Perspective: Worldwide hate epidemic -- Forgiveness essential to solving crisis | Hameed Naseem


The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community and its founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, have been at the forefront to remove the misunderstanding about jihad among Muslims and non-Muslims for well over a century.

Times of Ahmad | News Watch | US Desk
Source/Credit: Northwest Arkansas Democrat Gazette
By Hameed Naseem | November 4, 2017

In November 2015, Friday the 13th, a retired marine named Ted Hakey came home late night from a bar in Meriden, Conn., took hold of one of his high-powered rifles and opened fire at the mosque next door. A bullet went straight through the central prayer hall where, just a little earlier, worshippers had lined up for the night prayers.

Police acted promptly to figure out where the gun was fired from and arrested Hakey. FBI seized 24 guns and more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition from his house. Hakey's Facebook account was replete with anti-Muslim vitriol, like "All Muslims must die!!! I hate them all!!!" and "Once a tipping point is reached, the Muslims are [expletive]." And for Ted Hakey the tipping point had been reached earlier that day with the ISIS terrorist attacks that killed 130 innocent souls and injured hundreds more in Paris.
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