American Muslims Eight Years After 9/11: Living With
Imperialists
Latest Stories Headlines
12 September 2009
By Abdus Sattar Ghazali
“Change” was President Barak Obama's campaign slogan.
The seven-million strong American Muslim community,
firmly believing in his “change” slogan, voted
overwhelmingly for him in the 2008 presidential
elections with the hope that his administration would
bring an end to their humiliation and sufferings they
faced in the Bush era in the name of “war on terror.”
American Muslims were both pleased and surprised by
President Obama’s inclusive words in his inaugural
address, on January 20th, when he said America is "a
nation of Christians and Muslims, Jews and Hindus and
non-believers." Such words signaled Obama's
recognition that Muslims are an important part of the
American fabric.
In his historic June 4 speech in Cairo, President
Obama hinted to the problems facing American Muslims
by saying that the United States “rules on charitable
giving have made it harder for Muslims to fulfill
their religious obligation. That is why I am committed
to working with American Muslims to ensure that they
can fulfill zakat.”
His Cairo statement coincided with a statement by
Attorney General Eric Holder: "The President's pledge
for a new beginning between the United States and the
Muslim community takes root here in the Justice
Department where we are committed to using criminal
and civil rights laws to protect Muslim Americans. A
top priority of this Justice Department is a return to
robust civil rights enforcement and outreach in
defending religious freedoms and other fundamental
rights of all of our fellow citizens in the workplace,
in the housing market, in our schools and in the
voting booth.”
Similarly, in his September 2nd speech at the White
House Iftar dinner, President Obama emphasized that
“the contributions of Muslims to the United States are
too long to catalogue because Muslims are so
interwoven into the fabric of our communities and our
country.” While noting the contributions of American
Muslims, the president also alluded to their problems
when he shared the story of the Muslim sixth-grader
Nashala Hearn from Oklahoma, who was suspended twice
last fall because the school officials claimed her
hijab violated their dress code policy. The President
said: “When her school district told her that she
couldn't wear the hijab, she protested that it was a
part of her religion. The Department of Justice stood
behind her, and she won her right to practice her
faith.”
Not surprisingly, Valerie Jarrett, a Senior Advisor
and Assistant to President Obama for Public Engagement
and Intergovernmental Affairs, was the keynote speaker
at the inaugural session of the Islamic Society of
North America (ISNA) Convention 2009. She paid a
tribute to the diligent work of Muslim Americans on
behalf of the country. Citing President Obama’s April
2009 Cairo Speech, Ms. Jarrett acknowledged the
contribution of American Muslims to the overall
development of American society and the strengthening
of American institutions. Ms Jarrett pointed out:
“Your work here is crucial in confronting the
challenges that all Americans are facing. And you help
advance the new beginning between the United State and
Muslim communities around the world that the President
called for in Cairo.”
These courteous and good gestures by President Obama
are accompanied by the appointment of a number of
American Muslims to some minor positions in his
administration. Rashad Hussain, an American Muslim
lawyer, has been appointed as Deputy Associate Counsel
to the President. Dalia Mogahed was appointed by
President Obama to serve on the Advisory Council on
Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships.
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)
National Executive Director Kareem Shora has been
appointed a member of the Homeland Security Advisory
Council (HSAC).
However all these good gestures and public policy
measures have little positive impact on the
restoration of civil rights of American Muslims
curtailed since 9/11. Profiling has been
institutionalized in the post-9/11 America. State and
federal agencies, under the guise of fighting
terrorism, have expanded the use of this degrading,
discriminatory and dangerous practice. The damage to
civil liberties has been extensive, and a lot of work
remains to be done.
American Muslims and civil libertarians are
particularly concerned about Justice Department
guidelines implemented in the last days of the Bush
administration, which allow race and ethnicity to be
factors in opening an investigation. Other civil
rights concerns include FBI agent provocateurs sent
into American mosques, citizenship delays, politicized
“terror” trials, and misuse by the Department of
Justice of the “unindicted co-conspirator” label.
Today, eight years after 9/11, incidents of racial and
religious profiling in the United States have
increased dramatically. Soon after the 9/11 attacks,
racial profiling became the norm at American airports
where anyone belonging to the Arab or Muslim
communities was systematically called out for
questioning and sometimes even detained. Eight years
hence, August 14, 2009 detention of Indian Muslim
superstar Shah Rukh Khan’s detention at Newark Airport
in New Jersey is only one of the scores that take
place every day.
COINTELPRO operation against the Muslims
Last October — in the waning days of the Bush
administration — FBI director Robert Mueller signed
new guidelines allowing broader FBI authority in
pursuing potential threats to national security. The
new guidelines allow agents to consider race or
ethnicity in determining whether someone is a suspect.
These guidelines – which became effective Dec. 1, 2008
— allow the FBI to launch a criminal investigation
against someone without any factual predicate and
without approval from FBI headquarters.
The guidelines are similar to COINTELPRO, an FBI
program used in the 50s and 60s to spy on civil
rights, environmental and labor groups, with the goal
of unearthing Communist ties those organizations may
have had. At Congressional hearings last May, FBI
Director Mueller — who continues to serve as FBI
director in the Obama administration — said the
guidelines simply formalized processes the FBI had
begun to use, post-9/11. President Barack Obama and
Attorney General Eric Holder have not indicated
whether they intend to scrap the new guidelines.
Tellingly, the Obama administration has also
formalized laptop seizure rules. On August 27, 2009,
the Obama administration disclosed that it will carry
on Bush administration policies that allowed the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to seize and
search international travelers' laptop computers,
cellular phones, cameras, and other electronic
devices, even in the absence of suspicion of criminal
activity. The DHS made public two directives that
formalized operational practices established by the
Bush administration to carry out searches of the
personal digital instruments of travelers, U.S.
citizens or not, passing across U.S. borders.
According to the directives, border police "may detain
electronic devices, or copies of information contained
therein, for a brief, reasonable period of time to
perform a thorough border search. If DHS turns up
nothing incriminating, to regain the confiscated item
the traveler must return to the border crossing where
the item was seized, or else pay for its shipment.
Although the electronic media search regulations apply
to all passengers but Muslims are perhaps the main
target at present because they are the target of extra
scrutiny at the airports and other points of entry.
In April 2009, Muslim Advocates released a report -
Unreasonable Intrusions: Investigating the Politics,
Faith & Finances of Americans Returning Home -
documenting the systematic and widespread practice of
federal agents interrogating Muslim, Arab, and
South-Asian Americans returning home after
international travel — violating their rights to
privacy and nondiscrimination, among others. The
report pointed out: “Currently, no DHS policy limits
the scope of interrogations, even those that probe the
religious beliefs, political views and other First
Amendment-protected activities of law-abiding
Americans.
"For many hard-working, law-abiding Muslim Americans,
questions about their political beliefs, religious
practices, and charitable causes they support, as well
as surrendering their business cards, credit card
numbers and laptop and cell phone data, have become
the price of admission to return home to the U.S. ,"
says Farhana Khera, executive director of Muslim
Advocates.
On June 30, 2009 the ACLU issued a report titled: The
Persistence of Racial and ethnic Profiling in the
United States. The report said: “The Obama
administration has inherited a shameful legacy of
racial profiling codified in official FBI guidelines
and a notorious registration program that treats Arabs
and Muslims as suspects and denies them the
presumption of innocence and equal protection under
the law.……….As a result, in 2009, with a new
administration in office, the practice of racial
profiling by members of law enforcement at the
federal, state, and local levels remains a widespread
and pervasive problem throughout the United States,
impacting the lives of millions of people in African
American, Asian, Latino, South Asian, and Arab
communities.”
Tellingly, as a candidate, President Barack Obama’s
campaign released a “Blueprint for Change,” which
stated that, if elected, “Obama and Biden will ban
racial profiling . . . ” In 2005 and in 2007,
then-Senator Obama cosponsored End Racial Profiling
Act (ERPA) which has continued to languish in Congress
since its introduction in 1997. ERPA is the key piece
of federal legislation as it would compel all law
enforcement agencies to ban racial profiling; create
and apply profiling procedures; document data on
stop/search/arrest activities by race and gender; and
create a private right of action for victims of
profiling.
Islamophobia
Eight years after 9/11, there is a rising tide of
Islamaphobia, intensified by the wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq and U.S. government measures at home.
Americans' attitudes about Islam and Muslims are
fuelled mainly by political statements and media
reports that focus almost solely on the negative image
of Islam and Muslims. Politicians, authors and media
commentators are busy in demonizing Islam, Muslims and
the Muslim world. Eight years after 9/11 attacking
Islam and Muslims remains the fashionable sport for
the radio, television and print media. Few recent
incidents of Islamophobia:
In February 2009, Republican Senator Jon Kyl hosted
screening of an anti-Islam film ‘Fitna’ at the Capitol
building and invited anti-Islam far-right Dutch
lawmaker, Geert Wilders, as his guest. Tellingly,
Wilders was denied entry to London earlier that month
because British authorities believed that showing his
controversial film posed a threat to public order.
Islamophobe Wilders, who built his political career on
fear-mongering, compares Islam’s holy book Qur’an to
Adolf Hitler’s “Mein Kampf” and calls for its banned.
Islamophobes are also teaching hatred towards Islam
and Muslims to the school children. On August 24,
Faith Sapp, a 10-year-old daughter of Wayne Sapp,
pastor of the controversial church, the Dove World
Outreach Center, in Gainesville Florida, was sent home
for wearing a T-shirt with the words 'Islam Is Of The
Devil' printed on it. Next day three more students
were sent home for wearing the anti-Islam T-shirts. On
their front, the T-shirts had a verse from the Gospel
of John: "Jesus answered I am the way and the truth
and the life; no one goes to the Father except through
me." The message "Islam is of the Devil" is on the
back of the shirt. The Dove World Outreach Center’s
anti-Islam T-shirts episode came a month after the
church displayed a series of hand-painted anti-Islam
signs.
In the latest incident of Islamophobia, Clarksville,
Tennessee, Mayor Johnny Piper, on Sept. 4, sent an
e-mail to every City Council member, every department
head, and numerous other city employees, friends and
family members, to protest a US Postal Service stamp
commemorating two Islamic holidays of Eid. The e-mail
falsely claims that the stamp is new, and its creation
was ordered by President Barack Obama. In fact, the
stamp was first issued in 2001, and was reissued in
2002, 2006, 2007 and 2008.
Not surprisingly, Islamophobia has created an
atmosphere of suspicion among the fellow Americans
towards the Muslims. In this Islamophobic charged
atmosphere, it is not surprising that 48 percent
Americans have an unfavorable view of Islam according
to a 2009 poll by Washington Post-ABC News. Nearly
three in ten (29 percent) said they see mainstream
Islam as advocating violence against non-Muslims.
Unfortunately, what most Americans continue to see on
television and read in newspapers since 9/11 are
examples of Muslims and Arabs responsible for terror
attacks, the repression of women, and riots.
Islamophobia incited incidents targeting American
Muslim individuals and institutions. Eight years after
the 9/11 terrorist attacks, American Muslims and Arabs
continue to suffer a severe wave of backlash violence.
The hate crimes included murder, beatings, arson,
attacks on mosques, shootings, vehicular assaults and
verbal threats. Recent hate crimes include a
bias-motivated attack on a Muslim woman and child in
Seattle by a self-proclaimed white supremacist,
vandalism of mosques in California, Florida and North
Carolina, an anti-Islam sign outside a Florida church,
racist fireworks sold in Wisconsin, the beating of a
Muslim student in New York, and the death of a
California Muslim leader in a “suspicious” fire.
Last month, an Islandia, New York, man threatened to
kill a Muslim woman and her 20-year-old daughter as he
tried to run them down with his car at a gas station.
The victim, 49, and her daughter were dressed in an
abaya, a traditional Muslim garment that completely
covered their bodies and face, except for their eyes.
FBI infiltrated spies into South California mosques
In February 2009, the American Muslim community was
shocked at the revelation, that the FBI has been
infiltrating spies into a number of mosques in
Southern California. The Orange County Register
reported that the FBI sent a convicted criminal, Craig
Monteilh, to pose as an agent provocateur in several
of California’s mosques. In April, Monteilh told The
Los Angeles Times that he posed as a Muslim convert at
the request of the FBI to gather intelligence that
might aid anti-terrorism investigators. Monteilh said
he was instructed to lure mosque members to work out
with him at local gyms.
FBI agents later would obtain security camera footage
from the gyms and ask him to identify the people on
the tapes and to provide additional information about
them. He was told that the agents then conducted
background checks on the men, looking for anything
that could be used to pressure them to become
informants.
The Council of Islamic Organizations of Michigan (CIOM),
in April 2009, asked Attorney General Eric Holder to
launch an investigation into complaints that Michigan
Muslims are being approached to spy on activities of
Muslim congregations by the Federal Bureau of
Investigations (FBI).
Through coercion of certain members of congregations,
the FBI is reportedly promoting entrapment of
innocent, law-abiding citizens in otherwise peaceful
houses of worship, said a CIOM statement. CIOM is an
umbrella organization of mosques and Islamic
organizations within the state of Michigan. The
Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic
Relations (CAIR-MI), which is a CIOM member, had
received complaints that the FBI has approached
Michigan Muslims, asking them to spy on unsuspecting
worshippers including monitoring their legitimate
charitable donations.
Muslim charities
Eight years after 9/11, Muslim charity organizations
remain under pressure. In June 2009, the American
Civil Liberties Union released an extensive report
about how the U.S. terrorism finance laws and policies
were unfairly preventing the seven-million-strong
American Muslim community from practicing their
religion through charitable giving.
The 164 page report, "Blocking Faith, Freezing
Charity," is the first comprehensive report that
documents the serious effects of Bush administration
terrorism finance laws on Muslim communities across
the nation. The core of the report is about how
Muslims are being scared away from making zakat (a
religious obligation) donations to Muslim charities.
“U.S. terrorism finance laws and policies unfairly
prevent Muslim Americans from practicing their
religion through charitable giving, create a climate
of fear and distrust in law enforcement and undermine
America's diplomatic efforts in Muslim countries,” the
report said.
Since December 2001, the ACLU reports that the
government has seized the assets of three Muslim
charities, closed seven others and conducted raids of
more. The stated purpose was to cut off the money that
supposedly was heading from Muslim charities to groups
that support or carry out terrorism. "Without notice
and through the use of secret evidence and opaque
procedures, the Treasury Department has effectively
closed down seven U.S. -based Muslim charities,
including several of the nation's largest Muslim
charities," said Jennifer Turner, a researcher with
the ACLU Human Rights Program and author of the
report.
"While terrorism financing laws are meant to make us
safer, policies that give the appearance of a war on
Islam only serve to undermine America's diplomatic
efforts just as President Obama reaches out to the
Muslim world. These counter-productive practices
alienate American Muslims who are key allies and chill
legitimate humanitarian aid in parts of the world
where charities' good works could be most effective in
winning hearts and minds," Turner added.
In May 2009, after a series of legal twists, secret
evidence and questionable witness of Israeli
intelligence agents, five former officials of the Holy
Land Foundation, once a leading American Muslim
charitable organization, were sentenced upto 65 years
imprisonment on charges related to humanitarian aid
given to Palestinians living under Israeli occupation.
The defendants said they were engaged in legitimate
relief work, while the government claimed that work
benefited terrorists. During the trial, defense
attorneys accused the government of bending to Israeli
pressure to prosecute the charity, and of relying on
old evidence. The five were never accused of
supporting violence and were convicted for funding
charities that aided needy Palestinians.
To borrow the OBM Watch, the Holy Land Foundation
trial sends a chilling message to the U.S. charities.
It is virtually impossible for charities to determine
what foreign organizations they can legally partner
with. At the trial, Robert McBrien from Treasury's
Office of Foreign Assets Control testified that it can
be illegal to deal with groups that have not been
designated as supporters of terrorism and placed on
government watch lists. He said that keeping up with
front groups "is a task beyond the wise use of
resources." As a result, charities now have to guess
about whether or not any local charity or community
leader may be considered a supporter of terrorism,
said the OBM.
“Ramadan, Giving Wisely and With No Fear” is the title
of an article about zakat which reflects the dilemma
of Muslims to fulfill their religious obligation of
zakat which is usually given during the month of
Ramadan. Government crackdown of Muslim charities has
caused tremendous fear and anxiety among Muslims, with
many still fearful that a simple act of charity could
lead to federal agents knocking at their door.
Unfortunately Obama’s pledge to work with American
Muslims to resolve the problem has so far helped
little to assure the Muslims. In July, Muslim
organizations joined other nonprofit organizations in
signing a letter urging President Obama to follow up
on his Cairo commitment to revise charitable giving
rules.
On August 26, the Treasury Department issued a
statement about charity giving in Ramadan. “As Ramadan
begins, the US Department of the Treasury recognizes
the particular importance of charitable giving
throughout the holy month of Ramadan for Muslims in
America and around the world. Charitable giving is a
fundamental characteristic of many faiths, and zakat,
one of the five pillars of Islam, is a sacred
obligation for Muslims.” However, the Treasury
Department has failed to provide a safe list of
charity organizations so that Muslims can donate
without fear.
In short, eight years after 9/11, Muslims in America
remained at the receiving end with assault on their
civil rights and their faith. Muslims are the prime
targets of the post 9/11 reconfiguration of American
laws, policies, and priorities which have not been
changed under the Obama administration. Defending
civil rights remains the single most important
challenge before the seven million-strong American
Muslim community.
It will not be a harsh judgment to say that eight
years after 9/11, American Muslims remain under siege.
Despite healing words from President Obama about
bridging the divide between the Muslim world and the
West, America's Muslim community is subject to
pervasive and persistent attacks by the federal
government, many spearheaded by the Joint Terrorism
Task Forces.
As President Barack Obama made his public appearance
with Turkish President Abdullah Gul on April 6, 2009
as part of his first trip to a Muslim country, U.S.
federal agents were preparing to arrest Youssef
Megahed, a student from Egypt, in Tampa, Fla. Just
three days earlier, a jury in a U.S. federal district
court had acquitted him of charges of illegally
transporting explosives and possession of an explosive
device. Megahed was being held by U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement for a deportation proceeding. The
charges were the same ones from which he was
completely acquitted. Surprisingly, in August he was
released when an immigration judge refused to deport
him, ruling the Department of Homeland Security had
failed to prove terrorism charges.
Many people believed that after Bush had left the
White House, rampant arrogance combined with stunning
hypocrisy had also gone. Events have so far proved
otherwise. Although Obama is able to give a more
compassionate and intelligent speech than was possible
with Bush, the essence of their policies is identical.
To borrow Ted Rall: “Obama doesn’t talk like Bush; he
just acts like him?”
-- Abdus Sattar Ghazali is the Executive Editor of
the online magazine American Muslim Perspective (www.amperspective.com).
His e-mail is: asghazali@gmail.com.