From the Archive

In which I ask Sarah Palin, nicely, to butt the hell out

July 30th, 2010 at 3:30 pm ET

I’m ashamed of my fellow Americans this month, as allegedly intelligent and thoughtful people toss the Constitution (not to mention American values and common sense) in the garbage, and come out against the Islamic cultural center (abbreviated by everyone as “mosque”) on Park Place in Lower Manhattan.

This location is six blocks from my apartment, and I walk past it almost daily, so I think I have standing to have an opinion on the matter. The elected and appointed officials who have jurisdiction are, in large part, people whom I and my neighbors selected, who serve at our whim and whose salaries we pay. Sarah Palin and Newt Gingrich, on the other hand, live 4,300 miles away and 236 miles away, respectively. Would they kindly shut the hell up and go away?

There have been Muslim-Americans living in Lower Manhattan effectively forever, in planning terms; there were mosques in our neighborhood before the World Trade Center was here, and long before I lived here, and certainly before Sarah Palin ever came shopping here. Every day, hundreds of Muslim-American taxi drivers stop for lunch or dinner at one of the halal restaurants on Church Street around the corner from the proposed site. And last time I checked, neither the First Amendment nor RLUIPA had an asterisk leading to the disclaimer “except Muslims.” End of story.

Matt Yglesias’s Mosque Exclusion Zone posts are funny, and right on point, but this is a serious matter, which is why I was so disappointed to learn today that the Anti-Defamation League, one of America’s most important historical forces against intolerance and bigotry, has come down on the wrong side of this issue.

There are, to be sure, political issues in American social discourse that have two sides. But if you have any respect at all for equality, for freedom of religion, or for the founding principles of America, this isn’t one of them. And we do have plots of secular hallowed ground in America — but they’re not at “Ground Zero” (an embarrassing term that highlights all the wrong aspects of the events of the past decade). They’re in Montgomery, where Rosa Parks rode home from work on the bus. They’re in Little Rock, at Central High School. They’re at Tule Lake, in California, where my great-grandparents (I’ve been told) taught school during one of the most shameful failures of our constitutional system in our nation’s history. They’re at Gettysburg. They’re in Jackson Heights, Queens, home of some of the most diverse census tracts in the country.

I’m angry at Sarah Palin and Newt Gingrich, but at the end of the day, what can you expect from anti-intellectuals and opportunists? But the ADL? I’m ashamed of them, for losing sight of their mission, and for the implication that they are speaking in my name as a Jewish American. They emphatically are not, and I’m afraid they have done permanent damage to their credibility today.

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4 Responses to “In which I ask Sarah Palin, nicely, to butt the hell out”

  1. Tweets that mention Rich Mintz » Blog Archive » In which I ask Sarah Palin, nicely, to butt the hell out -- Topsy.com Says:

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Rich Mintz, Michael Luehrs. Michael Luehrs said: Great perspective on disturbing issue. Nice @richmintz Blog: In which I ask Sarah Palin, nicely, to butt the hell out http://bit.ly/bTAW1p [...]

  2. Heidi Massey Says:

    Hey Rich,

    I used to work at ADL from 1985 to 1988. Fortunately the Chicago office was not the same right wing machine that the national office has always been. Sad that they are blinded by this need to “protect” the Jewish community from their own paranoia. I am not so young as to think Jews are completely safe in the world or even in America. I know that the risks of anti-Semitism remain. However, I will never be so foolish as to label someone an enemy JUST by the color of their skin or because of the god they choose to pray to.

    Thank you for an insightful post that states exactly how embarrassing this whole thing is…to all of us!!!

  3. Leo Soderman Says:

    I would quibble with one point –

    I think you can consider Ground Zero “hallowed ground”, but only if you reflect on the entirety of it. How many muslims died on that day?

    The likes of Palin, Gingrich, et al., would prefer you forget that there were anyone in those buildings that did not match their picture of Americans. I agree the JDL has done themselves a terrible disservice by throwing in with them.

    The memory of those who died is best served not by limiting the people who can be near it, but embracing all who come in peace.

  4. Rich Mintz » Blog Archive » Fareed Zakaria returns ADL award Says:

    [...] response to the Anti-Defamation League’s appalling squandering of its moral authority last week, in coming out in opposition to the Cordoba Initiative’s Islamic center in lower [...]

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