MDI USA

Mosque in Missouri Burned Down

A day after a right wing terrorist shot and killed 6 people at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin, a Mosque in Missouri has been burned to the ground. The Mosque was already subject to an arson attack on July 4th. Such attacks should not come as a surprise, with the high level of Islamophobia we have seen over the past years being propagated among the likes of Robert Spencer, and Pamela Gellera, such attacks are bound to happen. Such attacks make it all the more imperative for good people to stand up against Islamophobia, and to refute their bigoted propaganda.
From the Associated Press:

A mosque in southwest Missouri burned to the ground early Monday in the second fire to hit the Islamic center in little more than a month, officials said.

The fire at the Islamic Society of Joplin was reported about 3:30 a.m. Monday, the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office said. The sheriff’s department said the building was a total loss. No injuries were reported and no charges have been filed.

Imam Lahmuddin, who leads the mosque and was in the building until late Sunday, said he was “sad and shocked” about the fire.

“I’m still in front of the building looking at the damage and nothing can be saved,” Lahmuddin said in a telephone interview Monday.

“But since we are people of faith we just can remember that this is a thing that happened because God let it happen, and we have to be patient, particularly in the month of Ramadan, control our emotions, our anger.”

A blaze at the same building July 4 caused minor damage and was determined arson. No arrests were made and the FBI has offered a $15,000 reward for information leading to charges in that fire.

The agency released video footage of what appeared to be a man starting the July blaze that did not cause extensive damage. Sharon Rhine, spokeswoman for the sheriff’s office, said the center’s security cameras were burned in the Monday fire.

The FBI is investigating the cause of the latest fire and whether or not it was also the result of arson, said agency spokeswoman Bridgett Patton.

A Washington-based Muslim civil rights organization meanwhile called for more police protection at mosques and other houses of worship following the Joplin fire and a deadly attack at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin. The Council on American-Islamic Relations also offered a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whoever started the mosque fire.

About 50 families belong to the Islamic Society of Joplin, which opened in 2007 as a mosque and community center. The FBI led an investigation in 2008 when the mosque’s sign was torched. That crime also remained unsolved.

Lahmuddin, who has lived in Joplin for about four years, said several people were at the center late Sunday. He said despite the attacks, the center’s members have good relationships with residents and other churches. He said many are doctors at area hospitals.
On Sunday, a gunman killed six people at a Sikh temple in suburban Milwaukee. The imam said it was a cause of great concern that both faiths had seemingly come under attack.

“I heard that yesterday, and this morning we see this happen in our place,” he said. “We are more fortunate that no one here got hurt in this incident.”

 

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2 replies »

  1. This could a case of Muslims being the culprits of the fire. That would not be the first cultivated time of this set-up issue for attention. use your faculty and wait. Islam 101 jump the gun and cause accusations as evidence. The evil-doers will be caught. accosting is not going to work. people do not stand for freedomphobia it does not do anyone good.

  2. All this talk about advancement and progress but history keeps repeating itself in predictable ways. Sure, we have the science but many people don’t have the knowledge, the critical thinking skills, and the empathy to move forward. So many people are full of mindless, senseless hate. There is no way to show them where they are going wrong, no proof to dissuade them when it comes to their Islamophobia. They cannot see, or refuse to see, their own irrationality. It’s as if they value and treasure it, like they’re stuck in Plato’s cave and they’re comfortable there.

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