July 05, 2005
The Muslim Hate Crime That Wasn’t
By
Michelle Malkin
The grievance industry went into overdrive last month
when burned Korans were reportedly discovered at a local
mosque in southwest Virginia.
The Washington-based
Council on American-Islamic Relations issued an
immediate press release on June 16 calling for
"Americans of all faiths to obtain and read the Quran
after burned copies of Islam's revealed text were found"
in a shopping bag at the front door of the
Islamic Center of Blacksburg.
Repent, all ye infidels!
Incensed CAIR officials contacted the FBI and
pressured authorities to treat the incident as possibly
"bias-related." CAIR-MD/VA Director of Civil
Rights Shama Farooq [shama@cairmd.org]lectured
that "A redoubled commitment to freedom of thought
and religious diversity is the best response to the
burning of any sacred text" in order to "send the
message that bigots do not represent our nation's
values."
Not content to let CAIR get all the free publicity,
other victim-card hustlers jumped aboard the burned
Koran bandwagon.
Laila Al-Qatami, a spokeswoman for the American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee in Washington, lambasted
police: "If pages from the Bible were burned and put
in a bag outside a church," she huffed to the
Associated Press, "I think the reaction of the
police would be that it would be a hate crime."
Actually, in
this country, when you dunk a crucifix in urine
that’s "art" and when you hang a framed copy of the Ten
Commandments inside a courthouse, that’s a crime.
Al-Qatami invoked the Guantanamo Bay bogeyman and
blamed the burnt Koran incident on insensitive, ignorant
Americans. The case, she asserted, was caused by "a
lack of zero tolerance for hate crimes and ‘a lack of
information about Arabs and Islam as a whole.’" Al-Qatami
also told the Roanoake Times:
"Let's face it, books don't burn themselves and end up
outside of a mosque. It's a willful act."
Muslims in Virginia also expressed their knee-jerk
outrage: "It is a shame that people are so
ignorant," said Blacksburg mosque member Idris
Adjerid. Ahmed Sidky, a Muslim graduate student at
nearby Virginia Tech, told the Roanoake Times that
the case "was certainly very symbolic." [FBI
has yet to open Quran inquiry, By Tonia
Moxley, June 17, 2005]
It certainly was a symbola symbol of the knee-jerk
penchant among some civil rights groups and their
enablers to cry racism, claim discrimination, and
criticize U.S. law enforcement authorities for not doing
enough to stop "hate crimes."
It turns out, you see, that the burnt Koran was left
at the mosque by…a Muslim student.
According to the AP, a
Muslim Virginia Tech student took responsibility
saying he dropped off the burned Koran and other singed
materials at the mosque, hoping "it could be given a
respectful disposal." Police Lt. Bruce Bradberry
reported that the student, who was not named, apparently
contacted police last week, "saying he was going to
be traveling abroad and didn't know what to do with the
Koran, which had been burned in a 2004 house fire. The
student said he placed the book and other fire-damaged
materials in a bag and left the bag at the Islamic
Center with a note, which apparently blew away."
Whoops.
The grievance-mongers’ continued failure to act
responsibly and with due skepticism when these cases
arise is expected. But the mainstream media’s failure to
put its America-bashing instincts in check is
intolerable. Instead of providing readers with
information about many cases of
so-called Muslim hate crimes that have turned out to
be fraudulent since Sept. 11, the Washington Post quoted
the usual suspects and editorialized in its
June 17 report that "The Koran burning comes at a
time of particular sensitivity. The U.S. military
recently confirmed five cases of U.S. personnel
mishandling the Muslim holy book at the prison at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, acknowledging that soldiers and
interrogators kicked the Koran, got copies wet, stood on
a copy during an interrogation and inadvertently got
urine on another one."
Over the Independence Day weekend, Pulitzer
Prize-winning Washington Post columnist Colbert King
added fuel to the fire, hysterically
listing this now-debunked Koran-burning incident as
evidence of rampant anti-Muslim bias in America.
Will Colbert King and the boys and girls crying wolf
calm down and acknowledge the truth about the Muslim
hate crime that wasn’t? I doubt it.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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