The San Diego Mosque Hate Crime and the Political Leaders Who Lit the Fuse
CounterPunch Exclusives
CounterPunch Exclusives
The San Diego Mosque Hate Crime and the Political Leaders Who Lit the Fuse
A hate crime had struck close to home. On the TV screen, more than four dozen police cars, blue lights swirling in a cold, mechanical rhythm. The news ticker crawled across the bottom of the TV screen, sanitizing horror into a newsbreak: police responding to an “incident” in San Diego’s Clairemont Mesa neighborhood. An incident. I didn’t think much of it at first. Then my phone rang. A friend. I couldn’t bring myself to answer. Moments later, a text came through, cryptic, short, and to the point: “Check on the Imam, shooting at the Islamic Center.”
I scrolled through my contacts, found the number, and dialed. My heart hammered against my chest with every ring. Then his voice. I closed my eyes. “We are okay. The school children are safe. We evacuated the mosque,” Imam Taha said.
I let out a breath I did not know I had been holding. But okay, I would learn in the minutes and hours that followed that was not the whole story. Three men who had been okay that morning would never be okay again.
Under the steady and visionary leadership of Imam Taha Hassane, the Islamic Center of San Diego has grown into far more than a place of worship. It is a living, breathing hub of culture and education, a place where faith leaders of every denomination and neighbors of every background have always found an open door and a welcoming table. It is, in the truest sense of the word, a community, one that has spent decades building bridges in a city that repaid the generosity with bullets.
In less than 10 minutes, hate stole the life of three human beings. Amin Abdullah, who welcomed you with a curious smile when you came in, a father and a husband. Mansour Kaziha, a husband, father, and grandfather,........
