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US Terror Suspects Not Muslims: CAIR

by Islam Online (reposted)
CAIRO — The Council on American-Islamic Relations, America's largest Islamic civil liberties group, has urged the media not to associate the seven suspects arrested on charges of plotting terrorist attacks in the US with the country's Muslim minority, insisting they were not Muslims.
"Given that the reported beliefs of this bizarre group have nothing to do with Islam, we ask members of the media to refrain from calling them Muslims," Ahmed Bedier, Director of CAIR Florida chapter, said in a statement e-mailed to IslamOnline.net.

Seven men — five US citizens, a legal resident and a Haitian — appeared in court on Friday, June23 , a day after they were arrested in Miami.

US Attorney-General Alberto Gonzales said the seven were charged with conspiracy to provide material support to Al-Qaeda and terrorists.

They face four terrorism charges, including a plot to blow up the110 -floor Sears Tower, the world's third tallest building, in Chicago and the FBI regional headquarters.

The charges sheet said the group's leader, Narseal Batiste, recruited individuals for an operation "which included a plot to destroy by explosives the Sears Tower."

However, law enforcement officials said that no weapons or explosives had been seized in the raid.

Though acknowledging that the plot was "more aspirational than operational", FBI deputy director John Pistole said the arrests were an "important step forward in the war on terrorism here in the US."

But relatives of the detained men denounced the arrests as an attempt to frighten Americans.

"It's all a show, they're scaring people, there's nothing to be scared at all," said Marlene Phanor, the sister of Stanley Grant Phanor,31 , one of the suspects.

Cult

Bedier criticized the media for referring to the arrestees as Muslims.

He regretted "a lot of talk on conservative radio and television stations and opinion that this is militant Islamism, radical Islamism."

The Muslim activist asserted that the suspects seem to belong to "some sort of cult group."

Media reports said the seven detainees were part of the "Seas of David" religious group.

A man identified himself as a member of the "Seas of David" told CNN on Thursday, June22 , that they had no connection to terrorists.

"We are not terrorists. We are members of David, Seas of David," said the man, identifying himself as Brother Corey.

He said the group blends the teachings of Christianity and Islam.

"We study Allah and the worship of the regular Bible."

He went on: "We study and we train through the bible, not only physical -- not only physical, but mentally."

Terminology

The American Muslim activist hailed US Attorney Alex Acosta for noting that the indictment "is not against a particular group or a particular faith."

He urged on other law enforcement authorities and officials to avoid using Arabic terminology in referring to the case.

Gonzales said the group of "home-grown terrorists" were inspired by what he said "a violent jihadist message."

Austria, the current holder of the EU's rotating presidency, has drafted a document of common vocabulary on Islam as part of efforts to avoid stigmatizing terminology in dealing with Muslims.

Rather than dictionary-style definitions, the EU lexicon tries to place words in their cultural, historical and political context to inform users and give them a better idea of how their use could be misunderstood.

The lexicon explains that the term "jihad," which is commonly used in the media to mean "holy war," refers to an intellectual, social or other kind of personal exercise -- "great jihad" -- or to a war in defense of Muslims; "little jihad."

"The latter is either regarded as a collective duty or as an individual obligation incumbent on any capable Muslim," says the document, adding that the word's misuse can also cause offence.

CAIR has called on the authorities to protect mosques and other Muslim institutions from any possible backlash prompted by the mistaken linkage of the case to the Muslim minority.

While there is no scientific count of Muslims in the US, six to seven million is the most commonly cited figure.

A May 2004 report released by the US Senate Office Of Research concluded that the Arab Americans and the Muslim community have taken the brunt of the Patriot Act and other federal powers applied in the aftermath of the9 / 11attacks.

http://islamonline.net/English/News/2006-06/24/02.shtml
by juan cole (reposted)

Friday, June 23, 2006

CAIR: Miami Cult not Muslims

I just saw the spokesman for the Council on American Islamic Relations on CNN saying that the Miami cult members just arrested are not Muslims. I'd say that is a fair statement.

For one thing, they are vegetarians!

It seems pretty obvious that they are just a local African-American cult which mixed Judaism, Christianity and (a little bit of) Islam. It seems to be a of vague offshoot of the Moors group founded by Dwight York. I heard on CNN that one of them talked of being Moors. And Batiste, the leader, called whites "devils" in the tradition of the original Nation of Islam and York's Moors. Now CNN is saying one member said they practiced witchcraft [likely meaning Haitian voodoo or perhaps Santeria-like rituals]. One former member is called Levi-El, suggesting he might be associated with the Black Hebrew movement or an offshoot. Now a relative of one of the members, Phanor, said that they wore black uniforms with a star of David arm patch and considered themselves of the Order of Melchizadek. I wonder if it is "Seas of David" or "C's of David", with "c" meaning commando or some such?

I define cult as a religious group that has values that put it in a high state of tension with the norms of mainstream society, and that has a leadership that imposes high levels of discipline and demand for control of adherents' lives.

This Seas of David group primarily seems to have been studying the Bible. The mother of one insisted that he is a Catholic. Then there is all that Jewish symbology and terminology, even in their names. Islam was nothing more for them but a set of symbols they could pull into their syncretic local culture. The group drew on poor Haitian immigrants and local indigent African-American youth. If this were the 1960s, they'd have been Black Panthers or Communists.

American folk religion, pursued in small groups with charismatic leaders, is replete with such groups, from Father Divine to Jim Jones of the People's Temple to David Koreish.

The group never got past the stage of talking big, and violently. They talked dangerously, and some sort of intervention was warranted. Since they begged the FBI informant for "shoes," they weren't exactly a well-heeled group that seems very dangerous in actual practice. And, to what extent did the FBI informant press an al-Qaeda connection on these otherwise clueless but imaginative zealots?

But contrast the grandstanding of Alberto Gonzales on this group of poor unarmed ghetto folk with the way in which the Robert J. Goldstein case was treated. He actually had the bombs in his house and was going to blow up Floridians. No press called him a "Jewish" terrorist and no questions were ever raised about his possible international links.

Imagine the horror of an urbane Arab-American professional with university higher degrees, steeped in Islamic culture and contributing to American society, at being lumped in by the American press and officialdom with these cultists who appropriated his religion for their violent religious fantasies.

The other thing to say is that American law is soft on cultic practices, of dirty tricks against and smearing of critics, enforced third-party shunning, manipulation, and group coercion. These things are not protected by the First Amendment and I think one part of our counter-terrorism strategy must be to develop legal strategies to make it easier to disrupt the workings of cults before they accumulate a critical mass for violent action. The practice of just letting the head of the Internal Revenue Service decide if a group is a tax-free religion should also be revisited. In the past, some IRS heads appear to have been blackmailed by cults into granting them that status, which allows them to accumulate more wealth.

Whereas most terrorism is a form of educated, middle class politics, this particular group clearly grew out of the grievances and resentments of race and class inequality in the United States.

The sister of one was just on MSNBC saying that he deeply resented Bush spending money to drop bombs on poor people who could not defend themselves, while depriving the poor in the United States of any support. "We are not capable," she said. This is a theory of class war, connecting the poor of Kut with the poor of Miami's inner city. The city, by the way, has horrific levels of unemployment.

The position of the poor and workers in particular is deteriorating in the US, as more and more of the privately held wealth is concentrated in the hands of a white, privileged, few. The unions have been gutted, the minimum wage is inadequate, and racist attitudes are reemerging on a worrisome scale. Cities such as Detroit, New Orleans and Miami continue to witness enormous strains coming mainly from racist attitudes. In this case, the best counter-terrorism would be more social justice.
by The Devil (George Warmonger Bush)
The Devil (George Warmonger Bush): "Sorry to Oil the Mohammed Cartoons, the Koran Toilet Flushings, the Islamophobia, and the FBI Photo Ops but Oil comes First. Fill her Up ???????"
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