Here comes a religious hurricane - the 9/11 Memorial
By: Tom Deignan | Published Tuesday, November 1, 2011, 7:15 PM | Updated Tuesday, November 1, 2011, 7:15 PM
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| Father Mychal Judge. |
Catholic League president Bill Donahue and many of his fellow Irish Americans are fuming mad at Mike Bloomberg.
No, they are not angry at the New York mayor’s handling of Hurricane Irene.
It is a religious conflict revolving around 9/11 which has many upset, and even calling upon the memory of 9/11’s first official victim, the sainted Irish American Franciscan Father Mychal Judge.
In short, we have the makings here of a different kind of hurricane, a full blown force of human nature which could leave a lot of destruction in its angry wake.
This week, Bloomberg announced that no members of any religious organizations would be speaking at the 9/11 anniversary ceremony. Bloomberg's office has argued the service should be focused on the families of the victims.
"There's an awful lot of people who would like to participate and you just can't do that,” Bloomberg noted.
Catholic League president Bill Donahue is having none of this.
“When it comes to granting the clergy their constitutional right to freedom of speech on the 10th anniversary of 9/11…(Bloomberg) simply elects to ban them,” said Donahue.
William McGurn, in The Wall Street Journal online, evoked the memory of the beloved Irish priest.
“The exclusion of religion from an important anniversary distorts an undeniable part of the 9/11 story, perhaps most vividly illustrated by its first recorded casualty -- a fire department chaplain named Rev. Mychal Judge.”
McGurn then quotes Ed Whelan, president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, who said, "If the fear is that the inclusion of religious leaders at a public commemoration is divisive, we've really lost something."
Donahue offered this solution: “Mayor Bloomberg should reverse his decision, allowing a priest, minister, rabbi and imam to make a short statement.”
This certainly seems sensible. Sadly, it’s also absurd on its face.
First of all, clergy did not speak at the previous nine ceremonies. Then, obvious questions about Sikhs and Hindus and Mormons who died on 9/11 also arise.
Then there are the atheists who would inevitably enter the fray.
As it is, Republican presidential candidates such as Rick Santorum have already jumped into this battle, surely hoping to score political points as they paint themselves holier than every one else in the 2012 race.
Meanwhile, Donahue surely knows that a lot of people are enraged that imams and other Muslins are setting up shop two blocks from Ground Zero.
Seeing an imam actually at Ground Zero at the ceremony would surely whip up a lot of those hostile feelings.
Such an ugly fight, and possibly even lawsuits that would result, leading up to this solemn anniversary would surely taint the event.
No one denies religion did and should play a role in how families cope with this tragedy. But let’s also not be naïve.
Religion can divide as well as unite. Those familiar with Ireland can tell you a thing or two about that.
Same deal with evoking Father Mike. He was indeed an earthly saint. Yet many of his admirers also opt not confront obvious questions about his sexuality and the broader implications those questions raise about gays and the Catholic Church.
More simply, as a blogger at uscatholic.org noted: “With September 11 falling on a Sunday this year, there will be no shortage of religious ceremonies that day…There will certainly be opportunities for people to reflect and remember in a religious way.”
The broader, more disturbing problem here is the growing number of people in America who believe that, since the country is falling prey to evil secular forces, they need to fight harder to bring religion into the public sphere.
The first Catholic president, John F. Kennedy, stressed that the U.S. Constitution would guide him, rather than any religious authority. That would probably get him booted from today’s Republican Party.
We live in a city of many religions and that is sometimes amazing, but let’s not pretend it is ever simple. Keeping religion out of the 9/11 anniversary is a bad decision -- with the exception, perhaps, of any other decision that could have been handed down on this very sensitive issue.
(Contact “Sidewalks” at tomdeignan@earthlink.net or facebook.com/tomdeignan.)
17 Comments
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Switch to the desktop site to post a comment.kaydog1 | Oct 11, 2011, 06:37 PM EDT
Correction for HorsesInMdstrm, the location of the "Victory Mosque" (yes, there IS a Mosque included there) is a building that was actually STRUCK by the landing gear of one of the 911 MURDER PLANES as it went over. That makes it "GROUND ZERO", and stop trying to pretend that it isn't. Why do you think the muslims want a Mosque/Community Center at that location in the first place, if not to lay claim to the territory of their "victory"?
peterson | Sep 02, 2011, 02:56 PM EDT
AMEN!
JimMcGarity | Sep 01, 2011, 11:58 PM EDT
Lets just go to PA. and the hell with that place anyways.Always hated the town anyways.
warlocks | Sep 01, 2011, 11:02 PM EDT
I'm not a Religious person even though i was brought up a Roman Catholic & attended Catholic schools. But i do believe their should be a short prayer on the opening of the event & at the end of the event what is the harm in that ? we are having this event to honor those who lost their lives. lets not make it a Politicial Event. let us all pray to God this will never Happen again. amen
seanomelbourne | Sep 01, 2011, 07:04 PM EDT
Maybe Bloomberg is concerned that the religions of all who died must be represented and that includes the Muslims who died.Donahue is a sad and almost forgotten bigot.
docmikey | Sep 01, 2011, 02:59 PM EDT
Good decision by the mayor!
Searlit | Sep 01, 2011, 02:52 PM EDT
I'm not an athiest, though I see how religious institutions cause so much division. Freedom of religion, to me, means freedom to practice faith in God, whatever you may call yourself, denominationally. However, with that protection comes a responsibility to not force your beliefs unto other people. I think Mayor Bloomberg is right on this. This memorial shouldn't be used as a tool by politicians or religious leaders. It is a sad occasion, to honor and remember the innocent people, who were murdered that day.
eibhleann7 | Sep 01, 2011, 12:54 PM EDT
People are just now noticing that Bloomberg is a self-serving moron?
AengusOg | Sep 01, 2011, 11:06 AM EDT
Who will speak for the families, mealy mouthed politicians? Will St. Patrick's Day be turned into Immigrants Day? Perhaps the families should be allowed to choose the speakers rather than surrogates like Mayor-for-Life Idi Amin Dadda Bloomberg (Little Dadda?). Voting rights would be limited to immediate family over the age of 11 so that families would not be divided over one family, one vote.
jamieLM | Sep 01, 2011, 10:45 AM EDT
Does he have the Constitutional right to prohibit free speech at this event?
jamthecat | Sep 01, 2011, 10:42 AM EDT
No one is taking Bill Donahue's right to speak away; he's perfectly free to hold his own ceremony and bark as loudly as he wants. This just means TV cameras and the spotlight won't be on him or his ilk. Bloomberg's smart to refuse that sort of circus. More power to him.
jflanagan | Sep 01, 2011, 10:36 AM EDT
The Mayor has a Napoleon complex and is making a mockery of the ceremony. While inviting every politician under the sun, even those not in office 10 years ago, he has banned the Firefighters who lost 343 of their fellow firefighters. He is all in favor of the Muslim Mosque/Islamic Center but does nothing to help rebuild St. Nicholas Greek Catholic Church that was destroyed on 9/11 when the wreckage fell on it. Mayor Bloomberg may be a successful businessman but he is a repulsive and ignorant person.
FGreggMeagher | Sep 01, 2011, 09:54 AM EDT
Personally, I believe that every religion (WHich promotes the True Natures and Structure of Being = None) should turn their Weekend Ceremonies in their churches, temples, mosques, etc. into a Memorial for 911 Victims. There is no need for selected individual religious representation to be inserted into the Actual 9/11 Ceremony. With reagrds to comments regarding "Islamic" representation in a manner connecting the same to the responsibility for the Twin Towers massacres? Maybe everyone should wake up to the FACTS CONCERNING THE PROVEN CONTROVERSIES REGARDING WHO IS RESPONSIBLE AND JUST HOW THE TOWERS WERE, IN FACT, DESTROYED. The same INDICATING THE REASONABLE DOUBT THAT Osama bin Laden had nothing to do with bringing down the Towers! The GREATEST MEMORIAL in honor of the Victims and their families is the DEMAND FOR AN EXTERNAL UNBIASED INVESTIGATION INTO THE 9/11 TRUTHS! Beyond prayers and preaching ACTION is needed; or, truth is no one really cares about the VIctims. Instead, their interest lies only in being seen on a pulpit in front of the media! Holy Publicity!
HorsesInMdstrm | Sep 01, 2011, 09:42 AM EDT
@colkelley - congratulations on your release from religious bondage. I think that the respective places of worship are the places for the religious leaders to speak. As Tom Deignan points out, this is a bad decision but better than all others. @shamrock99 - please stop describing the location as being at Ground Zero; it is two blocks away and not within view of the site. And Bill Donahue never misses a chance to promote himself and his pathetic organization. BTW, are you Bill Donahue?
| Sep 01, 2011, 09:39 AM EDT
Shamrock99: Islamaphobia is unbecoming of you. Firstly, it's not a mosque. Secondly, what would the problem be if it was a mosque? There are bad, horrible people in every faith grouping, and with no faith. Here in Ireland we have Protestant and Catholic churches all around us, but we also have respect for those that follow the faith. The Islamic Community centre a few blocks from Ground Zero should be welcomed with open arms. Not attacked under the bliss of ignorance.
colkelley | Sep 01, 2011, 09:28 AM EDT
As an atheist I firmly believe that the rights of individuals whose religious beliefs supported them in a tragic time should be honored and observed. Mayor Bloomberg is simply and absolutely wrong.
shamrock99 | Sep 01, 2011, 09:26 AM EDT
Kudos to Bill Donahue!! Bloomberg is the same guy that is fully supporting the Islamic Mosque at "Ground Zero"