I first wrote about Pastor Terry Jones in 2010 when he made news by planning to burn several copies of The Koran outside his Dove World Outreach Center in Florida. After fervent public opposition by then US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and General David Petraeus, Terry called off the event. Aside from a pro-George Zimmerman rally and a 2012 run for president, he has remained somewhat low key until a few days ago.
Jones was arrested on September 11, 2013 in Polk County
Florida for unlawfully transporting fuel, openly carrying a firearm, and cited
for improper lighting on his trailer. His pickup truck was towing a smoker and
a trailer filled with 2,998 kerosene-soaked copies of the Koran that he
planned to burn at a rally in Loyce E. Harpe Park (despite being denied the
necessary permits by county officials). According to Pastor Terry, the number
of Korans was significant as each copy represented “one of the victims, every
person murdered by Islam” during the September 11th attacks.
The number of Korans carried a poignant, but unintended, significance
since it also included the 19 hijackers who perpetrated the attacks. While it
is possible that Pastor Jones was subtly reminding us that everyone who lost
their lives that day was a victim of barbarically-misguided religious
interpretation, it is more likely that his kerosene budget dramatically eclipsed
his research budget. His lack of attention to detail (or statistics) undermined the statement he thought he was making. Sixty of
the victims of 9/11 were Muslims, ranging from a bank vice president with an office
in the south tower to a man and his pregnant wife on board the flight that
crashed into the north tower.
Essentially this means that, for a small percentage of the victims, Terry
Jones wishes to honor their death by burning copies of the very religious text
they adhered to while alive. It is this adversarial “us or them” tone that
attempts to satisfy our desire to transform complex moral or political issues
into Facebook memes. Our willingness and ability to engage in informed
discourse concerning the threats and challenges facing our nation has and
should continue to define us. I find it ironic that, in a period of history
where anyone with an Internet connection can access unprecedented amounts
of data, statistics, and information, most of us still form our opinions on
current events by reading the included caption on a shared status update.
When I visited the website for Pastor Terry’s organization I read
through his cryptically-titled article “12 Reasons to Burn 2,998 Korans on
September 11, 2013” where he presents his reasoning for the planned sacred-text
flambe’. Among subtle entries like “Islam is the Devil” his list includes more
nuanced critiques of the world’s second largest religion such as “Islam is
political. Islam does not recognize the separation of religion and state”. This
was an interesting justification to be championed by a minister funding a “political
organization using the United States Constitution’s First Amendment right to
stand against radical Islam and protest the moral decline of America.”
The “moral decline” he refers to apparently manifests itself
in 6 specific ways:
- Islam
- The Gay-Lesbian Agenda
- Abortion
- Government Overspending
- America’s slavery to the welfare state
- Racism
The elimination of these scourges, along with the immediate
legalization of industrial hemp, formed the basis of his shockingly-unsuccessful
2012 presidential campaign platform.
While Terry has the right to publicly espouse his views (burn
permits notwithstanding), perhaps he will realize that many of the “victims” he
wishes to memorialize would be vehemently opposed to his tactics. Of course, kerosene
is infinitely easier to acquire than perspective.
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