'If you don't like Australia, leave it' "If you don't like Australia, leave it." 
These are the words Parramatta Mosque chairman Neil El-Kadomi will utter when he stands before his congregation on Friday for thefirst time since the Sydney terror attack lastweek.
Mr Kadomi, pictured, will deliver the sermon to more than 400 worshippers in the same mosque in which, only a week earlier, 15-year-old Farhad Jabar had cloaked himself in black before walking 500 metres down the road to shoot a NSW Police employee in the back of the head.
He will tell those kneeling upon the tattered red carpet that enough is enough; the mosque is no place for politics, it is a place for worship. He has already changed the locks.
"We will not tolerate anyone who wants to get us into trouble," he said. Search warrants have been executed and CCTV footage reviewed - Farhad Jabar was there on that fateful final afternoon in the school holidays. But Mr Kadomi denied the mosque has anything to do with the teenager's spiral into extremism that ended withthe death of NSW Police finance worker Curtis Cheng. Eryk Bagshaw