Rep. Ellison Slams King’s
Anti-Muslim Comment
Washington,
DC: Rep. Keith Ellison, the first US Muslim Congressman, reacted
strongly to last week’s statement by his Republican
counterpart, Rep. Peter King (R-NY), who said in an interview
that there are “too many” mosques in the United
States and urged a more aggressive law enforcement approach
toward them…
Ellison was attending an Iftar held at the Council on American
Islamic Relations on Thursday in honor of Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu,
secretary general of the Organization of the Islamic Conference,
who was in Washington meeting with lawmakers in Congress before
traveling to New York where he will speak at the United Nations.
“Rep. King’s remarks that there ‘are too
many mosques in the US’ cuts into the basis of the US
Constitution, which guarantees all Americans freedom of their
religion,” Ellison told Arab News...
In the US, you can practice any religion you want. This is
guaranteed by both the Constitution and the 1st Amendment,”
said Ellison, 44, following prayers and Iftar at CAIR’s
Washington headquarters.
“While we have some people in Congress who make offensive
comments, it is important for us, as Muslims, to lift the
level of debate, and demonstrate the true character of Islam,”
said Ellison.
“The comment by Rep. King was surely heard throughout
the Muslim world, and I think it undermines our national security
because it gives people who are really hostile to the US —
terrorists and murders — recruiting tools.”
Ellison, who converted from Catholicism to Sunni Islam at
age nineteen, while attending university, said: “There
is nothing about Islam that should be associated with terrorism,
and nothing about terrorism that should be association with
Islam.
“The US has the right to defend itself, but not to insult
Muslims. This statement by Rep. King is insulting to all Muslims,
and also to all people who believe in religious pluralism,
the Jeffersonian tradition and those that support tolerance.”
Asked if people were tolerant to him, the first Muslim congressman,
Ellison said: “People here have been overwhelmingly
tolerant of me.”
Then returning to King, he said: “Please tell your readers
that Rep. King represents a very small minority view, but
— because his comments were so inflammatory —
they get a lot of attention.
“Just as we [Muslims] don’t want to be judged
by the actions of a small [extremist] minority, I ask the
Muslim world not to judge Congress by the remarks of one congressman.”
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