Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Monday, November 05, 2007
Plans For London Mosque Draw Opposition
In a story from Britain, yesterday's International Herald Tribune focuses on the the opposition that has developed to plans to build a large mosque in London's East End. Originally it would have been the largest mosque in Europe at the gateway to the 2012 Olympics. Christian Peoples Alliance Party leader Alan Craig has started a campaign against the mosque, first focusing on its size, but then objecting to its sponsor, the Tablighi Jamaat, an evangelical Islamic group based in Pakistan whose teachings, authorities say, encourage terrorists. The original plans for the mosque envisioned a complex that would hold 70,000 worshipers, featuring wind turbines instead of minarets, as well as gardens, courtyards and restaurants. Those grand plans have now been dropped as a new architectural firm has been hired to design a smaller mosque, one that will accommodate 12,000. Planners are moving slowly, and say they will not break ground until after the 2012 Olympics. Also a London public relations firm has been hired and has created a website to deal with concerns about the planned mosque.