went from empty to totally jammed within minutes. There were plenty of callers angry with me, but there were plenty who agreed.”[1] While some callers said he was “off his rocker”, others insisted that his statement did not go far enough, calling for forced mass exile: “Not only do you tattoo them in the middle of their forehead but you ship them out of this country…they are here to kill us.” Others called for Muslims to be placed in internment camps: “You have to set up encampments like during World War Two with the Japanese and Germans.”"[1]

At the end of the show he revealed that his statements were a hoax, saying, “I can’t believe any of you are sick enough to have agreed for one second with anything I said. For me to suggest to tattoo marks on people’s bodies, have them wear armbands, put a crescent moon on their driver’s license on their passport or birth certificate is disgusting. It’s beyond disgusting … because basically what you just did was show me how the German people allowed what happened to the Jews to happen … We need to separate them, we need to tattoo their arms, we need to make them wear the yellow Star of David, we need to put them in concentration camps, we basically just need to kill them all because they are dangerous.”[1] A week later, Klein also expressed surprise at how much international media coverage the story got. “You should know that I’ve received email from around the world, interview requests from the BBC and Channel 4 in England”.[3][4][5][6]

CAIR’s response

In a press release the Communications Director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), Ibrahim Hooper, stated, “The public reaction to Mr. Klein’s courageous parody should be a wake-up call for American religious and political leaders who remain silent in the face of growing anti-Muslim bigotry in our society. Americans of all faiths must come together to marginalize extremists and to challenge ethnic and religious bigotry.”[2]

Criticism

Conservative commentator James Taranto called the experiment misleading, writing that, though “any reasonable person will find the sentiments Klein elicited from his listeners disturbing”, “unlike German anti-Semitism, Americans’ fear of Muslims is not fundamentally irrational. It is a fact that not long ago 19 Muslims exterminated some 3,000 people in America, and that in doing so they were acting on the basis of their religion, as they understood it.” Taranto continued that “as one of his overheated listeners suggested, the real analogy here is not to Nazi Germany, where an evil leader concocted an imaginary threat in order to justify genocide, but to America during World War II, and specifically the internment of Japanese-Americans: an overreaction to a real threat, which deprived thousands of innocent people of their liberty.”[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Bernd Debusmann (Dec 1, 9:05). “In U.S., fear and distrust of Muslims runs deep”. Reuters. http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061201/lf_nm/usa_muslims_fear_dc_1.  Retrieved on Dec. 16, 2006. Reprinted as Bernd Debusmann (December 06, 2006). “Shocking anti-Muslim response to radio hoax”. Daily News, South Africa. http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=3577576.
  2. ^ a b “Radio Spoof Draws Support for Nazi-Like Treatment of U.S. Muslims”. Monday, November 27, 2006. http://cair.com/default.asp?Page=articleView&id=2415&theType=NR.  Retrieved on Dec. 19, 2006
  3. ^ Jerry Klein (December 9, 2006). “Saturday, December 9, 2006 – Catching Up”. http://jerryk.com/2006.12.01_arch.html.  Retrieved on Dec. 19, 2006
  4. ^ Gary Younge (December 11, 2006). “At least in America they understand the notion of cultural difference”. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/Columnists/Column/0,,1969165,00.html.  Retrieved Dec. 19, 2006. Reprinted as Gary Younge (11 December 2006). “Understanding the notion of cultural difference”. Mail & Guardian, South Africa. http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=292963&area=/insight/insight__comment_and_analysis/. .
  5. ^ “Fear and distrust of Muslims still run deep in America”. The Brunei Times, Brunei Darussalam. Dec 3, 2006. http://www.bruneitimes.com.bn/details.php?shape_ID=12762.
  6. ^ Abdus Sattar Ghazali (23 December 2006). “2006: Another tough year for American Muslims”. The Milli Gazette. http://www.milligazette.com/dailyupdate/2006/200612242_tough_year_American_Muslims.htm.  Retrieved on Dec. 27, 2006
  7. ^ Something to Fear but Fear itself, James Taranto, Best of the Web Today, December 4, 2006

External links

2008: Muslim Children Gassed at Dayton Mosque After “Obsession” DVD Hits Ohio

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,Islam,North America,Religion,USA — mungurk @ 11:36

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Muslim Children Gassed at Dayton Mosque After “Obsession” DVD Hits Ohio

by Chris Rodda

Sun Sep 28, 2008 at 08:50:29 PM PDT

(From the diaries — kos)

On Friday, September 26, the end of a week in which thousands of copies of Obsession: Radical Islam’s War Against the West — the fear-mongering, anti-Muslim documentary being distributed by the millions in swing states via DVDs inserted in major newspapers and through the U.S. mail — were distributed by mail in Ohio, a “chemical irritant” was sprayed through a window of the Islamic Society of Greater Dayton, where 300 people were gathered for a Ramadan prayer service. The room that the chemical was sprayed into was the room where babies and children were being kept while their mothers were engaged in prayers. This, apparently, is what the scare tactic political campaigning of John McCain’s supporters has led to — Americans perpetrating a terrorist attack against innocent children on American soil.

I read the story as reported by the Dayton Daily News, but this was after I had received an email written by a friend of some of the victims of these American terrorists. The matter of fact news report in the Dayton paper didn’t come close to conveying the horrific impact of this unthinkable act like the email I had just read, so I asked the email’s author for permission to share what they had written. The author was with one of the families from the mosque — a mother and two of the small children who were in the room that was gassed — the day after the attack occurred.

“She told me that the gas was sprayed into the room where the babies and children were being kept while their mothers prayed together their Ramadan prayers. Panicked mothers ran for their babies, crying for their children so they could flee from the gas that was burning their eyes and throats and lungs. She grabbed her youngest in her arms and grabbed the hand of her other daughter, moving with the others to exit the building and the irritating substance there.

“The paramedic said the young one was in shock, and gave her oxygen to help her breathe. The child couldn’t stop sobbing.

“This didn’t happen in some far away place — but right here in Dayton, and to my friends. Many of the Iraqi refugees were praying together at the Mosque Friday evening. People that I know and love.

“I am hurt and angry. I tell her this is NOT America. She tells me this is not Heaven or Hell — there are good and bad people everywhere.

“She tells me that her daughters slept with her last night, the little one in her arms and sobbing throughout the night. She tells me she is afraid, and will never return to the mosque, and I wonder what kind of country is this where people have to fear attending their place of worship?

“The children come into the room, and tell me they want to leave America and return to Syria, where they had fled to from Iraq. They say they like me, … , and other American friends — but they are too afraid and want to leave. Should a 6 and 7 year old even have to contemplate the safety of their living situation?

“Did the anti-Muslim video circulating in the area have something to do with this incident, or is that just a bizarre coincidence? Who attacks women and children?

“What am I supposed to say to them? My words can’t keep them safe from what is nothing less than terrorism, American style. Isn’t losing loved ones, their homes, jobs, possessions and homeland enough? Is there no place where they can be safe?

“She didn’t want me to leave her tonight, but it was after midnight, and I needed to get home and write this to my friends. Tell me — tell me — what am I supposed to say to them?”

When acting as a representative of Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF), the 501(c)3 non-profit organization that I work for, I cannot engage in political activities. The distribution of Obsession, however, although a political campaign scheme, clearly crosses over into the mission of MRFF. So, I’m going to make two statements here — one in my capacity as MRFF’s Research Director, and another as an individual whose disgust at the vile campaign tactics of John McCain’s supporters completely boiled over when I opened up the email about children being gassed.

My statement as MRFF’s Research Director:

The presidential campaign edition of the Obsession DVD, currently being distributed by the Clarion Fund, carries the endorsement of the chair of the counter-terrorism department of the U.S. Naval War College, using the name and authority of an official U.S. military institution not only to validate an attack the religion of Islam, but to influence a political campaign. For these reasons, this endorsement has been included in MRFF’s second lawsuit against the Department of Defense, which was filed on September 25 in the Federal District Court in Kansas.

My opinion as an individual and thoroughly appalled human being:

John McCain has a moral obligation to publicly censure the Clarion Fund, the organization that produced Obsession and is distributing the DVDs; to denounce the inflammatory, anti-Muslim message of Obsession; and to do everything in his power to stop any further campaign activities by his supporters that have the potential to incite violence.

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