Radical Islam Behind Bars 

Islamist prison chaplains face renewed challenge. 

by Stephen Schwartz 

11/09/2007 12:00:00 AM 

 

AS REPORTED AT LENGTH in THE WEEKLY STANDARD--the latest commentary appeared
<http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/014/122ozozu.
asp> here
<http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/014/122ozozu.
asp>
<http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/014/122ozozu.
asp> on September 16, 2007--federal, state, county, and city prison
officials have wrestled since the horror of 9/11 with the presence of
radical Muslim chaplains in our country's correctional systems. To the shock
of most Americans, when they hear about it, missionaries of the
ultrafundamentalist Wahhabi sect, financed by Saudi Arabia and supporting
terrorism, have a monopoly on Muslim chaplaincies behind bars. Similar
patterns of "authorized" prison infiltration by Islamists are visible in
Britain, Russia, and other countries.

The U.S. Justice Department and related authorities are disinclined to take
serious action about this problem, even though a jail is the last place
Muslim radical recruiters should be allowed free access, much less
employment under the pretext of religious services and counseling to
inmates. As thoroughly established in the public record, Saudi-subsidized
and Wahhabi-trained chaplains preach extremism, including contempt for
Western law, to convicts. This contrasts rather obviously with the presumed
role of prison chaplains in seeking rehabilitation of lawbreakers. 

Moderate Muslim groups have collected stacks of letters from disgruntled
prisoners describing sermons in favor of al Qaeda, discrimination and
threats against dissident Muslims, confiscation of anti-radical Muslim
literature, and similar abuse by Islamist chaplains in prisons. In the
absence of relief from penal authorities, however, Muslim victims of radical
Islam in America's jailhouses have been compelled to file legal complaints
that, until a few weeks ago, were routinely dismissed. 

The main such case has involved a small 

group of Shia Muslims in the New York prisons, who demand separate religious
services, away from Wahhabi control and incitement of anti-Shia hatred by
the chaplains. The Shias allege government violation of their rights to
equal use of public facilities, as well as pro-Wahhabi favoritism, which is
presumably illegal under the First Amendment. In 2006, the Shia prisoners'
suit against the state of New York, entered in federal court, was thrown
out--not for the first time. 

But in a new and promising development, three members of the federal Second
Circuit Appeals Court have overturned the 2006 decision and sent the Shia
case, now designated Orafan et al v. Rashid et al, back to the district
court for trial. The appeals judges--Roger Miner, José Cabranes, and Paul
Crotty--held on September 28, 2007, that issues of religious freedom and the
obligation of the prison system to act fairly are unresolved, and must be
fully heard. 

Reinstatement of the complaint by the Shia prisoners against the Wahhabi
chaplains in New York is not only commendable, it is of great significance
for the security of our country. While some observers may try to turn the
New York controversy into a parallel of Sunni-Shia conflict in Iraq, that is
only a dramatic detail, not the essence of the case. The real issue is the
power of radical Muslim chaplains and the discrimination against
non-Wahhabis they exercise with impunity. Unfortunately, the state of New
York has established Wahhabism as "official Islam" for convicts. Positive
resolution of the issue means more than guaranteeing the rights of Shia
Muslims who are doing time--it requires that radical chaplains be driven out
of American prisons. 

Removal of Islamist demagogues from such sensitive positions in key American
institutions is long overdue. We should hope that a full hearing for the
Shia plaintiffs in their challenge to the New York Islamist prison chaplains
will help end a flagrant and dangerous injustice. 

Stephen Schwartz is a frequent contributor to THE WEEKLY STANDARD. 

 

 
<http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/014/324puasg.
asp> 



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