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- Ligne n°1 : NYC Mosque Imam Looking to "Americanize Islam" - CBS News
Ligne n°19 : ...- Ligne n°20 : CBSNews.com / CBS Evening News / CBS This Morning / 48 Hours / 60 Minutes / Sunday Morning / Face the Nation Video US World Politics Entertainment Health MoneyWatch SciTech Sports Crime More Blogs Political Eye The Feed Webshows 60 Overtime Face to Face The Startup What's Cooking Resources Mobile Radio Local Log In Log In Join CBSNews.com Sign in with Profile Manage my newsletter subscriptions Update my e-mail address Change my password Log Out CBS/AP / August 23, 2010, 11:05 AM NYC Mosque Imam Looking to "Americanize Islam" The imam leading plans for an Islamic center near the Manhattan site of the Sept. 11 attacks said Friday he has been working on a way to "Americanize Islam." While he did not elaborate on what an American version of Islam might look like, he did note that different interpretations of the faith have emerged over the religion's nearly 1,400-year existence. "The same principles and rituals were everywhere, but what happened in different regions was there were different interpretations," Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, who is on the first leg of a 15-day Mideast tour funded by the U.S. State Department, said. "So we recognize that our heritage allows for re-expressing the internal principles of our religion in different cultural times and places." Rauf refused to discuss the political firestorm over the plans for an Islamic cultural center about two blocks from the World Trade Center towers. Foes of the project say it is insensitive and disrespectful to the victims of 9/11 and their families. The debate has become politicized ahead of November's midterm congressional elections. Mosque Near WTC Divides Sept. 11 Relatives Howard Dean on Mosque Comments: "Not Going to Back Off" Rudy Giuliani: Move Mosque away from Ground Zero Instead, Rauf preferred to focus on shared concerns. Speaking after leading Friday prayers at a neighborhood mosque outside Bahrain's capital Manama, he said radical religious views pose a security threat in both the West and the Muslim world. He said he hopes to draw attention during his trip in the Middle East to the common challenges to battle radical religious beliefs. "This issue of extremism is something that has been a national security issue - not only for the United States but also for many countries and nations in the Muslim world," Rauf said. "This is why this particular trip has a great importance because all countries in the Muslim world - as well as the Western world - are facing this ... major security challenge." This is Rauf's fourth U.S-government sponsored trip to the region, according to the State Department. He traveled twice to the Mideast in 2007 during the Bush administration and once earlier this year. Rauf will also visit Qatar and the United Arab Emirates during this trip to talk about Muslim life in America. Details of the imam's specific plans in each country have been closely guarded - possibly in reaction to the rancor in the United States over plans proposed by Rauf's organization, The Cordoba Initiative, for an Islamic cultural center near the site of the World Trade Center towers. President Barack Obama has said he believes Muslims have the right to build an Islamic center in New York as a matter of religious freedom, though he's also said he won't take a position on whether they should actually build it. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg came out in support of the mosque, calling it a test of the separation of church and state. New York Gov. David Paterson suggested last week that leaders of the project might want to consider relocating out of sensitivity to families of those killed on Sept. 11. He said he had the support of Islamic clergy, New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan and former Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who led the city through the attacks and their aftermath. The governor and state officials won't say what other site would be suitable for the center or where the state owns nearby land. This week, Paterson said he had hoped to meet with developers in a couple of days to talk about the concerns of those still hurt and angry over the Sept. 11 attacks. He told WNYC Radio's "The Take Away" on Friday that he's still seeking a meeting, but that the group postponed a Monday meeting because of Rauf's travels. Muslims have been holding prayer services since last year in the building that the new project will replace. Fact Check: The "Ground Zero Mosque" Debate Howard Dean: NYC Mosque a "Real Affront" "Ground Zero Mosque" Developers: We Won't Move Pelosi Questions Funding of NYC Mosque Critics Obama has "No Regrets" Weighing in on NYC Mosque Buchanan: Newt Gingrich "Opportunist" on Mosque Mosque Opponents Leaving X-Rated Shops Alone © 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- Ligne n°20 : CBSNews.com / CBS Evening News / CBS This Morning / 48 Hours / 60 Minutes / Sunday Morning / Face the Nation Video US World Politics Entertainment Health MoneyWatch SciTech Sports Crime More Blogs Political Eye The Feed Webshows 60 Overtime Face to Face The Startup What's Cooking Resources Mobile Radio Local Log In Log In Join CBSNews.com Sign in with Profile Manage my newsletter subscriptions Update my e-mail address Change my password Log Out CBS/AP / August 23, 2010, 11:05 AM NYC Mosque Imam Looking to "Americanize Islam" The imam leading plans for an Islamic center near the Manhattan site of the Sept. 11 attacks said Friday he has been working on a way to "Americanize Islam." While he did not elaborate on what an American version of Islam might look like, he did note that different interpretations of the faith have emerged over the religion's nearly 1,400-year existence. "The same principles and rituals were everywhere, but what happened in different regions was there were different interpretations," Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, who is on the first leg of a 15-day Mideast tour funded by the U.S. State Department, said. "So we recognize that our heritage allows for re-expressing the internal principles of our religion in different cultural times and places." Rauf refused to discuss the political firestorm over the plans for an Islamic cultural center about two blocks from the World Trade Center towers. Foes of the project say it is insensitive and disrespectful to the victims of 9/11 and their families. The debate has become politicized ahead of November's midterm congressional elections. Mosque Near WTC Divides Sept. 11 Relatives Howard Dean on Mosque Comments: "Not Going to Back Off" Rudy Giuliani: Move Mosque away from Ground Zero Instead, Rauf preferred to focus on shared concerns. Speaking after leading Friday prayers at a neighborhood mosque outside Bahrain's capital Manama, he said radical religious views pose a security threat in both the West and the Muslim world. He said he hopes to draw attention during his trip in the Middle East to the common challenges to battle radical religious beliefs. "This issue of extremism is something that has been a national security issue - not only for the United States but also for many countries and nations in the Muslim world," Rauf said. "This is why this particular trip has a great importance because all countries in the Muslim world - as well as the Western world - are facing this ... major security challenge." This is Rauf's fourth U.S-government sponsored trip to the region, according to the State Department. He traveled twice to the Mideast in 2007 during the Bush administration and once earlier this year. Rauf will also visit Qatar and the United Arab Emirates during this trip to talk about Muslim life in America. Details of the imam's specific plans in each country have been closely guarded - possibly in reaction to the rancor in the United States over plans proposed by Rauf's organization, The Cordoba Initiative, for an Islamic cultural center near the site of the World Trade Center towers. President Barack Obama has said he believes Muslims have the right to build an Islamic center in New York as a matter of religious freedom, though he's also said he won't take a position on whether they should actually build it. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg came out in support of the mosque, calling it a test of the separation of church and state. New York Gov. David Paterson suggested last week that leaders of the project might want to consider relocating out of sensitivity to families of those killed on Sept. 11. He said he had the support of Islamic clergy, New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan and former Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who led the city through the attacks and their aftermath. The governor and state officials won't say what other site would be suitable for the center or where the state owns nearby land. This week, Paterson said he had hoped to meet with developers in a couple of days to talk about the concerns of those still hurt and angry over the Sept. 11 attacks. He told WNYC Radio's "The Take Away" on Friday that he's still seeking a meeting, but that the group postponed a Monday meeting because of Rauf's travels. Muslims have been holding prayer services since last year in the building that the new project will replace. Fact Check: The "Ground Zero Mosque" Debate Howard Dean: NYC Mosque a "Real Affront" "Ground Zero Mosque" Developers: We Won't Move Pelosi Questions Funding of NYC Mosque Critics Obama has "No Regrets" Weighing in on NYC Mosque Buchanan: Newt Gingrich "Opportunist" on Mosque Mosque Opponents Leaving X-Rated Shops Alone © 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Ligne n°476 : ...- Ligne n°477 : You Helen are too FIXED on FIXED news and apparently have no mind of your own! reply Lawyers-Guns-n-Money06 replies: link icon report icon email icon Fixed News, what a laugh! Fox has become too moderate for these ueber-fascists. It's not news to them any more unless it comes from some internet meme, WND or AIM. liberalme replies: link icon report icon email icon No these people pray to the hammity, lintball and beck (the wreck) gods--they wouldn't have anything to say or know how to think without those commedians. link icon report icon email icon Lawyers-Guns-n-Money06 says: by helen97068 August 20, 2010 6:52 PM EDT The Community Center IS a Mosque. ========================== Calling this thing a mosque is like calling a mall a fast food joint because it has a McDonalds in it. reply Lawyers-Guns-n-Money06 replies: link icon report icon email icon ...or calling a Catholic hospital with a chapel in it a cathedral. link icon report icon email icon AmazingGrce says: The Snake - sung by Al Wilson - Comes to mind when I hear about any effort to "Americanize Islam"
Ligne n°478 : Nuff Said reply Lawyers-Guns-n-Money06 replies: link icon report icon email icon AIn't gonna happen. More than likely, there will be an attempt for the swastika-zation of America. link icon report icon email icon bradkt1 says: Marginalizing, isolating and demonizing moderate Muslims only gives ammunition to the extremists, the rejectionists and the terrorists and their sympathizers. ...