http://www.newsday.com/news/local/w...ct21,0,1470737.story?coll=ny-region-apnewyork
I am confused by my reaction to this. It seems the religion of Islam has so many rules which actually demand of our economy, our way of life, our traditions - far more than any other religious group or culture. By their very nature of worship and custom of dress, we have had to accommodate them in
so many ways. Is this absolutely necessary or it is another method of attention-getting by a minority group? Why do they wish to live in a traditional western country and then change things to suit their own traditions? Europe has done this and they are thanked by bombings and riots. Is Islam really a religion?
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I am confused by my reaction to this. It seems the religion of Islam has so many rules which actually demand of our economy, our way of life, our traditions - far more than any other religious group or culture. By their very nature of worship and custom of dress, we have had to accommodate them in
so many ways. Is this absolutely necessary or it is another method of attention-getting by a minority group? Why do they wish to live in a traditional western country and then change things to suit their own traditions? Europe has done this and they are thanked by bombings and riots. Is Islam really a religion?
West Point opens Islamic worship space as Muslim cadets increase
October 21, 2006, 10:45 AM EDT
WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) _ Muslims at the U.S. Military Academy numbered just two in 2001. This year, there are 32.
Now West Point has opened its first space dedicated to Muslims, a worship hall complete with a pulpit facing Mecca. The space officially opened Thursday.
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"I knew the Army had a policy of religious tolerance, but I didn't know it was to this extent," said first-year Cadet Ahmed Moomin, 20, from the Maldives.
Until now, Friday prayers were held in an increasingly crowded first-floor office, said Imam Asadullah, the academy's Muslim cleric. The number of Muslim cadets jumped by 10 from last year.
The new hall is large enough for dozens of followers, he said.
West Point's Muslim leaders approached administrators last year for help.
"We live in a world where everyone is looking at the United States saying, 'You're anti-Islam.' But here at West Point, that's not what we do," West Point Chaplain Col. John Cook said.
Asadullah said the new hall is a strategic move.
"We have cadets here who are going to be the future of tomorrow," he said. "If we treat them differently from other cadets or other faiths, that will be a cause for future confrontation."
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