AhlulBayt News Agency

source : Detroit Free P.
Sunday

21 July 2024

7:34:04 AM
1473400

Oregon woman who burned Quran outside Dearborn mosque vows to return to city

Sorbeah Almosa, who is from Oregon, lit on fire a copy of the Muslim Holy Book at about 4 a.m. on July 13 on a sidewalk outside the Al-Huda Islamic Association, a mosque on Warren Avenue, Dearborn, as a protest against what she said were extremist statements made at rallies in Dearborn in recent months. Almosa is outspoken against Islam, claiming that Islamic law, sharia, poses a threat to the US. She has taken part in various conservative protests in Oregon in recent years.

AhlulBayt News Agency: An American woman who desecrated the Quran outside a mosque in Dearborn, US state of Michigan, earlier this month is going to do the act of sacrilege again.

Sorbeah Almosa, who is from Oregon, lit on fire a copy of the Muslim Holy Book at about 4 a.m. on July 13 on a sidewalk outside the Al-Huda Islamic Association, a mosque on Warren Avenue, Dearborn, as a protest against what she said were extremist statements made at rallies in Dearborn in recent months. Almosa is outspoken against Islam, claiming that Islamic law, sharia, poses a threat to the US. She has taken part in various conservative protests in Oregon in recent years.

"I will be back," Almosa told the Free Press. She said the next time she's in Dearborn, she intends to protest against Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud and again burn a Quran because he issued a public alert about her the day before she burned the Quran.

Her Quran-burning was the latest event in Dearborn over the past 15 years involving anti-Islam protesters targeting the city, which has the highest percentage of Arab Americans among all cities in the US. Most of the Arab American population in Dearborn is Muslim. In previous years, demonstrators against Islam were met with protests and the hurling of objects in a couple of cases, but there were none this time.

Almosa said that officers approached her when she was walking toward the mosque during the early morning hours of July 13. There were nine officers in five cars in total who eventually arrived, she said. A Dearborn officer spoke with her about her plans and then allowed her to burn the Quran she had with her.

“That's protected First Amendment speech," the officer claimed on a video Almosa recorded and posted on X. "If you burn like the Quran or Bible or American flag, that is First Amendment protected speech."

The officer asked her whether she had any accelerant with her, saying he wanted to make sure the fire didn't spread and cause damage. Almosa said no, and then moments later, burned the book.

"I finally made it out to Dearborn, Michigan," she said in a video, holding a Quran that was ablaze. "Got cop protection while I burn this Quran outside of Al-Huda."

She flew back to Portland a few hours later.

Almosa was not charged, arrested or given a ticket by police. In the past, Dearborn authorities have been more strict in dealing with anti-Islam protesters. In 2011, a Christian pastor from Florida known for burning Qurans, Terry Jones, was put on trial after trying to hold a rally in Dearborn, briefly jailed, and then ordered to not protest outside a Dearborn mosque, the Islamic Center of America, for three years.

During his trial, then Dearborn Police Chief Ronald Haddad testified that a Muslim cleric in Dearborn told him of his concern of the potential reaction of youths, saying that for some Muslims, burning a Quran is worse than a thousand deaths. Jones rallied in 2012 at the mosque after Wayne County and federal judges ruled in his favor. In 2010, some Christian missionaries were arrested by Dearborn police at the Arab International Festival for disturbing the peace; after they filed a lawsuit, the city of Dearborn publicly apologized to them in 2013 and reached a settlement. In another case, a federal appeals court ruled in favor of a California pastor whom the city tried to prevent from handing out pamphlets. In 2014, a Detroit man was fined $400 by the city of Dearborn for open burning and littering after he burned Qurans in Dearborn.

A city spokesman, Hassan Abbas, confirmed Almosa did burn the Quran at 4 a.m. and left shortly afterward. Cpl. Dan Bartok of Dearborn police did not return messages seeking details about the incident.

After Almosa arrived in metro Detroit, she posted a video on X at about 6:30 p.m. July 12 of her driving outside Al Huda mosque and a mosque in the south end of Dearborn, the American Moslem Society. About an hour later, Mayor Hammoud issued a public alert on his Facebook account the evening of July 12 warning of her.

"Please be vigilant and report any sightings of the individual pictured below," Hammoud wrote, with photos of her beneath. "She has recently arrived in Dearborn and expressed intent to burn Qurans. There have been reports of her driving around neighborhoods and surveilling religious institutions."

Hammoud added that the city has increased police patrols at houses of worship.

"For your safety, please do not approach her. Instead, contact the Dearborn Police Department immediately if you have any information," Hammoud wrote.

Almosa said she was not aware the mayor had put out an alert about her until she was back in Oregon.

"You've made it incredibly dangerous for me," she said of Hammoud's alert. "I was not aware of this. And he had notified the police and the police were at that particular location waiting for me. They were already there by the time I got there. And I don't know how long they had been there because I told nobody what time I'd be going there."

Almosa said that when she walked on the sidewalk toward the mosque, a police officer approached, surprising her.

Almosa said she's going to speak to an attorney and research Michigan laws before she returns to Dearborn to protest against Hammoud, whether outside City Hall or another address, and intends to burn the Quran while doing it.

"So long as I'm not on his property, I can stand on the sidewalk and yell at him, I can go to City Hall, I can go to where he works," she said.


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