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Murfreesboro Mosque: On Ramadan Eve, Muslims Fight For The Right To Celebrate

Posted: 07/19/2012 7:50 pm

As Ramadan sets in, Muslims in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, are fighting for the right to celebrate as faithful Muslims.

Yesterday, The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty filed a request for a temporary restraining order on behalf of the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro. Becket's brief requested that the Islamic Center be permitted to use its newly built mosque in time for Ramadan, the holiest month of the Islamic calendar, during which Muslims fast each day from dawn till sunset. Within a few hours of filing the brief, the judge granted the restraining order -- good news for Murfreesboro Muslims, who commence their Ramadan observations on Thursday.

The Islamic Center of Murfreesboro has been part of the Murfreesboro community for over 30 years. In 2010, the Islamic Center began building a new mosque to accommodate its growing congregation. Its efforts were met with a hostile reception by a small group of local residents, who filed suit in Rutherford County Chancery Court seeking a temporary restraining order to halt construction of the new mosque. Among other things, the suit made the baseless claim that the county's zoning law denied plaintiffs due process by failing "to provide a hearing to examine the multiple uses of the ICM site and the risk of actions promoting Jihad and terrorism."

But in a novel twist, the plaintiffs also made the claim that Islam, the world's second largest religion, is in fact, not a religion, and thus undeserving of First Amendment religious freedom protections.

The argument went like this: because Islam is not a religion but a political ideology and the mosque would be used for political not religious assembly, the mosque is not subject to the same zoning treatment as churches.

The move against the mosque is part of the larger anti-sharia movement in the state and across the nation, with a prominent leader of the movement, Frank Gaffney, introduced as an "Islam expert" at trial. The anti-sharia and anti-mosque protests culminated in numerous acts of anti-Muslim animus during the course of the mosque construction. For example, a large construction vehicle at the construction site was intentionally set on fire. There was even a bomb threat, which resulted in a federal indictment.

So the Muslim community found itself, on the eve of its most holy religious period, a collection of so-called political jihadis facing a violent and politically-oriented attack.

As a Muslim and Catholic, we stand together in denouncing the hostility towards this Muslim community and the effort to turn our court system into an accomplice. And while there is well-grounded concern in this nation about national security threats posed by terrorism, decades-old faithful communities seeking to celebrate their religious holidays in peace are the wrong target.

But most importantly, seeking to undermine the religious rights of a group through dirty hat tricks is something that should be cause for concern for all people of faith. Because when any group, be it private citizens or our own government, succeeds in redrawing the lines as to what constitutes a religion or religious activity for political motives, religious freedom in this nation regresses for all.

This was at root in the landmark Supreme Court case of Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC in which a small Lutheran Church in Michigan clung to its right to hire and fire employees based on core religious tenets, despite the governments' argument that a religious group should be treated no differently in employment matters than any other group. This would be a dramatic change to the posture of church state relations, essentially placing the government in the role of appointing and terminating ministers, and the argument was swiftly labeled as "amazing" and "shocking" by both wings of the highest Court.

It is also the issue at stake in the national struggle over the HHS mandate which in less than two weeks will begin requiring certain religious employers to violate their consciences and provide services in their healthcare plans which they find gravely immoral, simply because they are, by the government's standards, not religious enough.

The Murfreesboro mosque case exemplifies how the winds can blow when one group who cares little for the religious freedom of another takes action.

As a Muslim and a Catholic, we stood together behind Hosanna-Tabor and the essential role the ministerial exception plays in our legal system. We stood together against the HHS mandate, despite the narrative that opposition to the mandate constituted a "war on women." And we stand together now. Because no religion is an island. When the rights of one faith are abridged, the rights of all faiths are threatened. All faiths have the right to worship God in freedom and in peace, and with dignity.

 

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03:14 AM on 08/13/2012
I have been back to France many times and so have my parents as well as my sister. I became a US citizen in 1982. MUSLIMS SHOULD NOT BE WELCOME IN AMERICA AND IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD. In France, they refuse to assimilate. They are causing nothing but problems. There is an increase in crime and in their neighborhoods it is of epidemic proportion. They have even assaulted the language. And of course the culture. They are destroying France. Instead of moving there to become French, they want to take over France and rule over it. Their religion is a way of life. A lifestyle which is overwhelming and full of tradition and ritual. Unlike us Americans who understand freedom of religion to mean just that, freedom to pray as you wish, BUT NOT TO TRY TO CHANGE PEOPLE AND MAKE THEM SWALLOW YOUR BELIEFS. Don't take my word for it. Go online and study what the French say. See how they have made it illegal to wear a Burqa in some situations. And study Muslims in the Middle East or Africa or Asia. Everywhere they go, they want to take over. And they usually treat women like chattel. And if you are not Muslim, the Quran states you are an infidel. And Allah is capable of evil, unlike the Christian God. And see how many extremists in the world are Muslims. DO NOT ALLOW THESE PEOPLE TO TAKE OVER YOUR COMMUNITIES. You must fight.
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Mrmiklos
01:22 PM on 08/13/2012
I will fight people like you...people that use your fear and hate like a weapon...not all are like you think, and not all are like you
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arachne646
No more hurting people--Peace
05:48 PM on 07/22/2012
I hope the congregation of the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro gets to celebrate a holy and peaceful Ramadan. They sure deserve it. Interfaith and ecumenical cooperation in education, political participation, and initiatives for poverty, green improvements, and similar things do advance civilization in my part of the world, 2can.
09:57 AM on 07/20/2012
Catholic and Muslim standing together, what could be sweeter for the advancement of civilization?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cranmer1549
Always bet on black.
09:15 AM on 07/20/2012
Any red-blooded American that seeks to discriminate against a Muslim house of worship needs to read President George Washington's 1790 letter to the synagogue in Newport, RI:

"May the children of the stock of Abraham who dwell in this land continue to merit and enjoy the good will of the other inhabitants--while every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and fig tree and there shall be none to make him afraid."

http://www.teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=21
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Cranmer1549
Always bet on black.
09:11 AM on 07/20/2012
How is this happeneing in the year 2012? Anyone that's a Tea Partier or otherwise claims to love our Founding Fathers needs to read George Washington's 1790 letter to the synagogue in Newport, RI:

"May the children of the stock of Abraham who dwell in this land continue to merit and enjoy the good will of the other inhabitants--while every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and fig tree and there shall be none to make him afraid."

http://www.teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=21
07:59 AM on 07/20/2012
"All faiths have the right to worship God in freedom and in peace, and with dignity" in Murfreesboro. One day that may be a valid assertion in Egypt, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and other similar cultures..
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arachne646
No more hurting people--Peace
05:40 PM on 07/22/2012
It would be in Egypt, if the military government who inherited Mubarak's secret police state were not trying to stir up trouble between the Coptic Christians and the other demonstrators for democracy. Interesting that all the US aid is going to the military government who is preventing the democratically elected Parliament from meeting. Just the way the US backed Mubarak, dictator of Egypt.
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johnnasiiq
01:44 AM on 07/23/2012
For now, let's square away Tennessee.
03:25 AM on 07/20/2012
“Islam isn't in America to be equal to any other faith, but to become dominant." http://seanrobsville.blogspot.com/2009/12/what-buddhists-and-pagans-need-to-know.html
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johnnasiiq
01:55 AM on 07/23/2012
The quote is unsubstantiated and manufactured. It can be found only on blogs, Wikipedia and extremist right-wing, anti-Islam websites. Find a legitimate source for the quote for it to be taken seriously.
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xandrasmom
10:23 PM on 07/19/2012
"Islam is not a religion but a political movement." I think these people made a mistake and were really talking about Christianity. What could be more political than fighting against women's reproductive rights, talking about states prohibiting contraception, defining marriage according to a literal reading of the Scriptures of one particular belief system, insisting on religious rituals in public schools...I could go on. The people who hold these views about Islam are simply ignorant. Unfortunately for America, there seem to be quite a few of them...some have even been elected to the U.S. Congress. Fortunately, even Republicans are beginning to call them out...thank you Senator McCain!
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09:10 PM on 07/19/2012
If all faiths simply drew the line at allowing non-members the inalienable right to worship and not worship as we each please, there would be no complaints. Or court cases. Or quite as many wars.
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Atwill
Christian puppets scare me
07:36 AM on 07/20/2012
all wars are started over religion.
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arachne646
No more hurting people--Peace
05:41 PM on 07/22/2012
How about Iraq?
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johnnasiiq
01:58 AM on 07/23/2012
Incorrect. What was the religious motivation in the U.S. War for Independence? What about World War I? Was Hirohito striking a blow for Shinto supremacy at Pearl Harbor?