The call to prayer was part of a performance of ``The Armed Man: A
Mass for Peace.''
A video runs during the singing, showing graphic war
scenes followed by people from different faiths drawing together.
At a point in the video where Muslim worshippers are shown, there was silence rather than the call to prayer.
The decision to ban led Northwestern Michigan College to withdraw
its sponsorship on the eve of the Nov. 11 performance, part of First
Congregational Church's annual Mel Larimer Concert Series.
The Rev. David Walls, senior pastor of Traverse City's First
Congregational Church, said leaders of his congregation feared causing
offense to those at the concert.
``We were concerned that there was potential that some of our
active military personnel, military families with sons or daughters in
Iraq, who have even lost their lives there, would find it much too hard
to handle,'' Walls told the Traverse City Record-Eagle (http://bit.ly/TafMFf ). ``A prayer in Arabic, addressed to Allah, with references to Muhammad for an event that was intended to honor veterans.''
``We are clearly a Christian church and we don't apologize for
that,'' said Doug Bishop, vice president of the First Congregational
Church council. ``We have the right to control our content.''
Dawud Walid, executive director of the Michigan chapter of
Council on American-Islamic Relations, told The Associated Press on
Sunday that the church's action was ironic given the religious diversity
that he experienced while serving in the U.S. Navy in 1994-98.
Walls ``seems to be oblivious to the core values of the U.S.
military,'' said Walid, who said he observed firsthand how the military
provided worship opportunities for ``Jews, Christians, Muslims, even
Wiccans.''
Alya Nadji, 16, is Muslim and a member of the Traverse City West
High School Chorale. She said she ran from the room crying during a
rehearsal when she learned the call to prayer was being cut from the
program.
``I felt like I wasn't being treated equal,'' Nadji said. ``I
felt that I was unwelcome and that I didn't belong any place near there.
Kamran Memon, president of the Chicago-based Muslims for Safe
America, said many Muslim Americans are veterans, with about 20,000
currently in the military.
``American soldiers have fought and died side-by-side with Afghan
and Iraqi troops fighting against a common enemy,'' Memon said.
*Pictured above is David Walls.