By Raheel Raza and Tarek Fatah
We Muslims know the Ground
Zero mosque is meant to be a deliberate provocation. It's an act of "fitna."
Last week,
a journalist who writes for the North Country Times, a small newspaper in Southern California, sent us an e-mail titled "Help."
He couldn't understand why an Islamic Center in an area where Adam Gadahn, Osama bin Laden's American spokesman came from,
and that was home to three of the 9/11 terrorists, was looking to expand.
The man has a very valid
point, which leads to the ongoing debate about building a mosque at Ground Zero in New York. When we try to understand the
reasoning behind building a mosque at the epicenter of the worst-ever attack on the U.S., we wonder why its proponents don't
build a monument to those who died in the attack?
New York currently boasts at least 30 mosques
so it's not as if there is a pressing need to find space for worshippers. The fact is we Muslims know the idea behind the
Ground Zero mosque is meant to be a deliberate provocation to thumb our noses at the "infidel." The proposal has
been made in bad faith and in Islamic parlance, such an act is referred to as "fitna," meaning "mischief-making"
that is clearly forbidden in the Quran.
The Quran commands Muslims to, "Be considerate when
you debate with the People of the Book" -- i.e., Jews and Christians. Building an exclusive place of worship for Muslims
at the place where Muslims killed thousands of New Yorkers is not being considerate or sensitive, it is undoubtedly an act
of "fitna."
So what gives Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf of the Cordoba Initiative and his cohorts the misplaced idea
that they will increase tolerance for Muslims by brazenly displaying their own intolerance in this case?
Do they not understand that building a mosque at Ground Zero is equivalent to permitting a Serbian Orthodox church
near the killing fields of Srebrenica where 8,000 Muslim men and boys were slaughtered?
There
are many questions that we would like to ask. Questions about where the funding is coming from? If this mosque is being funded
by Saudi sources, then it is an even bigger slap in the face of Americans, as nine of the jihadis in the Twin Tower calamity
were Saudis.
If Rauf is serious about building bridges, then he could have dedicated space in
this so-called community center to a church and synagogue, but he did not. We passed on this message to him through a mutual
Saudi friend, but received no answer. He could have proposed a memorial to the 9/11 dead with a denouncement of the doctrine
of armed jihad, but he chose not to.
It's a repugnant thought that $100 million would be brought
into the United States rather than be directed at dying and needy Muslims in Darfur or Pakistan.
Let's
not forget that a mosque is an exclusive place of worship for Muslims and not an inviting community center. Most Americans
are wary of mosques due to the hard core rhetoric that is used in pulpits. And rightly so! As Muslims we are dismayed that
our co-religionists have such little consideration for their fellow citizens and wish to rub salt in their wounds and pretend
they are applying a balm to sooth the pain.
The Quran implores Muslims to speak the truth, even
if it hurts the one who utters the truth. Today we speak the truth, knowing very well Muslims have forgotten this crucial
injunction from Allah.
If this mosque does get built, it will forever be a lightning rod for those
who have little room for Muslims or Islam in the U.S. We simply cannot understand why on Earth the traditional leadership
of America's Muslims would not realize their folly and back out in an act of goodwill.
As for
those teary-eyed, bleeding-heart liberals such as New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and much of the media, who are blind to
the Islamist agenda in North America, we understand their goodwill.
Unfortunately for us, their
stand is based on ignorance and guilt, and they will never in their lives have to face the tyranny of Islamism that targets,
kills and maims Muslims worldwide, and is using liberalism itself to destroy liberal secular democratic societies from within.
[Raheel Raza is author of Their Jihad ... Not my Jihad, and Tarek Fatah is author of The Jew is Not My Enemy (McClelland
& Stewart), to be launched in October. Both sit on the board of the Muslim Canadian Congress. This article was written
for The Ottawa Citizen.]