zo., .itgi4frie aleas long history of pressing for a moderate, engaged Islam. "One of the ways to prevent future Ground Zeroes is to encourage modera- tion within Islam and to treat Muslim moderates differently than we treat Muslim extremists:' the Atlantic's Jeffiey Goldberg wrote on his blog."The campaign against this mosque treats all Muslims as perpetrators." Last week, the mosque project at Ground Zero cleared what may have been its final hurdle before construc- tion could begin, winning unanimous approval for the plan by New York City's Landmarks Preservation Committee. The Jewish hesitancy to ally formally with Muslim groups is grounded in alarms raised in the past about the sup- posedly radical origins and alliances of groups claiming to speak for moderate Islam. The Council on American Islamic Relations, often cited in media reports as the Muslim equivalent of Jewish civil rights groups, had relations in the 1990s with groups and individuals sub- sequently identified as close to Hamas, a U.S.-designated terrorist group. The council in recent years has issued statements distancing itself from such groups, but mainstream Jewish organizations still keep away in part because of the council's vigorous criti- cism of Israeli actions. After Israel's raid on a Turkish aid flotilla attempting to breach Israel's embargo on the Hamas- controlled Gaza Strip, the council charged Israel with a "blatant disregard for international law" and called for ADL Spurned Over Mosque New York/JTA — CNN host Fareed Zakaria has returned an award to the Anti-Defamation League over the group's opposition to building a mosque near Ground Zero. Zakaria, also a Newsweek columnist, had received the Hubert H. Humphrey First Amendment Freedoms Prize in 2005. In a public let- ter to Abraham Foxman, national Fareed director of the Zakaria ADL, issued last week, Zakaria said, "I cannot in good conscience hold onto the award or the honorarium that came with it and am returning both. I hope that it might add to a reduction in military assistance to Israel. Jewish groups have differed over associations with another Islamic American group, the Islamic Society of North America. The American Jewish Committee has refused to work with the group, citing government investiga- tions of its alleged associations with radical Muslims although the society was never charged with any crime. The ADL and the Reform movement have worked with the society, noting its overtures to Jewish groups and the Holocaust education it has promoted for its membership. Abraham Foxman, the ADI's national director, said he rejected the bigotry of some of the critics of the Ground Zero mosque, but that the sensibilities of the families of the Sept. 11 victims should be paramount. The Philadelphia-based Shalom Center organized a statement from 29 Jewish lay leaders and clerics urging American Jews to press the ADL to reverse its decision. In an interview with JTA, Foxman likened the sensibilities regarding the mosque project to those that led the Jewish establishment to oppose a Carmelite nunnery at Auschwitz in the 1980s. The nuns had good intentions, but Auschwitz wasn't the right place for a nunnery. The Vatican ordered the nuns to leave, and they did in 1993. "We've been out there as often as we can, as vociferous as we can, when signs of Islamaphobia are on the rise," Foxman said. "And we'll con- tinue to be." ❑ the many voices that have urged you to reconsider and reverse your position on this issue. This decision will haunt the ADL for years, if not decades, to come. "Whether or not the center is built, what is at stake here is the integrity of the ADL and its fidelity to its mission. Admitting an error is a small price to pay to regain your reputation." In a letter responding to Zakaria, Foxman wrote, "I am not only saddened, but stunned and somewhat speechless by your decision to return the ADL Hubert H. Humphrey First Amendment Freedoms Prize you accepted in 2005." Foxman said he hoped that Zakaria "will come to see that ADL acted appropriately" and would reclaim his award. Walk4Friendship 2010 Power Walkers Thank you for stepping up! Elliot Baum Stacey Bean Marlowe Bechmann Lisette Benyamin Elana Berlin Michelle Chekan Tammy Dines Matt Egrin Joanna Eiwen Susan Feber Darryl Fink William Flesher Cathy Fogel Danielle Glickfeld Naomi & Michael Glickfeld Jenna Goldstein Marlee Goldstein Gina Guereso Cady Hadesman Jennifer Hart Claire Kahn Gary Karp ------:: Rachel Karp Cookie Koblin Adva Kohn Rebecca Klausner Ed Krass Lisa LaBelle Jason Langwell Stephanie Langwell Jen Lovy David Lubin Eugene Neugebohr , David Newman Debbie Pearlman Debby Portney Tanja Rankl Ellen Rothenberg Sarah Shea Lois Shulman Harriett Silverman Diane Swimmer Lisa Wasserman Neil Weissman Emma Zerkel IC 11 Walk beside us today! Sunday, September 5th www.Walk4Friendship.com August '12 • 2010 25