[Biggest 
Islamic 
web site in the 
U.S.]
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1. Greenboro report on Rachel Corrie, sweet rose 
of 
America, 
victim of 
Zionism.
2. Report on unprecdented million march in 
Lahore, 
Pakistan.
3. Day 4: Day of defeat for U.S. as 
Iraq 
fights 
back.
4. 
Chicago 
from ground level: Mexicans support 
Arabs and Muslims.
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80 protest at Greensboro vigil
U.S. woman killed in Gaza Strip is remembered as 
'hero'
By Michael Hewlett
JOURNAL REPORTER
About 80 people gathered yesterday at the 
Governmental Plaza in downtown 
Greensboro to protest the war in Iraq and to 
remember a 23-year-old American 
woman killed in the midst of the 
Israeli-Palestinian 
conflict.
Yusra Al-Alqrah, a Palestinian who grew up in the 
West Bank and taught in 
Kuwait a year before the first Persian Gulf War 
started in 1991, said she saw 
Rachel Corrie as a hero.
Corrie, a college student from Olympia, Wash., 
was the first international 
protester to be killed during the 30-month 
conflict between Israelis and 
Palestinians.
Working for a U.S. group called 
International Solidarity Movement, 
Corrie was 
killed when an Israeli military bulldozer crushed 
her as she crouched in its 
path. Witnesses have said that she was trying to 
protect the home of a 
Palestinian physician in the Gaza Strip.
"What Rachel did, she didn't do for oil, money or 
to be famous," Al-Alqrah 
said. "She went to help innocent people."
Corrie's parents, who live in Charlotte, have 
asked that the Federal Bureau 
of Investigation or the State Department conduct 
an independent investigation 
in the incident. Israeli officials have called 
the death an accident.
Others also protested what they see as an immoral 
war. "I feel that the 
impasse between Islam and the West will continue 
as long as the American 
administration is playing God in this war," said 
Badi Ali, the president of 
the Islamic Center of the Triad.
The center organized the candlelight vigil along 
with the Greensboro 
Coalition for Peace and the Not in Our Name 
Project, a national anti-war 
organization.
Ali had planned to travel to Iraq to serve as a 
human shield and said he was 
ready to leave Monday, but the Iraqi borders were 
closed. The vigil was 
another way to get the same message across, he 
said.
He said he disagrees with those who say that the 
war is to liberate the Iraqi 
people from Saddam Hussein's dictatorship. "We 
liberate people by bombs and 
missiles?" Ali said. "I don't understand. Is this 
war going to liberate them 
or are we going to liberate them from life?"
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2003-03-24 Mon 07:38ct