http://www.defenddemocracy.org/in_the_media/in_the_media_show.htm?doc_id=203
279
<http://www.defenddemocracy.org/in_the_media/in_the_media_show.htm?doc_id=20
3279&attrib_id=7378> &attrib_id=7378

 

U.S. Muslims as patriots 

 

By 2003 FDD Student Fellow, Oubai Shahbandar, Oubai Shahbandar

 

Arizona Republic 

October 11, 2003 

Web site:
http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/eastvalleyopinions/articles/1011sha
hbandar1011.html 

 

Where is the outrage in the American Muslim community? 

 

Two years after 9/11, the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), the
American Muslim Council (AMC), the Muslim Students Association (MSA) and
similar groups are still respectfully regarded as the voices of American
Muslims, despite the fact that members of these organizations have been
apologists for extremism and even linked to terrorist groups. Almost no one
- Muslim or non-Muslim - dares criticize these groups for their positions or
their associations.

 

What's more, these groups shamelessly attack, demean and attempt to
intimidate Muslims who are loyal to this great nation. They continue to
attempt to persuade American Muslims to view themselves not as patriots but
as victims. 

 

Muslim community newspapers are silent about these issues. They write
nothing about the MSA-directed groups that stage anti-American rallies,
attack people who speak out about the pernicious activities of the Saudis,
or simply challenge the talking points of the establishment Muslim groups on
anything taking place in the Arab and Islamic worlds. 

 

In particular, proud Muslims who are also proud Americans need to tell the
truth about Wahhabism, the intolerant and militant brand of Islam being
exported from Saudi Arabia and which is defended in the United States by
CAIR, AMC and MSA.

 

I know about these issues firsthand. As a Muslim student at Arizona State
University who abhors Wahhabism, I've been the victim of MSA's hate
campaigns. For my efforts in organizing a "Support our Troops" rally the day
that Operation Iraqi Freedom started, I was told by several MSA members that
I was "going to hell." In a letter to the editor in the campus paper, the
president of the MSA even accused me of being guilty of bigotry toward Arabs
and Muslims. In his view, it was anti-Muslim of me to want to see Iraqi
Muslims liberated from the oppression of Saddam Hussein, who has murdered
more Muslims than anyone else in this century, and perhaps in any century. 

 

Terrorism has not been far from the Arizona State University campus. On May
9, a Saudi student at ASU, Muhammad Al-Gurashi, was arrested; he had been
the driver who escorted convicted terrorist supporter Faisal Al-Salmi to
President Bush's Crawford, Texas, ranch on what were apparently
reconnaissance missions. 

 

In April, the home of Hassan Alrafea, president of the ASU chapter of MSA,
was raided and his computers were confiscated by the FBI. Another radical
Muslim student at ASU, Ahmad Saad Nasim, staged a "hate crime" two days
after the 9/11 attacks. Nasim wrote "Die Muslim Die" on his forehead and
wrapped a plastic bag over his head and laid down in the school parking lot
waiting for the police to discover him. Incredibly, the campus MSA chapter
continues to defend him.

 

Nor is ASU the only school with this kind of problem. The MSA has hundreds
of chapters at schools across the country; most of them are working against
America's vital interests. For example, in February, Sami Al Hussayen, a
Saudi citizen and former president of the University of Idaho Muslim
Students Association, was arrested by federal officials for his role in
raising funds for al-Qaida's terror network. The national MSA organization,
of course, rallied to his defense.

 

And U.S. Army Sgt. Asan Akbar, the American Muslim accused of throwing a
grenade into the living quarters of fellow soldiers last March in Kuwait,
killing two and wounding 15, attended the student mosque at the University
of California, Davis, which was controlled by MSA. The MSA has yet to
forthrightly and unequivocally denounce that act of terrorism.

 

Off campus, the leaders of CAIR and similar groups also have been active.
The U.S District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia handed down a
long list of terrorist-related charges this August against Soliman Biheiri,
a senior figure in the American Muslim Council. Bassem K. Khafagi, CAIR's
former community affairs director, pled guilty Sept. 10 to committing bank
and visa fraud while running an Islamic charity that the federal government
has deemed a front for associates of Osama bin Laden.

It is the challenge and responsibility of the American Muslim community to
confront the evil rot in our midst. We know who among us preach death and
destruction for America and its citizens. But many of my fellow Muslims
remain trapped in a delusory groupthink. We ignore or even deny the
possibility that fellow Muslims could be guilty of treason and terror. 

 

It is now up to a new generation of American-born Muslims to show our pride
in being Americans, and our willingness to advance our chosen brand of
moderate Islam, not the Wahhabi despotism backed by our so-called leaders.
The sooner that Muslim Americans come to realize the error of following
groups like CAIR, AMC and MSA, the sooner we can be welcomed and respected
wholeheartedly by the rest of America. It is our nation, too; we must expose
and denounce those who would destroy it. 

Oubai Shahbandar is a senior at Arizona State University and an
Undergraduate Fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies in
Washington, D.C.

 

 



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