shafique wrote:Bora - I think that those behind Park 51 did indeed stop and think about the wisdom of building a cultural centre in an abandoned coat factory in a side street of Manhattan that no one else wanted to buy and develop. A center which will not advocate hate and be open to all and have a gym and a prayer area.. I mean all indications are that they weren't being provocative. 2 blocks away from there is a mosque that's been there since before WTC towers were built - no harm/objections have been raised.
I also think Pastor Jones knows exactly what he is doing (he is attention seeker - and was formerly in Germany where there the congregation sacked him for his views!)
As for Park 51, it didn't cause any fuss until some people decided to call it an Islamic supremacist mega-mosque and tell people it was on Ground Zero.
In reality, there is no 'Ground Zero Mosque'
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZpT2Mux ... r_embeddedBut the full reality doesn't hit you until you see exactly what is presented as a Mosque at Ground Zero, and what is actually around the area:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-11070481I too would have objected to a mega-mosque at Ground zero (or even overlooking ground zero). However this isn't even close.
Cheers,
Shafique
On the one hand I agree witih the views expressed in the videos, but on the other hand, I have to say that the location is wrong. If it was, say, 20 blocks away I don't think it would have even been newsworthy. One center is not going to change those who have been brainwashed to believe that Islam translates to terrorists. It is not as if there was a large Muslim community in that area. As for the churches that were noted in the clips, they were there long before 9/11, as was the small Islamic center established in 1970 (I believe that was the year mentioned).
No matter how they spin it or justify it, it's the wrong location. To say that the objections and not to build it will make America more unsafe is like planting seeds in evil minds. Build it, but just do it somewhere else. As I said, even the Imam acknowledges the issues brought about the construction of the center at that particular location. Hindsight is wonderful, but now that he sees that "possibly" poor judgment was used and the response brought on by it, there is still time to find another location.
When you speak of full reality, have you been to the site? I have. To this day, people who don't see the site on a daily basis become emotional. Those people who walk past it everyday have become desensitized to what took place. If they had to think about what happened every time they walked past it, at least twice a day, they would go crazy. It's like everything else, see/hear enough of something and eventually it doesn't register on an emotional level.
Anyway, I apologize for going off topic, so back on topic. This pastor and his followers should take the Jim Jones route.