T
TheTrueCentrist
Guest
This is a subtle, but somewhat valid, distinction. Lets discuss.Because, as I’ve tied to point out, whether this imam agrees with their particluar interpretation of Islam or not, the impetus behind behind the 9/11 attacks was Islam. People find that insensitive, especially when the stated purpose of the community center is to somehow build trust.
You may question that people find the location to be insensitive, and disagree with them, but you seem to be questioning their motivation.
Firstly: the motivations for the organization of the terrorist attacks were political. The terrorists were responding to injustices (real and perceived) inflicted on their community by the US. They wanted to retaliate, and twisted the teachings of Islam to not only allow their planned action but also sanctify them.
Here, then, is my own subtle distinction. The attacks were not motivated by Islam. The terrorists did not say “I am attacking the US because of my interpretation of Islam.” but rather “I am attacking the US because of its injustices, and my interpretation of Islam will sanctify my attack.”
Secondarily: if people are worried that seeing a mosque will make them think of Islam, which will in turn remind them of 9/11 (which is distressing), shouldn’t the Muslims build their mosque closer to ground zero? If people are at ground zero, they will be reminded of 9/11 by the site itself, and seeing a mosque will not be responsible for calling to mind the attacks.