New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, on the weekend that the nation marks the 10th anniversary of the Islamic terrorist attacks on Washington and New York, has declined to respond to a written demand for Christian and Jewish clergy to be represented at the city's memorial for the nearly 3,000 victims of the 9/11 attacks.
"No response from the mayor," attorney Larry Klayman, who founded Judicial Watch and now is of FreedomWatch, told WND.
"No surprise. He thinks he is above the law and has little to no respect for our Judeo-Christian heritage, let alone people of true faith, as opposed to those who practice Islam and Shariah law. It's likely the mayor is bowing down to Muslims given his business interests in the Arab world. One can also assume he is working with the Obama administration and that President Obama himself had a hand to play in this latest affront to Christians and Jews and the families of 9/11 victims."
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Klayman noted that Bloomberg originally had invited the controversial imam Feisal Rauf, who is connected to the planned Ground Zero mosque in New York, to the event, but was forced to cancel because of negative reaction. Bloomberg then disinvited all clergy, Klayman said.
In a letter to the mayor early Friday, Klayman explained his plan to seek legal redress should the mayor decline to respond appropriately.
Wrote Klayman to Bloomberg: "You have banned Christian and Jewish clergy from speaking and participating in prayer at the Sept. 11, 2011, memorial ceremony on the 10th anniversary of this tragic event. Importantly, this occurred only after you invited imam Feisal Rauf of the Ground Zero Mosque, which you support, to speak at the event. Your invitation caused a huge controversy and you had to withdraw it. Your actions in excluding Christian and Jewish clergy, but inviting a Muslim imam, and in particular imam Feisal Rauf, amount to religious discrimination under color of state law, as well as an abridgement of the right to free speech, among other causes of action."
Klayman said his clients are clergy "who have spoken and participated each year at the annual commemoration of Sept. 11, 2011, sponsored and paid for in large part by the City of New York."
His request was for a reversal of the ban and the permission for his clients to participate.
Bloomberg's action has stirred up reaction all around the country. Some 62,000 Americans signed petitions assembled by the Family Research Council asking him to relent. Jay Sekulow of the American Center for Law and Justice wrote that the United States "has a long and cherished history of prayer, from the first prayer in Congress in 1774 to the National Day of Prayer celebrated each year. Even the Supreme Court acknowledges our religious heritage."
Klayman said his clients who would be plaintiffs in a legal action include Bishop Dan Johnson, a member of the "World Bishops Council" who on the early morning hours of 9/11 had arrived in Manhattan.
According to his story, he was resting when his wife called concerned about an airplane accident. He immediately responded to offer his help, and was asked by the New York Police Department to set up the first morgue in the financial district.
He kept records of victims brought in, performed last rites on the dead and prayed for them, and has participated in every 9/11 ceremony at Ground Zero since.
"Originally I was invited to attend this year's 9/11 ceremony as a first responder, just like I was every year since 2001," Bishop Johnson told former U.S. Navy Chaplain Gordon Klingenschmitt, who also is involved in the case.
"But then I heard Mayor Bloomberg banned clergy, so it took five phone calls to his office before [a Bloomberg senior staffer] asked me if I was going to wear my clerical collar. I said I planned to dress just like I did the previous nine years, so she replied 'they' prefer you not attend. And that was it. I was disinvited."
"Disinvited because of his religion, his clergyman status, and his faith in Jesus Christ. Bishop Dan Johnson is a hero who faces arbitrary and illegal persecution and discrimination for religion by the mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg," Klingenschmitt, who runs the Pray In Jesus Name organization, said.
Sekulow noted that when America was attacked, thousands gathered for the "Prayer in America" event at Yankee Stadium for a united time of seeking God.
"There's a growing chorus of Americans – religious and non-religious alike – calling on Mayor Bloomberg to reconsider his decision," Sekulow said. "And in the past week, we have heard from thousands of Americans who have signed our letter urging Mayor Bloomberg to change his mind. He still has time to act. He should clear the way for clergy and religious leaders to participate – to pray for our nation, and to pray for those who are still suffering from the pain and loss of Sept. 11, 2001."
There are other plaintiffs who also may join in the action, Klayman told WND.
The Associated Press speculated that perhaps Bloomberg's decision was prompted by his effort to dodge the controversial issue of including a representative of Islam, in whose name the terrorists destroyed the Twin Towers, part of the Pentagon and apparently tried to hit either the White House or Capitol.
A Bloomberg spokeswoman, Evelyn Erskine, told the wire service the program includes moments of silence.
"Rather than have disagreements over which religious leaders participate, we would like to keep the focus of our commemoration ceremony on the family members of those who died," Erskine told AP.
But Cathy Cleaver Ruse, of the FRC, said, "Before Todd Beamer uttered his now iconic last words, 'Let's roll,' he recited the Lord's Prayer with Lisa Jefferson, the GTE Airfone operator. Yet there is no place for this or any prayer at Mayor Bloomberg's event.
"When our country was attacked, Americans didn't say: 'Oh, Great Politicians, please hold a press conference!' No, they turned to God for help and solace. It was and is their natural response to a great tragedy," she continued.
"Banning religion from the memorial of this tragedy is, in fact, unnatural for America, and for Americans. It's hollow and strange. It feels like an attempt to scrub the history books of the importance that God and faith played on that day and afterwards, and even to rewrite our long-cherished tradition as a nation of elected officials including clergy and invoking God at every point of crisis.
"Government can only do so much, politicians can only do so much. The presence of politicians and presidents will not make up for the absence of prayer and pastors."
Pamela Geller, author of the new "Stop the Islamization of America: A Practical Guide to the Resistance," said the Sunday anniversary events are nothing more than a "whitewash" of the Islamic enemy trying to destroy America.
Geller, of Atlas Shrugs and a key leader in planning Sunday's second annual Freedom Rally at 3 p.m. at Park Place and West Broadway, told WND tens of thousands, including first responders and members of the clergy, are expected to be in attendance.
The focal point will not be obfuscated, either, by high-sounding calls to "service" and advocacy for "tolerance," she warned.
"If we don't understand who wants to destroy our country, our way of life and civilization, how can we possibly be able to defeat them," she asked.
The event is being assembled by her American Freedom Defense Initiative, and its Stop the Islamization of America Program, as well as Robert Spencer of Jihad Watch.
"We must show the jihadists we are unbowed in the defense of freedom," she said.