In December 2009, influential American Muslim leader Feisal Abdul Rauf
announced plans to build a 15-story community center, the Cordoba House,
in downtown Manhattan. The center, which is to include a dedicated
prayer space, would be located two blocks from Ground Zero, the site
of the September 11, 2001, attacks. But that center, colloquially
described as the "Ground Zero Mosque," has come under attack by New York
conservatives and become an increasingly prominent issue in the New
York gubernatorial campaign.
- GOP Gov Candidate Campaigns
Against 'Ground Zero Mosque' Politico's Maggie Haberman reports,
"[Republican state representative and gubernatorial candidate] Rick
Lazio has finally found an issue on which he's on offense instead of
playing defense -- the planned Ground Zero mosque -- and despite criticism
today from the Port Authority Police Benevolent Association that he's
'exploiting' the issue, I doubt we've heard the last of it from him. ...
he said [state Attorney General and Lazio's Democratic opponent] Andrew
Cuomo doesn't understand the issue ... his call for Andrew Cuomo to
investigate the mosque's funding was based on three-month-old clips from
the New York Post."
- Congressman Joins Fight Against Center
Wonkette's Jack Stuef writes, "Long Island
Congressman and ranking Republican on the House Homeland Security
Committee Peter King wants
there to be an investigation into the funding of a proposed mosque
to be built near the World Trade Center site in New York City, because
terrorists are the only Muslims in the world with money, right? 'It's a
house of worship, but we are at war with Al Qaeda,' King said. Muslims
worship Al Qaeda! Makes sense. We wouldn't want Muslims to think they
are welcome near Ground Zero, because that might show we don't hate them
and do allow them to be free in our country."
- Bloomberg
Defends Center New York Magazine's Dan Amira writes, "While
Republican Senate candidate and ex-CIA officer Gary Berntsen weighs in against the proposed mosque at ground
zero, Mayor Bloomberg is still
sticking up for the mosque, saying today that investigating it would be 'un-American' and go 'against what the nation stands for.'"
- The
Public Opinion Campaign Salon's Alex Pareene fumes, "Through
misinformation and shameless fear-mongering, they've got a slim majority of New Yorkers opposing the planned
community center as well. (Specifically, 36 percent of Manhattanites
oppose it. And 73 percent of Staten Islanders.)." Pareene is skeptical
about concerns "that future tourists to the WTC site will accidentally
wander into the
mosque and become radicalized Islamic terrorists (that is, I think, the
fear here)."
- Islamophobia Clearly at Play The American
Prospect's Adam Serwer writes, "By
implying that the center will be financed by extremists without any
actual evidence, [Lazio has] already let the cat out of the bag--he's
opposing the center because of the religious persuasion of the builders,
even though he insists that's not the case ... To the extent that
there's really any controversy over the center at all, it's only because
the proposal is to build the center near Ground Zero. If that wasn't
the case, no one at this level would be calling for an investigation.
Which implies just how frivolous and baseless these accusations are."
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