New York, September 28: The imam behind the controversial plan to build a Muslim culture centre near the site of New York’s September 11 attack said on Sunday the project is meant to prevent a similar attack.
In an interview with CBS’s 60 Minutes programme, Imam Faisal Abdul Raouf said he feels duty bound to help protect non-Muslim Americans from such violence.
Abdul Raouf said building the centre, which will include a prayer room, two blocks from the destroyed World Trade Centre is “the right thing to do… America needs it and the Muslim world needs it,” he said.
“We have to wage peace.”
Emotional debate
Critics say the centre’s proximity to Ground Zero is insensitive, while supporters say politicians have wrongly commandeered the emotionally charged debate before US congressional elections on November 2.
Asked if it was insensitive to build the centre so close to Ground Zero, Abdul Raouf said: “We wanted to prevent another 9/11… We wanted a platform…to strengthen the voice of the moderates.”
Saying that the “campaign for winning hearts and minds is an important part” of any military fight against radical extremists from his faith, Abdul Raouf said he was “ready, willing and able to serve our country and serve our faith tradition”.
If 9/11 happens there again, I want to be the first to die,” said Abdul Raouf, who was born in Kuwait and is a naturalised American citizen. “It’s my duty as an American Muslim to stand between you, the American non-Muslim, and the radicals who are trying to attack you.”
-Agencies