Will controversy follow recent sale of Palos Church to Muslims? The southwest suburbs have a history of community opposition to the building of a mosque or Muslim center, reflecting growing racism and discrimination against Muslims nationwide. Have things changed?
By Ray Hanania
Ray Hanania
More than 15 years ago, tried to purchase the abandoned Reform Church of Palos Heights for $2.1 million, sparking an unforgettable public debate that quickly turned ugly.
In May 2000, city officials held a public hearing on the sale to the Al Salam Mosque Foundation and residents spoke out in fierce opposition.
The church, one of 19 in the southwest suburban Chicagoland community, had been abandoned for 5 years with no other buyers in sight.
I was there when hundreds of residents packed a community center and complained that the mosque would attract terrorists, violence and insult the Christian faith.
The city blocked the sale and offered the buyers $200,000 to go away but Palos Heights Mayor Dean Koldenhoven, who supported the mosque, said the buyout was wrong.
Elected in 1997, Koldenhoven was thrown out of office in April 2001 by angry Palos Heights voters.
Koldenhoven grew-up as a Dutch Protestant living in an Irish-Catholic neighborhood in Chicago where he “learned diversity real quick.” He was a graduate of Chicago Christian High School at 71st and Racine (which later relocated to Palos Heights) and moved to Palos Heights “because of its strong Christian background.” Koldenhoven received the John F. Kennedy Profiles in Courage Award in 2002.
“They just expressed their hatred straight out. They said they didn’t care they didn’t want Muslims in their neighborhood,” Koldenhoven remembered. Koldenhoven said that he was shocked at the anger, especially since there were so many Christian churches in Palos Heights and not one mosque. He also said that so many of the neighbors of the critics were Muslims and “upstanding citizens.”
Orland Park Mosque
This all happened before the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attack that heightened American fears of Muslims and Arabs.
In the days after the terrorist stacks that killed nearly 3,000 Americans, neighbors in Bridgeview gathered to protest against Muslims and Arabs at the Bridgeview Mosque located a few blocks west of 92nd and Harlem Avenue.
Several years later, a similar public outcry occurred when Muslims purchased land at 162nd and 104th Avenue in Orland Park to build a new mosque. Officials in Orland Park held public hearings to allow residents to express their views, but the hearings also turned ugly as many residents opposed to the mosque cried that building the mosque would open the door to Osama Bin Laden “to kill our people.”
The Orland Mosque was build despite the public outcry, which drew more than 600 angry residents at a meeting that I also attended. I produced a documentary on the Orland Mosque controversy.
Anti-Muslim sentiment continues to grow. Wheaton College (of Illinois) recently suspended an African American Christian teacher, Larycia Hawkins, when she put on a Hijab (head covering) and said Christians and Muslims “worship the same God.” Her fate remains uncertain as the school has moved to fire her.
This week, Regional Newspaper Editor Jack Murray got the scoop on the sale of the First Church of Christ, Scientist in Palos Park at 123rd and 80th Avenue to the Muslim American Society.
The property most certainly will be used for some religious activities and probably would have a prayer center, but I was not able to get MAS to respond to my inquiries about what they planned to do with the former church building.
Will there be the same ugly outcry or have we Americans finally learned to be tolerant?
(Ray Hanania is an award winning former Chicago City Hall reporter and columnist. Email him at [email protected].)
Ray Hanania is senior blogger for the Illinois News Network news site. He is an award winning former Chicago City Hall political reporter and columnist who covered the beat from 1976 through 1992 (From Mayor Daley to Mayor Daley). And, Hanania is a stubborn and loud critic of the biased mainstream American news media.
Hanania covered Chicago political beats including Chicago City Hall while at the Daily Southtown Newspapers (1976-1985) and later for the Chicago Sun-Times (1985-1992). He published The Villager Community Newspapers covering 12 Southwest suburban regions (1993-1997). Hanania also hosted live political news radio talkshows on WLS AM (1980 - 1991), and also on WBBM FM, WLUP FM, WSBC AM in Chicago, and WNZK AM in Detroit.
The recipient of four (4) Chicago Headline Club “Peter Lisagor Awards” for Column writing. In November 2006, Hanania was named “Best Ethnic American Columnist” by the New American Media;In 2009, he received the prestigious Sigma Delta Chi Award for Writing from the Society of Professional Journalists. Hananiaalso received two (2) Chicago Stick-o-Type awards from the Chicago Newspaper Guild, and in 1990 was nominated by the Chicago Sun-Times for a Pulitzer Prize for his four-part series on the Palestinian Intifada.
Hanania’s columns are published by the Illinois News Network every week. You can reprint his columns with full credit to the author, using the shirttail and without content edits. Hanania is also President/CEO of Urban Strategies Group media and public affairs consulting which has clients in Illinois, Florida, Michigan and Washington D.C. His personal website is www.TheMediaOasis.com, and www.UrbanStrategiesGroup.com. Email him at: [email protected]
Will controversy follow recent sale of Palos Church to Muslims?
Will controversy follow recent sale of Palos Church to Muslims? The southwest suburbs have a history of community opposition to the building of a mosque or Muslim center, reflecting growing racism and discrimination against Muslims nationwide. Have things changed?
By Ray Hanania
Ray Hanania
More than 15 years ago, tried to purchase the abandoned Reform Church of Palos Heights for $2.1 million, sparking an unforgettable public debate that quickly turned ugly.
In May 2000, city officials held a public hearing on the sale to the Al Salam Mosque Foundation and residents spoke out in fierce opposition.
The church, one of 19 in the southwest suburban Chicagoland community, had been abandoned for 5 years with no other buyers in sight.
I was there when hundreds of residents packed a community center and complained that the mosque would attract terrorists, violence and insult the Christian faith.
The city blocked the sale and offered the buyers $200,000 to go away but Palos Heights Mayor Dean Koldenhoven, who supported the mosque, said the buyout was wrong.
Elected in 1997, Koldenhoven was thrown out of office in April 2001 by angry Palos Heights voters.
Koldenhoven grew-up as a Dutch Protestant living in an Irish-Catholic neighborhood in Chicago where he “learned diversity real quick.” He was a graduate of Chicago Christian High School at 71st and Racine (which later relocated to Palos Heights) and moved to Palos Heights “because of its strong Christian background.” Koldenhoven received the John F. Kennedy Profiles in Courage Award in 2002.
“They just expressed their hatred straight out. They said they didn’t care they didn’t want Muslims in their neighborhood,” Koldenhoven remembered. Koldenhoven said that he was shocked at the anger, especially since there were so many Christian churches in Palos Heights and not one mosque. He also said that so many of the neighbors of the critics were Muslims and “upstanding citizens.”
Orland Park Mosque
This all happened before the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attack that heightened American fears of Muslims and Arabs.
In the days after the terrorist stacks that killed nearly 3,000 Americans, neighbors in Bridgeview gathered to protest against Muslims and Arabs at the Bridgeview Mosque located a few blocks west of 92nd and Harlem Avenue.
Several years later, a similar public outcry occurred when Muslims purchased land at 162nd and 104th Avenue in Orland Park to build a new mosque. Officials in Orland Park held public hearings to allow residents to express their views, but the hearings also turned ugly as many residents opposed to the mosque cried that building the mosque would open the door to Osama Bin Laden “to kill our people.”
The Orland Mosque was build despite the public outcry, which drew more than 600 angry residents at a meeting that I also attended. I produced a documentary on the Orland Mosque controversy.
Anti-Muslim sentiment continues to grow. Wheaton College (of Illinois) recently suspended an African American Christian teacher, Larycia Hawkins, when she put on a Hijab (head covering) and said Christians and Muslims “worship the same God.” Her fate remains uncertain as the school has moved to fire her.
This week, Regional Newspaper Editor Jack Murray got the scoop on the sale of the First Church of Christ, Scientist in Palos Park at 123rd and 80th Avenue to the Muslim American Society.
The property most certainly will be used for some religious activities and probably would have a prayer center, but I was not able to get MAS to respond to my inquiries about what they planned to do with the former church building.
Will there be the same ugly outcry or have we Americans finally learned to be tolerant?
(Ray Hanania is an award winning former Chicago City Hall reporter and columnist. Email him at [email protected].)
View interview with Dean Koldenhoven on Youtube:
Or, click here to view the Cable TV interview.
Click below to view the documentary on the 2004 Orland Mosque Controversy:
Click here to view Part 1 of “Eyes of the Beholder: The Orland Mosque Controversy.
Click here to view Part 2 of “Eyes of the Beholder: The Orland Mosque Controversy.
Ray Hanania
Hanania covered Chicago political beats including Chicago City Hall while at the Daily Southtown Newspapers (1976-1985) and later for the Chicago Sun-Times (1985-1992). He published The Villager Community Newspapers covering 12 Southwest suburban regions (1993-1997). Hanania also hosted live political news radio talkshows on WLS AM (1980 - 1991), and also on WBBM FM, WLUP FM, WSBC AM in Chicago, and WNZK AM in Detroit.
The recipient of four (4) Chicago Headline Club “Peter Lisagor Awards” for Column writing. In November 2006, Hanania was named “Best Ethnic American Columnist” by the New American Media;In 2009, he received the prestigious Sigma Delta Chi Award for Writing from the Society of Professional Journalists. Hananiaalso received two (2) Chicago Stick-o-Type awards from the Chicago Newspaper Guild, and in 1990 was nominated by the Chicago Sun-Times for a Pulitzer Prize for his four-part series on the Palestinian Intifada.
Hanania’s columns are published by the Illinois News Network every week. You can reprint his columns with full credit to the author, using the shirttail and without content edits. Hanania is also President/CEO of Urban Strategies Group media and public affairs consulting which has clients in Illinois, Florida, Michigan and Washington D.C. His personal website is www.TheMediaOasis.com, and www.UrbanStrategiesGroup.com. Email him at: [email protected]
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