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Ibn Warraq  
     


 
September 13, 2010 4:00 A.M.One Imam, Multiple  Messages 
The truth about the main  figure behind the Ground Zero  mosque.


 
 
This  is the first installment of a two-part essay. Part two will appear on 
 National Review Online  tomorrow. 
Journalist and author Fareed Zakaria has made  some grave accusations 
against those who oppose the building of the  Islamic center near Ground Zero, 
and has predicated his own approval of  the project on the moderateness of 
Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf. Zakaria wrote  that Abdul Rauf “has said one or two 
things about American foreign policy  that strike me as overly critical — but it
’s stuff you could read on The  Huffington Post any day.” 
Yes, indeed — you are likely to read similar “stuff” on the  Huffington 
Post, since Rauf has written there. But how can that  possibly constitute a 
convincing defense of Rauf? Many Huffington  Post writers are anti-American, 
and believe that the U.S. had 9/11  “coming to it.” They still have not 
learned that 9/11 had nothing to do  with U.S. foreign policy. 
Rauf evidently has not learned that lesson either. On Sept. 30, 2001,  60 
Minutes host Ed Bradley asked him if he thought the U.S.  deserved the 9/11 
attacks. Rauf replied, “I wouldn’t say that the United  States deserved what 
happened, but the United States’ policies were an  accessory to the crime 
that happened. . . . We have been an accessory to a  lot of — of innocent 
lives dying in the world. In fact, it — in the most  direct sense, Osama bin 
Laden is made in the U.S.A.” 
It is worth noting Rauf’s words carefully. The atrocity is  characterized 
in the passive: “a crime that happened.” This allows Rauf to  avoid stating 
that it was Islamists who committed it. In his book  What’s Right with 
Islam, Rauf even objects to the term “Islamism”  — one that was actually 
concocted to avoid indicting Islam directly —  since, he argues, it falsely 
implies 
that Islam is the source of the  militancy. 
The United States is accused of being an “accessory,” of somehow having  “
created” Osama bin Laden. According to Rauf on page one of What’s  Right 
with Islam, because many Muslims around the world support Osama  bin Laden, 
the United States is doing something wrong. 
And incidentally, what Rauf wrote in the Huffington Post, soon after  the 
rigged Iranian elections of June 12, 2009, is evidence that he is an  admirer 
of the tyrannical theocracy in that country. After endorsing the  “official 
results,” Rauf praised the 1979 revolution: “The Iranian  Revolution of 
1979 was in part to depose the shah, who had come to power  in 1953 after a 
CIA-sponsored coup overthrew democratically-elected Prime  Minister Mohammad 
Mossaddeq. And in part it was an opportunity to craft an  Islamic state with 
a legitimate ruler according to Shia political theory.  . . . After the 
revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini took the Shiite  concept of the Rightly 
Guided Imam and created the idea of  Vilayet-i-faqih, which means the rule 
of the jurisprudent. This  institutionalizes the Islamic rule of law. The 
Council of Guardians serves  to ensure these principles.” 
Then Rauf claims that the elections in Iran were a slow-but-sure step  
towards democracy: “[Obama’s] administration understands that what is  going on 
now in Iran is an attempt by the Iranian people to live up to  their own 
ideals. Just as American democracy developed over many years,  the United 
States recognizes that this election is part of the process of  an evolving 
democracy in Iran.” I wonder what Iranians in exile, or those  risking their 
lives to protest that hideous regime, think about Rauf’s  complacency about 
what is happening in Iran. 
Here is Rauf’s advice to the president: “He should say his  administration 
respects many of the guiding principles of the 1979  revolution — to 
establish a government that expresses the will of the  people; a just 
government, 
based on the idea of Vilayet-i-faqih, that  establishes the rule of law.” 
Rauf praises the tyrants in Iran and is apparently ready to accept  their 
money for the Islamic center at Ground Zero, but he fails to explain  the 
term vilayet-i-faqih to American audiences. The  term, literally “the 
guardianship of the jurist,” was developed by  Ayatollah Khomeini in a series 
of 
lectures in 1969, and became the guiding  principle of the government of Iran 
after he came to power in 1979. The  concept is but an extension and slight 
modification of the Shia idea of  walī, in which Ali and the imams succeeding 
him were considered  guardians of the community, acting on behalf of God 
himself. Under this  concept, the people of Iran are the wards of the 
ayatollahs, and the  people of Iran owe the guardians absolute obedience in 
accordance with  Sura IV verse 59 (“O you who believe, obey Allah and obey the 
Messenger  and those in authority from among you . . .”). Secondly, the 
exclusive  
right of interpretation of Islamic law belongs to religious scholars. Thus  
there is nothing democratic about it — its totalitarian character should  
be evident. Rauf’s endorsement of this principle makes him the unequivocal  
defender of totalitarian Khomeinism. 
CONTRADICTIONS AND  PREVARICATIONS 
Rauf says one thing to Western audiences and another to Muslim  audiences. 
He is quite capable of writing reassuring things, as in the  New York Daily 
News earlier this year: “My colleagues and I are  the anti-terrorists. We 
are the people who want to embolden the vast  majority of Muslims who hate 
terrorism to stand up to the radical  rhetoric. Our purpose is to interweave 
America’s Muslim population into  the mainstream society.” 
But when presented with actual opportunities to “interweave America’s  
Muslim population into the mainstream society,” Rauf and most of his  fellow 
Muslims decline. Nearly ten years ago, I was the guest of the  Pontifical 
Institute for Arabic and Islamic Studies (PISAI) of Rome. PISAI  is dedicated 
to 
interfaith dialogue between Christians and Muslims. But as  the director at 
the time said to me, “There is no real dialogue, since  Muslims never 
reciprocate the goodwill gestures made by the Christians.  The result is we sit 
down together, and the Christians say what a  wonderful religion Islam is, 
and the Muslims say what a wonderful religion  Islam is.” Rauf was invited to 
give a sermon in a church and did so, but  he never reciprocated by inviting 
a Christian to give a sermon in a  mosque. This, for Rauf and his ilk, 
would be unthinkable. 
Like Tariq Ramadan, also touted by the unvigilant and ill-informed as a  
great moderate Muslim, Rauf is a master of double talk and prevarication.  
When asked if he considered Hamas a terrorist organization, as it is  labeled 
by the State Department, Rauf ducked, weaved, and sidestepped:  “Look, I’m 
not a politician. The issue of terrorism is a very complex  question. There 
was an attempt in the ’90s to have the U.N. define what  terrorism is and say 
who was a terrorist. There was no ability to get  agreement on that.” The 
interviewer persisted. Rauf, clearly flustered,  replied, “I am a peace 
builder. I will not allow anybody to put me in a  position where I am seen by 
any 
party in the world as an adversary or as  an enemy.” 
This unwillingness to criticize Hamas is hardly surprising, given his  
views on Israel. In a letter published on Nov. 27, 1977, in the New  York 
Times, 
he wrote, “In a true peace it is impossible that a purely  Jewish state of 
Palestine can endure. . . . In a true peace, Israel will,  in our lifetimes, 
become one more Arab country, with a Jewish  minority.” 
While he indulges in ecumenical blather in front of Western audiences,  
Rauf reveals his true intentions and philosophy in Muslim newspapers,  
magazines, and websites. He spells out in unequivocal terms his desire to  
establish 
sharia in the West, to reestablish the Islamic caliphate, and to  do away 
with the separation of religion and state. 
For instance, in an article for the Jordanian newspaper  al-Ghad entitled “
Sharing the Essence of Our Beliefs,” Rauf  wrote, “People asked me right 
after the 9/11 attacks as to why do  movements with political agendas carry 
[Islamic] religious names? Why call  it ‘Muslim Brotherhood’ or ‘Hezbollah 
(Party of Allah)’ or ‘Hamas’ or  ‘Islamic Resistance Movement’? I answer 
them this — that the trend towards  Islamic law and justice begins in religious 
movements,  because secularism has failed to deliver what the Muslim wants, 
which  is life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. . . . The only law 
that the  Muslim needs exists already in the Koran and the Hadith.” A state 
based on  the Koran and Hadith could only be called a theocracy. 
In an interview he gave in 2007 to the website HadieIslam,  Rauf said, “So 
the question in our era throughout my discussions with  contemporary Muslim 
theologians is [whether] an Islamic state can be  established in more than 
just in a single form or mold, [whether] it can  be established through a 
kingdom or a democracy. The important issue is to  establish the general 
fundamentals of sharia that are required to govern.  It is known that there are 
sets of standards that are accepted by [Muslim]  scholars to organize the 
relationships between government and the  governed. . . . And we also suggest 
to 
the governors and political  institutions to consult [Muslim] religious 
institutions and [Muslim]  personalities in the field as to assure their 
decision making to reflect  the spirit of sharia.” 
In the Washington Post, Rauf commented on a 2008 lecture by  the Archbishop 
of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams, about sharia and British  law. The 
archbishop hinted that the application of sharia in certain  circumstances 
seemed 
unavoidable if we want to achieve cohesion and take  seriously people’s 
religions. Rauf writes, “The addition of Sharia law to  ‘the law of the land’, 
in this case British law, complements, rather than  undermines, existing 
legal frameworks. The Archbishop was right. It is  time for Britain to 
integrate aspects of Islamic Law.” Rauf immediately  follows this suggestion 
with a 
reassuring proviso: “Sharia law is  unequivocally clear that Muslims who 
live as minorities in non-Muslim  majority communities are required to abide 
by the law of the land. That  doesn’t prevent British Muslims from practicing 
aspects of Sharia that  don’t conflict with British law . . .” 
However, there is a coda to that sentence: “. . . or from seeking  changes 
in British law.” Here we have the real intentions of Rauf: abide  by Western 
laws for now but seek to change them until they  reflect sharia. Neither 
the Archibishop of Canterbury nor Rauf ever spell  out how all this was going 
to work in practice: Are they asking for  parallel courts? How exactly would 
sharia “complement” British law? Would  sharia courts be voluntary? Would 
Muslim apostates be executed? Adulterers  stoned to death? Would non-Muslims 
be judged by Islamic laws? 
The 64 sharia courts that already operate in Britain severely undermine  
the rights of women, as has been thoroughly documented in an important  study 
by the group One Law For All. 
— Ibn Warraq is  an independent scholar and the author of five books on 
Islam and Koranic  criticism: _Why I  Am Not a Muslim_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=1591020115) , 1995; _The  
Origins of the Koran_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=157392198X) , 1998; _What  
the Koran Really Says_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=157392945X) , 2002;  
_Virgins?  What Virgins? And Other Essays_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=1616141700) , 2010; and the  
forthcoming _Which  Koran?_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=1591024293)  This is part 
one of a two-part  series.






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