Tuesday,
September 11, 2001
Muslim,
Christian leaders denounce attacks
By Jacque Petersell
Staff Reporter
Islamic and Christian scholars were in agreement Tuesday,
both in their offerings of solace and condemnation for terrorist
attacks on the New York City and Washington D.C.
Some
area worship centers opened their doors to show support, while
scholars searched to find a meaning.
People
may turn to religion for understanding and strength after
a devastating experience, said Rev. Brian Young, United Methodist
campus minister.
I
think in any tragedy people are searching for that which we
have in common, Young said. People may be more
drawn to prayer services more than they would have at other
times.
However,
not everyone in the area was allowed to gather in prayer.
Moujahed Bakhach, chairman of the Imams Council of Tarrant
County, said an activity involving 600 to 700 people was canceled
at the Islamic Association of Tarrant County because the mosque
received threatening phone calls. He said it was not safe
for people to attend and suggested they perform their daily
prayers at home.
We
cannot take any risks, Bakhach said. We have to
take all precautions.
Bakhach
said the alleged terrorist attack was unacceptable under Islamic
religion.
If
you were a true Muslim, you would not have committed this
act, Bakhach said.
Ronald
Flowers, a professor of religion, said people tend to jump
to conclusions when there could be a religious reason for
an act of terrorism. In light of Tuesdays attack, Flowers
said people may look at the Islamic religion as one of war,
when in fact it is not.
Islam
would reject an act of terrorism, Flowers said. Islam
is a religion of peace. The name Islam means peace.
Mark
Toulouse, dean of the Brite Divinity School, said people with
more traditional ideas may try to connect the act to prophecy
in the book of Revelation in the Bible, which predicts the
end of the world through a series of catastrophes. He said
people with more mainstream ideas do not share that view and
believe biblical prophecies were not made for our time.
Eugene
Boring, a professor of New Testament at Brite, said faith
and religion have a connection with the destruction, but the
connection is not through prophecy.
The
way to respond to this religiously is not if it was predicted
in Revelation, but how this causes us to pray and think through
what it means to live as human beings in this world,
Boring said.
Young
said the goal now is to reach out to the community through
prayer and to help out where needed.
Jacque
Petersell
j.s.petersell@student.tcu.edu
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