NCC's Michael Kinnamon supports mosque at Ground Zero

From Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date Fri, 13 Aug 2010 17:20:32 -0700

Cordova House and Mosque at Ground Zero is a gesture of neighborliness
and healing

Editor's Note. August 13, 2010. Dr. Kinnamon's statement on Cordova
House and Mosque at New York's Ground Zero is available to you for use
and distribution as you see fit.

By Michael Kinnamon

For thousands of families, Ground Zero in southern Manhattan is holy ground .

Thousands lost someone they love in the terror attacks of September
11, 2001, and hundreds of thousands know someone who was directly or
indirectly scarred by the collapse of the World Trade Center. The
emotional investment in Ground Zero cannot be overestimated.

That is precisely why Ground Zero must be open to the religious
expression of all people whose lives were scarred by the tragedy:
Christians, Jews, Sikhs, Buddhists, Hindus, and more. And Muslims.

No one knows how many Muslims died on 9/11, but they number in the hundreds.

One was Salman Hamdani, a 23-year-old New York City police cadet,
emergency medical technician and medical student. When Salman
disappeared on September 11, law enforcement officials who knew of his
Islamic faith sought him out among his family to question him about
the attacks. His family lived with the onus of suspicion for six
months until Salman's body was identified . He was
found near the North Tower with his EMT bag beside him, situated where
he could help people in need.

The point of this now famous story is simple. Not every Muslim at
Ground Zero was a terrorist, and not every Muslim was a hero. The vast
majority were like thousands of others on September 11: victims of one
of the most heinous events of our times.

But for the family of Salman Hamdani and millions of innocent Muslims,
the tragedy has been exacerbated by the fact that so many of the rest
of us have formed our opinions about them out of prejudice and
ignorance of the Muslim faith.

It is that narrow-minded intolerance that has led to the outcry
against the building of Cordova House and Mosque near Ground Zero. It
is the same ignorance that has led many to the outrageous conclusion
that all Muslims advocate hatred and violence against non-Muslims. It
is the same ignorance that has led to hate crimes and systematic
discrimination against Muslims, and to calls to
burn the Qur'an.

On the eve of Ramadan on August 11, the National Council of Churches,
its Interfaith Relations Commission and Christian participants in the
National Muslim-Christian Initiative, issued a strong call for respect
for our Muslim neighbors.

"Christ calls us to 'love your neighbor as yourself' (Matthew 22:39),"
the statement said. "It is this commandment, more than the simple
bonds of our common humanity, which is the basis for our relationship
with Muslims around the world."

The statement supported building Cordova House "as a living monument
to mark the tragedy of 9/11 through a community center dedicated to
learning, compassion, and respect for all people."

Now the National Council of Churches reaffirms that support and calls
upon Christians and people of faith to join us in that affirmation.

The alternative to that support is to engage in a bigotry that will
scar our generation in the same way as bigotry scarred our forebears.

Three-hundred years ago, European settlers came to these shores with a
determination to conquer and settle at the expense of millions of
indigenous peoples who were regarded as sub-human savages. Today, we
can't look back on that history without painful contrition.

One-hundred and fifty years ago, white Americans subjugated black
Africans in a cruel slavery that was justified with Bible proof-texts
and a belief that blacks were inferior to whites. Today, we look back
on that history with agonized disbelief.

Sixty years ago, in a time of war and great fear, tens of thousands of
Japanese-Americans were deprived of their property and forced into
detention camps because our grandparents feared everyone of Japanese
ancestry. Today that decision is universally regarded as an
unconscionable mistake and a blot on American history.

Today, millions of Muslims are subjected to thoughtless
generalizations, open discrimination and outright hostility because of
the actions of a tiny minority whose violent acts defy the teachings
of Mohammed.

How will we explain our ignorance and our compliance to our grandchildren?

It's time to turn away from ignorance and embrace again the words of
Christ : Love your neighbor as yourself.

In that spirit, we welcome the building of Cordova House and Mosque
near Ground Zero.

Michael Kinnamon
General Secretary
National Council of Churches

Since its founding in 1950, the National Council of the Churches of Christ  in
the USA has been the leading force for ecumenical cooperation among Christians
in the United States. The NCC's 36 member faith groups -- from a wide spectrum
of Protestant, Anglican, Orthodox, Evangelical, historic African  American and
Living Peace churches -- include 45 million persons in more than 100,000 local
congregations in communities across the nation.

NCC News contact:  Philip E. Jenks, 212-870-2228(office),
646-853-4212 (cell), pjenks@ncccusa.org