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The Wall and the Mosque: Divide and Unite
The current fight over the building of an Islamic study center near Ground Zero here in Manhattan is reminiscent of another battle nearly thirty years ago. Then, too, ignorance, rage and prejudice threatened to destroy the creation of something intended to help mend a grievous wound and foster understanding and reconciliation.
In May 1981, a jury of architects and sculptors announced the results of a nationwide competition to design a Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, DC. Congress had authorized the setting aside of three acres of National Park Service land near the Lincoln Memorial. More than 1400 design submissions came in, so many they took up more than 35,000 square feet in a hangar at Andrews Air Force Base outside the capital. Each entry was numbered so that the identities of those submitting remained anonymous.
The winner, by unanimous vote of the jury, was Number 1026 -- a massive, horizontal V made from polished black granite: two walls, each 246 feet, nine inches across, inscribed with the names of more than 58,000 Americans killed during the Vietnam War. In the words of Jan Scruggs, the ex-infantryman who came up with the idea of building a monument, "As you looked at the other designs, they were miniature Lincoln Memorials. There was the helicopter on the pole, there was the army helmet with dog tags inside. They seemed so banal and average and typical compared to this."
But many screamed in protest, including two who had been supporters of the idea of a Vietnam memorial and prominent fundraisers for its construction: billionaire H. Ross Perot and now Democratic senator from Virginia Jim Webb, who wrote to Scruggs, "I never in my wildest dreams imagined such a nihilistic slab of stone."
Some veterans described it as a "black gash of shame" and said it was an insult, both to those who had given their lives and those who had fought and survived. Others were further outraged by the identity of the memorial's designer, a 21-year-old Yale undergraduate, Chinese-American Maya Ying Lin. Irrationally ignoring even the simple truth that the judges had no idea of her identity beforehand, the notion that a young Asian woman should be chosen to design a monument to a conflict in which the other side was Asian was attacked as a slap in the face by the bigoted and ill-informed.
As Washingtonian magazine reported, in words echoing the current Ground Zero battle, "The fight was bitter, fueled by emotions that had as much to do with the war as they did with the memorial itself. There were death threats, racial slurs and broken friendships. Memories of that time still spark pain and anger."
Ronald Reagan's Secretary of the Interior James Watt, the same man who wanted to ban the Beach Boys from Washington's National Mall because he thought they attracted "the wrong element," tried to block the building permit. But eventually a compromise was made. Over Maya Lin's vehement, aesthetic objections, a statue of three servicemen and an American flag were added to the site.
Today, of course, the protests have faded to meaninglessness and Maya Lin's Vietnam wall is recognized for what it is and always was, a simple yet dramatic and eloquent expression of both service and the horrible finality of war. Now a venerated part of Washington's landscape of monuments and tributes, more than three million come to the wall every year, triple the combined number of sightseers who go to the White House and the Washington Monument. Many stop to make a pencil rubbing of one of the names engraved in the granite; some leave flowers and other mementoes, or stop to stare into the polished black surface that reflects back the visitor's own face.
"It has become something of a shrine," Jan Scruggs told US News and World Report in 2007. "It has helped people separate the warrior from the war and it has helped a nation to heal." So powerful is its impact, replicas of the wall tour the country, reminding towns and villages that sent so many of their young to southeast Asia of the sacrifices made and the lives cut short by combat, then and now.
Millions will not visit the planned Islamic study center near Ground Zero (although surely they will flock to New York's someday-soon-to-be-completed 9/11 memorial). But with patience, tolerance and common sense, perhaps in the years to come, when the angry shouts have ended, it, too, will become a place where visitors -- Muslims, Jews, Christians and those of all other faiths -- can peacefully reflect not only upon a great national tragedy but on the centuries of good and evil perpetrated throughout this planet's history in the name of God, ideology and country.
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10 Comments so far
Show AllMaya Lin's design for the Vietnam Memorial is a lasting masterpiece - as a memorial but also as art.
This article is a timely reminder that reactionaries resisting open expressions of peace and truth are nothing new and the real fear that is being resisted is the challenge to the American myth of self-righteousness.
Mosque in Shadow of Twin Towers
There are many means by which promoters of the mosque near the 9/11 site could rectify that horrific act. Nothing could be worse than this shrine which would canonize the 9/11 terrorists as martyrs in the eyes of many reactionaries--thus catalyzing more such events.
Predictably, this project has already generated backlash and unrest among our citizenry, which could lead to violence--and even riots if it were to proceed.
If the families, who were robbed of their loved ones by these homicidal conspirators, approve this project---then let it proceed.
There is one bit of hope in the comment of Bobforreform's comment: to let the construction of the proposed Mosque begin if the families of theose killed in the 9?11 attacks give their approval. I would hope that might happen.
As others have pointed out before, it is not inappropriate for a Mosque to be built near the 9/11 Memorial; there were Muslim victims of that attack as well as Jews and Christians who happen to have a synagogue and a church very close by. We are supposed to be a nation that accepts people of many backgrounds, if you will; a "Melting Pot" in historical lingo. Peace will require such an accepting attitude - - we need to Co-Exist!
There is another factor that also must be considered: When are we as a nation going to DEMAND that another thorough examination of all the facts surrounding the 9/11 Attacks be undertaken, with testimony to be given under oath before an impartial investigative authority? What if the variouis diusciplinres that are part of the 9/11 Truth Movement are at least half right; that our ruling authorities "let it happen"; OR, what if those same authorities "made it happen" and the mis-east terorists were "Patsies"?
" Church to Burn Copies of Koran to Mark 9/11
5 August 2010, 12:04 am
By staff writers / News.com.au
A FLORIDA church was yesterday promoting an event where it will burn copies of the Koran to mark the ninth anniversary of the September 11 attacks on the U.S.
In the announcement on its Facebook page, The Dove World Outreach Center of Gainesville, Florida, asked other religious groups to join in standing “against the evil of Islam. Islam is of the devil!”
The Facebook event has received more than 1,500 “Like” recommendations by users, but had also been attacked with a number of threatening messages posted on the page and corresponding anti-Islam rants.
The church’s pastor, Terry Jones – who has written a book titled “Islam is of The Devil” and sells T-shirts bearing the same message – defended the controversial event.
“Islam and Sharia law was responsible for 9/11,” Jones told Agence France-Presse.
“We will burn Korans because we think it’s time for Christians, for churches, for politicians to stand up and say no; Islam and Sharia law is not welcome in the U.S.
“We’ve got many death threats from jihad groups, but we cannot react by fear and we cannot compromise our beliefs. Somebody must stand up.”"
BORNFREEMEN ,,, WOW
Produce the tapes of the threats, you know, we have 800000 WARRANT LESS SURVEILLANCE analysts in Washington looking for these jihad groups, we have verizon warrant less wire taps that can track the phone numbers, and we have Fusion center stazi spys that will trak these people down Mr. Jones.
But you people should be very careful, because that kind of hate speech is going to piss off all the oil corporations executives that have Muslim oil buddy friends in the middle east.
Your going to end up on the USA potential anti-government threat lists.
GO AHEAD MAKE MY DAY, GET ALL THE CHRISTIANS AND THE CHURCHES ON ANTI-GOVERNMENT / HATE THREAT LISTS. FUEL THE FIRE FOR MORE PRIVATELY RUN WARRANT LESS SURVEILLANCE CONTRACTORS .ARE YOU ALL SO STUPID THAT YOU DONT REALIZE THE 4TH AMENDMENT DOES NOT EXIST, YOU ARE GOING TO HELP BUILD THE CASE TO HAVE FREEDOM OF RELIGION REMOVED, ALL RELIGIONS, YOU PEOPLE ARE ALL INSANE.JESUS WOULD NOT APPROVE OF YOUR ACTIONS, LOVE YOUR ENEMY COMES TO MIND.WHICH ALL OF ISLAM IS NOT.
WOW, I HAVE BEEN WRITING ABOUT THE CHRISTIANS MOVING TOWARDS SELF DESTRUCTION FOR A WHILE, BUT THESE PEOPLE ARE CLUELESS.
MUSLIMS AND ISLAM DID NOT ATTACK US, CRIMINALS USING RELIGION DID, DONT TAKE THE SAME PATH FOR CHRISTS SAKE.
TRY PREACHING JESUS, PEACE AND LOVE. END THE WARS, BEFORE YOU DESTROY ALL OUR FREEDOMS IN THIS COUNTRY WITH YOUR STUPID ACTS OF HATE.
ITS PEOPLE LIKE YOU, THAT HAVE TAUGHT ME ABOUT WHAT FAKE CHRISTIANITY IS ALL ABOUT.
I guess that everyone has forgotten that the Statue of Liberty was unwanted when it first arrived too. The government didn't want it.
I read somewhere that a grassroots movement started by school children was really what took hold to give the Statue a place and a space.
Maybe it's time for another grassroots childrens' movement; they seem to see more clearly than most of the adults.
I'm white, English by birth, C of E by upbringing, Buddhist by parental influence, and have lived in more countries than most of you have had hot dinners. I am the original man without a country, and I understand but loathe the taint of patriotism and religious affiliation.
I recently moved from South Africa to Oman. Ramadan starts tomorrow in Oman. It heralds a month of daytime fasting and a period of introspection and gentility towards fellow humans. Seems to me there are people on both sides of the debate who need to do some serious introspection and offer some serious gentility towards others. (Forget the Muslim radicals for a moment. We can't fix them. But we can address our radicals.)
We know the Christian fanatics won't do this by themselves. They are motivated by fear and ignorance. So the biggest question is how do we, as a society, remove the ignorance and calm the fear?
As I say, Ramadan starts tomorrow. It will be the first time I have been in a Muslim country for Ramadan, and though I expect to undergo some privation (no eating, drinking or smoking in public until the evening), I am really looking forward to the experience. I expect to learn so much and gain valuable insights into other minds and cultures.
I might get real upset when I can't smoke a cigarette after going diving, or have a coke and a McDonalds at the shopping mall, but that frustration is only in my head. Nowhere else in the whole universe does that frustration exist. And it's worth the knowledge gained.
So knowledge is the answer. That means education. This sort of education means experience. So, though millions of my blood-tribe might crucify me for this, I advocate exporting Americans from a young age to foreign lands. Make it part of a school program, or a Boy Scout Exchange deal. It is the only way to combat this particular sort of virulent racism - by exposing our youth to the lie that others are different (in the things that really matter) from ourselves.
But this just ain't gonna happen is it? I can see the headlines now. So all that remains is to tackle each person's fear one by one. One by one. Remember that in dark days to come. One by one.
This was a better post than the article.
I'm basically liberal in my outlook, except that I have an invisible friend who tells me what to do and say, and I usually do these things. It probably should be embarrassing to even have an invisible friend that other people can't see, much less to be directed around by this friend, but that's life as I see it. It's been so long that I've lost my embarrassment.
My friend often tells me what's coming.
Sometimes I've been told to put my hands on people. I feel the pains in their knees and knuckles as heat, I smooth the pain out, and they tend to get better.
My friend gives me advice. Religious prejudice is outrageous and hurtful. Any liberal could see this, but it helps to hear it from my friend. My friend talks to the other side too.
My apologies to all the non-theists.
I loved Mayor Bloomberg's comments about the proposed Muslim Study Center.
I hope that he can "set the tone" and quell the bigots.
That said, here's an even better idea:
A "Muslim, Christian & Jewish Peace Center" to be built on the same site.
THAT would speak even louder to our hopes for harmony between the people of these three great religions.
We need more practical examples of how peace & conflict resolution works.
I am with Penelope: an inter-faith building accommodating all three major religions.