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Islamic Center Garden Thrives

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Center_082214CHabeeb Ahmed of Albertson loves digging in the soil. Drive past the Islamic Center of Long Island on Brush Hollow Road in Westbury on a Friday or Sunday morning, you’re very likely to find him planting flowers around the mosque and supervising a crew of volunteers who care for the gardens. “Many people stop by when there is an event and tell us what a nice garden,” he says.

I know what he means—I live down the road from the mosque, which is located on Brush Hollow Road, and always look forward to seeing what’s in bloom each season. In early spring there are crocus, followed by hundreds of tulips and daffodils of different colors and sizes. Then comes pink Kwanzan cherry and magnolia trees and lots of hosta, peonies, lilies and sunflowers throughout the summer; there are chrysanthemums in autumn. Interspersed are thousands of annuals: vinca, marigolds, begonias, dahlias, hollyhocks, petunias and coleus.

center_082214B“Not much is planted in the winter,” said Ahmed, who is the volunteer garden supervisor and a first vice president at the Islamic Center, “we all are too tired by then to do any more planting.” But come March, it all starts again with the cleaning of the grounds. Ahmed starts many of the plants by seed, such as the sunflowers. At planting time, he usually takes three to four days off from his job as a medical technologist to set up the garden with his crew. “I’m a gardener by nature,” he said. “I loved gardening even as a child.”

The garden crew does more than beautify the grounds. If you drive around the neighborhood, you’ll see that their planting extends beyond the boundaries of the center and the volunteers also spend time going through the neighborhood, picking up trash and tidying up areas where there might be some debris from the wind or rain.
“We want to be a positive presence in the neighborhood,” said Ahmed, who lives in Albertson. This is very much in keeping with the teachings of Islam from the Quran and Hadith (teachings, deeds and sayings of the Islamic prophet Muhammad), which instructs believers to treat their neighbors well.

Center_082214AAhmed estimates that they spend nearly $5,000 each year buying annuals and replacing plants that have died. Members provide financial support as well as labor. In addition to the plantings around the center and in the neighborhood, the Peace Garden welcomes visitors. The garden was formally established on the tenth anniversary of September 11 with Westbury Mayor Peter Cavallaro, other elected officials and the interfaith clergy in attendance. In the Peace Garden are 25 hybrid tea roses. To add more color to the garden, there is vinca, marigolds, sunflowers, four o’clocks and ornamental corn.

“This garden reminds all the visitors—Muslim and non-Muslim alike—that peace is the best alternative to war, death and destruction,” said Ahmed.