Latest
World News
Return
to Lastest World News Menu
NEW YORK (AP)
-- The Rev. Jerry Falwell says
"I think Muhammad was a terrorist"
in an interview to be broadcast Sunday
on the CBS program "60 Minutes."
The conservative Baptist minister
tells correspondent Bob Simon he has concluded from reading Muslim
and non-Muslim writers that Islam's prophet "was a -- a
violent man, a man of war."
"Jesus set the example for
love, as did Moses," Falwell says. "I think Muhammad
set an opposite example."
CBS released a partial transcript
of the interview Thursday. Falwell's comments occur in a segment
about American conservative Christians' political support for
Israel.
Falwell stood by his opinion
in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. He said Simon
asked directly whether Falwell considered Muhammad a terrorist
and he tried to reply honestly. The minister said he would never
state his opinion in a sermon or book.
"I've said often and many
places that most Muslims are people of peace and want peace and
tranquility for their families and abhor terrorism," Falwell
said. "Islam, like most faiths, has a fringe of radicals
who carry on bloodshed wherever they are. They do not represent
Islam."
Other conservative Protestant
clergy have made sharply critical remarks about Islam and Muhammad
in the past year. They include Franklin Graham, Billy Graham's
son and successor, TV evangelist Pat Robertson and leaders in
the Southern Baptist Convention.
In response to Falwell's remarks,
Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic
Relation in Washington, said: "Anybody is free to be a bigot
if they want to. What really concerns us is the lack of reaction
by mainstream religious and political leaders, who say nothing
when these bigots voice these attacks."
Hooper noted that Falwell and
Robertson will speak at next week's Christian Coalition convention
in Washington alongside House Majority Whip Tom DeLay and other
politicians.
"How can these elected representatives
legitimize this kind of hate speech by appearing on the same
platform with Islamophobes and Muslim-bashers?" Hooper asked.
Falwell was widely criticized
last year after he said on Robertson's TV show that pagans, abortionists,
feminists, homosexuals and civil liberties groups had secularized
the nation and helped the September 11 attacks happen. Falwell
later apologized.
Home
Page | Building the Global Village
| Events
Latest News | Featured
Publications | Join Today | Fundraising
|