Tuesday, January 20, 2009

ISNA's Ingrid Mattson in her own words = ACT for America

























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Dear Solsticewitch13,

Ingrid Mattson, president of the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), will
deliver
a prayer at the National Prayer Service on January 21st. This designation has
prompted many people to ask, “Who is Ingrid Mattson?”

Our friends at the Center for Security Policy released the research brief
below
that reveals who Mattson is and what she believes – in her own words.
It is sufficiently problematic that ISNA, the organization of which Ingrid
Mattson is president, was designated an unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land
Foundation terrorism financing trial (which produced guilty verdicts on 108
counts).

Mattson’s words and views beg the question:

When there are Muslims in America who have publicly spoken out against Jihad,
against shariah law, and against ISNA, why was Ingrid Mattson chosen for this
interfaith prayer service?






Prayer Service.
ISNA's Ingrid Mattson in Her Own Words

Center for Security Policy (Research Brief)

August 23, 2008

will only be effective if they do it, according to the Prophet's words, in a "brotherly" fashion.
This implies a high degree of loyalty and affection. This does not mean, however, that
citizenship and religious community are identical commitments, nor that they demand the
same kind of loyalty. People of faith have a certain kind of solidarity with others of their
faith community that transcends the basic rights and duties of citizenship.

2) Mattson on the possibility that Americans may "rise to the challenge of defining
themselves as an ethical nation":


The first duty of Muslims in America, therefore, is to help shape American policies so they are
in
harmony with the essential values of this country. In the realm of foreign policy, this "idealistic"
view has been out of fashion for some time. Indeed, the American Constitution, like foundational
religious texts, can be read in many different ways. The true values of America are those which
we decide to embrace as our own. There is no guarantee, therefore, that Americans will rise
to the challenge of defining themselves as an ethical nation; nevertheless, given the success of
of domestic struggles for human dignity and rights in the twentieth century, we can be hopeful.
There's a prejudgment, a collective judgment of Muslims, and a suspicion that well "you may appear
nice, but we know there are sleeper cells of Americans," which of course is not true. There aren't any
sleeper cells.


4) Mattson defends Wahhabism:

CHAT PARTICIPANT: What can you tell us about the Wahhabi sect of Islam? Is it true that this
is
an extremely right wing sect founded and funded by the Saudi royal family, and led by Osama bin
Ladin? What is the purpose of the Wahhabi?

MATTSON: No it's not true to characterize 'Wahhabism' that way. This is not a sect. It is the
name of a reform movement that began 200 years ago to rid Islamic societies of cultural
practices and rigid interpretation that had acquired over the centuries. It really was analogous
to the European protestant reformation. Because the Wahhabi scholars became integrated into
the Saudi state, there has been some difficulty keeping that particular interpretation of religion
from being enforced too broadly on the population as a whole. However, the Saudi scholars
who are Wahhabi have denounced terrorism and denounced in particular the acts of September 11.
Those statements are available publicly. This question has arisen because last week there were a
number of newspaper reports that were dealing with this. They raised the issue of the role of Saudi
Arabia and the ideology there. Frankly, I think in a way it was a reaction to the attempts of many
people to look for the roots of terrorism in misguided foreign policy. It's not helpful, I believe, to
create another broad category that that becomes the scapegoat for terrorism.

5) Mattson on the negative effects of the end of the Islamic Caliphate:

CHAT PARTICIPANT: Osama bin Laden made a reference that Muslims have been living in
humiliation for 80 years. Did he refer to the Treaty of Sevres in 1920 that dismantled caliphates
and sultanates?


MATTSON: Yes, he is referring to that, to the overthrowing of the caliphate, which was a plan
of European powers for many years. This deprived the Muslim world of a stable and centralized
authority, and much of the chaos that we're living in today is the result of that.

6) Mattson teaches the jihadists Sayyid Qutb and Syed Abu'l-`Ala Mawdudi in her course
at Hartford Seminary – see the syllabus here.


7) Mattson praises the jihadist Mawdudi (aka Maududi):
In response to another question, "Please suggest any comprehensive work of Tafseer (Qur'anic
commentary) for us Muslim youth," she said, "There are different kinds of Tafseers. For e.g. there
are ones that contain detailed interpretations of grammatical aspects of Qur'anic language. And there
are others that serve to explain the general message of Qur'an, coupled
with the experiences and
insights of the author of the Tafseer. However, there aren't really any Tafseers that combine the
both aspects. So far, probably the best work of Tafseer in English is by Maulana Abul A'la Maududi.'"

Maududi on jihad (Jihad in Islam, page 9): "Islam wishes to destroy all States and Governments
anywhere on the face of the earth which are opposed to the ideology and programme of Islam
regardless of the country or the Nation which rules it. The purpose of Islam is to set up a State
on the basis of its own ideology and programme, regardless of which Nation assumes the
role
of the standard bearer of Islam or the rule of which nation is undermined in the process
of the
establishment of an ideological Islamic State. It must be evident to you from this discussion
that the objective of Islamic 'Jihad' is to eliminate the rule of an un-Islamic system and establish
in its stead an Islamic system of State rule. Islam does not intend to confine this revolution to
a
single State or a few countries; the aim of Islam is to bring about a universal revolution."

Maududi on denial of rights to non-Muslims (Jihad in Islam, page 28): "Islamic 'Jihad' does not
recognize their right to administer State affairs according to a system which, in the view of Islam,
is evil. Furthermore, Islamic 'Jihad' also refuses to admit their right to continue with such practices
under an Islamic government which fatally affect the public interest from the viewpoint of Islam."


Maududi on Shariah Law's precedence over any other legal system (Islamic Law and Its
Introduction, p. 13): That if an Islamic society consciously resolves not to accept the Sharia, and
decides to enact its own constitution and laws or borrow them from any other source in disregard
of the Sharia, such a society breaks its contract with God and forfeits its right to be called 'Islamic.'"

8) Although she recommends and teaches Abdul ala Maududi, who advocates violent jihad
against
non-Muslims (see above), Mattson is highly critical of Christians who make the factual statement
that texts by Muslims support violent jihad against non-Muslims -- and she

Mattson on critical statements by Christians about Muslims:

"These kinds of statements are really irresponsible, because they can lead to violence against
ordinary people......I don't see any difference between that and al Qaeda and Osama bin
Laden [using] Islamic theology to justify violence against Americans. What's interesting is if
you compare [their] statements about what Islam is and what Muslims believe, you'll find
they are almost identical, and I reject both interpretations -- both the non-Muslims who
are saying that Islam justifies violence against Christians and Jews, and the Muslims who
are saying it. Certainly these statements have a very unnerving effect, especially when they
continue, when more than one person says it."

9) Mattson is a traditionalist on Shariah law and the legitimacy of Shariah authorities:

"As a practicing Muslim, I believe that there is a core of fundamental beliefs and practices that
distinguish authentic Islam from deviations. I also believe that apart from this essential core,
the task of interpreting the application of Islamic norms to human society is an enormously
complicated task, which inevitably leads to a broad range of opinion and practice. I agree
with " Sunni" Muslims, the majority of the Muslim community worldwide, that after the
death of the Prophet Muhammad, no one has the right to claim infallibility in the interpretation
of sacred law. At the same time, this does not mean that all opinions are equal, nor that
everyone has the ability to interpret law. Without the intense study of Islamic texts and
traditions under qualified scholars and without the presence of a stable Muslim community
through which one can witness the wisdom of the living tradition, the chances of an ordinary
believer arriving at a correct judgment about most legal issues are slim."

Click here to continue reading this article.




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informed and coordinated civic action that will lead to public
policies that promote America’s national


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assault of radical Islam.






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