WASHINGTON,
November 26 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - As part of his incessant
anti-Muslim campaign, popular U.S. televangelist Pat Robertson said
Monday, November 25, that western media and leaders failed to educate
Americans about what he claimed was violence in the Qur’an and Islamic
history.
In
an interview with the Washington Times, Christian preacher
and conservative commentator Robertson regretted that U.S. President
George Bush once praised Islam as “a religion of peace.”
Unhappy
with Bush’s statements, the one-time presidential hopeful, who has
been highly critical of Islam in the past, asserted that the president
“is not elected as chief theologian.”
“It
would have been better for the president to speak only politically about
the Islamic world, and not religiously,” he said, alleging this “is
leading to needless confusion.”
Robertson
claimed that the American public would be better served if the media
would investigate the content of the Qur’an and what he alleged are
many passages that incite Muslims to kill nonbelievers.
Robertson,
whose previous anti-Islam comments have been denounced by Jewish and
Muslims groups alike, alleged that violence against Christians in
countries such as Sudan and Nigeria arises from Islamic Sharia (law),
claiming that violent behavior is tied to Islamic beliefs.
Though
Robertson relinquished his Baptist ordination to run for the Republican
presidential nomination in 1988, he has taken it up again and describes
his primary work as promoting Christianity.
For
18 years, his Christian Broadcasting Network had an Arab-language
broadcast station in Lebanon, which he claims “was overrun by
Hezbollah.”
“In
terms of Islam, I don’t think the issues have been ventilated at all
in the press because no one has read the Qur’an,” he claimed.
“I
have never advocated ferreting out Muslims in America,” he said.
“They are citizens like I am.”
Robertson
claimed that if American Muslims are funneling money to Hamas, a
Palestinian resistance group dubbed by the U.S. and some European
countries as a “terrorist” organization, “they ought to be
deported.”
U.S.
Muslim groups have organized a yearlong project to put a package of
books and a PBS video on Islam, all by American authors, in the nation's
16,000 public libraries to promote understanding of the religion.
The
Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) reports that supporters
have sent in 4,219 “sponsorships” of dollars 150 each to pay for the
library package, but the number of libraries accepting them is not yet
clear.
“It’s
a yearlong campaign, and it will take a year or so to sort that [number]
out,” said CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper.
Last
week, Hooper said on a New York radio show that conservative religious
leaders such as Robertson were “equivalent” to Osama bin Laden
because they want to divide the world into a religious war.
When
asked whether Christian leaders would urge killing members of a
different faith as bin Laden has done, Hooper said: “Given the right
circumstance, these guys would do the same in the opposite direction.”
He
also confirmed reports that a Saudi billionaire, Prince Al-Waleed bin
Talal bin Abdul Aziz Al-Saud, donated dollars 500,000 to CAIR for the
educational push.
“I
think most of it is going for the library project,” Mr. Hooper said.
Hooper
said a positive image of Islam is important to protect the civil rights
of Muslims in the United States.
He
cited a recent FBI report that “hate crimes” against people of
Middle Eastern ethnicity had increased from 28 in 2000 to 481 in 2001
across the country.
Robertson
claimed that his main business is not Islam but Christian evangelism.
“I
don’t want to change my ministry and become some kind of Muslim
fighter,” he alleged.
“I
don’t want to alienate Muslim people around the world,” said
Robertson, adding that Muslims want more information about the West and
even Christianity.
He
claimed that Islam is “a deeply held religious belief pushed by
mullahs all over the world” as a basis for attacking Jews and
Christians.
“Maybe
we can counter it by American propaganda. Maybe we can counter it by
love,” Robertson alleged.
Robertson’s
comments were just the latest in a string of anti-Islamic remarks from
prominent U.S. conservative Christians in the aftermath of the September
11 terrorist attacks.
Earlier
the hate speech of Baptist minister Jerry Falwell, who in a television
interview last month called the Prophet Mohammed (pbuh) “a
terrorist,” resulted in the death of 8 people in India.
His
comments sparked international outrage and deadly riots in the Indian
city of Bombay. Falwell later apologized.
Franklin
Graham, son of the noted preacher Billy Graham, has also been accused of
making defamatory statements about Islam