Dozens gather for anti-Islam stunt outside Phoenix mosque, face counter-protest

Two demonstrators stand in front of the Islamic Community Center to oppose the Freedom of Speech Rally Round II across the street in Phoenix, Arizona May 29, 2015. (Reuters/Nancy Wiechec)

Two demonstrators stand in front of the Islamic Community Center to oppose the “Freedom of Speech Rally Round II” across the street in Phoenix, Arizona May 29, 2015. (Reuters/Nancy Wiechec)

A crowd of anti-Islam protesters who gathered for a provocative rally in front of the Islamic Community Center in Phoenix, Arizona, has faced a much larger group of counter-protesters promoting peace. Police had to intervene to separate the two rallies.

The gathering outside
the Phoenix mosque became a convergence of two rival protests
with a phalanx of police officers separating the two. Despite
anti-Islam event organizers calls on participants to bring guns
and Mohammed cartoons and feel free to exercise their

“constitutional right,”
the event remained
peaceful.

A large group of people with signs reading “Love not
Hate,”
and “Provoke Peace,” came ahead of the
provocative event planned to coincide with Friday prayers, and
lined up near the mosque. In anticipation of trouble, Arizona
police also stepped up security in the area to prevent
provocations and defuse tensions should the events turn ugly.

The second, larger group gathered in response to rally under the
hashtag #NotMyAmerica, and carrying peace signs, supporting the
Muslim community, according to Fox10 News.

Only a few people showed up for the mosque’s scheduled prayer
service, as “pro-free speech” protesters began arriving,
, some carried guns, wearing offensive t-shirts and placards, and
waving American flags. Only a handful of some 7,000 people who
had been invited to attend the event via Facebook, have shown up.

Jon Ritzheimer, a former marine, and self-proclaimed
“anti-Islam activist” organized the event on Facebook,
and called for people to join him for a protest outside the
mosque as part of a peaceful rally, but instructed that guns be
brought as a precaution in the event that they came under attack.

Ritzheimer told Fox 10 Arizona that he was “hoping to inspire
more freedom of speech rallies.”

“This is not about me,” Ritzheimer said. “This is
about freedom of speech across America.”


He told the news outlet that the rally had been worth it but also
that his life had been threatened, that he was going to have to
sell his house, and going into hiding with his family.

The so-called “Freedom for Speech Rally II” was staged
at the same mosque attended by the two gunmen who tried to attack
the Mohammed cartoon drawing contest and exhibition in Garland,
Texas, two weeks ago. The event was allegedly intended to
“deliver a message” to the families of the two gunmen.Aliide,

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