Va. mosque vandalism draws sympathy for long-persecuted Muslim sect

Credit: Washinton Post: Reference provided Wasim Saroya Imam Selvenia:

By , Tuesday, February 21, 1:09 AM

In late January, workmen in Chantilly erected a minaret on the roof of a new building, the first highly visible sign that it was to be a mosque. That night, vandals hurled rocks at its arched windows, shattering many. Empty beer cans and liquor bottles were scattered on the mosque’s grounds and roof.

The attackers left no written message, and police have not found them. But if their intent was to ostracize or frighten the worshippers, mostly of Pakistani origin, it didn’t work. Religious and political leaders across the region quickly issued statements of condemnation. A week later, at a regional interfaith meeting in Sterling, officials from a variety of congregations expressed their outrage and sympathy.

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1 reply

  1. We cannot be provoked to respond in violence, we will always respond with peace in this modern day and age.

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