Plans for Muslim Centers Stir Concerns From Neighbors
Published by Haseeb July 24th, 2006 in Current NewsWhile many parents at George Washington Elementary School next door have greeted the (new Islamic) center’s arrival with a shrug, some said they were uncomfortable.
“I’m scared,” said Beka Brucaj, 48, who has two children in the school.
“It’s a stupid thing to put the mosque next to the school,” added Mr. Brucaj, who said he fears recruitment of children for extremist ends.
Mr. Ramadan said any fears of fanaticism were ridiculous. His extended family, which is financing the project, has been in Westchester and the surrounding counties for some 30 years, he said.
“Yeah, I’m a fanatic,” Mr. Ramadan said, in an interview. “I’m a Mets fanatic.”
Plans for Muslim Centers Stir Concerns From Neighbors
By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
YORKTOWN, N.Y.
A LONG-ABANDONED Roman Catholic high school in this northern Westchester town still bears a few markers of its past. There is the metal cross near the main entrance and the small, granite placard that offers a simple mission statement: “For God and Country.”
But the old Franciscan High School is in the midst of a conversion, both physical and spiritual. A new religious institution, the Hudson Valley Islamic Community Center, is taking shape there.
“It’s really the coming of age of a community,” said Zead Ramadan, spokesman for the center, which closed on the $3 million property in May.
After some minor renovations, Mr. Ramadan said, the center will combine a mosque, meeting space and a weekend school in the first large-scale Muslim institution in the northern half of the county. The Westchester Muslim Center in Mount Vernon is the largest mosque in the county, and many Muslims from northern Westchester are among the 700 people who attend Friday prayers there.
The Yorktown center and a similar one planned for nearby New Castle are, in a sense, simple statements of arrival: a small Muslim population, growing in numbers, is staking claim to this land of well-kempt lawns and quaint Main Streets just as Protestants, Catholics and Jews did before them.
But almost five years after 9/11, making those statements has proved difficult.
In Yorktown, the welcoming words of town officials, church leaders and several neighbors have found a counterpoint in a series of anti-Muslim statements at public meetings of the Planning Board and angry letters to town hall, some expressing fears about the spread of terrorism in suburbia, but most voicing concerns about traffic.
While many parents at George Washington Elementary School next door have greeted the center’s arrival with a shrug, some said they were uncomfortable.
“I’m scared,” said Beka Brucaj, 48, who has two children in the school.
“It’s a stupid thing to put the mosque next to the school,” added Mr. Brucaj, who said he fears recruitment of children for extremist ends.
Mr. Ramadan said any fears of fanaticism were ridiculous. His extended family, which is financing the project, has been in Westchester and the surrounding counties for some 30 years, he said.
“Yeah, I’m a fanatic,” Mr. Ramadan said, in an interview. “I’m a Mets fanatic.”
In New Castle, where 35 families organized as the Upper Westchester Muslim Society have filed plans with the Zoning Board of Appeals to build a 25,000-square-foot Islamic center in a residential neighborhood, the debate has focused on parking, traffic and other typical development concerns. The society hopes to open the center in mid-2007.
Critics like Anthony Rakis said speaking up about traffic was awkward when the complaint was against a religious institution.
“We’d like the Muslim community of Westchester to have a great home and to expand their community, but it just doesn’t fit,” he said. “I would be making the same argument if it was a Greek Orthodox church, and I’m Greek Orthodox.”
Kaan Katircioglu, 42, an I.B.M. researcher who is vice chairman of the Muslim Society’s board, said the group did not see any bias in the early criticism of the project. But Mr. Katircioglu said the society could not help but feel the need to prove the virtues of its faith after 9/11.
“Our success,” he said, “will be measured by what our neighbors think of us.”



















Salaam ‘Alaikum
::: sitting on my hands ::: I know some of the people involved with this. I am also familiar with the attitudes of Westchesterites. It’s great to be concerned with what the neighbors think, but they shouldn’t forget about showing the Muslims around there that the open arms extend to all Muslims of all races and classes too. I would hope that *that* is part of their “measure of success,” esp. since they’ve had ample opportunity to learn from past mistakes in other Westchester Muslim projects.
If it was a SevenEleven they would be fine.
Oh wait, 7-11’s sell alcohol? Oh yeah, wasn’t the most popular place to get drugs was around 7-11’s?
(sarcasm)