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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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May 5, 2017
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Bazian
Uses Islamist Convention to Push "Islamophobia" Scare
by John Rossomando
IPT News
May 5, 2017
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University of
California, Berkeley lecturer Hatem Bazian has made a career out of
demonizing critics as Islamophobes and flipping the script, arguing jihad
is not the problem, but its critics are. He accuses opponents of promoting
a type of McCarthyism and a racist clash of civilizations against Muslims.
"...Islamophobia comes in as a way to rationalize a clash of
civilizations, using cultural markers as a way of constructing
difference," Bazian said in a speech last month at the Muslim American
Society's (MAS) joint conference with the Islamic Circle of North
America (ICNA) held in Baltimore. "Let me say the following: Cultural
racism is another signpost for biological racism."
Bazian's anti-Semitism runs deep. As a San Francisco State University
(SFSU) student in the late 1980s and early 1990s he
campaigned against Hillel, the student Jewish organization. He
allegedly participated in an assault on the SFSU campus newspaper, The
Golden Gator, claiming it was filled with "Jewish spies," a
2011 Campus
Watch report said. Bazian also allegedly worked to prevent a Jewish
student from being appointed to the Student Judicial Council. He also
served as president of the General Union of Palestinian Students (GUPS), which was
aligned with the Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO).
Bazian has a long association with the Boycott, Divestment,
Sanctions (BDS) movement that seeks to isolate Israel. He helped found
Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) in 2001 as an outgrowth of GUPS; SJP is known for its pro-Hamas stance and anti-Semitic acts such as
disrupting an on-campus Holocaust remembrance event at Northwestern
University. In recent years, Bazian has served
as chairman of the national board of American Muslims for Palestine
(AMP). It is closely connected with groups that comprised the Muslim
Brotherhood's defunct anti-Israel network in the United States called the
Palestine Committee. Bazian also raised
money for KindHearts, a Hamas front whose assets were frozen by the U.S. government in 2006.
Bazian's Islamophobia Research & Documentation Project that
he founded in 2009 churns out academic papers through its Islamophobia
Studies Journal that blames the West for terrorism. He also helped found
Zaytuna College, the first Muslim liberal arts college in America.
For Bazian, screaming "Islamophobia" is a way to build a
smokescreen against inconvenient truths when debating the facts about
Islamist aggression.
Some in the Islamic community, such as California Imam Abu Laith Luqman
Ahmad, contend the entire concept of Islamophobia is about shirking
responsibility.
"By declaring [Islamophobia], the number one threat to Islam and
Muslims in the United States, we effectively bypass the central doctrines
of self accountability, and moral fortitude; principles upon which our
faith is founded," Ahmad wrote
in The Lotus Tree Blog in 2010. "The sooner we wake up and take
an intrepid and honest look at ourselves, the better."
Bazian's hosts for his recent speech have their own ties to
international Islamist movements.
Prosecutors describe MAS as the "overt arm" of the Muslim Brotherhood in the
U.S., and it has been alleged to have financial ties to Hamas. ICNA retains a
strong spiritual connection with Islamist pioneer Sayyid Abul A'la Maududi,
founder of the radical South Asian Islamist group Jamaat-e-Islami.
In his book Jihad in Islam, Maududi argues that Muslims should 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." ICNA's 2010 Member's Hand Book advocates the "struggle for Iqamat-ad-Deen,"
or the establishment of Islam in its totality, "in this land."
In his MAS-ICNA remarks, Bazian specifically named Investigative Project
on Terrorism Executive Director Steven Emerson, Pamela Geller, David
Horowitz and Daniel Pipes as drivers of the "Islamophobic
industry" dedicated to preserving Israel's interests.
Playing off the foundations of Islam, Bazian defined the "five
pillars of Islamophobia" starting with the government's "constant
war on terrorism that defines it as a war on Islamic terrorism." He
misleadingly cited data to argue that Muslims are responsible for only 4
percent of terrorism in the United States and Europe. He did not cite a
source for his data, but did note that it covered a period ending in 1995 –
before al-Qaida, ISIS, al-Shabaab, Boko Haram and other Islamist terrorist
movements that have recruited westerners and attacked Western targets.
Other "pillars" Bazian mentioned include the counter-jihad
movement, neo-conservatives and liberal interventionists. But Bazian's
emphasis on "Islamophobes" is to be expected. One cannot expect
to attract funding for an Islamophobia Research and Documentation Project
without concocting the frightening specter of "Islamophobes."
Bazian similarly denounced Emerson, Pipes and Geller following the 2013
Boston Marathon bombings for connecting the bombings to jihad before the
Tsarnaev brothers who carried out the attacks were identified.
"...[The] crime of the terrorist is immediate, while that of the
Islamophobes is long-lasting, for it creates and impresses on our
collective public mind the logic of hate and racism ...," Bazian wrote in an academic paper called "Boston Bombing,
Islamophobia and Sudden Ignorance Syndrome."
But this was no wild leap of logic. The pressure-cooker bombs used in
Boston were just like those recommended by al-Qaida in the Arabian
Peninsula's English language magazine, Inspire. Dhzokhar Tsarnaev
later told investigators he and his brother, Tamerlan, got
their idea for the bombs from the magazine.
In Bazian's world, however, it's Islamophobic and racist to connect
violent and imperialistic interpretations of Islam to acts of terrorism
today. The Tsarnaevs, indeed, were the bombers, he acknowledged. "But
the Islamophobic machine committed crimes against our collective
consciousness by exploiting the suffering and pain of our fellow
citizens."
Much of his MAS-ICNA speech was spent attacking Samuel Huntington's 1993
essay, "The Clash of Civilizations?" which predicted
global conflict would be driven more by cultural differences than ideology
and economics.
Bazian dismisses this as a "clash of ignorance," arguing that
the past sins of white Western Christians are more important to discuss
than jihadist terror.
"Bernard Lewis' question about Islam of 'What Went Wrong?' should
be asked in relation to European history with emphasis on the Inquisition,
genocide of the Natives in the Americas, the European Trans-Atlantic slave
trade, colonization, 8 Apartheid South Africa, WWI and WWII, with the good
White Aryan Christian Europeans responsible for the Holocaust and the only
use of nuclear weapons against civilians recorded in history to this
day," Bazian wrote.
Then as now, Bazian charged that "Islamophobes" relished in a
clash of civilizations.
"It's interesting that repeated aggressions by Islamists, both
violent and non-violent [including Bazian's speech] don't count for
anything, while criticism of Islamists is used to say that the Bill of
Rights is being rescinded," Pipes told the Investigative Project on
Terrorism. "That's highly untenable considering that we're not the
cause of jihad."
Islamophobia has nothing to do with misunderstanding Islam or Muslims
integrating into Western societies, Bazian said at the MAS-ICNA convention.
It's about protecting Western dominance over the rest of the world.
"So often [what] you get with debate and discussion, immediately
the Islamophobes who jumps in – 'well Islam is not a race.' Well, again,
race is a socially constructed category, but the directions of how people
are racialized could be for a number of areas," Bazian said. "You
could be racialized because of your language; you could be racialized
because of your skin tone; you could be racialized because of your religion."
Bazian's cultural racism concept is a flawed one, said American Islamic
Forum for Democracy founder and President Zuhdi Jasser. Islam is a belief
system. It cannot be treated as a monolithic entity exempt from
criticism.
"If you are going to believe that Islam cannot be debated and
cannot be reformed, and cannot be changed, the bottom line is you have to
make it into a racial identity," Jasser said. "That's why
Islamists are wedded ... to the idea of Islam as a single tribal identity
that is defined by the leaders of that tribe who are imams, clerics or
theocrats."
Islamists then use this tribal identity to depict Christians, Israeli
Jews and the West as the enemy, Jasser said.
Fellow Muslims also can be "Islamophobes" if they disagree
with Bazian. That's the word he used to slur Muslims who supported the ouster of Egyptian
President Mohamed Morsi, which ended the Muslim Brotherhood's brief rule.
Presumably this included Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb, the grand sheikh of Al-Azhar
University, Sunni Islam's most important clerical institution, who blessed
Morsi's ouster.
When it comes to aggressive clash of civilizations rhetoric coming from
Islamists, Bazian turns a blind eye. He chose to write for UCLA's newsmagazine Al-Talib in the
late 1990s and early 2000s despite the fact that Al-Talib regularly
featured pro-jihadist articles. For example, an article he wrote in the March 1999 issue appeared along with a piece
praising Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini.
The July 1999 edition contained an editorial titled "Jihad in America"
that criticized calling Osama bin Laden a terrorist. Bin Laden, it said,
was a "freedom fighter" who spoke out against oppressors.
By that time, bin Laden had publicly declared war on the United States, "Jews and
Crusaders." That fatwa invoked the Quran to declare that killing
Americans "an individual duty for every Muslim who can do it in any
country in which it is possible to do it..." The al-Qaida suicide bombing attacks on U.S. embassies in Kenya and
Tanzania took place the year before Bazian's Al-Talib article.
Bazian could have opted to stop writing for the newsmagazine after the
pro-terrorist articles were published, yet he chose to submit articles in Al-Talib's
September 1999 issue and again in Al-Talib's March 2000 issue.
"I think he is a classical civilizational Islamist
supremacist," Jasser said, "meaning that until he is caught and
exposed on various positions he'll do whatever possible to advance the
concept that where Muslims are a majority that an Islamic state is the best
avenue for governance."
Islamists love clash of civilizations rhetoric because they view the
world in terms of the Land of Islam and the Land of War ruled by
non-Muslims, Jasser said.
Bazian's effort to accuse "Islamophobes" of a racist clash of
civilizations at the MAS-ICNA conference and on other occasions distracts
from the Islamists' stated desire to supplant Western civilization.
Related Topics: Muslim
American Society (MAS), The
Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA) | John
Rossomando, Hatem
Bazian, "Islamophobia",
MAS-ICNA
conference, BDS,
Students
for Justice in Palestine, American
Muslims for Palestine, Hamas,
Clash
of Civilizations, Muslim
Brotherhood, Mohamed
Morsi, Al-Talib,
Muslim
American Society (MAS), The
Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA)
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