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(Photo illustration) The aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks casts a long shadow.
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Dear *|MERGE3|* *|MERGE2|*:
• New York Mayor
Michael
Bloomberg declined to invite any clergy members to the ceremony
commemorating the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks —
some say to avoid the issue of including a Muslim representative.
• Proposed mosque
projects across America, including an Islamic center near ground
zero in Manhattan, have polarized opinions and drawn protests.
• Norwegian terrorism
suspect Anders
Behring Breivik has become the latest, infamous proponent of
the theory of the “clash
of civilizations.”
The Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks are a decade in the past, but reaction against the religion
of the perpetrators is still very much in the present. How can America’s
long-standing values of religious liberty and pluralism survive
in such an atmosphere?
Read
the rest of this article on SageLaw.
Bruce
T. Murray is
the author of Religious
Liberty in America: The First Amendment in Historical and Contemporary
Perspective.
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