Muslims hope new center will reach out and serve all
By Emmet Pierce
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
2:00 a.m. August 9, 2009
Muslim leaders who attended a groundbreaking ceremony for an Islamic community center in Santaluz yesterday called on members to make sure the facility remains part of America's cultural mainstream.
The way for Muslims to endure in the United States “is to find a genuine expression of Islam that is American,” said Mahmoud Mostafa, a founding member of the Muslim Community Center of Greater San Diego.
“I want our children to know no contradiction between faith and national identity,” Mostafa said. “I don't want our kids to be living dual lives.”
The community center “must serve everyone, regardless of race and religion,” Imam Abdel Jalil of the Islamic Center of San Diego told a crowd of about 350 people who attended the event.
The $2 million, 10,600-square-foot facility is being built on 5 acres north of state Route 56 near Via Fiesta and Via Inez. It will combine worship services with educational and social programs, said spokeswoman Anita Tallman.
People of all ages gathered beneath a large canopy at yesterday's groundbreaking. Sulayman S. Nyang, a professor at Howard University in Washington, D.C., told audience members that their ethnic diversity makes them a microcosm of the United States.
“You must know that history has been rising up to make America gradually more and more inclusive,” Nyang said.
Planning for the new building began about five years ago. The first Muslim community center opened in March 2001 in a shopping mall in Rancho Peñasquitos. Currently, Friday prayer services are held in a hotel in Rancho Bernardo. The governing board meets in leased office space nearby.
Center officials said they hope to have the new facility open by this time next year.
Although there was early community opposition to the project because of concerns about traffic, Tallman said those concerns have dissipated.
The community center is being built near attached housing. Its appearance will reflect the Spanish architectural style of surrounding structures.
Speakers at the groundbreaking included Rep. Brian Bilbray and former San Diego City Councilman Scott Peters.
Bishop Chad Olson of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said his church is a mile from the construction site.
“We're glad to have you here in our neighborhood,” Olson said.
Estimates of the San Diego region's Muslim population vary. Center members at yesterday's ceremony placed it at 20,000. Ghada Osman, director of the Center for Islamic and Arabic Studies at San Diego State University, put the number at around 80,000.
In a statement announcing yesterday's ceremony, center officials said it will be governed with equal participation from men and women. Some Islamic centers in the United States don't provide an opportunity for women to hold leadership positions, Tallman said.
“This center is open to everyone,” said founding member Sayed Ali. “It does not divide lines between anyone of the Muslim faith. We want to be very inclusive.”
Emmet Pierce: (619) 293-1372; emmet.pierce@uniontrib.com
In the Union-Tribune on Page B1
========================================================================
Muslims hope new center will reach out to more San Diegans
By Joseph Peña, SDNN
Monday, August 10, 2009
With a new $2.2 million, 10,000-square foot facility on its way, local Muslims are excited to reach out to diverse communities and educate more people about Islam.
More than 250 people gathered Saturday in Santa Luz for the groundbreaking of the Muslim Community Center (MCC) of Greater San Diego.
The eight-year-old center - which moved from one leased space to another this year - is open to non-Muslims and Muslims of all sects and regions. Sunni and Shiite Muslims worship together, alongside Muslims from Africa and East Asia.
The center also engages women in leadership roles within the center, and elects members of its board of directors, who hold three-year terms. Irfan Zaman, a spokesman for the center, said the process is “very democratic,” and that the center’s inclusive nature is unique, though more Muslim groups are welcoming non-Muslims, and distributing power equally among men and women.
“We are all moving in the right direction,” said Zaman. “Islam professes unity. We are becoming more and more inclusive, and we do not restrict membership at all based on sect, or whether you are a man or a woman.”
“In general our religion teaches us to be very tolerant and balanced,” said Anita Tallman, a member of the MCC. “We do our best to ensure that everyone who comes is welcome.”
The perception of Muslims in the U.S. was skewed by Muslim members of Al Qaeda’s role in the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City. Muslims living in the U.S. faced a tremendous amount of backlash after the terrorist attacks. As time as passed, though, Tallman said she sees more people willing to learn about Islam, and reaching out to Muslim neighbors.
“People in general are more open, even after 9/11,” said Tallman, whose family migrated from Pakistan to the U.S. “People are very aware of the extremes; and that what they see on television does not reflect the sentiment of Muslims all over the world. You’d be surprised; people have shown so much compassion for Muslims. They try to understand the struggles we have. Over the last few years, I’ve run into more people who just want to learn more [about Islam].”
The Muslim Community Center of Greater San Diego purchased the land for its center five years ago, and, after vigorous fundraising, will begin constructing the project which is expected to open in May 2010. The center will be privately funded, primarily through donations made my members.
This year, a rent increase forced the MCC out of its Rancho Peñasquitos location and into a Rancho Bernardo strip mall. The smaller location and sparse parking has made it difficult for the center to gather all its members for prayer groups, and provide the types of services it would like. Zaman and Tallman said they are looking forward to more space for the center to grow.
The new center will include a mosque for worship, classrooms and activity areas for children, and offices for various services.
Providing space for children to learn the teachings of Islam and interact with other Muslim children is critical to the center’s mission.
Tallman, who was raised in Ohio, said she and her husband make a conscious effort to educate their children about Muslim holidays, and explain to them why they celebrate. Tallman said she also reaches out to teachers at her children’s schools, so they understand the family’s religious principles.
“When you are Muslim, it’s a very communal religion - it isn’t about being an individual, it is about being an individual member of a group,” Tallman said. “That’s so important in our faith; helping others, reaching out to neighbors. That is so important, especially being Muslim in a non-Muslim country. You want to make sure you reach out to everyone, regardless of religion.”
Tags: SDNN
Read more: http://www.sdnn.com/sandiego/2009-08-10/blog/muslims-hope-new-center-will-reach-out-to-more-san-diegans#ixzz0cQPCBPGk
=========================================================
GROUNDBREAKING CEREMONY FOR MUSLIM COMMUNITY CENTER OF GREATER SAN DIEGO