Officials banned anyone from saying anything negative about mega-mosque in residential neighborhood
(WND) - The Supreme Court is being asked to strike down special privileges the city of Sterling Heights, Michigan, created for a giant mosque that Muslims want to build in a residential neighborhood.
It would be tens of thousands of square feet and nearly six stories tall.
The American Freedom Law Center has filed a petition to the high court asking for review.
The case began when city officials bent their own rules to approve a mega-mosque proposed by Muslims. The residents of the surrounding neighborhood include many Chaldean Christians who escaped persecution from Muslims in their home country Iraq.
Seven residents sued, but lower courts sided with the mosque builders.
Chaldean Christian children.
The Iraq Chaldean community originates from groups of adherents of the Church of the East in about 1552. In Southeast Michigan there is a Chaldean community numbering 113,000 people.
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The civil-rights case against the city and its mayor contends the American Islamic Community Center proposed the mosque to "plant the flag" in a community of Christians who fled Iraq because they or family members were subjected to violence and abuse from ISIS.
The city initially rejected a proposal for a mosque in the residential neighborhood. Muslims then sued and the city complied with their demand to ignore local ordinances and regulations and permit the mosque through a consent agreement.
The civil-rights suit by residents followed.
AFLC said the decision to enter into the consent judgment was made during a city council meeting held in February 2017.
"During this public meeting," AFLC said, "the mayor enforced a content- and viewpoint-based speech restriction that prohibited private citizens, including our clients, from making any comments that the mayor deemed critical of Islam, in direct violation of the First Amendment!"
WND reported in 2017 a spokeswoman, Nahren Anweya, expressed the view of the Chaldean and Assyrian Christians in Sterling Heights.
"The mayor and the corrupted personal interests behind him have outraged a community which is comprised of the largest minority Assyrian/Chaldean Christians from Iraq," Anweya said. "This minority group consists of more than four generations of refugees and genocide victims under radical Islam."
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