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Wednesday, 22 Syawal 1432
Wednesday, 21 September 2011 15:38

Jackson Heights Imam fights Muslim radicalism Muhammadi Community Center's Qayyoom preaches against terrorism, supports interfaith work.

Ever since he lost someone he knew in the World Trade Center attacks in 2001, Mohd Qayyoom has worked on his own and through his Muhammadi Community Center of Jackson Heights to spread his message of how despite popular perceptions Islam is against terrorism. “Islam has no room for the terrorism,” Qayyoom said. A Muslim priest from Bangladesh, Qayyoom moved to America in 1991. Beginning in 1996, he worked as a paid imam in Elmhurst, but after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Qayyoom used many of his Friday night sermons to speak against terrorism, which met with some resistance from the congregation. “I decided an imam from Islam should stand up and say, ‘Don’t do that,’” Qayyoom said.

Qayyoom left the mosque in Elmhurst in 2004 to open his community center, on 37-46 72nd St. in Jackson Heights, in 2005. As of now, he has about 100 people coming to the traditional Juma prayers, but says he has not gotten support from Islamic groups. Nevertheless, he has many plans for the center. “I want to work with all of the community, all of the issues,” Qayyoom said. Qayyoom said his current plan is to build a $10 million new Islamic community center in Jackson Heights by 2020. He hopes to buy the house he currently rents for the mosque and four other houses adjacent to it for this to happen.

His center also houses the Al-Azhar Academy, an Islamic after-school program which teaches children both the teachings of the religion and how to avoid falling into terrorist organizations or mosques directly or indirectly aligned with terrorist organizations. “I want to save all the children from the hands of terrorists, from the hands of brainwashing,” said Qayyoom, who has three children. Some of Qayyoom’s goals and opinions are unpopular with other Muslims. Having lost his immigration lawyer, along with many of his own important papers, in the World Trade Center attacks, he is against the Park51 Islamic center planned to be built two blocks from the site. He compared the proposed Manhattan center to the Masjid-e-Zirar in the Quran, a mosque said to be built by hypocrites against Islam. He is in favor of the state of Israel and believes the American government should put pressure on Saudi Arabia not to fund terrorists. He also said he believes all Muslim immigrants who come to America should have training so that they do not fall into radical groups, and mosques and religious schools should have background checks to ensure they are not teaching radical or terrorist philosophies. Qayyoom has participated in many interfaith programs, including an interfaith breakfast with Mayor Mike Bloomberg and state Sen. Jose Peralta’s (D-East Elmhurst), anti-domestic violence initiatives, and is a frequent speaker at the Jewish Center in Jackson Heights. He said
he hopes his center will be a place where people of all faiths can visit. “Quran is the book for all human beings,” Qayyoom said.

Publication date:
Thursday, November 11, 2010 - 00:00
Times Ledger
by Rebecca Henely


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Sunday, 07 Ramadan 1432
Sunday, 07 August 2011 06:16
A fresh US-led airstrike has killed at least eight civilians and wounded several others in the troubled southern Afghanistan, local authorities say. The causalities come after NATO targeted a residential area in Nad Ali district of southern Helmand Province. The western military alliance claims to have targeted militants in the troubled region. However, eye-witnesses and local sources said all those killed in the attack were civilians. Afghan officials say women and children are among the victims. Kabul has been condemning attacks on Afghan people, with President Hamid Karzai saying the foreign forces should stop looking for Taliban militants among civilians. Hundreds of civilians have lost their lives in US-led airstrikes and ground operations in different parts of the war-ravaged country over the past months. A large number of civilians have fallen victim to the air raids since the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan. The loss of civilian lives at the hand of foreign forces has dramatically increased anti-American sentiments in Afghanistan. Afghans have held several angry protests against NATO over the issue of civilian casualties. The US-led war in Afghanistan, with civilian and military casualties at record highs, has become the longest war in the US history.

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Sunday, 07 Ramadan 1432
Sunday, 07 August 2011 06:11
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem has announced that the country will hold free and transparent parliamentary elections by the end of the year. “The Syrian leadership still stresses that national dialogue is the way to solve the current crisis, and in the absence of such dialogue due to the opposition's negative stances, we have no other choice but to go down the path of reforms without leaving it hostage to any hindering factor,” Muallem said on Saturday after reviewing President Bashar al-Assad's reform package. He further said that the government is committed to implementing Assad's promised the reforms as the Syrian leadership is devoted to maintaining security and stability and to lead the country towards democracy and progress, the Syrian Arab News Agency reported. Assad issued a decree on Thursday, authorizing a multi-party political system in the country. The decree paves the way for the establishment of political parties and allows them to function alongside the country's Baath Party, which has been in power since 1963, with the constitutional status of the “leader of state and society.” Syria has been experiencing unrest in the past months, with demonstrations held both against and in support of the Assad government. Hundreds were killed when some protest rallies turned into armed clashes between alleged protesters and state security forces as well as organized attacks by well-armed gangs against the Syrian police force and border guards in the north of the country. The Syrian opposition accuses security forces of being behind the killings, but the government blames the deadly violence on armed gangs.

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Sunday, 07 Ramadan 1432
Sunday, 07 August 2011 06:05
At least thirty-one US special forces have been killed after a helicopter belonging to the NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) crashed in Afghanistan's eastern province of Wardak. The deaths were announced in a statement by the office of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, AFP reported on Saturday. The death toll is the biggest in a single incident for foreign forces since the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001. Seven Afghan forces were also killed in the incident, the statement added. Provincial spokesman Shahidullah Shahid said the chopper crashed on Friday night in the city of Seyed Abad. The helicopter went down when it was carrying out an anti-Taliban operation by foreign and Afghan forces in which at least eight militants were killed, the Afghan official said. A spokesman for ISAF said they are investigating the crash but did not provide any further information about the incident. Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said the militant group was responsible for shooting down the helicopter. The Afghan official confirmed the militants' claim. "The US chopper that crashed last night was shot down by the Taliban as it was taking off. A rocket fired by the militants hit it and completely destroyed it," Shahid said.

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Sunday, 07 Ramadan 1432
Sunday, 07 August 2011 05:59
Hundreds of thousands of people have staged anti- regime demonstrations across Israel as street protests continue for a third consecutive week. More than 300,000 people attended demonstrations in Israeli cities and towns, from Kiryat Shmona in the north to the Negev in the south, on Saturday night to protest against the high cost of living, especially skyrocketing housing prices, and to demand social justice, the daily Ha'aretz reported on its website. The protesters were chanting, “The people demand social justice” while carrying banners reading “Resign, Egypt is here.” The largest demonstration was held in Tel Aviv, where more than 200,000 marched across the city. The police closed the main avenue early on Saturday in anticipation of the demonstration and will only reopen it on Sunday afternoon. Several other major roads in the central part of the city were blocked during the demonstration. In al-Quds (Jerusalem), more than 20,000 demonstrators marched toward the residence of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The demonstrations are gaining momentum as Netanyahu is facing mounting pressure over his handling of the economy. Some protesters have also criticized Israel's settlement expansion policy. They blame the housing crisis on Tel Aviv's outsized financial support for settlement construction on occupied Palestinian land.

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