
Nice try, douchebag
NEW YORK - When Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf decided to build a Muslim cultural center in lower Manhattan, the model he chose couldnt have been more mainstream American the Young Mens Christian Association chapters found in cities across the United States.
The institution he had in mind was the 92nd Street Y, a Jewish adaptation of the YMCA concept that is one of New Yorks leading addresses for residents of all religions or none to visit for public lectures, debates, concerts or educational courses.
But Imam Raufs project is better known here now as the Ground Zero mosque, after the term for the World Trade Center site. Families of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and conservative politicians have mounted an emotional campaign to block it, claiming that locating it only two blocks north of the site was a provocation.
We repeatedly say we are neither a mosque nor within Ground Zero, but they just shout back Ground Zero mosque, Ground Zero mosque, Imam Rauf, 61, told Reuters in an interview. The planned building will have a prayer room for Muslims, he said, but it would only be a small part of the 13-story complex.
Imam Rauf said the YMCA, which began in London in 1844 as Christian center for young working men and quickly spread to the United States and other countries, had long worked to promote understanding across religious, ethnic and social dividing lines in modern societies. Now called simply the Y, its facilities across the United States offer exercise classes, education and community activities.
We are trying to establish something that follows the YMCA concept but is not a church or a synagogue or, in this case, a mosque, he said by telephone from Kuala Lumpur, where he is visiting. We are taking that concept and adapting it to our time and the fact that were Muslims. Its basically a Muslim Y.