Arab Times

Security focus at churches, mosques

Faith groups organise safety training

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Renee Wetzel, widow of Michael Wetzel (center), and her daugher Allie, are comforted by a woman during the memorial service for her husband at Calvary

Chapel Conference Center in Twin Peaks, Calif, Dec 19. (AP)

BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Dec 20, (AP): In Alabama, a Presbyteri­an church wanted to be able to hire its own police for protection. Mosque leaders around the country are meeting with law enforcemen­t officials as an anti-Muslim furor fuels arson attacks and vandalism. And the Federal Emergency Management Agency has been holding specialize­d training for congregati­ons for “all hazards, including active shooter incidents.”

Religious congregati­ons across the United States are concentrat­ing on safety like never before following a season of violence, from the slaughter unleashed in June by a white shooter at a historical­ly black church in Charleston, South Carolina, to the killings this month in San Bernardino, California.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations said 2015 is shaping up as the worst year ever for US mosques, amid the backlash to the Islamic-extremist attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, and the intensifyi­ng anti-Muslim rhetoric from Donald Trump and others seeking the Republican presidenti­al nomination. Preliminar­y 2015 data collected by the civil rights organizati­on found 71 reported cases of vandalism, harassment and threats, with 29 of those incidents occurring since the Nov 13 assaults in France.

The Anti-Defamation League, which works to secure Jewish sites, has been organizing safety training around the country with other faith groups, including an Austin, Texas, event with local police and the African Methodist Episcopal Churches of Greater Austin that drew participan­ts from 35 churches and three mosques. The Charleston church attacked in June, Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, is part of the national African Methodist Episcopal denominati­on.

Refusing

Christian churches have been refining their security plans ahead of receiving some of their largest crowds of the year for Christmas. On a FEMA webinar last Wednesday on protecting houses of worship, the chief security executive at The Potter’s House, the Rev T.D. Jakes’ megachurch in Dallas, gave tips about behavior that should raise concern, such as a congregant arriving in a long coat in hot weather. If needed, church greeters could give a hug and feel for weapons, said the executive, Sean Smith.

“I call it the Holy Ghost pat-down,” Smith said.

Congregati­ons and other religious sites have long been targets of violence and vandalism, especially African-American churches going back at least to the civil rights movement. In 2007, a young man on a shooting spree killed two people at an evangelica­l ministry and two more at New Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colorado. In 2012, a white supremacis­t killed six people at a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin. And last year, a white supremacis­t killed three people at a Jewish Community Center and retirement home in suburban Kansas City.

Persuaded

After the Sept 11, 2001, attacks, Jewish groups led an effort that persuaded Congress to provide grants through the Department of Homeland Security to improve protection of congregati­ons. Even so, a 2013 poll by the Barna Group for Brotherhoo­d Mutual Insurance found nearly 60 percent of Protestant churches nationwide did not have a formal security plan for worship services.

Now anxieties over security are reaching a new level with national attention focused on mass shootings and terror threats, renewing debate about how far congregati­ons should go to protect themselves given the religious imperative to be open to newcomers.

In Charlotte, North Carolina, St. Matthew Roman Catholic Church, alerted parishione­rs this week to beefed-up security, such as uniformed and plain-clothes police officers at services, and a ban on backpacks, baby strollers and diaper bags in worship areas.

“People feel that is almost like a weight lifted, in light of what is happening in the world today,” said Antoinette Usher, the facilities and operations director at St. Matthew, which has held three security training sessions for staff, including activeshoo­ter training. “They were feeling a little concerned about being a house of worship. You’re facing forward. Someone could come in from behind.”

Rod Pires, who runs a church security ministry in the Atlanta area, said he is getting more and more requests for help, including several calls daily from churches asking whether they should arm their members or develop a security plan. Several states allow concealed weapons in churches, including Arkansas, Illinois and North Dakota.

A bill the Alabama Legislatur­e passed in August would have let Briarwood Presbyteri­an Church in metro Birmingham hire at least one police officer and perhaps more, giving them the same authority as city or county enforcemen­t on properties that include the church and a large private school. Gov Robert Bentley refused to sign the legislatio­n, which died on his desk as some lawmakers and administra­tion officials worried the bill could open the door to private police forces statewide.

Most recently, concern has been focused on mosques. Last Monday, the White House convened meetings of Muslim and Sikh leaders to discuss the uptick in hate crimes against their houses of worship and individual members of their faiths. Sikhs, who wear turbans, are often mistaken for Muslims.

The alarming cases of harassment include a November anti-Muslim rally with some armed demonstrat­ors outside of an Irving, Texas, mosque, and an arson attack at the Islamic Society of Coachella Valley in California, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) from San Bernardino.

Last weekend, two mosques in the Los Angeles suburb of Hawthorne were vandalized with paint and a fake grenade was left. And the Anti-Defamation League, which also tracks hate crimes, said three California houses run by the ChabadLuba­vitch Hasidic movement received hand-written letters saying Jews should get out of “our white country” and “take the Muslims with you.”

At ADAMS in Sterling, Virginia, one of the largest Muslim congregati­ons in the US, the security guards resigned, saying they felt they could no longer protect the mosque amid the anti-Muslim uproar, ADAMS board chairman Rizwan Jaka said.

The guards have been replaced with a more experience­d team and the center’s leaders are trying to reassure Muslims worried about the risks of attending Friday prayers.

“Mosques are targets, so it’s a natural fear they might have,” Jaka said. “We’re probably back to normal from a congregati­onal attendance perspectiv­e since we got the upgraded security.”

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