Sunday, April 17, 2011

Conservative Muslims protest against Christian governor in Egypt

Apr 15, 2011, 16:31 GMT

Cairo - Thousands of conservative Muslims protested in the southern Egyptian province of Qina Friday against the appointment of a new Christian governor.

Witnesses said the protesters, mostly observers of the conservative Islamic Salafist movement, threatened to bar Emad Mikhail, the new governor, from entering the province.

The previous governor, whom Mikhail will replace, was also Christian.

Qina has seen sectarian strife in the past. Late last year, dozens of Christians and Muslims were arrested in the province after nearly a dozen homes were burnt in clashes between members of the two religions.

Full article here: http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/middleeast/news/article_1633279.php/Conservative-Muslims-protest-against-Christian-governor-in-Egypt

Order of the Dragon Cancels Dearborn Protest, Condemns Quran-Burning Pastor

 

Two leaders of the Michigan-based group canceled their April 22 Dearborn protest and instead met with religious leaders on Saturday. Quran-burning Pastor Terry Jones, however, is still slated to make an appearance.

 
Leaders of the Michigan-based Order of the Dragon announced Saturday that they have canceled their planned April 22 protest slated to be held outside of the Islamic Center of America. Quran-burning Florida Pastor Terry Jones, however, is still expected to make an appearance.

Order of the Dragon President Frank Fiorello and Vice President Jammie Bothwell met with local religious leaders Saturday morning, but said that they had already decided before that meeting to cancel the protest, which would have been held on Good Friday.

Public outcry began not when the Order announced their protest­ over what they believed was evidence of “creeping Sharia” Islamic law, but when Jones announced that he would be joining them in Dearborn that day.

Jones, who preaches at a small church in Gainesville, Fla., is most widely known for his attacks on the Quran, which escalated in March when he publicly burned the Muslim holy book.
Fiorello explained Saturday that the Order’s decision to allow Jones to join them was made before he burned the Quran. After the act, the group took steps to distance themselves from the pastor–including publicly denouncing him.

“He’s a little off his rocker,” Fiorello said of Jones. “My honest opinion is that he’s going to hate gays, he’s going to hate Jews, he’s going to hate Muslims, he’s going to hate anybody until somebody realizes what he’s saying and they focus on it, then he’s going to do it all the more.”

Attention, he added, is not the purpose of the Order’s actions. Instead, the 15-member group’s mission–as stated on their website–is “to come together as a community, help protect the traditional rights of Americans … (and) protect our country from the rise of radical Islam and the implementation of Sharia law.”

Fiorello said he never believed Sharia was happening in Dearborn, but that his group saw inklings of it that concerned them. Examples, he said, included the fact that Fordson High School football players practice at night during Ramadan, due to the fact that Muslim players must fast during the day.

“I don’t think Sharia law has been implemented here or anywhere else,” Fiorello said. “I’m just worried about the future.”

Michael Hovey, coordinator for the Department of Parish Life and Services at the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit, said that one of the goals of Saturday’s meeting between religious leaders and the Order was to quell their fears of Sharia in Dearborn.

“I think they appreciated what we were contributing to help them understand that some of the things they read as being imposed were, in fact, chosen as creative ways to be tolerant of each other’s traditions,” Hovey said of their talk about the Fordson football issue. “It’s just like how we would let Jewish students take off of school during the high holy days.”

Dearborn Mayor Jack O’Reilly said he was happy to host the discussion between the Order and religious leaders in Dearborn, and hopes that it made progress to dispel rumors that Sharia law is happening in the city.

“(Religions leaders) were willing to come to have this honest dialogue and to see if they could assure (Fiorello) that his concerns about Dearborn are not really well-founded,” O’Reilly said. “Muslims in Dearborn are not disruptive and they’re part of the faith community.”

O’Reilly said he believes that much of the hubbub over Islamic law taking precedent over state or federal law is based not in truth, but in fear.

“With Sharia law, what’s really at the heart of it is that people are afraid of Muslims,” he said.
In Dearborn, he added, the integration of faiths isn’t an issue–until outside voices make it so, such as with recent comments from Texas Rep. Leo Berman, who cited what he believed to be evidence of Sharia law in Dearborn–something he said he “heard on the radio.”

“What concerns me is these people who are doing this have no knowledge of Dearborn,” O’Reilly said. “They’re ill informed about our community.”

Meetings like the one on Saturday, he added, help to educate others about what's really happening in Dearborn.

Both religious leaders and Order of the Dragon leaders agreed that the discussion was fruitful. The religious community saw it as an opportunity to educate, while Fiorello and Bothwell saw it as a step to ensuring that the constitutional law stays in tact.

“Now that we have a dialogue going,” Bothwell said, “we can start moving along to make sure that America stays the way it is and that our constitution doesn’t get superseded by anything else.”
The next step for both

Your Mail: Sharia hysteria

Why It’s OK for the U.S. Govt. to Burn Bibles But Condemn Burning the Koran

April 16, 2011 - 7:55 am - by Roger Kimball
 
 
F. Scott Fitzgerald said that the ability to hold two contradictory ideas in the mind simultaneously was a mark of genius.

If that were true, the U.S. government must be full of geniuses. Consider: it was just a week or two ago that everyone from Sen. Lindsey Graham (R., sort of, SC) to Gen. David Petraeus and Sec. of State Hillary Clinton loudly condemned the Rev. Terry Jones for presiding over his Koran barbecue. Burning a holy book, you see, was hateful, intolerant, and extremely disrespectful.

That’s how General Petraeus put it: “hateful, intolerant, extremely disrespectful.”

For his part, Sen. Lindsey wondered aloud on Face the Nation about how the government could “push back” against individuals who did such things. “Free speech is a great idea,” he said, “but we’re in a war.” Ann Barnhardt did for Lindsey Graham what Apollo did for Marsyas, and I hope that who ever runs against him in 2014 plays his statement and Ms. Barnhardt’s video again and again and again.


Full story: http://pajamasmedia.com/rogerkimball/2011/04/16/why-it%e2%80%99s-ok-for-the-u-s-government-to-burn-bibles-but-condemn-burning-the-koran/

After protest, FAU supports Muslim professor with terror links

via 50 protest FAU professor they say has terrorist ties.

BOCA RATON — About 50 protestors at the entrance to Florida Atlantic University today called for the firing of a Syrian professor they claim has terrorist ties.

At the same time, across campus, almost an equal number of students and professors gathered to support professor Bassem Alhalabi, an associate professor of computer science and engineering who has worked at FAU since 1996.

The university issued a statement Wednesday supporting Alhalabi.

Joe Kaufman of Americans Against Hate, who describes himself as an investigative journalist, targeted Alhalabi more than a decade ago. According to Kaufman, Alhalabi has troubling connections to terrorist groups, including the Islamic Center of Boca Raton, of which he was a co-founder. Kaufman says the center was bankrolled by Saudi Arabians and had several members, including its former imam, who have been arrested


Islamophobia at Merriam-Webster

Islamophobia2.jpg

Merriam-Webster online has no definition for "Islamophobia"! Why, it's...it's...an obvious case of, uh...what's that word again?

Here's a new job for Ibrahim "Honest Ibe" Hooper and his merry band of thugs at the Hamas-linked Council on American-Islamic Relations: cry "Islamophobia" until Merriam-Webster picks up the trumped-up, politically manipulative, and substanceless word forthwith. Clearly the absence of a dictionary definition of the word is a sign of the all-pervasiveness of the concept itself, no?


Full article here: http://www.jihadwatch.org/2011/04/islamophobia-at-merriam-webster.html

"Another one that needs torched. Who is this Robert Spencer character?"

TorchSpencerBook.jpg

Jihad Watch reader James sends me this gem from "riss's photos" at Plixi.com. I am thoroughly honored by Rissa's declaration, and invite her to go through with it; in fact, if she would like to burn copies of my book The Complete Infidel's Guide to the Koran in bulk, I will contact Regnery Publishing on Monday and see if I can get them for her at a special discount rate.

And I promise that if she does torch The Complete Infidel's Guide to the Koran, whether one copy or many, I will not riot, I will not kill any innocent people (or any guilty ones, for that matter), and I will not demand that her freedom of speech be curtailed. Rissa, you have my solemn word on all that.

Group pulls out of Islamic Center protest



Dearborn Mayor Jack O'Reilly (right) talks with Frank Fiorello, President of the Fraternal Order of the Dragon, and Jammie Bothwell, vice president, (middle) after they met with members of the Dearborn Area Ministerial Association Saturday at the Ford Community and Performing Arts Center. (Photo by Millard Berry/P&G)

Controversial pastor still expected

DEARBORN — The group expected to protest here next week with Terry Jones, the Quran-burning pastor from Florida, has canceled  their appearance.

After a two-hour roundtable with area interfaith leaders, leaders of the demonstration group announced today they would no longer take part in the event that they planned for Good Friday at Islamic Center of America in Dearborn.

“The protest has been canceled,” said Frank Fiorello, the group’s president “We decided to (have the meeting) instead of the protest. . . I never believed Dearborn was under Sharia law.”

Fiorello is a founder of Fraternal Order of the Dragon, a 15-member outfit that goes by the motto “knights of the constitution.” Fiorello said the protest was supposed to be in response to a “pro Sharia” rally in Washington D.C. publicized -- but eventually called off -- by Anjem Chaudary, an extremist Muslim cleric from Britain.

“With Chaudary protesting for Sharia in Washington we felt that our best impact would be to come to the largest mosque in North America to do our protest. That was the only idea behind it, nothing more,” Fiorello said.

Terry Jones, who wrote a book titled “Islam is of the Devil,” got involved as an uninvited guest when he picked up word of FTOD’s protest over the internet, Fiorello said.

“We were never really affiliated with Terry Jones,” he said. “He asked to come out in the beginning of March and we agreed not knowing who he was or anything he stood for really – like, ‘you want to protest with us, that’s fine.”

But when Fiorello started finding out more about Jones he started to distance himself and his group.

“I tried to tell them not (to) offend Christians or the Muslims on Good Friday, to bring their protest over to Dearborn City Hall,” he said. “They disagreed to do that and we separated ways.”
The meeting with local clergy was designed to show that there is no Sharia practiced in Dearborn’s civic arena. Sharia is essentially an Islamic code of conduct that has differing interpretations among branches of the religion.

The idea that Sharia precepts are infiltrating Western institutions has become increasingly popular in recent years among social conservatives. The growth of the idea has, in turn, led to counter informational campaigns like the one today.

“It’s absurd,” said Michael W. Hovey, coordinator of interfaith relations for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit. “There is no Sharia law in Dearborn or anywhere else in the United States. I mean it’s not a conversation to be had. It’s ridiculous.”

FOTD’s absence doesn’t mean the anti-Sharia protest won’t happen, however. Jones’ group has requested its own permit to protest between 5-8 p.m. Police Chief Ronald Haddad is reviewing it and said he would have a decision sometime next week.

Dearborn Mayor Jack O’Reilly said he would pre-fer Jones uses City Hall as the location due to concerns about accessibility at the Islamic Center, which is located next to several churches that will be offering Good Friday services.

“As a city policy we will not have churches cancel their Good Friday services because of what people outside our community choose to do,” O’Reilly said.

If it does go on as planned, it would be the second time Jones has showed up as an interloper to a protest about Sharia – and the second time when the actual organizer didn’t show. Jones and some followers went to Washington D.C. in March to demonstrate against the pro-Sharia rally that was canceled by Chaudary.