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WASHINGTON (Pauline
Jelinek AP) -- Evangelist Franklin Graham prayed
on a sidewalk outside the Pentagon Thursday after his
invitation to a prayer service inside was withdrawn
because of comments that insulted Muslims.
"It looks like Isla m has gotten a pass," he told
reporters. "They are able to have their services, but
just because I disagree ... I'm excluded."
In 2001, Mr. Graham, the son of famed evangelist Rev.
Billy Graham, described Islam as evil. More recently, he
said he finds Islam offensive and wants Muslims to know
that Jesus Christ died for their sins. The Pentagon's
chaplain office called those comments inappropriate and,
at the request of the Army, withdrew Mr. Graham's
invitation to attend a multi-denominational "National
Day of Prayer" service that was held in the Defense
Department auditorium.
He came anyway, arriving in the Pentagon parking lot
just before 8 a.m. EDT -- his party of a half dozen
people forming a circle on the sidewalk and praying.
They stood there for about five minutes, heads bowed, as
people arriving for work passed by -- a man with a
briefcase, one on a bike, a woman carrying breakfast
pastry in a bag and another man carrying a skateboard.
Then the group walked to the Pentagon's Sept. 11
memorial roughly a couple of hundred feet away, where
media had gathered because it's one of the few places
were cameras are allowed on the Pentagon property.
There, Mr. Graham held a press conference.
Asked why he had come, Mr. Graham said it was to pray
for the men and women serving at the war-front,
including his son, who he said had already been wounded
in Iraq and now serves in Afghanistan.
He said he doesn't believe "all religions are equal" and
that there is only "one way to God" -- and that is
through Jesus.
Asked if he still believes Islam is evil, he said: "I
believe the way they treat women is evil, yes I do."
And, can he understand how some of his comments would be
offensive to Muslims? "Oh, I'm sure," he said. "But I
find what they teach and what they preach and what's on
the Internet -- I find that to be offensive, too."
Another moment in the press conference, he said people
shouldn't be offended because it's simply a disagreement
in what people believe.
Mr. Graham said many American Christians "feel we are
losing our freedoms while people of other faiths are
gaining their freedom. It's a perception, whether it's
right or wrong."
While Mr. Graham spoke outside, some 80 people attended
a service inside the Pentagon that included Roman
Catholic, Jewish, Muslim and Protestant chaplains.
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