http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/13/world/middleeast/origins-of-provocative-video-shrouded.html?_r=1&ref=global-home&pagewanted=all

Origins of Provocative Video Are Shrouded
By ADAM NAGOURNEY
Published: September 12, 2012 
LOS ANGELES — The film that set off violence across North Africa was made in 
obscurity somewhere in the sprawl of Southern California, and promoted by a 
network of right-wing Christians with a history of animosity directed toward 
Muslims. When a 14-minute trailer of it — all that may actually exist — was 
posted on YouTube in June, it was barely noticed. 

Enlarge This Image
 
Zoubeir Souissi/Reuters
Tunisians burned the American flag during a protest outside the United States 
Embassy in Tunis on Wednesday. 

Steve Klein of Hemet, Calif., is one of the film’s producers. 
But when the video, with its almost comically amateurish production values, was 
translated into Arabic and reposted twice on YouTube in the days before Sept. 
11, and promoted by leaders of the Coptic diaspora in the United States, it 
drew nearly one million views and set off bloody demonstrations. 

The history of the film — who financed it; how it was made; and perhaps most 
important, how it was translated into Arabic and posted on YouTube to Muslim 
viewers — was shrouded Wednesday in tales of a secret Hollywood screening; a 
director who may or may not exist, and used a false name if he did; and actors 
who appeared, thanks to computer technology, to be traipsing through Middle 
Eastern cities. One of its main producers, Steve Klein, a Vietnam veteran whose 
son was severely wounded in Iraq, is notorious across California for his 
involvement with anti-Muslim actions, from the courts to schoolyards to a 
weekly show broadcast on Christian radio in the Middle East. 

Yet as much of the world was denouncing the violence that had spread across the 
Middle East, Mr. Klein — an insurance salesman in Hemet, Calif., a small town 
two hours east of here — proclaimed the video a success at portraying what he 
has long argued was the infamy of the Muslim world, even as he chuckled at the 
film’s amateur production values. 

“We have reached the people that we want to reach,” he said in an interview. 
“And I’m sure that out of the emotion that comes out of this, a small fraction 
of those people will come to understand just how violent Muhammad was, and also 
for the people who didn’t know that much about Islam. If you merely say 
anything that’s derogatory about Islam, then they immediately go to violence, 
which I’ve experienced.” 

Mr. Klein has a long history of making controversial and erroneous claims about 
Islam. He said the film had been shown at a screening at a theater “100 yards 
or so” from Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood over the summer, drawing 
what he suggested was a depressingly small audience. He declined to specify 
what theater might have shown it, and theater owners in the vicinity of the 
busy strip said they had no record of any such showing. 

The amateurish video opens with scenes of Egyptian security forces standing 
idle as Muslims pillage and burn the homes of Coptic Christians. Then it cuts 
to cartoonish scenes depicting the Prophet Muhammad as a child of uncertain 
parentage, a buffoon, a womanizer, a homosexual, a child molester and a greedy, 
bloodthirsty thug. 

Even as Mr. Klein described his role in the film as incidental, James Horn, a 
friend who has worked with Mr. Klein in anti-Muslim activities for several 
years, said he believed Mr. Klein was involved in providing technical 
assistance to the film and advice on the script. Mr. Horn said he called Mr. 
Klein on Wednesday. “I said, ‘Steve, did you do this?’ He said, ‘Yep.’ ” 

As the movie, “Innocence of Muslims,” drew attention across the globe, it was 
unclear whether a full version exists. Executives at Hollywood agencies said 
they had never heard of it. Hollywood unions said they had no involvement. 
Casting directors said they did not recognize the actors in the 14-minute 
YouTube clip that purports to be a trailer for a longer film. Production 
offices had no records for a movie of that name. There was a 2009 casting call 
in BackStage, however, for a film called “Desert Warrior” whose producer is 
listed as Sam Bassiel. 

That name is quite similar to the one that Mr. Klein, in the interview, said 
was the director of his film. He spelled it Sam Basile, though he added that 
was not the director’s real name. Mr. Klein said he met Mr. Basile while 
scouting mosques in Southern California, “locating who I thought were 
terrorists.” 

An actress who played the role of a mother in the film said in an interview 
that the director had originally told cast members that the film was “Desert 
Warriors” and would depict ancient life. Now, she said, she feels duped, angry 
and sad. “When I looked at the trailer, it was nothing like what we had done. 
There was not even a character named Muhammad in what we originally put 
together,” said the actress, who asked that her name not be used for fear of 
her safety. 

She said she had spoken on Wednesday to the film’s director, whose last name 
she said was spelled Basil. She said he told her that he made the film because 
he was upset with Muslims killing innocent people. 

The original idea for the film, Mr. Klein said, was to lure hard-core Muslims 
into a screening of the film thinking they were seeing a movie celebrating 
Islam. “And when they came in they would see this movie and see the truth, the 
facts, the evidence and the proof,” he said. “So I said, yeah, that’s a good 
idea.” 

Among the film’s promoters was Terry Jones, the Gainesville, Fla., preacher 
whose burning of the Koran led to widespread protests in Afghanistan. Mr. Jones 
said Wednesday that he has not seen the full video. 

Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called Mr. 
Jones on Wednesday and asked him to consider withdrawing his support for the 
video. Mr. Jones described the conversation as “cordial,” but said he had not 
decided what he would do because he had yet to see the full film. 

The Southern Poverty Law Center said Mr. Klein taught combat training to 
members of California’s Church at Kaweah, which the center described as a “a 
combustible mix of guns, extreme antigovernment politics and religious 
extremism” and an institution that had an “obsession with Muslims.” 

Warren Campbell, the pastor of the church, said that Mr. Klein had come to the 
congregation twice to talk about Islam. He said the law center’s report on his 
church was filled “with distortions and lies.” The center also said that Mr. 
Klein was the founder of Courageous Christians United, which conducts 
demonstrations outside abortion clinics, Mormon temples and mosques. Mr. Klein 
also has ties to the Minuteman movement. 

Mr. Horn said Mr. Klein was motivated by the near-death of his son, who Mr. 
Horn said had served in the United States Army in Iraq and was wounded in 
Falluja. “That cemented Steve’s feelings about it,” he said. 

Although Mr. Horn described Mr. Klein as connected to the Coptic community in 
Los Angeles — and Morris Sadek, the leader of a Washington-based Coptic 
organization, had promoted the film on the Web — Bishop Serapion of the Coptic 
Orthodox Diocese of Los Angeles said he did not know of Mr. Klein. “We condemn 
this film,” he said. “Our Christian teaching is we have to respect people of 
other faiths.” 


Reporting was contributed by Brooks Barnes, Michael Cieply and Ian Lovett from 
Los Angeles; Jason Henry from Gainesville, Fla.; Lizette Alvarez from Miami; 
Serge F. Kovaleski and Andrea Elliott from New York; and Elisabeth Bumiller 
from Washington. Kitty Bennett and Jack Styczynski contributed research from 
New York. 

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: September 12, 2012


An earlier version of this article mispelled the name of a bishop of the Coptic 
Orthodox Diocese of Los Angeles. It is Serapion, not Serapian.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke