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Sept. 11 Funds Aid Leftist Groups; Critics Charge 'Abuse'
Marc Morano, CNSNews.com
Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2001
One of the largest relief funds set up to help the victims of the Sept. 11
attacks has awarded more than $1 million to left-wing political groups
devoted to causes such as "hate crime" legislation, expanded welfare, gun
control and nationalized health care.
According to United Way CEO Brian Gallagher, September 11th Fund has received
donor pledges totaling $334 million, with $250 million already collected and
$47 million distributed. The fund is a project of United Way and New York
Community Trust.

But critics say many of the groups receiving charitable contributions from
the fund have little or nothing to do with helping victims of the attacks,
and records show contributions are used to pay for things including ethnic
media, office equipment and massage therapy.

Victim Relief or Children's Defense?

In one case, September 11th Fund awarded a grant of $31,000 to Children's
Defense Fund (CDF).

CDF has been at the forefront of lobbying for "children's rights," gun
control and expanded welfare programs.

According to the fund's financial documents, the grant to CDF was "to get out
information about subsidized health insurance expanded in response to
September 11th."

But this and other grants are drawing criticism. "Giving money to
organizations that have controversial political agendas like CDF's and not
directly assisting victims' families is just flat out wrong," said John
Carlisle of the Capital Research Center, a conservative charity watchdog
group.

The Hillary Connection

"Children's Defense Fund is a major advocate for the vast expansion of the
federal welfare state and their affiliation with Hillary Clinton is well
known," he added. Clinton served as a CDF board member between 1986 and 1992.

CDF did not return repeated phone calls requesting comment on its grant from
September 11 Fund.

The Intersection of Disaster Relief and 'Hate Crime'

September 11th Fund awarded $30,000 to Asian American Legal Defense &
Educational Fund (AALDEF) to provide "legal help and preventative measures
against hate violence."

AALDEF's Web site states the mission of the group is to "achieve social and
economic justice for Asian Americans and all Americans."

It also states that AALDEF is "concerned about reports of harassment,
intimidation and violence against South Asian Americans, particularly
Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Sikhs and other Indians in New York City."

The group's goals include stopping "racial profiling based on ... race,
religion or national origin" and defending racial-preference programs.

AALDEF is a member of Alliance for Justice, a consortium of left-of-center
groups including National Organization for Women Legal Defense Fund, National
Center for Lesbian Rights, National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action
League, Planned Parenthood and Earth Justice Legal Defense Fund.

Margaret Fung, executive director of AALDEF, told CNSNews.com the $30,000
grant was "to hire community organizers to assist in providing information
and legal assistance to victims of hate violence, especially in the South
Asian community here in New York City" and to fight "workplace
discrimination."

Fung defended the use of the grant from September 11th Fund for the "hate
crime" program. "They are victims of the tragedy because the kinds of
incidents that occurred had a direct impact on individuals. It would not have
occurred but for the attacks on the WTC," she explained.

Arab-American Family Support Center (AAFSC) received a grant of $60,000 from
September 11th Fund "to provide emergency assistance" and combat "attacks on
Arab-Americans."

AAFSC spokesman Mahdis Keshavarz told CNSNews.com the grant money was going
to a hotline to help fight "hate crime or biases" perpetrated against Arabs
in New York.

Keshavarz said the problem involved "women being afraid to go to the grocery
store, to take their children to school, so the grant is basically targeted
at furthering the programs and specifically the hotline."

Subsidizing Critics of 'Sympathetic' American Press

September 11th Fund gave a grant of $81,150 to Independent Press Association
(IPA) "to use community and ethnic newspapers to distribute information about
victim assistance to immigrants and non-English speaking people and to
prevent bias-related violence," according to the fund.

IPA describes itself as supporting "independent publications committed to
social justice ..."

An undated statement issued after Sept. 11 by Abby Scher, director of IPA,
was headlined with the words "IPA wins relief," and referred to the grant's
beneficiary as "New York's Endangered Ethnic Press." Scher called the grant
from September 11th Fund "only a drop in the bucket of what's needed ..."

IPA's Internet site features an article titled "Observers Cast Doubt on the
Objectivity of the American Press."

The article criticizes the American media coverage of the terrorist attacks
and military action in Afghanistan for allegedly being pro-American. The
article states that the American media "did not hide their sympathy for
Americans and in particular New Yorkers in this difficult period."

A top official with National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC), a legal watchdog
group in Washington, called it "a shame" that so much money was being
disbursed to groups with a clear "political or ideological agenda."

"The real victims of September 11th are the victims of this politicized
process," said NLPC Chairman Ken Boehm. "Every dollar spent for a group that
has a political agenda is a dollar that can't be spent for the real need of
the victims."

Phones, Massage Therapy and 'Environmental Justice'

Another beneficiary of September 11 Fund is Legal Services of New York, which
received a grant of $40,000 "to replace phones, computers and other office
equipment destroyed in the attack."

According to spokeswoman Edwina Martin, the group has an annual operating
budget of $33 million and gets its funding from federal, state and local
governments as well as private grants.

Martin said the $40,000 grant was necessary because, "If we don't have our
phones and computers, we can't do anything, and people are left with
nothing."

She noted that the offices were "fairly close" to the World Trade Center, and
that "equipment wasn't functioning." Martin said Legal Services was providing
civil legal help to individuals facing eviction because of unemployment.

Other grants given by September 11th Fund include one for $57,575 to New York
Lawyers for the Public Interest, a "disability rights" and "environmental
justice" organization.

September 11 Fund documents show the money is "to help families of
maintenance and restaurant workers who died at the WTC deal with rent, credit
card debt and other legal and financial problems."

New York Immigration Coalition collected a $450,000 grant to help "access
relief assistance to immigrants harmed by the disaster." The group's stated
purpose is to secure "immigrant rights."

Coalition Executive Director Margie McHugh has previously lobbied for
expanded government welfare programs and wrote a 1997 essay titled
"Republican Proposals on Immigrants – A Windfall Profit for the Feds, a
Disaster for New York."

Carlisle speculated that Americans would not have given so generously had
they known that so much of the money raised for the Sept. 11 victims was
going to be diverted to groups with sharply defined political causes.

'Abuse of Trust'

"The public expects that the money that is given to these organizations goes
to help the families, and clearly a lot of these organization are politically
controversial organizations which are doing little or no real relief work on
behalf of those victims' families," he said.

"It's an abuse of trust on the part of the September 11th Fund."

Not all September 11 Fund grant recipients have such clearly defined
political goals. Olive Leaf Wholeness Center received a grant of $100,000 to
provide "massage therapy to rescue workers, medical examiners, staff and
victims' family members at various relief locations," according to the fund.

Olive Leaf's goals include creating "an enriching, humane, and ecologically
sound healing environment" to "start people on their journey toward
wholeness." The September 11th Fund grant will go to "provide stress
reduction bodywork" to rescue and relief personnel.

Carlisle believes this money was misspent as well. "If these rescue workers
want a massage, I think they already know where to go. They don't need a
$100,000 grant from the September 11th Fund," he said.

"When they start straying into massage therapy for rescue workers or getting
involved in hate crimes, that is not what these people are giving for,"
Carlisle added. "It smacks of them using September 11 to advance their
organization's agenda and that is, under the circumstances, shameful."

Jeanine Moss, spokeswoman for September 11th Fund, told CNSNews.com the
ideology of the nonprofit groups receiving the grants was irrelevant.

"People are concerned with the victims of the crimes. That is why millions of
people opened their hearts and wallets to this cause. I don't think people
are saying, 'Oh gosh, I don't want to help them if the person who is helping
them might not have all the same values I have,'" she said.

"Our job is not to judge what an organization's opinions are. Our job is to
help victims of the September 11th attack."

Legal Aid Again

September 11th Fund recently was criticized for a $171,000 grant it gave to
Legal Aid Society (LAS), a group fighting for expanded government programs
and welfare rights in New York City.

LAS is also defending a number of detainees held on immigration charges in
connection with the terror attacks.

Steven Banks, spokesman for LAS, maintains the men are being held on civil
violations and are not criminal suspects. He added that if any of the
detainees were charged in connection with the terror attacks, LAS would
"withdraw from the case."

But the Immigration and Naturalization Service said that just because a
detainee has not been charged with a crime, it doesn't mean that person is
not part of the government's investigation into the terror attacks.

"Individuals arrested on immigration charges in connection with the 9-11
investigation were charged because of the immigration violations, but clearly
were arrested because of a lead developed from the investigation into the
terrorist attacks," INS spokesman Russell Bergeron told CNSNews.com.

"The American people fully expect that if we have someone in custody, that we
will not release that person until the investigation has determined that that
person is not linked to the ongoing investigation," he added.

Officer Stephen Jacobson of Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, where
the detainees are being held, said he could not provide any information about
Legal Aid's clients without first knowing their names.

Legal Aid did not respond to repeated requests to release the names of the
detainees they are defending.




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