http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/global.php?id=980459
 "Judeocentrism" - A New Slur?
Stephen Schwartz,  The Family Security Foundation, Inc.,  16 May 2007
  <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/assets/home/schwartz_thumb_B.jpg> 
 
Are you aware that a nefarious movement to subvert a more moderate version
of Islam is promoted by operatives associated with the Saudi-Wahhabi death
cult? FSM Contributing Editor Stephen Schwartz' report shatters any illusion
that the Global War on Terror is an overrated myth.
 
 
The narrative that follows may be considered excessively complex, and for
that I crave the reader's mercy. Those of us committed to moderate Islam
have not had an easy time of late. 
 
Anybody who has read my writings, or perused the website of the institution
I helped found, the Center for Islamic Pluralism (www.islamicpluralism.org
<http://www.islamicpluralism.org/> ), knows that I have consistently
defended Balkan Muslims - Bosnians and Albanians -  as indigenous European
followers of the faith of Muhammad, representing an Islam that can
contribute loyally and productively to Western society.


In The Weekly Standard just ten days ago, I wrote
<http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/013/612zecct.
asp> The Wahhabis are up to no good in southern Europe; there I described in
detail a revived, current attempt at subversion of moderate Islam in the
Balkan region, by agents of the Saudi-Wahhabi death cult.

 

Then, on May 8, came news of the Fort Dix terror conspiracy in which four
Albanian adherents of Wahhabism  - easily identified as such by their
untrimmed beards -  were among six men charged with preparation of a
jihadist attack on American service personnel.

 

And a day after that, on May 9, I published a column on FSM entitled CAIR
Feels  <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/homeland.php?id=960668> the
Heat, about the efforts of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)
to pursue opposition research  against me, while they complain about all who
criticize them from within Muslim ranks.

 
What brings these incidents together, aside from temporal proximity? Is
there a connection between ideological aggression in faraway countries,
homicidal plotting on our soil, and attempts, also inside the U.S., to
silence adversaries of the Wahhabi lobby?   Is a unified radical-Islamist
counter-offensive underway?  
 
Radical Muslims claim all Muslims owe their primary loyalty to a single
global  'umma or community. This view is supported by an aggressive
minority, since Muslims are as divided by history, culture, and language as
Christians and even Jews. But it seems undeniable that within Islam
worldwide, especially where the Wahhabis scheme to take control of all
Sunnis, money is disbursed and actions are planned in a coordinated manner. 
Indeed, I have argued for some time that Sunni radicals are engaged in a new
campaign, reaching across borders, continents, and oceans, with the aim of
exporting the tensions, if not the terror, seen in Iraq and Afghanistan. In
those countries, Muslim-on-Muslim bloodshed often appears to overshadow the
atrocities perpetrated against the U.S.-led coalition. 
That said, for all Americans, including American Muslims, the safety of our
troops must come first, whether in Fallujah or at Fort Dix.
 
But the "horns of the devil" represented by Wahhabi machinations have become
even more visible on the southeast European front. In FSM last November, I
called attention to the alarming news that the Muslim Public Affairs Council
(MPAC), a group that in my experience parallels CAIR in its production of
distortions and insults against those who challenge them, had invited
Bosnian Muslim cleric Mustafa Ceric to address their annual convention in
Southern California.
 
At that time,  Ceric was in the middle of the nascent controversy over
Wahhabism in Bosnia-Hercegovina. Prominent Muslim intellectuals came out
strongly against the importation of violent extremism into their community,
and rural Bosnian Muslims soon began driving the radicals  from their
village mosques. These events have been documented and posted  by the Center
for Islamic Pluralism. 
Ceric never showed up for the MPAC affair in Southern California, but back
in Sarajevo, he had begun wavering.   The man who had spoken out for a
Bosnian Islam in a European context, I was told, was worried about losing
the support of the Saudis. Further, extremists from England, the center of
radical Islam in Western Europe, had descended on Bosnia.
 
Not that the Saudis, or their radical puppets in Britain, ever did much to
help the Bosnians, either during the 1992-95 war or afterward,  when
terrorists used Sarajevo  to set up a local office  for the charities
supporting al-Qaida  while trying to convert the Bosnian Muslims to the
Wahhabi creed. 
But in recent months, apparently in response to rising anti-Wahhabi
resentment, someone from the Gulf reportedly dropped several million dollars
in cash on Sarajevo's Islamic authorities.
 
And so, Mustafa Ceric announced not long ago  that antagonism toward the
Wahhabis is detrimental to all the Muslims of Bosnia-Hercegovina  and
reflects Islamophobic trends in the rest of Europe.  But Ceric seems to have
thought he could peddle a pro-Wahhabi message at home,  while delivering
honeyed speeches abroad.
Next Tuesday, May 22, he is scheduled to lecture at the Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars in Washington, an official U.S. government
forum, on "The Art of Tolerance."  
 
There's more: the same weekend  that my reportage appeared in The Weekly
Standard, I was brutally attacked in Preporod (Revival),  a rather dull
weekly that is the personal organ of Mustafa Ceric.  
A long diatribe assailed me in the "oppo"  idiom I had described in my
recent FSM column:  mainly, for my leftist past, which ended 23 years ago.
But the article also introduced a new and obnoxious element, referring to me
as "Judeocentric."
 
How clever to invent a new entry in the lexicon of hate!  And how entirely
and primitively Balkan! But what does "Judeocentric" mean?   I am a Muslim;
my father was Jewish, my mother Christian, and I had no religious
upbringing.  Islam is my first and so far my only religion.  I write about
Muslim-Jewish dialogue in a manner intended to increase respect between the
two communities of believers,  as well as toward Christians. I have also
written positively  about the history of Jewish-Muslim relations in the
Balkans, with the enthusiastic approval of Balkan Muslim leaders, since the
American Jewish leadership played a major role  in saving Bosnia-Hercegovina
and Kosovo from aggression.
But in the Preporod article,  "Judeocentric" was linked to the new
vocabulary of prejudice in America,  which seeks to present neoconservatives
as a Zionist cabal  that has seized control of American foreign policy.  In
truth, the neoconservatives were prominent among those responsible for
preventing the whole Bosnian Muslim community from ending up in a mass grave
or as refugees.   But some Bosnian Muslims seem to have short memories,  or
none.
 
And here is the real shocker:  the screed against me and my "Judeocentrism,"
published in a distant land and in a language few Americans can read, was
signed by a faculty member  at the U.S. Naval Academy (emphasis added) in
Annapolis, named Ermin Sinanovic. Sinanovic, a professor of political
science, also filled his text with crude allegations against the Bush
administration.
           
These are questions I believe are posed  by this contretemps:
 

Why should some Bosnian Wahhabis care so much about me as to launch an
attack now?

 

How does someone teaching at Annapolis "moonlight" as an ideological hit man
and author of Americophobic invective?

 

Is it appropriate for Mustafa Ceric  to speak at the Woodrow Wilson Center
on "tolerance" when his personal weekly  practices gross intolerance  by
introducing its new Jew-baiting slur, "Judeocentrism?"

 

I think the answer to the first question is easy:  this is one struggle with
many fronts, and those who participate outside the U.S. will be targeted, if
only by obloquy, wherever they are found. Nevertheless, the material
published by the Bosnian Wahhabis to counter my work has the flavor of an
export product from the American Wahhabis, who doubtless hope their stale
"oppo" will finally have an impact. 
 
So far, the effect has been exactly contrary  to what the Wahhabis, both
American and Bosnian, must have expected. 
Leading Muslim figures in Sarajevo rushed to assure me of their support; one
prominent academic,  whose name must be kept private for now, wrote me,


"there will always exist a critical mass of reasonable and well-disposed
people who will never forget  your generous help and support,  offered to
the offended and crushed people of Bosnia  at the most critical moments in
our entire history. They will never let you down©  don't let a handful of
mercenaries and ignorant folk  make you hesitate to finish the blessed job
you've started.   The game is not even close to ending© May God grant you
good health and strength in this fight."

 

Professor Sinanovic and his employment by the Naval Academy  will be
explored in good time.  But Ceric stayed in Sarajevo last year,  and missed
the scandal his appearance at the MPAC convention  would have caused;
perhaps that humiliation for the MPAC gang  produced this counter-blow.  I
think Ceric should stay in Sarajevo again and forget about the Woodrow
Wilson Center  as a place to offer ameliorative rhetoric about "tolerance."
Unfortunately, it is probably too late to rescind his invitation, which is
what he seems, at this juncture, to merit.
 
(Next week: further thoughts  on Mustafa Ceric  and his Washington visit.)
 
# #   



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



--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: [email protected]
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Reply via email to