The main developer of the controversial 'Ground Zero' mosque that has sharply divided New Yorkers, has said the centre is not inviting funds from Iran, Hamas or any organisation that has "un-American" values.
The planners began raising funds for the proposed project amid sharp divisions over it across the country. Sharif El Gamal, the developer of the proposed Islamic Centre that would stand two blocks away from the site of the fallen twin towers of the World Trade Centre, has collected US $ 10,000 for the US $ 100 million community centre project called Park 51 from a Muslim congregation of worshippers.
"We will not take money from Iran. We will not take money from Hamas," El Gamal told CBS's 60 Minutes. "We will not take money from organisations that have un-American values. The money is going to be coming from people that want to get involved in the project," he added. "And I think it's gonna come from people from all walks of life," he said.
The debate, however still rages, with a section of people arguing that establishing a mosque so close to the World Trade Centre site would be insensitive. Polls suggest that majority of Americans inside and out of New York, both Republican and Democrats, are against a mosque two blocks away from the 9/11
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