No examples of this vile hate mail are published here, and so we cannot get a true taste of this horrifying “Islamophobia.” But one thing is glaringly omitted from this Los Angeles Times hate piece on “hate mongerers”: does the Muslim Public Affairs Council really have ties to the Muslim Brotherhood? And if so, should All Saints church really be hosting this group?
Meanwhile, all this pious posturing about hate mail is ridiculous. MPAC, the church and the Los Angeles Times are trying to use the hate mail to deflect attention away from the Muslim Brotherhood question and to portray themselves as victims who own the moral high ground. But receiving hate mail doesn’t give one the moral high ground. And if they want to play that game, here is plenty of hate mail. I am sure that I have received much, much more than any of the people quoted below will ever receive. There are idiots and louts on both sides of this issue, but the really lethal ones are overwhelmingly on the Islamic supremacist side, contrary to the media mythmaking about “right-wing yahoos.”
“Despite hate mail, Pasadena church will host Muslim event,” from the Los Angeles Times, December 6 (thanks to Darcy):
Despite receiving a slew of hate mail, All Saints Church in Pasadena is moving forward with a conference hosted by the Muslim Public Affairs Council — the first time the organization has conducted an event at a Christian church.
All Saints Rev. Ed Bacon described the emails his congregation received as “some of the most vile, mean-spirited emails I”ve ever read in my life.”
Will the Rev. Bacon change his name so as not to appear “Islamophobic”?
“When we scheduled this event we had absolutely no anticipation that we would have this kind of response,” Bacon said, adding that none of the emails made actual threats.
Salam al-Marayati, president of Los Angeles-based MPAC, said his organization is working with the Department of Homeland Security, FBI and local authorities to ensure the Dec. 15 event is safe. The event is expected to discuss the state of the American Muslim community.
“The hate-mongerers have made our convention relevant so we saved on our marketing budget, so some of the money was transferred to extra security,” al-Marayati said, half-jokingly. “We are taking extra precautions, but at this point there is no threat to the convention.”
Church officials believe the hate mail was prompted by an article posted by Washington D.C.-based Institute on Religion and Democracy. The piece alludes to connections between MPAC and the Muslim Brotherhood.
“Yet again, the Islamists are taking advantage of naïve Christians with a desire to show off their tolerance,” said Ryan Mauro, a writer for the Institute on Religion and Democracy.
Institute President Mark Tooley, said the piece didn’t call for people to send hate mail, adding that MPAC hasn’t denied any of the article’s points and instead only offered a broad response.
“I think it’s wrong for people to send nasty emails to anybody,” Tooley said. “For the couple of nasty emails they received, to portray themselves as victims, is somewhat of an exaggeration.”
Indeed!
The tone and candor of the emails is what caught the church’s attention, said Susan Russell, senior associate at All Saints Church.
“So dripping with vitriol and the worst possible demonization of people of other faiths,” Russell said. “What they offered us was basically a window into the ugly underbelly of Islamaphobia.”
Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) commended All Saints Church and the Muslim Public Affairs Council for hosting the convention and bridging interfaith understanding.
“I was deeply distressed to learn of the hateful and vitriolic messages that the church has received,” Schiff said in a statement. “Yet, these odious emails will only increase our determination to fight bigotry and increase understanding.”