COLORBEARER OF ATHENS, GEORGIA LOCALLY OWNED SINCE 1987
August 31, 2016

Georgia Doesn't Welcome Muslims, but Extremism Comes in Many Forms

Capitol Impact

Photo Credit: Joshua L. Jones/file

Worshippers at the Al-Huda Islamic Center in Athens.

When it comes to people who observe the Muslim faith, Georgia doesn’t exactly put out the welcome mat. If anything, that welcome mat is yanked out from under them.

If a Muslim group attempts to open a mosque or cemetery, local residents often will go berserk and their government will deny the necessary rezoning or building permit. That happened in Lilburn a few years ago, when the city fathers turned down a proposal for a mosque. It happened in Kennesaw when a mosque in a shopping center was temporarily blocked. And it happened in Snellville with attempts to locate a cemetery.

Elected officials also have a hissy fit if you talk about resettling Muslim refugees in Georgia. That happened last year with Gov. Nathan Deal, who demanded that the federal government stop the flow of Syrian refugees here.

The new battlefield has moved to Newton County, where a group called Al Maad Al Islami Inc. purchased a tract of land for a new mosque. After word of their plans got out, local citizens flocked to a county commission hearing to complain. "We have already seen bombings and beheadings," said one resident. "Eight years ago our U.S. government got a Muslim president who has put Muslims in power.” (For the record, Barack Obama is a Christian.)

"You and your children will be living under Sharia law, putting your hand over your heart for Allah," said a complainant. Another citizen commented: "Do we have a right to be fearful today? Of course we do. We don’t know these people." This was from a man who claimed to be a Christian pastor.  

The Newton County Commission imposed a moratorium on zoning actions, which put at least a temporary halt on plans for the mosque.

You can understand the fears people have. When you read the news dispatches from the Middle East, it’s human nature to worry about those terrorist organizations. The mistake, however, comes from thinking that this country will be safe if we can just keep out all the Muslims. Extremism comes from many sources.  

In 1996, Eric Rudolph, a white Christian, carried out the Atlanta Olympics bombing that killed one spectator. He later caused the death of a security guard when he bombed an Alabama abortion clinic.

In 1998, James Charles Kopp, a white Christian, shot and killed Barnett Slepian, a doctor who had performed abortions.

In 2008, Jim David Adkisson, a white Christian, went to a Unitarian Universalist Church in Knoxville, TN and started shooting people, killing two in the process. Adkission said he did it because he hated liberals, Democrats, and gays.

In 2009, Scott Roeder, a white Christian, shot and killed George Tiller because Tiller had performed abortions.

In 2015, Robert Lewis Dear, a white Christian, killed three people in a mass shooting at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado.

And we haven’t even talked about Timothy McVeigh, the white military veteran who killed 168 people when he blew up a federal building in Oklahoma. McVeigh wasn’t a Muslim, either.

If you extend the argument used by Donald Trump and the opponents of the Newton County mosque to its logical extreme, then we should prohibit all white Christians from entering the U.S. We should also deport those who are living here back to their original country. After all, white Christians have a demonstrated history of murder and violence against American citizens.

I am not advocating that, of course. If all white Christians were to be deported, both sides of my family would be on their way back to Scotland and England. I don't want that, and I don't want to see us trampling on our long-held principles of religious tolerance. Be careful whom you want to keep out.

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