self.document.write('<div style="margin : 0px; width : 250px; height : auto; border : solid 0px; overflow : hidden; font-size : 1em; font-family : \'Arial\'; color : black; background : inherit;"> <div style="padding : 3px;" > <ul style="margin : 0px; padding-left : 0px;"> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://blog.beliefnet.com/news/2010/07/religious-leaders-hail-cocaine.php" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Religious Leaders Hail Cocaine-sentencing Bill</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> WASHINGTON (RNS) U.S. religious leaders are applauding Congress\' approval of legislation that reduces the disparity of jail time between crack and powder cocaine offenses. After passing the Senate in March, the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 was approved by the House on Wednesday (July 28). The bill now goes to President Obama for his signature. The bill amends the original 1986 law that was passed at a time of high crack use in the U.S. Under that law, individuals received the same sentence for possessing crack cocaine as someone with 100 times the same amount in powder form. The revamped law raises the minimum quantity of crack cocaine that triggers a mandatory minimum sentence. The five-year minimum mandatory sentence is now applied to possession of 28 grams of crack rather than 5 grams; 280 grams, instead of 50 grams, triggers a minimum 10-year conviction. Gone as well is the mandatory minimum for simple possession of crack cocaine. According to the U.S. Sentencing Commission, the bill could lead to a prison population reduction of about 3,800 within 10 years. The bill will not, however, retroactively affect people currently incarcerated for low-level offenses. "It makes significant progress toward parity in criminal penalties for possession and use of crack and powder cocaine," said Galen Carey, director of government affairs for the National Association of Evangelicals. Carey and others said the new law will mitigate a ballooning prison population and reduce injustices to African-Americans. Crack used to be more prevalent in the inner cities, with blacks receiving longer sentences than whites, who preferred the powder. The uneven treatment of racial communities "increases the cynicism with which many view the criminal justice system," said the Rev. Michael Kinnamon, chief executive of the National Council of Churches. The inequity left churches and other faith communities to contend with children who were left parentless for long periods of time. Instead of targeting high-level drug kingpins, church leaders say tax dollars were spent pursuing low-level offenders, many of whom attend their churches. "Today we have stepped closer to realizing fairness in our criminal justice system," said United Methodist Bishop Peggy Johnson of Eastern Pennsylvania. <p> -- Alfredo Garcia <p> Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. Read this post » </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://beliefnet.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">beliefnet.com</a> - 2010-07-29 22:32:08 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://blog.beliefnet.com/news/2010/07/news-feature-mormons-see-poten.php" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >News Feature: Mormons See Potential in Online Proselytizing</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> By Peggy Fletcher Stack c. 2010 Salt Lake Tribune <p>SALT LAKE CITY (RNS) Not so long ago, Mormon missionaries were prohibited from using the Internet, even to contact their families. The system then loosened a bit to allow weekly e-mails home and some occasional viewing of church materials. <p>Now the nearly 14 million-member Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is attempting to revolutionize the way Mormons find converts -- and it\'s all online. The move involves experimenting with blogging missionaries, self-produced member profiles and stereotype-busting videos. The American-born church, which has been harnessing technology to promote the faith since the 1920 radio days, sees great potential in fast-paced storytelling. The Internet is the new "town square," said Ron Wilson, manager of Internet and marketing for the church. "And Mormons are taking to it like never before." The electronic universe, however, also is uncontrollable, an aspect that has traditionally been tough for the hierarchical church but one that organizers readily acknowledge. "We relinquish a lot of control to members on this site ... and every one (of the authorities) is on board with it," said Scott Swofford, director of media for the church\'s Missionary Department. "(The Internet) is where we\'ve got to be." The online missionary effort began in 2001, with the launch of www.mormon.org, a site aimed at telling outsiders what Mormons believe. <p>The church created it just before the world descended on Salt Lake City for the 2002 Winter Olympics, when people everywhere were asking about the church. Two years ago, the church expanded the site to add a chat function and called its first online-only missionaries, who would discuss church doctrines with inquiring seekers from computer screens in cubicles at the Provo Missionary Training Center. Then in May, LDS leaders asked a dozen full-time missionaries in Rochester, N.Y., to spend their mornings or downtime blogging, commenting on various sites that mention Mormonism and describing their experiences on Facebook. The president of the Rochester mission is one of the "Facebook friends," Wilson said, so he will know what missionaries write. Also, missionaries work in pairs and the church expects them to "police" each other -- no inappropriate information shared and no accessing naughty sites, for example. "It\'s a test," Wilson said. "We\'ll learn if it\'s appropriate to give missionaries hand-held devices." To top it off, the church has rolled out additions to www.mormon.org, which currently showcases 15 video portraits and 2,000 written profiles of Mormons across the globe; there are another 75 videos and 13,000 more profiles ready to be posted. The subjects, drawn from diverse occupations, ethnicities, ages and genders, were allowed wide license to share their lives and faith. The site features testimonials from Joy Monahan, of Honolulu, who won the 2008 Longboard Surfing World Championship; professionals Aaron and Emily Sherinian in Arlington, Va., who describe their family\'s frenetic pace; Jeff Tucker, with a goatee, who talks about his love for sculpting motorcycles; and Valetin Marcero, who spent time in jail on drug charges before joining the church. Each segment ends with the subject repeating his or her name, a detail about their lives and the words, "And I am a Mormon." The personal approach is the result of two findings from focus groups and public opinion surveys: Most Americans have either false or hostile impressions of the Utah-based church but typically change or soften those views after meeting a real-life member. The idea, officials said, was to help everyone "know a Mormon." "Our leaders were struggling for years to find a more effective, less annoying way to get our message across than knocking on doors," Swofford said. "Our mission is to deliver teaching opportunities." The online missionaries already have proven the program\'s success. They routinely participate in about 10,000 chats a week, with 3,500 people asking for in-person visits and 1,200 going on to hear the missionary lessons. "It\'s a lot more effective than (door-to-door) tracting in many places," Wilson said. But what if the church authorities or its doctrinal office don\'t agree with how a missionary or member describes a particular doctrine? That\'s the only aspect that the site\'s monitors edit, and only in certain cases. If a Mormon writes, "the church teaches that...," the doctrinal statements have to be correct, Swofford said. Monitors will ask them to revise any wording that misrepresents the faith. If the person writes, however, "I believe that ...," monitors leave it, he said. A person\'s belief is his or her own. "There is no way you can read 10 profiles and think we are controlling what they are saying," he said. "We want to show people how Mormons live their faith. We want them to be authentic and transparent. That is the way misperceptions disappear." <p> (Peggy Fletcher Stack writes for The Salt Lake Tribune.) <p> Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. Read this post » </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://beliefnet.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">beliefnet.com</a> - 2010-07-29 22:32:08 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://blog.beliefnet.com/news/2010/07/gospel-singer-doug-oldham-dead.php" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Gospel Singer Doug Oldham Dead at Age 79</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> (RNS) Doug Oldham, a prolific gospel singer and ministry partner of the late Rev. Jerry Falwell, died July 21 at the age of 79. Oldham, who was a soloist at Falwell\'s Thomas Road Baptist Church and helped the evangelist raise money to start Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., died at a Virginia hospital while awaiting back surgery. "My father and Doug Oldham were an evangelistic team who brought the gospel to nearly every home in America every Sunday morning on the `Old Time Gospel Hour,"\' said Liberty University Chancellor Jerry Falwell, Jr. in a statement. "The names Jerry Falwell and Doug Oldham were synonymous as Billy Graham and George Beverly Shea. ... His passing represents the end of an era at Thomas Road Baptist Church and Liberty University." Oldham recorded more than 60 albums and sang on Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker\'s Praise the Lord (PTL) ministry\'s television show. He was the first to perform "He Touched Me," a song written by colleague Bill Gaither. "Doug\'s resonant voice and vibrant spirit moved people at a very personal level," Gaither recalled in a tribute on his Web site, Gaither.com. "He possessed that rare balance between polished professionalism and authenticity." Oldham, a Dove Award-winning artist, was inducted in the Gospel Music Association\'s Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2006. <p> -- Adelle M. Banks <p> Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. Read this post » </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://beliefnet.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">beliefnet.com</a> - 2010-07-28 22:52:06 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://blog.beliefnet.com/news/2010/07/senate-democrats-plead-for-rel.php" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Senate Democrats Plead for Religious Support on Key Bills</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> WASHINGTON (RNS) Top Senate Democrats said Wednesday (July 28) that Democrats need the help of religious groups in overcoming Republican opposition to key pieces of legislation. In a media roundtable hosted by Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., chairwoman of the Democrats\' Steering and Outreach Committee, senators said the majority of "the faith community" is fully on board with Democratic policies on immigration, health care and clean energy. Senate Democrats said the progress they\'ve made on economic recovery and job growth is due to the continued support of faith communities. Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, cited a common thread of "economic and social justice" between Democratic lawmakers and religious groups. "We would not have passed (any of the bills) ... without the strong voice and commitment from the faith community to keep us on track," Stabenow said. But as the Democratic majority faces stiff resistance from the GOP on other legislation -- "a battle on every bill we have put forward," Stabenow said -- religious groups need to play a larger role in supporting those bills. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., highlighted the "strength in numbers" that faith communities have, and urged them to continue "pushing back" against Republican opposition. "When we were saying we don\'t have any Republican support, did they (faith groups) go to rally?" Klobuchar asked. "That\'s what I think that the religious groups have to (do)." Senators conceded, however, that there is a limit in how far faith leaders can go in their advocacy without alienating some of their own flocks. "I think this is a question of comfort level," Stabenow said. "Some in the faith community ... will feel comfortable in a bipartisan arena and others won\'t." Many religious groups do not feel that they have to "deal with that stuff," because they are not political organizations, Klobuchar added. "I\'m not being critical, I\'m just being honest," she said. <p> -- Alfredo Garcia <p> Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. Read this post » </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://beliefnet.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">beliefnet.com</a> - 2010-07-28 22:52:06 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://blog.beliefnet.com/news/2010/07/muslims-aclu-seek-data-on-fbi.php" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Muslims, ACLU Seek Data on FBI Profiling</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> WASHINGTON (RNS) Muslim American groups and the American Civil Liberties Union are demanding the FBI turn over records relating to agency guidelines they say permit the FBI to collect and use racial and ethnic data. The groups allege that the Domestic Intelligence and Operations Guide, an FBI policy manual published in 2008, gives FBI agents the authority to map and investigate communities based on ethnic behaviors and lifestyles, cultural traditions, and "ethnic-oriented" businesses, even when there is no evidence of criminal activity. While the guidelines don\'t mention Muslims specifically, opponents say they are used almost exclusively against Islamic followers. Critics say such policies are not only unconstitutional, but ineffective, and often counter-productive. "It drives a wedge between the police and the communities they are sworn to serve," said Michael German, an ACLU lawyer and former FBI agent. "The FBI should be focusing its efforts on people it has a factual basis for suspecting of wrongdoing, not targeting communities with race-based investigations." Rather than profiling, the FBI would be better off establishing cooperative and open relationships with Muslims, since they are in the best position to detect radicals, critics say. Farhana Khera, executive director of Muslim Advocates, a San Francisco-based civil liberties group, agreed. "Law enforcement has an important job to protect us and should do so by focusing on legitimate leads and credible intelligence of actual criminal activity and threats," said Khera. On Wednesday (July 28), FBI Director Robert Mueller told the Senate Judiciary Committee the current guidelines are "effective," adding that membership in a particular religious or ethnic group was not "in and of itself" enough to justify FBI surveillance. "There are segments in the Muslim community who do not necessarily want the relationship (with the FBI) to work out, but ever since Sept. 12, 2001, we\'ve reached out to the Muslim community, and if you talk to leaders in that community, you will find that relationships are very good," Mueller said. <p> -- Omar Sacirbey and Alfredo Garcia <p> Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. Read this post » </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://beliefnet.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">beliefnet.com</a> - 2010-07-28 22:52:06 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/episodes/by-topic/politics/senate-democrats-%25e2%2580%259cshared-values-and-common-ground%25e2%2580%259d/6730/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Senate Democrats: "Shared Values and Common Ground"</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> Senate Democrats invited religion reporters to Capitol Hill to talk about outreach to communities of faith, the role of values in governing, and religious involvement in domestic and foreign policy issues. </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-28 21:29:11 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.gallup.com/poll/141581/Countries-High-Home-Internet-Access-Span-Regions.aspx?utm_source=tagrss&amp;utm_medium=rss&amp;utm_campaign=syndication&amp;utm_term=Religion%20and%20Social%20Trends" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Countries With High Home Internet Access Span Regions</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> Among 116 countries Gallup surveyed last year, the median proportion of adults who reported having Internet access at home was 19%. However, the proportion was greater than 75% in 15 countries that span several global regions. </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://gallup.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">gallup.com</a> - 2010-07-28 18:47:59 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://blog.beliefnet.com/news/2010/07/nj-supreme-court-declines-to-t.php" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >N.J. Supreme Court Declines to Take Gay Marriage Case</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> TRENTON, N.J. (RNS) Supporters of gay marriage said they would press on with their fight despite the New Jersey Supreme Court\'s decision not to hear a case in which six same-sex couples asked for the right to marry. "We ... will never give up -- not until our dying breath," said Steven Goldstein, chairman of Garden State Equality, the state\'s largest gay rights organization. Goldstein said Monday\'s (July 26) announcement by the state\'s highest court maintains the unequal legal status of same-sex couples. "Same-sex couples will continue to be denied the consistent right to visit one another in the hospital, to make medical decisions for one another and to receive equal health benefits from employers, all because of the deprivation of the equality and dignity that uniquely comes with the word marriage," Goldstein said in a statement. Though the court said it won\'t consider the case now, it left open the possibility it could hear it in the future. The justices said the case needs to be filed anew in Superior Court -- where it originated eight years ago -- and wind its way back up. "This matter cannot be decided without the development of an appropriate trial-like record," the court said. The seven-member court currently has one vacancy, and the remaining six justices were split down the middle, one vote short of the four votes needed to grant a motion. In 2006, the Supreme Court ruled same-sex couples were due the full rights and benefits of heterosexual married couples, but left it up to the Legislature to provide those rights, leading to the 2006 civil-union law. Armed with a legislative commission report saying civil unions had failed to achieve equal status for gay couples, same-sex marriage advocates pushed for full marriage rights. But after the state Senate rejected the gay marriage bill, the case made its way back to the state\'s highest court. Hayley Gorenberg, an attorney for Lambda Legal, a gay rights advocacy group, said her clients are ready to restart the legal battle, but the delay means more than just extra paperwork. "Every day, people are being denied their rights in medical situations, in school situations, at work," she said. John Tomicki, president of the New Jersey Coalition to Preserve and Protect Marriage, said he wants voters to decide if marriage should be defined as a union between one man and one woman. "I have no doubt the plaintiffs and Garden State Equality will continue their march on the courts because they do not have natural law and the public\'s interests on their side," he said. -- Matt Friedman / The Star-Ledger <p> Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. Read this post » </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://beliefnet.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">beliefnet.com</a> - 2010-07-27 22:30:44 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://blog.beliefnet.com/news/2010/07/report-anti-jewish-incidents-r.php" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Report: Anti-Jewish Incidents Remain `Sustained and Troubling\'</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> WASHINGTON (RNS): A Jewish group that tracks anti-Semitism has published its annual report of more than 1,200 incidents of assaults, vandalism and harassment against Jews in 2009, saying the level of incidents remained "sustained and troubling." "America is not immune to anti-Semitism, and 2009 was no different in this regard than in any other year," said Abraham H. Foxman, national director of the New York-based Anti-Defamation League, in a news release. In total, ADL reported 29 incidents of physical assaults on Jewish individuals, 760 cases of anti-Semitic harassments and threats, and 422 reports of anti-Semitic vandalism in 2009. This number of cases comes to about three incidents per day, said Deborah Lauter, the ADL\'s director of civil rights, in an interview. "Generally, these things are very underreported," she said. Most of the cases took place in states with large Jewish populations. The top four states included California (23 percent of total cases), New York (17 percent), New Jersey (10 percent), and Florida (7 percent). The 2009 audit employed new methodology and evaluation criteria, the first makeover ADL has made in the more than three decades of reporting on the topic. When analyzed using the old criteria, Lauter said that the 2009 numbers represent an approximate 10 percent increase in incidents from 2008. Overall, however, there has been no general trend to the data. "It goes up and down year to year," she said. Part of the new method includes a more conservative approach to categorizing incidents. The swastika, for instance, "is no longer exclusively used as a hate symbol against Jews," the ADL report said, so it is included only if accompanied with clearly anti-Jewish markings. Also omitted from the report were the more than 2,000 anti-Semitic faxes sent to Jewish centers nationwide by the Kansas-based Westboro Baptist Church. "These faxes caused great distress among recipients and, had they been counted, the 2009 Audit\'s harassment totals would have significantly increased," the ADL report said. The report also doesn\'t contain statistics on anti-Semitism in cyberspace. Although Lauter said there has been "an explosion" of anti-Semitic sites, postings and comments, ADL is "not yet capable of quantifying the amount." "We try to keep track of them, but it\'s just a huge number of people reporting it." <p> -- Alfredo Garcia <p> Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. Read this post » </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://beliefnet.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">beliefnet.com</a> - 2010-07-27 22:30:44 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://blog.beliefnet.com/news/2010/07/anglicans-reject-move-to-separ.php" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Anglicans Reject Move to `Separate\' U.S. Church</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> (RNS) Anglican leaders meeting in London have rejected a move to "separate" the Episcopal Church from the wider Anglican Communion, a proposal that officials called premature and "unhelpful." The proposal was offered Saturday (July 24) by Dato Stanley Isaacs, a member of the Anglican Communion\'s Standing Committee from the Province of South East Asia, according to a statement issued Monday. The Episcopal Church has come under fire from sister Anglican churches for its decision to consecrate an openly gay bishop in New Hampshire in 2003, as well as a lesbian assistant bishop in Los Angeles earlier this year. In June, the U.S. church was removed from Anglican panels that host ecumenical dialogue with other Christians, as well as a committee that determines doctrine and authority. But the 13 members of the Standing Committee -- who are elected from the 44 member churches of the 77 million-member Anglican Communion -- said formally exiling the U.S. church was not the proper response. "Committee members acknowledged the anxieties felt in parts of the Communion about sexuality issues," the statement said. "Nevertheless, the overwhelming opinion was that separation would inhibit dialogue on this and other issues ... and would therefore be unhelpful." The U.S. church has two representatives on the Standing Committee: Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori and Bishop Ian Douglas of Connecticut. At the Standing Committee\'s last meeting, just days after the Diocese of Los Angeles elected its lesbian bishop, the panel called for "gracious restraint" on actions that would test the fragile unity of the communion. When that statement failed to make any difference, Egyptian Bishop Mouneer Anis resigned from the panel, saying it had "no desire ... to sort out the problems which face the Anglican Communion and which are tearing its fabric apart." <p> -- Kevin Eckstrom <p> Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. Read this post » </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://beliefnet.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">beliefnet.com</a> - 2010-07-27 22:30:44 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://blog.beliefnet.com/news/2010/07/quietly-another-mosque-operate.php" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Quietly, Another Mosque Operates in Shadow of Ground Zero</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> By NICOLE NEROULIAS c. 2010 Religion News Service <p>NEW YORK (RNS) Barely visible among the high-rise apartment buildings and cocktail lounges, a battered steel door in Manhattan\'s trendy Tribeca neighborhood leads to a basement jammed with barefoot men praying on their lunch break. The makeshift mosque is a far cry from the 13-story proposed Cordoba House, the so-called planned "Ground Zero mosque" that\'s two blocks closer to the busy construction site where the twin towers of the World Trade Center once stood. And the leaders of Masjid Manhattan want to keep it that way. "We are not involved with that other group," said Imam Mustafa Elazabawy, raising his voice just loud enough to be heard above the din of an air conditioner unit, but not to disturb the Arabic recitations. <p>"We have been here for 30 years, in this neighborhood. Many Muslims also died over there, on 9/11." Ever since Masjid Manhattan lost its lease on nearby Warren Street in 2008, members have struggled to find a more suitable space for daily prayers. They\'ve also tried to keep a low profile, clearly nervous about prompting the kind of outcry that has plagued the planned Cordoba House project. Nevermind that Cordoba House is neither a mosque nor really at Ground Zero. Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, chairman of the Cordoba Initiative, insists the facility will serve as a YMCA-type community center for interfaith bridge-building. The $100 million complex, replacing an abandoned Burlington Coat Factory warehouse, would have a prayer room, but also a swimming pool, basketball court, childcare services, art exhibitions and a food court serving halal dishes from around the world. <p> But opponents, including retired New York City firefighter Tim Brown, say a highly visible Muslim organization with international benefactors has no place in the neighborhood, especially not in a building damaged by the attacks. "We\'re saying no to the group and no to the location. A mosque in the U.S. that\'s using foreign money from countries with Shariah law is unacceptable, especially in this neighborhood," Brown said. "The other group (Masjid Manhattan) lost their lease, and they just want to replace what they already had. That\'s a lot more understandable." Brown, who wears a metal bangle on his right wrist engraved with the names of two of the nearly 100 friends he lost on 9/11, demurs when asked how far would be considered a more appropriate buffer zone from Ground Zero. Five more blocks away? 15? "You can\'t put a rule on that," he said. "It\'s about being sensitive to the families." Brown has enlisted the services of the American Center for Law and Justice, a conservative law firm founded by Pat Robertson and better known for championing the rights of Christians to build and worship freely. The ACLJ, representing Brown and more than 20,000 people who have signed an online petition for the Committee to Stop the Ground Zero Mosque, has been lobbying the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission to give 45-47 Park Place landmark status -- adding a major hurdle to construction there -- because part of one of the hijacked planes had fallen through its roof. Brown concedes he\'s doubtful the site will get land marked, but says the point is to keep raising awareness of the Cordoba House plans and pressure Rauf to fully disclose the project\'s funding sources. "The decision has already been made. But we\'re going to stay on him, and keep exposing his radical ties," Brown said, adding that he and the ACLJ will challenge a landmark status rejection. "The bridge Imam Rauf wants to build is a bridge to Islam, and it\'s a one-way street." Publicly, Rauf has expressed confidence that Cordoba House will move forward, noting the quiet but steadfast support from local residents and city officials, including Mayor Michael Bloomberg. "The government should never, never be in the business of telling people how they should pray or where they can pray," Bloomberg told reporters in late July, responding to Sarah Palin and other vocal Republican and Tea Party critics of the project. Interfaith advocates and religion experts, including Boston University professor Stephen Prothero, author of "God Is Not One," have chimed in, objecting to the emerging arguments: that Cordoba House should not be built near Ground Zero because it will serve as a symbol of Muslim conquest of lower Manhattan, and because Saudi Arabia doesn\'t allow the construction of churches. "Since when has Saudi Arabia been the model for American civil liberties?" Prothero asked, in his CNN blog, wondering whether all mosques and other non-Christian houses of worship should therefore be banned, as well. "One of America\'s core values, inscribed into the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights, is freedom of religion." But less than 10 years after the attacks, with Ground Zero still under heavy construction and Americans still facing grave threats from Muslim extremists abroad and at home, the wound is far too raw to be talking about tolerance, Brown contends. "Now is not the right time," he said. "They\'re telling us that we\'re against religious freedom? That\'s backwards. Our friends and families were murdered by these terrorists, who were against religious freedom." For its part, Masjid Manhattan, crammed into the Warren Street basement, continues to distance itself from the Cordoba House proposal on its website and in conversations. Elazabawy says they would not be interested in moving to the facility, which won\'t be ready until 2012 at the earliest. Nodding towards the diverse array of men sitting on the dingy floor-- in business suits, track suits and traditional African or Middle Eastern clothing -- Elazabawy said his mosque desperately wants more room, but not at the cost of a multi-million dollar facility and at the expense of community relations. "We need space, because our community is growing," he said. "But we are not with that group. They are just investors, for real estate." <p> Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. Read this post » </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://beliefnet.com" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">beliefnet.com</a> - 2010-07-26 22:33:24 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/headlines/religious-leaders-protest-oil-money/6727/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Religious Leaders Protest Oil Money</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> A coalition of interfaith leaders rallied in front of the U.S. Capitol this week to mark the 3 month anniversary of the BP oil spill. Protestors from both religious and secular groups called on members of Congress to stop accepting campaign contributions from oil companies. They also demanded that any money currently donated [...] </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-23 23:27:40 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/headlines/judge-weighs-immigration-law/6726/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Judge Weighs Immigration Law</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> In Arizona, a federal judge heard a series of challenges to the state\'s controversial immigration law, scheduled to go into effect on July 29th. The judge said she may not rule until after that date. Meanwhile, religious organizations are among those who say they plan to engage in civil disobedience on the 29th. [...] </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-23 23:27:40 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/headlines/catholic-bishops-given-authority-to-close-churches/6725/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Catholic Bishops Given Authority to Close Churches</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> The Vatican delivered some unwelcome news this week to American Catholics fighting the closure of some local churches. The Vatican\'s high court ruled that a bishop even if it is well attended or financially stable. Ten parishes in Boston lost their appeals to stay open in May, although vigils there continue. But the Vatican [...] </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-23 23:27:40 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/headlines/american-jewish-congress-suspends-activities/6724/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >American Jewish Congress Suspends Activities</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> The American Jewish Congress, long active on liberal issues, announced this week it is shutting down for the time being. Founded in 1918, it had 300 chapters at one time. In the 1960s it lobbied against the Vietnam War and the Arab economic boycott of Israel, challenged restrictive clubs and litigated for the separation [...] </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-23 23:27:40 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/headlines/spain-rejects-veil-ban/6723/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Spain Rejects Veil Ban</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> In Spain, the Parliament has rejected a proposal to ban face covering veils like the burqa or niqab in public. Opponents of the legislation had said that the ban would force women to either break the law by wearing the veils in public or stay home all the time. </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-23 23:27:40 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/headlines/haitians-celebrate-at-sacred-waterfall/6722/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Haitians Celebrate At Sacred Waterfall</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> In Haiti, pilgrims flocked to the sacred waterfalls of Saut-d\'Eau to celebrate the festival of our Lady of Mount Carmel. The annual event attracts both Christians and practitioners of voodoo who believe bathing in the water washes away sins and bad luck. This year they prayed for a better future for their country, still [...] </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-23 23:27:40 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/headlines/desmond-tutu-announces-retirement-from-public-life/6721/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >Desmond Tutu Announces Retirement from Public Life</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> South Africa\'s Desmond Tutu announced this week that he will retire from public life in October, when he turns 79 years old, saying, "The time has now come to slow down and sip maybe Rooibos tea with my beloved wife in the afternoon." Tutu is the former Anglican archbishop of Cape Town, and a leader [...] </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-23 23:27:40 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/episodes/july-23-2010/fishermen-of-the-gulf/6702/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >July 23, 2010: Fishermen of the Gulf</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> According to US government figures, more than 40,000 people have been brought in to help clean up the oil and deal with the crisis. But many in the fishing industry say they haven\'t been able to get work, and they don\'t know when they\'ll be able to resume their livelihoods. </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-23 22:26:32 GMT </div> </li> <li style="margin-bottom : 4px;list-style : none;"> <div style=""> <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/episodes/july-23-2010/spiritual-implications-of-the-oil-spill/6704/" target="_blank" style="font-weight : bold; font-size : 1em; color : inherit;" >July 23, 2010: Spiritual Implications of the Oil Spill</a> </div> <div style="margin : 2px 0px; font-size : inherit ; color : inherit;"> Watch more from New Orleans Roman Catholic Archbishop Gregory Aymond, Margaret Dubuisson of Catholic Charities of the New Orleans Archdiocese, and Rev. John Dee Jeffries, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Chalmette, discussing the spiritual toll of the oil spill crisis for people along the Gulf Coast. </div> <div style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;"> <a href="http://pbs.org" target="_blank" style="font-size : 1em; color : inherit;">pbs.org</a> - 2010-07-23 21:27:58 GMT </div> </li> </ul> </div> </div>');
