http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?print=yes
<http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?print=yes&id=24565> &id=24565
 
Building Bridges, Aiding Jihad 
by Robert
<http://www.humanevents.com/search.php?author_name=Robert+Spencer> Spencer
<file:///C:/search.php?author_name=Robert+Spencer> (more by this author)
Posted 01/22/2008 ET




Maybe he was just trying to help out a charity. In 2004, the Islamic
American Relief Agency approached former Congressman Mark Deli Siljander
(R-MI, 1981-1987) for help: the group had been placed on a Senate Finance
Committee list of organizations suspected of supporting terrorism, and
wanted Siljander to lobby for its reinstatement as an “approved government
contractor.” 

Islamic charities have long been a subject of government scrutiny. Leaders
of the Holy Land Foundation, one of the leading Muslim charities in America,
were recently tried in Dallas for allegedly funneling contributions to the
jihad terrorist group Hamas, in a contentious court battle that ended in a
mistrial. The case will be retried. But Muslim spokesmen and advocacy groups
have long insisted that Islamic charities are being unfairly targeted,
consistent with an anti-Muslim bias they allege to exist among law
enforcement officials. 

So it may be that Siljander, when approached by the IARA, thought they
deserved a fair shake. For his thought was evolving, and his sympathy with
Muslims and Islam growing. In a revealing November 2007 address
<http://www.urbantulsa.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A18513> , Siljander
described how, as a congressman, he was angry when the Qur’an was read
during the National Prayer Breakfast. He wrote to the Breakfast’s emcee:
“How can you read the book of the devil at a prayer breakfast?”

Afterward, however, he began to read the Qur’an himself, and was impressed:
“I found out that Jesus was mentioned in the Quran 110 times, either
directly or indirectly, and there was not a single word about Jesus that was
horrible, disgraceful or, in my opinion, inconsistent with what the Bible
says about him” -- hardly a mainstream view among either Muslims or
Christians. He spoke of wanting to “create a movement, a dynamic” to bring
Christians and Muslims together.

One way he did this was to work for the IARA. But according to his
indictment <http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2008/January/08_nsd_029.html>  for
money laundering and obstruction of justice, released Wednesday, he ended up
helping that organization conceal funds it had stolen from the U.S. Agency
for International Development, and lied to FBI agents about the nature of
his relationship with the IARA. 
And the IARA itself sent around $130,000 to bank accounts controlled by its
parent organization, the Islamic Relief Agency (ISRA), in Peshawar, Pakistan
-- where the money went to fund the activities of jihadist Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar, an ally of the Taliban and Al-Qaeda. Also, according to the
Treasury Department
<http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2008/January/08_nsd_029.html> , “IARA is
formerly affiliated with Maktab Al-Khidamat (MK), which was co-founded and
financed by UBL [Osama bin Laden] and is the precursor organization of al
Qaida.” The IARA has also funneled money to Hamas.

John F. Wood, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, declared:
“An organization right here in the American heartland allegedly sent funds
to Pakistan for the benefit of a specially designated global terrorist with
ties to al-Qaeda and the Taliban…. The indictment also alleges that a former
congressman engaged in money laundering and obstruction of a federal
investigation in an effort to disguise IARA’s misuse of taxpayer money that
the government had provided for humanitarian purposes.”

The fact that Siljander lied to the FBI suggests that he had no illusions
about what he had gotten into. Still, it may be that his indictment is the
bitter fruit of his naivete. Siljander would not be the first naïve
Westerner to establish, out of zeal to build bridges of respect between
Muslims and Christians, ties with Muslims who had a far deeper connection to
the global jihad than he would ever have imagined. All too many of those
have been operating what appeared to be completely reputable charitable
organizations. Siljander’s experience should also serve as a cautionary tale
for all who pursue “bridge-building” and “dialogue”: while these may be
laudable, they are beset with pitfalls, and the universal purveying of the
politically correct fiction that Islam is a religion of peace that has been
hijacked by a tiny minority of extremists has only had the effect of leading
many to grow complacent about many areas in which jihadists are actively
operating -- notably, those Islamic charities. Were there a more forthright
and honest public discussion of the elements of Islam that jihadists use
among peaceful Muslims to recruit and motivate terrorists, Siljander may
never have gotten into the fix he’s in.

The best outcome of the Mark Siljander indictment would be a newly vigorous
investigation of Islamic charities in the U.S., and the framing of new laws
that would require complete transparency as to their funding. It may be too
late for Mark Siljander, but it isn’t too late for the rest of us.

 



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