NEW YORK - A prominent national Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization Friday renewed its call for a strong response by public officials to growing anti-Muslim bigotry nationwide following another hate incident targeting an American mosque. The Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) reports that a man entered the Iman Mosque in Queens, a borough of New York City, during a prayer service last night and shouted anti-Muslim slurs as he urinated on prayer rugs. The man, who was charged with criminal trespass, allegedly called the worshippers "terrorists." On Wednesday night, CAIR reported that a mosque in California was vandalized recently with a brick and hate signs referring to the controversy over a planned Islamic community center in New York City. CAIR said vandals targeting an Islamic Centre in Madera, California, left signs stating "No Temple for the God of terrorism at Ground Zero.", "Wake up America, the Enemy is here." and "American Nationalist Brotherhood." Also on Thursday, CAIR called on religious and political leaders to repudiate growing Islamophobia following an attack on a New York taxi driver allegedly stabbed by a passenger who had asked him if he was Muslim. "Without a significant response by mainstream political leaders, this disturbing trend will only continue to grow," CAIR's New York Community Affairs Director Faiza Ali said in a statement. "We ask that this incident be treated as a hate crime and that relevant charges be brought against the alleged perpetrator." She singled out New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg for his strong support for American Muslim religious and civil rights and urged other elected officials to follow his lead. Ms. Ali also noted that a Florida church plans to burn Qurans, Islam's revealed text, on the anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks.