On Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 11:24 AM, Sam <sammyc...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> I'd like to see that again, I remember you posting a pr and an op-ed,
> nothing more.
>

Here's the entire release from the AP:

An Islamic Center including a mosque is proposed for a site in lower
Manhattan that's two blocks from where Muslim extremists flew airplanes into
the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, and killed nearly 2,800 people.
The project has ignited passions and turned into a major political issue.
Some questions and answers:

---

Q: Who is behind the project?

A: The project is called Park51 and is a product of the Cordoba Initiative,
a nonprofit organization headed by the Muslim cleric Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf
and his wife, Daisy Khan. The group aims to improve relations between Islam
and the West by hosting leadership conferences for young American Muslims,
organizing programs on Arab-Jewish relations, and empowering Muslim women.

Rauf, 62, was born in Kuwait and educated in Malaysia, London and the U.S.
He's a prolific speaker and author of several books about the role of Islam
in the modern world, including "What's Right with Islam: A New Vision for
Muslims and the West." He serves as imam of a mosque in New York's TriBeCa
neighborhood, also not far from ground zero.

The State Department recently sent Rauf on a religious outreach trip to the
Middle East, one of several he has made on behalf of the U.S. government
since 2007.

While he promotes himself as a moderate bridge builder, Rauf has made
comments over the years that have alarmed some observers and helped fuel
opposition to the proposed project.

In a CBS News interview shortly after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Rauf
said, "United States policies were an accessory to the crime that happened."
In a radio interview this year, he refused to call the radical Islamic group
Hamas a terrorist organization, saying "the issue of terrorism is a very
complex question."

---

Q: Is it just a mosque?

A: The developers have planned a 13-story, $100 million Islamic community
center, complete with a pool, gym and 500-seat auditorium, of which the
mosque would be a part.

---

Q: Where exactly will it be located?

A: The address is 45-47 Park Place, two blocks north of the World Trade
Center site where nearly 2,800 people were killed in the Sept. 11 attacks.

The building, which once housed a Burlington Coat Factory store, was closed
after being damaged by debris from the attacks. SoHo Properties, a private
real estate development company and partner in the Islamic center project,
bought the building in 2009 for $4.85 million. Muslim prayer services have
been held each week there since then.

---

Q: Why did the developers choose this site, given its proximity to ground
zero?

A: In an interview with The Associated Press in May, Khan said the growing
number of congregants at the only other mosque nearby created a need for an
additional Islamic center in the neighborhood. Khan also said the project
was a way to showcase the efforts of moderate, peace-seeking Muslims and
their involvement in the rebuilding of lower Manhattan.

"We want to create a platform by which the voices of the mainstream and
silent majority of Muslims will be amplified. A center of this scale and
magnitude will do that," Khan told the AP.

---

Q: Can opponents of Park51 prevent its construction?

A: Not really. It's private property, and the developers own the building.
The street is zoned to accommodate houses of worship. The project cleared
its last potential regulatory hurdle when the city's Landmarks Commission
voted unanimously not to designate the building a historic landmark,
clearing the way for it be demolished and for construction of the Islamic
center to begin.

Barring any unexpected legal or regulatory obstacles, opponents' best hope
to stop the project would be through a public relations campaign urging the
developers to move it elsewhere out of respect for victims of the 9/11
attacks and their families. Gov. David Paterson, who supports the project,
said he might offer state property if the developers were willing to
construct it farther from ground zero.

---

Q: How is the project being funded?

A: The funding is a major issue for some opponents, who say the developers
have not been transparent enough about their financial patrons. Opponents
have also dropped hints that they worry about ties to terrorist money but
have not furnished evidence to support that concern.

In an op-ed published this month in the New York Daily News, Sharif
El-Gamal, the owner of SoHo Properties, said fundraising efforts for the
project were just getting started and would be handled with great vigilance.

"We pledge to all New Yorkers and all Americans that we'll work under all
applicable laws and regulations. By no means will we accept support from
persons with anti-American views or agendas," he wrote.

---

Q: What is the timeline for building the center?

A: Park51 spokesman Oz Sultan has said there was no timeline for starting
demolition of the existing structure or construction. Once the old building
is demolished, building the community center is expected take 18 to 48
months

<end of release>

I got it from here:
http://www.kansascity.com/2010/08/16/2153697/questions-and-answers-on-mosque.html

Please note that two of the questions exactly mirrored your questions: Why
there, and who's funding it.

-- 
No matter how close to yours another's steps have grown
In the end there is one dance you'll do alone


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