Thursday, August 26, 2010

Peter Dybing - "Isalamophobia: A Threat to the Pagan Community"

Over at the Pagan + Politics section of the Pagan Newswire Collective there is a statement from our First Officer elect - Peter Dybing:

Islamophobia: A Threat to the Pagan Community

"From rural Wisconsin to lower Manhattan Americans are mobilizing in opposition to the location of Islamic places of worship in their communities. With images of September 11th etched in it’s collective subconscious, our nation is once again traversing the slippery slope that leads to religious persecution, fear and outright bigotry.

Islam has become the convenient target of defamation, hate, suspicion and direct verbal attacks. Americans in ever growing numbers freely tell anti Islamic jokes in public places. If these attacks were aimed at another faith, minority or ethnic group there would surly be a substantial backlash.

So why should the Neo Pagan community become involved in defending the rights of a belief system that holds views so foreign to our earth based community?

Islam, an incredibly diverse group of faiths, is faced with being branded as intolerant and violent due to the actions of radical fringe groups. We in the Pagan community have experienced attempts to paint us all with the same brush when individuals who claim to be Pagan commit violent acts. Recent events in New Mexico and Australia make this clear.

To stand by and allow these forms of attack encourages those who believe that our country should not be tolerant of a diversity of beliefs. If we do not stand in support of inclusion and respect we risk our own fight for Pagan rights through our lack of action.

There are many well-meaning people who have expressed concern with the placement of the Mosque in New York City. There are others, however, who have taken this opportunity to spread fear, hate, and bigotry. They must be confronted

All threats to religious rights and tolerance are a threat to our community, our nation and our ability to openly worship the divine as we please.

It is not easy to come to the defense of a belief system so different than ours. Nor was it easy for Christian, Jewish and Islamic leaders to support the inclusion of Pagans in the interfaith movement. Yet, these leaders did it because it was the right thing to do. Now comes our opportunity to stand for what we believe.

Pagan Brothers and Sisters, join me in communicating to the Islamic community our support for their right to worship openly, when they want to and where they want to. Confront those who oppose tolerance, Make our collective intent known.

In Service to the Goddess,
- Peter Dybing"

More on this issue
Pagan media
Pagans and Park51
The Mosque, the Mirror, this Moment…
Why The New York Mosque Debate matters to Pagans
We All Must Speak Out to Counter Anti-Muslim Prejudice
The Face of Savagery
First They Came for the Muslims...
Mosques of the Illuminati
Islamophobia and an American Heathen
Mainstream media
Looking at Islamic Center Debate, World Sees U.S.
Proposed Muslim Center Draws Opposing Protests
Was the Attack on a Muslim NYC Cabbie a Sign That the Mosque Debate Is Getting Out of Hand?
Mosque attack in California refers to Ground Zero
N.Y. governor, archbishop call for peaceful dialogue on mosque
Mosque Project Near NYC's Ground Zero Tests U.S. Freedoms, Bloomberg Says

1 comment:

  1. "It is not easy to come to the defense of a belief system so different than ours."

    I don't find that to be the case at all. Whenever there is a clear cut case religious discrimination or religious bigotry, what difference does it make which particular religion is involved?

    But the case of the Ground Zero Mosque does not involve the issue of religious freedom at all. Muslims are not only free to practice their faith in the US, they have far more freedom in how they choose to practice Islam in the US than they would in any majority Muslim country in the world -- where individual Muslims have little or no right to voice their opinions or criticisms, unlike in the US.

    There are lots of mosques in NYC, and around the US. No one is saying that Muslims should not have mosques or in any other way practice their faith. But people have every right to protest any $100M building project, especially one so close to such an important, indeed, sacred, location. The same kinds of concerns have been expressed -- and listened to! -- in the cases of Civil War battlefields and former Nazi concentration camps. So why not Ground Zero?

    Besides, regardless of where they build it, people have every right to object to things that the Cordoba Initiative has said and done, like their international promotion of Sharia. And people have every right to know where their money comes from and what kind of ideologies will be represented at their new mosque.

    The mosque founded by Imam Rauf's father, on 96th street, ended up becoming a platform for the dissemination of the accusation that "the Jews" were behind 9/11!

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