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Interfaith Leaders Call on Bush to Denounce Intolerance

Religious leaders denounced recent statements by influential members of the Christian Right

By Jamshed Bokhari, IOL Washington correspondent

WASHINGTON, October 10 (IslamOnline) - Religious leaders representing various faiths gathered here Wednesday, October 9, to denounce recent statements by influential members of the Christian Right, who, in recent days, have caste disparaging remarks concerning Muslims and the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh), and called on U.S. President George W. Bush to publicly denounce the remarks.

Addressing an extremely sparse media audience at the National Press Club, Muslim, Christian and Jewish leaders specifically addressed remarks made by Jerry Falwell on CBS’ 60 Minutes program calling the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) a terrorist.

They also expressed disdain toward similar remarks made by Franklin Graham, who gave the inaugural prayer at Bush’s presidential inauguration in January 2001, who commented, “The God of Islam is not the same God…and I believe it is a very evil and wicked religion.”

Interfaith Alliance vice president Rabbi Jack Moline, commenting on Falwell’s assertions, said, “To describe Prophet Muhammad [pbuh] with such criminal obscenities is like condemning all Christians with Hitler.”

Interfaith Alliance executive director Rev. C. Welton Gaddy said such statements emanate from the fringes of the Christian faith, from “a fundamentalist interpretation of scripture,” to which Falwell adheres, saying a close look at Falwell’s statements indicate they are not only directed at Muslims.

In the 60 Minutes appearance, Falwell asserted it was the fulfillment of Biblical prophecy that Christians will ultimately control Jerusalem and that any Jews therein will eventually convert to Christianity.

Moline said he “expected better from religious leaders.”

Saying that such statements are “the worst kind of politicization of scripture,” Gaddy said Falwell and the Christian Right were engaging in the “same kind of terrorism they are trying to denounce.”

In making such assertions, Father Patrick Conroy commented, “Jerry Falwell is a violent man, the man of war.”

Conroy, critiquing Falwell’s comments from a Catholic perspective on relations with non-Christians, said, “Falwell’s words are a return to what Pope John Paul has denounced,” namely that they are a calculated provocation of anger made by an individual who is accountable to no religious authority, which, ultimately, carries no religious weight.

Fearing comments emanating from the Christian Right could lead to violence directed at Muslims, Muslim Alliance of North America (MANA) representative Imam Johari Abdul Malik called, “on the government to address those who would cause a civil war and foment hate.”

Sarah Eltantawi, of the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC), specifically addressed Bush’s silence on the matter, saying, “The president’s silence is viewed as complicity,” with the Christian Right, and called on Bush to speak out against such types of statements.

Also commenting on Bush’s silence on the matter, Gaddy asserted the existence of a political alliance between the present administration and the religious Christian right, stating that it is currently shaping U.S. foreign policy.

Calling on Bush to come clear on the association, Gaddy said, “We have a right to know whether evangelical, fundamentalist interpretations of scripture are running foreign policy.”

Rev. Graylan Hagler, of the United Church of Christ and president of the Muslim/Christian Coalition, agreed, charging that in this “political climate of hate and intolerance,” where “there is a war mentality and marginalization,” the present “administration reflects the views of the Christian Right.”

Addressing the lack of media response to the interfaith condemnation of Falwell, Muslim American Society (MAS) Freedom Foundation executive director Mahdi Bray, commenting that 60 Minutes provided fifteen minutes of national airtime allowing Falwell to preach hate, requested that mainstream media provide the same coverage for those opposed to Falwell’s views.

 

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