More on the Mosque: I am like you

Essays, Featured — By Karen Spears Zacharias on August 24, 2010 at 8:00 am

There are well-meaning good-hearted people on both sides of the Ground Zero mosque issue. I believe that, I really do. It’s just hard right now to see that, what with the way the people are carrying on. If I were Frank Peretti writing This Presence Darkness, I might imagine that demons are dancing, delighted by all the ugly ways in which we can hate on one another.

I blame media. Insipid talk radio, incendiary yammering on the 24-7 boob tube, and a blogosphere that considers fact-checking a click over to Wikipedia.

On a recent trip to Seattle, I heard one of those talk show hosts jawing on and on about how he was the lone defender of freedom for Americans and how he and his organization had filed a lawsuit to stop the building of a mosque at Ground Zero.

Fact check error one: There is no mosque planned to be built at Ground Zero.

It’s two blocks away.

But it’s hard to make an argument stick if every time a talk show host, blogger or TV personality has to say, “The mosque planned to be built two blocks from Ground Zero” rather than “The mosque at Ground Zero.”

The radio host made sure to let his listeners know that he stands between them and that wrong-headed president who favors putting the mosque at Ground Zero.

Never mind that President Obama hasn’t taken a position one way or another on whether the mosque should be built. Fact check error two: What he did say is that this country’s founding principals allow for a mosque to be built two blocks from Ground Zero.

Listen. I understand memorials. I visit the Wall in DC twice every year — Memorial Day and Veterans Day. I get why people are so emotional about them. A few years ago, I asked a man who was protesting the war in Iraq to please go stand elsewhere — I suggested the steps of Congress, since that’s where the war really began. His presence at the Wall was upsetting to many of us there that day. He didn’t leave, but he did move back out of sight.

So I appreciate the emotion that has fueled this fray.

There was a time when I would have been out there holding up the placard, screaming like a banshee. Growing up, I loathed all things Vietnamese — the people, the country, the war. The way I saw it, if it hadn’t been for them I would have had my father around.

Everything was so clearly defined in my “us” and “them” world. But it all got so messy that day I passed a Vietnamese Honor Guard standing in the rain at the Vietnam Memorial Wall. It was Veterans Day, 2002,  my first trip to the Wall. I went with all my biases, misconceptions and hatefulness fully intact.

When I walked past that honor guard, all my clearly defined boundaries came crumbling down. I cried that entire day. I wept not so much for the loss of my father as I wept for the years I had carried the burden that is misunderstanding. In a matter of a few short hours, I’d left behind the world of “us” and “them.”

In March 2003 I boarded a plane at LAX and flew to the country where my father took his last breath. It was there at the marketplace in Hoi An that I met a Vietnamese fellow who said to me, “I am like you.”

“In what way?” I asked.

“I, too, lost my father to that war.”

Prior to that encounter, I had not allowed myself to think of the Vietnamese children and the sufferings they had endured. Afterward, I have looked upon every Vietnamese person as my brother, my sister, my mother, my father, my friend.

I think of them first and foremost when I think of the war in which my father died. I think of how the bodies of their soldiers were piled in heaps alongside the roadways, too numerous to bury. I think of how their widows never received any government benefits for their husbands’ deaths. I think of how these women prostituted themselves just to be able to feed their sons and daughters. I think of the European and American businessmen who allowed these women and girls to be exploited that way.

I think of the field near Dragon Mountain where Vietnamese locals watched as I built a rock memorial to honor my father. They couldn’t understand the words I spoke, but I hope they understood the grace that had led me there to them.

I pray for the families who lost loved ones at Ground Zero.  I pray they come to understand what the Vietnamese taught me – that the best memorial we can build to our loved ones is not made out of concrete or stone but out of mercy and grace.

I can’t think of any better way to do that than to build a house of worship because there is no greater answer to the hatred that fueled 9-11 than the voices of people united in prayer and praise.

Don’t stop with the mosque, build a house of worship on every block near Ground Zero. Then the demons can sit back and watch the angels dance.

Karen Spears Zacharias is author of After the Flag has been Folded/Wm. Morrow, 2006 and Will Jesus Buy Me a Doublewide? Zondervan, 2010

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    5 Comments

  • aaron says:

    that was beautiful, i don’t know what else to say.

  • Jo Hilder says:

    Here in Australia, we have a similar level of anti-Islamic sentiment. Weve been terrorised by Muslim fanatics as well. On the weekend, a journalist report on television explained the faciity being in New York built by Muslims two blocks from where the WTC fell is actually an Islamic community centre, which will include a place of worship. Perhaps this centre could be a place of reconcilitation for New Yorkers. Don’t we have to allow space for the restitution we demand when a wrong has been committed?

    Recently, it was proposed that a homosexual community festival be held in our city. One local church took a stand against it, vehemently opposing the homosexuals right to hold a community gathering. My, they caused a fuss. At Christmas time, when this church wants to hold their regular Carols by Candlight event, I wonder if they will be surprised when people oppose it this year. The issue, I believe, is that if we as Christians ask for the religious, personal, civic and human rights of other certain minority groups to be removed, then we cannot expect to enjoy and exercise those same rights. Muslims enjoy the religious right to freely worship, and the civic right to build a place of worship – are the Christians in new York be prepared to surrender their rights to do the same?

    Be very careful….the world is watching.

  • Kristi says:

    Do not judge those who oppose the mosque so harshly. You lost your father in a war in which he knew he would fight and might die. The victims of 9-11 were attacked without provocation by a stealth enemy.

    This site is called Ground Zero because debris from one attack plane fell on and damaged the building on 9-11.

    This imam espouses Shariah Law, which supports Jihad, and makes controversial remarks that make others question whether he is truly as peace-loving as he claims.

  • diane nienhuis says:

    Fack Check Three: It will not actually be a mosque – they are building a community center. Traditionally, a mosque may ONLY be a place of worship but this new building will be filled with events and activities, not a place of worship.

  • diane nienhuis says:

    FACT! Ha, not fack

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