Muslim Republicans : Don’t Bring Mosque Debate Into Elections
By HHR | August 17th, 2010 | Category: Featured | 9 comments
A group of conservative Muslim and Arab American officials on Tuesday went further than most in the GOP to accuse their Republican colleagues of trying to exploit the so-called “Ground Zero mosque controversy” for electoral benefits.
In a letter to Republican leaders, the group of authors criticized members of the party for abandoning the principle of tolerance that has defined the GOP from Lincoln to Bush. In the process, the authors — who include former Bush administration official Randa Fahmy Hudome and former Reagan administration official and prominent D.C.-based lawyer George Salem, as well as David Ramadan, who worked on both of George W. Bush’s campaigns — make similar philosophical and substantive arguments as other defenders of the proposed Cordoba House.
(Update: Samah Norquist, wife of prominent GOP activist Grover Norquist and a Senior Advisor to Arab and Muslim Outreach, for the U.S. Agency for International Development during the Bush Administration, has also signed the letter)
Read More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/08/17/conservative-muslimameric_n_684692.html?ref=twitter
BELOW IS THE FULL LETTER
August 17, 2010
Dear Republican Colleague:
We are writing to you today as loyal Americans who are active members of the Republican Party. We also happen to be proud of our Arab American and Muslim American contributions to the Republican Party.
We are deeply concerned by the rhetoric of some leading members of our party surrounding the construction of the Muslim Community Center in downtown Manhattan. These comments are not only constitutionally unsound, they are also alienating millions of Arab American and Muslim American voters who believe, as we do, in the principles of our party – individual liberty, traditional values, and the rule of law.
As you know, our party has had a long history of inclusion – beginning with our great President Abraham Lincoln, whose leadership on the slavery issue was monumental, and continuing through President George W. Bush whose public statements and actions on the differentiation between Islam and the terrorists who attacked us on 9-11 were critically important. We are particularly proud to note that President Bush appointed more Arab Americans and Muslim Americans to his administration than any other president in U.S. history.
That being said, it perplexes us as to why some vocal members of our party have chosen to oppose the construction of a cultural and religious center on private grounds. Not only does the First Amendment to our Constitution protect the right of these private citizens to worship freely, it also prevents Congress from making any law respecting an establishment of religion. Our party and the leaders in our party should not be engaged in judgment issues of the location of a cultural center and a house of worship in direct contravention of the First Amendment.
While some in our party have recently conceded the constitutional argument, they are now arguing that it is insensitive, intolerant and unacceptable to locate the center at the present location: “Just because they have the right to do so – does not make it the right thing to do” they say. Many of these individuals are objecting to the location as being too close to the Ground Zero site and voicing the understandable pain and anguish of the 9-11 families who lost loved ones in this horrible tragedy. In expressing compassion and understanding for these families, we are asking ourselves the following: if two blocks is too close, is four blocks acceptable? or six blocks? or eight blocks? Does our party believe that one can only practice his/her religion in certain places within defined boundaries and away from the disapproving glances of some citizens? Should our party not be standing up and taking a leadership role- just like President Bush did after 9-11 – by making a clear distinction between Islam, one of the great three monotheistic faiths along with Judaism and Christianity, versus the terrorists who committed the atrocities on 9-11 and who are not only the true enemies of America but of Islam as well? President Bush struck the right balance in expressing sympathy for the families of the 9-11 victims while making it absolutely clear that the acts committed on 9-11 were not in the name of Islam. We are hoping that our party leaders can do the same now – especially at a time when it is greatly needed.
While we share the desire of all in our party to be successful in the November elections, we cannot support victory at the expense of the U.S. Constitution or the Arab and Muslim community in America. As President Lincoln so eloquently stated in his famous speech: “a house divided against itself cannot stand.”
As proud and patriotic Americans, we are grateful for all the rights our U.S. citizenship allows us, and we will always do our best to not only protect our rights but the rights of all others as well. May God Bless our nation, our freedoms, and our party.
David Ramadan
Vice Chair, Ethnic Coalitions, Republican Party of Virginia
Sherine El-Abd
President, New Jersey Federation of Republican Women
Randa Fahmy Hudome
Associate Deputy Secretary of Energy, Bush Administration
George Salem
Solicitor of Labor, Reagan Administration
Suhail Khan
Chairman, Conservative Inclusion Coalition
HHR NOTE: Colorado Republican Muhammad Ali Hasan, wrote an op-ed in the Huffington Post Tuesday supporting the building of the Mosque.


In an ERA of political correctness why isn’t everyone held to the same standard? The government has no right to oppose or endorse the building of the mosque. The purchase of the land was a private deal and unless anyone can prove any illegality they should keep their Government hands away. With that said the building of the mosque is very insensitive to 3000 families and a nation still healing from the wounds of 9-11.
I suggest they build a hospital on the sight and fund its operations with donations from the Muslim community. A hospital dedicated to treating post 9-11 illnesses and/or victims of Terrorism. Put a symbol of healing on the sight that everyone will understand not one that may be seen as a symbol of victory by some.
Glad to see Muslim Republicans speaking out against the (un) holy war the Far Right has welded the GOP to with predictable support from Black conservatives who should know better. Supporting religious discrimination sets the stage for more racial discrimination since they go hand in hand.
Attempts have been made to treat me like a second class citizen because I’m Black. I see the same sick thought afoot if you’re not Christian too.
This is what passes for Far Right national security strategy, that and questioning where Obama was born. Where are Rockefeller Republcians when you need ‘em? lol.
O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells;
Rise up—for you the flag is flung—for you the bugle trills;
Oh Captain my Captain… You talk the talk,
but when pray tell will you depart this band ‘O brigands
Klansmen and Homophobes and Crakpot ChristoFascists!
Is your precious free market IDEA
greater than your immortal soul?!
But I, with mournful tread,
Walk the deck my Captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead*
*apologies to W Whitman
Start yer own party for God’s sake Oh Captain!
So I guess you folks are against building a hospital at ground zero funded by Muslim Charity. Can we spell
H I P O C R I T E ! ! ! ! ! I got one better why not a combination Mosque / Synagogue שול or בית תפילה funded by Muslim Charity. Now thats charity and tolerance . Lets see what the Imam has to say about that………. Tolerance when it suits you……..
Col Kurtz:
If I form my own party, will you serve as poet laureate? lol
PS
Apocolypse Now, great movie.
I’ll be the poet Laureate and you the Court Jester
Col Kurtz can be head of the party………
LOL, naw leave me outta this tiff!
All kidding aside, the question is how do Y’all force/push for a return to the Big Tent party of Eisenhower? (myth or reality?) [it was after all, the Republicans from the "Territories" who helped carry the day for the Civil Rights Legislation!?]
But I reckon, Nixon and his Southern Strategy and Lee Atwater and his Willie Horton persona pushed your party too far from those days!?!
Col Kurtz:
You reckon correctly…