[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 125 (Thursday, September 16, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H6793]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GROUND ZERO--MOSQUE OR MONUMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from Texas (Mr. Poe) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. POE of Texas. Madam Speaker, history is the great predictor. To
understand today, all you have to do is to look at last Saturday. We
all remember where we were when hijacked planes hit the World Trade
Center. We remember the billowing clouds of smoke blacking out the New
York skyline. Those towers--once pillars of strength and freedom--
became mass graves in the space of a few moments. Firefighters, police
officers, innocent men women and children all died in a firestorm of
hate.
Our country men and women were killed at the hands of radical Muslim
extremists. People who believe their religion tells them to be violent
in the name of that religion.
Now, 9 years later, it's clear that some Americans have forgotten the
horror caused by these terrorists, and they expect us to forget as
well. However, forgetting is not an option.
Even though we don't show the pictures anymore except on the
anniversary of September 11. We don't talk about those responsible for
plotting and carrying out these deadly terrorist attacks against
America. We're told we can't be angry. We are expected to blindly
accept the hatred for America in the name of tolerance. Under this
guise of ``religious tolerance,'' we're told we must allow a mosque to
be built near Ground Zero.
No one disagrees with the legal right to build a mosque, but the
builder's decision is ill-advised and it's insensitive. This is a
building where the landing gear from one of the hijacked planes tore
through the roof.
The media scolds those of us who disagree with this building. They
say to be tolerant, be respectful and accepting of other people's
religions. But why is not the same expected of those individuals? Is
this really about tolerance?
The day the two planes hit the World Trade Center, that piece of land
in New York City took on a whole new meaning. Ground Zero is no longer
just a location in New York. It is a symbol of America as powerful as
the stars and stripes. It is hallowed ground of the victims who were
victimized because of hate.
Iman Feisal Abdul Rauf--the man behind the Ground Zero mosque--should
instead build a memorial to the victims of the radical Muslim
extremists instead of a mosque. That would be sensitive. That would be
compassionate.
The history books show ``victory mosques'' have been built in or near
locations of Muslim conquests throughout history. In 1453, Mehmed II,
the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, conquered Constantinople. One of his
first acts was to convert a Christian church for more than 900 years--
the Hagia Sophia--into a mosque.
Iman Rauf calls his project the Cordoba House. The first great mosque
of Cordoba was built by medieval Islamic invaders. They built it on the
site of a ransacked Roman Catholic cathedral in Spain. The name
Cordoba--is that just a coincidence--the Cordoba mosque initiative at
Ground Zero--too many in America thinks this mirrors history too
closely.
One of our greatest freedoms in America is our right to worship as we
please. Our Nation was founded on liberty and freedom for everyone. Do
not Muslims, like most religions and cultures, believe in tolerance and
respect for other religions?
Thousands of sons, daughters, fathers, and mothers at this very
moment are stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan. They're fighting the
terrorists in the deserts and in the rough mountain terrain. Thirty-
five American warriors from my congressional district area gave their
lives in these two wars. They died protecting us from these same
radical extremists that murder in the name of religion. It seems to me
that the tolerance lesson is being preached to the wrong part of the
world.
Many Christians, Jews and other non-Muslims are offended by the
building of this mosque and believe it is disrespectful and dishonors
those who were murdered on 9/11. If building this mosque is meant to
truly promote education and understanding of the Muslim religion, I
suggest the supporters take a look at history. And rather than repeat
history, they should remember history.
Ground Zero is off-limits.
And that's just the way it is.
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