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Mosque
Bombing FBI Confrontation: Anti-Sharia Laws - Concerns
Over Jewish Halachah
05 May 2011 By Juan Cole
A St. Johns County man wanted in the bombing of a
Jacksonville mosque was shot and killed Wednesday when
he pulled a weapon as agents tried to serve an arrest
warrant in northwest Oklahoma, FBI officials said.
Sandlin Matthew Smith, 46, was suspected of setting
off a pipe bomb at the Islamic Center of Northeast
Florida nearly one year ago.
Investigators said Smith had been on the run for
the last few days after acquaintances of Smith, both
in northeast Florida and out of the area, tipped them
off that he was involved in the mosque bombing and was
in Oklahoma.
FBI Special Agent Jeff Wescott said agents learned
late Tuesday that Smith was staying in a tent in a
park in the rugged foothills of the Glass Mountains,
near Fairview, in northwest Oklahoma.
“During the overnight hours, the Oklahoma City FBI
SWAT team, along with the assistance of the Oklahoma
Highway Patrol, set up a perimeter around the area,”
Wescott said.
Agents said that Smith refused to surrender and
pulled out a firearm. Agents opened fire and killed
Smith, FBI officials said. The agents involved weren’t
injured.
Wescott said Smith was carrying an AK-47 when he
was killed. Authorities found remnants of a crude pipe
bomb at the scene, and shrapnel from the blast was
found a hundred yards away.
Smith was facing several federal charges, including
damage to religious property and possession of a
destructive device, in connection with the May 10,
2010, bombing.
Anti-Sharia Laws Stir Concerns
that Jewish Halachah Could Be Next - By Ron Kampeas
With conservative lawmakers across the United
States trying to outlaw sharia, or Islamic religious
law, Jewish organizations are concerned that halachah
could be next.
If the state legislative initiatives targeting
sharia are successful, they would gut a central tenet
of American Jewish religious communal life: The
ability under U.S. law to resolve differences
according to halachah, or Jewish religious law.
“The laws are not identical, but as a general rule
they could be interpreted broadly to prevent two
Jewish litigants from going to a beit din,” a Jewish
religious court, said Abba Cohen, the Washington
director of Agudath Israel of America, an Orthodox
umbrella group. “That would be a terrible infringement
on our religious freedom.”
A number of recent beit din arbitrations that were
taken by litigants to civil courts — on whether a
batch of etrogim met kosher standards; on whether a
teacher at a yeshiva was rightfully dismissed; and on
the ownership of Torah scrolls — would have no
standing under the proposed laws.
Cohen added that a New York State law requiring
parties in a divorce to cut all ties immediately would
be affected by the passage of anti-sharia legislation;
the law protects divorced Jewish women from becoming “agunot,”
chained to a recalcitrant husband through his refusal
to grant a religious divorce. Federal laws protecting
religious expression in the workplace — for instance,
wearing head coverings or asking for certain holidays
off — also could be affected, he said.
The threats posed by the anti-sharia laws — passed
by referendum in Oklahoma and under consideration in
13 other states, according to a study by the liberal
Center for American Progress — led Agudah and the
Orthodox Union to join in an American Jewish
Committee-spearheaded letter to state legislatures
urging them to reject such laws.
“The impact of this legislation goes well beyond
prohibiting religious tribunal resolution of monetary
or ministerial disputes,” says one of the letters, to
the Arizona state Senate. “It would apparently
prohibit the courts from looking to key documents of
church, synagogue or mosque governance — religious law
— to resolve disputes about the ownership of a house
of worship, selection and discipline of ministers, and
church governance.”
The unlikely combination of signatories, which also
include the American Civil Liberties Union, the
Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty and
Americans United for Separation of Church and State,
signal the breadth of opposition to the legislation
targeting Islamic law.
But there are also Jews supportive of the anti-sharia
laws, such as David Yerushalmi, an Orthodox lawyer who
has written extensively on the topic and testified on
the matter as some legislatures consider the proposed
laws.
Yerushalmi argues that sharia differs from halachah
or Christian canon law because it sanctions jihad,
which he says amounts to sedition through seeking the
overthrow of governments through nonviolent and
violent means.
“Because Jihad necessarily advocates violence and
the destruction of our representative,
constitution-based government, the advocacy of jihad
by a sharia authority presents a real and present
danger,” he wrote recently on a conservative website.
“This is sedition when advocated from within our
borders; an act of war when directed at us from
foreign soil.”
Scholars of Islam say such characterizations of
sharia are distorted.
And those opposing the legislation say many of the
laws as proposed are unconstitutional and likely would
not survive their first judicial test.
“It’s violation of the right to free exercise,”
said Rabbi David Saperstein, who directs the Reform
movement’s Religious Action Center and teaches
church-state law at Georgetown University. “It’s a
violation of the establishment clause, giving
pre-eminence of one religion over another.”
A federal judge cited the establishment clause in
her decision to indefinitely hold the Oklahoma law in
abeyance while she considers a lawsuit.
Still, the tide of proposed laws has stoked enough
concern that the groups are taking action. Cohen,
Saperstein and the Orthodox Union’s Nathan Diament all
said their organizations are urging constituent
synagogues to take up the matter in states where laws
are under consideration.
Jewish officials in Nashville, Tenn., have spoken
out against a proposed sharia ban that has evolved
into a bill that would grant the state attorney
general broad powers to name any group a terrorist
group.
“I have been on a local morning TV show about the
issue,” said Judy Saks, the community relations
director for the local federation. “I said, as Jews,
we’ve been persecuted throughout the ages, and to
stand by and watch this broad brush being used against
another community — we really can’t.”
Diament expressed concerns about proposed laws in
places like Nebraska and South Dakota that might
circumvent constitutional bans by targeting “foreign
law” and “religious code” and not naming sharia or
Islam.
Such laws “are problematic particularly from the
perspective of the Orthodox community — we have a beit
din system, Jews have disputes resolved according to
halachah,” Diament said. “We don’t have our own police
force, and the mechanism for having those decisions
enforced if they need to be enforced is the way any
private arbitration is enforced” — through contract
law in the secular court system.
Marc Stern, the AJC’s associate general counsel who
drafted the letter to the state legislatures, said the
greatest threat presented by the proposed laws is to
America’s delicate relations with Muslims across the
world.
“The key point here for us is that it makes all
Muslims who take their religion seriously a threat,”
he said, adding that the laws could alienate Muslim
moderates who otherwise seek accommodation with the
West.
“It’s a strategic error of gigantic proportions,”
Stern said.
Saks recalled that when she heard that vandals had
defaced a mosque in Nashville in February 2010 with
crosses and “Muslims go home” graffiti, she joined a
clean-up effort — and forged new alliances.
“When they found out I was Jewish, there was a kind
of astonishment, and then they were grateful,” she
said of the mostly Somali congregation.
Abed Awad, a New Jersey-based lawyer who is an
expert on Islamic law, said the application of the
proposed laws would have an impact not only on
domestic family court agreements and contracts between
members of the same religious community, but on
contracts made overseas.
Awad noted that a number of Muslim states and
Israel use religious law in divorce cases, for
example. An American judge addressing the divorce of a
couple now must take into account the sums agreed upon
in those contracts; the proposed laws would ban such
considerations.
Additionally, Awad said, the legislation would
affect agreements signed between American companies
and counterparts in countries such as Saudi Arabia,
where sharia governs business law. How would one side
pursue a grievance in an American court should the
laws governing the contract be considered null?
In no instance does sharia law prevail over U.S.
law, said Awad, who has testified in about 100 cases
as a sharia expert. Instead, judges use sharia to
understand the underpinnings of a contract.
“The judge will elicit testimony from me, what is
the document, what were the expectations of the party
when they came into this, what is the culture,” he
said. “Then he applies New York contract law — was
there an offer, was there acceptance, was there fraud.
Sharia law comes into play to explain what this is all
about.”
Such a case in a Florida court, where a judge is
considering a dispute between the officers of a
mosque, already has led to accusations that sharia has
infiltrated the U.S. court system. Leading the charge
is Adam Hasner, a Jewish Republican and veteran state
politician who is mounting a bid for the state’s U.S.
Senate seat in 2012.
“We need to speak out,” Hasner said at a recent
rally. “We need to make sure that these threats do not
continue to grow, do not continue to infiltrate our
state and our country.”
Abraham Foxman, the Anti-Defamation League’s
national director, said he often encounters Jews
concerned about sharia.
“I’ve had questions from Jewish audiences: What is
the ADL doing from stopping sharia from taking over
the country?” he said.
Foxman said he politely counters that there is no
such threat, except perhaps to the American tradition
of accommodating religious observance.
“People don’t know what sharia means, it’s a
foreign word,” Foxman told JTA. The proposed anti-sharia
laws, he said, are “camouflaged bigotry.”
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