Shortly after the 2001 terrorist  attacks,  word began circulating that police wanted to speak with Mohammad Salman  Hamdani about his activities at the World Trade  Center.
And why not? This Pakistani-born Muslim had  studied biochemistry and worked as a lab technician while attending  college. After the Twin  Towers collapsed, people became suspicious when Hamdani failed to  report to work and had gone missing.
It turned out that Hamdani was  involved in the events at the World Trade Center that morning. As an  emergency medical technician, he made his way to the Twin Towers to  assist the injured.
Rumors that he was being sought by  authorities weren’t true, but his family endured suspicions about him  for some time. His remains were finally discovered six months later in  the rubble of Ground Zero near the north tower, his EMT bag close by.
Having  lived in New York  since he was 1, Hamdani helped finance his education at Queens College by working  part time as an EMT. Planning to  study medicine, he served as a research assistant at Rockefeller University.
As  if all that weren’t enough, Hamdani had become a cadet with the New York City Police Department.  He certainly packed a lot in to his 23 years of life.
This is  one of the many stories of Muslims victimized by the evil we witnessed  on 9/11. The families of these people have grieved every day since then,  just like those of all the others who died.
So, what if they  decided to go to Ground Zero next year and offer public prayers for  their loved ones on the 10th anniversary of 9/11? Would they be driven  from this area because their Islamic faith enrages others?
Controversy over a  proposed Islamic center a few blocks from Ground Zero suggests these poor people would not be  welcome to mourn their dead. The hysterical mantra declares that since  the attacks was committed in the name of Islam, permitting a place for  Muslim worship so close to the site  would be sacrilegious.
While the controversy has focused on the  location of a building, the argument against the facility holds that  Islamic religious practices are in no way appropriate anywhere near  Ground Zero. Muslims choosing to pray at the site, therefore, would  likely be equally upsetting.
I recently traded opposing comments  with a woman on Facebook  over this story. I asked her if this Islamic  center would insult the memory of the Muslims killed on 9/11.
“What  about the Muslims that were killed on 9/11?” she responded. “We know 19  of them were terrorists.”
Pondering the fate of people like  Hamdani, her vulgar reply sickened me. She must know that some of the  innocent victims of 9/11 were Muslims, yet her first thought was to  bring up the hijackers. Then to display her warped ignorance further,  she wrote that Muslims in this nation “do not pledge allegiance to  America.”
Hamdani  wasn’t just someone who happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong  time. Like many heroic first-responders that day, he gave his life  helping others in the midst of a national crisis. If this doesn’t  demonstrate the incredible love he had for his city and our country,  what would?
 
Who, then, will be callous enough to kick grieving  Muslims out of Ground Zero next year if they came to pay respects to  those they lost? Who’s going to tell them that their diseased religious  practice has no place within the incubation zone of this sacred area?
My  guess is that no critic of the planned Islamic center wants to go this  far. How could you inform a victim’s mother that she must keep her  distance with her fanatical beliefs?
But that’s where the  opposition against the center falls apart. Either Islam is not  appropriate for Ground Zero, meaning these Muslim families wouldn’t be  allowed to conduct public prayers there, or its  presence would be permitted, meaning the Islamic center is acceptable.  For if you can tolerate having Muslims practice their faith in the open  at Ground Zero on Sept. 11,  why should you be troubled by Muslims saying private prayers tucked  away inside an office building several blocks away?
My heart goes  out to everyone who lost a loved one on 9/11, but their anger in this  case is woefully misdirected. Violent fanaticism led to these attacks,  not religion. The terrorist group al-Qaeda is no more a subset of Islam  than the Irish Republican  Army is of Roman  Catholicism.
Worse, these people’s pain is being  manipulated by opponents of the Islamic center. These opportunists  repeatedly spread lies about the planned facility to advance their  bigotry against the Islamic faith.
Mohammad Salman Hamdani was  just as patriotic as anyone else who died that day. To suggest his  family members cannot honor his memory at Ground Zero in a religious  manner of their choosing is both shameful and un-American. And to  declare that an Islamic center located within a few blocks of the  hallowed site would be a tribute to terrorism is a reckless distortion  of the facts.
When confronted with how to treat minority groups,  we Americans have often reverted to fear and prejudice. But time and  again this has only led to misery, for both them and us. When will we  ever learn?
 
 
