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Four Christians who were
arrested at a large Arab festival in Michigan will have
their arraignment hearing on Monday.
Four Christians who were
arrested at a large Arab festival in Michigan will have
their arraignment hearing on Monday.
Dr. Nabeel Qureshi, a medical doctor, and fellow street
preachers Negeen Mayel, Paul Rezkalla, and David Wood
were arrested on charges of breach of the peace. Mayel,
an 18-year-old woman who emigrated from Afghanistan and
who recently converted to Christianit y, is also charged
with failure to obey police orders. She was videotaping Qureshi’s discussion with Muslims when police seized her
camera.
“It’s evident that the Dearborn Police department was
more interested in placating Muslims than obeying our
Constitution,” said Richard Thompson, president and
chief counsel of the Thomas More Law Center, which is
representing the four street preachers. “These
Christians were exercising their Constitutional rights
to free speech and the free exercise of religion, but
apparently in a city where the Muslim population seems
to dominate the political apparatus, sharia law trumps
our Constitution.”
Michigan has been described as the Islamic capital of
the United States and has one of the largest Arab
populations outside of the Middle East. Nearly 30,000
out of Dearborn, Michigan’s 98,000 inhabitants are
estimated to be Arab.
The four Christians, three of them converts from Islam,
were arrested and jailed on June 18 by the Dearborn,
Mich., police when they attended the Annual Arab
International Festival and shared the Gospel to those
who expressed interest. Qureshi did most of the talking
with Muslims at the festival while the other three were
mostly involved with videotaping the conversations.
After their arrest, the street preachers requested the
police to view their video at the scene of the arrest,
which they say exonerates them from any charges.
“We made sure that the only people we talked to were
people who first approached us. And this was to limit
accusations of instigation and disruption,” Qureshi said
after the incident. “We knew people have a tendency to
accuse us of being disruptive, of inciting, and
instigating. So we wanted to make sure we did absolutely
nothing of the sort.”
The preachers are associated with Acts 17 Apologetics
Ministries, a ministry led by a former Muslim and a
former atheist – Qureshi and Wood, respectively. Ethan
Cole, Christian Post Reporter.
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