ICMC - Islamic Center of Morris County
Islamic Center of Morris County
Home 

About Us

Contact Us   

Events / Activities

ICMC in the News

> Listen to Qur'an


> Mohammed (pbuh)

> Islam & Muslims

> Family in Islam

> 99 Names of Allah

> Ramadan

> Islamic Terms

> Salat: How to Pray

> Audio / Video

> Special Islamic Dates

Resources:

> Muslim Resources

> Islamic Web  Directory

> Links
ICMC in the News:
Rockaway Islamic center brings faiths together

Participants set aside controversial mosque plan

BY ROB JENNINGS
DAILY RECORD

Friday, September 28, 2007

ROCKAWAY -- The Islamic Center of Morris County steered away from tensions over its proposed mosque in the borough at a "Love Thy Neighbor" interfaith dinner it hosted Thursday night at the First Presbyterian Church.

Aref Assaf, of Denville, who helped organize the event and invited various elected officials and others to attend, said it was aimed at celebrating the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and promoting goodwill, rather than winning over neighborhood critics of the mosque proposed for a Mannino Drive building.

"Our intention is to reach out to our neighbors -- Muslims, Christians or Jews. It has nothing to do with the mosque," Assaf said of the 6:30 p.m. dinner that the church agreed to host.

The Islamic Center is seeking a use variance from the Rockaway zoning board to convert a former warehouse into a mosque, and the next public hearing is Oct. 2.

A hearing on Sept. 4 drew 350 people.

Scene on Thursday

Approximately 65 people attended at Thursday's dinner. It was not clear whether any borough residents who had expressed concern about traffic or raised other objections to the center's plan were in attendance.

"There's a lot of public opposition to it," said Larry Nagel of the Morristown Unitarian Fellowship.

Nagel, eating dinner at a table, agreed with Assaf that the controversy was not the main focus Thursday.

"This is a way we can share the experiences of Ramadan with our Muslim brothers and sisters," he said.

Susan Berkowitz of Parsippany, who organizes weekly vigils on the Morristown Green against U.S. military intervention in Iraq and elsewhere, attended the dinner and said she hopes the mosque gains approval.

"People are afraid because they connect it with 9/11, when in fact these are very peace-loving people," Berkowitz said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Charles McKenna, one of several speakers at the dinner, lauded Muslims for cooperating with law enforcement inquiries following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

"Prior to 9/11, frankly, we did not have a lot of interaction with the Muslim community," McKenna said.

That changed following the attacks, he said.

"The Muslim community did not wait for us to come to them. They came to us," McKenna said.

Upbeat atmosphere

Assaf said that "our Muslim community has been facing a lot of adversity since 9/11," but added that he didn't want to dwell on it Thursday.

"Tonight is a time to share in the festival of our holy month," he said.

Another invited speaker, State Sen. Anthony Bucco, R-Boonton, spoke favorably about the mosque in Boonton.

"I've had the opportunity to work with the Islamic Center in Boonton. It has worked out very well. We have had no serious problems with it. It has grown tremendously," Bucco said.

Arif Akhtar, who works as the chief environmental health specialist for Mount Olive, said he was hoping that people will take the time to get to know Muslims who are interested in the mosque plan.

"We invite people from the community to know who we are," he said.

Ignorance leads to fear and hate

Friday, September 14, 2007

To the Editor:

I am responding to the letter this past Saturday regarding the writer's opposition to the building of a Muslim mosque in Rockaway. I welcome the building of the mosque. Although the gentleman voiced the fears that some have regarding those of the Islamic faith, he unfortunately used a broad brush to label all as a threat. It is unfortunate that he did not come to the American Joint Multi-Faith Association/People of Peace meeting held last Sunday so that he could have his fears and concerns addressed.

One of the key things voiced by the Muslims there (hard-working American citizens), who simply want a place to worship (truly an American value), was that Muslims like themselves who follow the teachings of the Koran do not support the terrorist violence and have made that clear since 9/11. Unfortunately, ignorance leads to fear, which often leads to hate. We need more understanding; not hate.

PAUL SNELLGROVE

Rockaway

Families celebrate religious days with reflection, fasting

First full day of Ramadan, Rosh Hashanah begins; many gather for meals


Thursday, September 13, 2007

Today, the first full day of Ramadan and Rosh Hashanah, both Jewish and Islamic families will mark the religious days with reflection.

Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, celebrates the biblical creation of the world, said Rabbi Zalman Grossbaum, director of The Living Legacy, a project of the Morris Township-based Rabbinical College of America-Lubavitch.

According to Grossbaum, Rosh Hashanah is a time to reflect not only on the positive things in one's life, but on one's mistakes.

Being that the holiday follows the anniversary of Sept. 11 this year, Grossbaum said, people may contemplate on what it means to be an American.

Families often celebrate the holiday by gathering together for meals.

Ramadan, in contrast, consists of a month of fasting in order to figuratively burn away sins, said Mustafa Abuzeed, president of the Islamic Center of Morris County. Families celebrating the holiday refrain from eating or drinking between dawn and dusk. According to Abuzeed, Ramadan is a time of self control, charity and doing good deeds. After sunset, Muslims partake in the iftar, the meal that breaks the daily fast.

The Islamic Center of Morris County will offer nightly prayers throughout Ramadan.

Morris Islamic group reaches out as Rockaway weighs mosque

Event promotes peace

BY TEHANI SCHNEIDER
DAILY RECORD

Monday, September 10, 2007

ROCKAWAY -- Amid controversy swirling over a proposed mosque, a grass-roots organization promoting peace and interfaith dialogue sponsored a forum on Sunday afternoon for residents, to foster understanding of the project and of Islam itself.

However, the target audience -- critics of the project -- didn't show.

But officials for the Islamic Center of Morris County, which has applied to convert a Mannino Drive warehouse into a mosque, said the forum could be the first of many in their quest for approval.

"Whatever it takes," said Aref Assef, a spokesman for the Islamic Center of Morris County .

"Our job is to make sure that their fears are allayed and misconceptions are dispelled. We strongly believe that forums like this are necessary for us to build a mosque and to let our faithful have a place to worship."

Officials of the Islamic Center, which currently rents space in Budd Lake, have explained their need for a permanent facility. They are seeking variances from the borough zoning board to convert the 14,800-square-foot warehouse into a mosque.

Borough residents have turned out en masse for several hearings of the application, with some expressing concerns over an increase in traffic and parking. Others have bluntly stated -- in so many terms -- that a mosque isn't welcome in Rockaway.

Those comments -- and a belief that area residents lack understanding about Islam -- led David Mortensen to organize Sunday's forum on behalf of the American Joint Multi-Faith Association/People of Peace and Justice, or AJMA.

Mortensen, a Rockaway Township resident who helmed a similar effort in response to vocal opposition over a mega-church's plans for his township, said the purpose of the forum, "Open Hearts, Open Minds," was to foster peace, friendship and understanding through interfaith dialogue.

"Some people in our community fear what they don't know," said Mortensen, an AJMA member who attended the last two mosque hearings.

"A lot of people don't know the three Abrahamic faiths -- Judaism, Christianity and Islam -- are all interconnected. They all share many of the same prophets ... stress the love of God, love of neighbor. We're trying to make people aware of the commonalities."

AJMA, Mortensen said, held an interfaith forum at the mosque in Boonton in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.

Sixth anniversary

Nearing the sixth anniversary of the attacks, mosque outreach directors, local church officials and rabbis, such as Rabbi Benjamin Adler of White Meadow Temple and the Rev. Allison Miller of the Morristown Unitarian Fellowship, spoke during the four-hour forum.

The event, held at the First Presbyterian Church on Church Street, drew dozens of Morris County residents, leaders of other faiths and members of the Islamic Center.

Sandra Moulden, a borough resident and member of the First Presbyterian Church, said she was curious about the mosque and wants to learn more about Islam.

Moulden, who hasn't attended any of the hearings, said she believes that most people are misinformed about Islam and about Muslims in general.

"I think when some people think of Muslims, they think right away of terrorism," she said. "I think Muslims are mostly moderates, peaceful people. There's good and bad in every religion."

Other attendees, who came from Denville, Randolph, Mount Olive and Parsippany, said they came out after reading about the mosque controversy in the Daily Record.

"I'm a little concerned that there's tinges of intolerance coming up at these meetings," said Larry Nagel, a Randolph resident and AJMA member.

"We have too much of that in this time and we need much less of it. I certainly hope they can come to a reasonable conclusion."

Mosque officials say they are not discouraged by the response of residents to the application, but disheartened about the misconceptions of their religion.

"The mosque is not the goal," said Mostafa Abuzeed, president of the Islamic Center. "The goal is to get people together and learn about Islam. We'd like the chance to prove to everybody that we're good .... We should live together and we should learn how to live together in peace."



Support your Masjid

Donate Now


ICMC Helping Hand
Helping  Hands

Community Outreach

Subscribe to
ICMC Mailing List
First Name:
Last Name:
Email Address:

Daily Prayer Times

map


Please confirm suggested direction before following this tool!

Copyright © 2008, Islamic Center of Morris County (ICMC), All Rights Reserved. 
ICMC is not responsible for the contents of external links. Fair Use Notice