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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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June 20, 2019
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Charitable
Organization Spotlights Radical CAIR Activists
by Steven Emerson
IPT News
June 20, 2019
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"What's the one
thing you want funders to do differently to support the pro-immigrant and
-refugee movement?"
This is the question posed by the National Committee for Responsive
Philanthropy (NCRP) on Monday to highlight the organization's members.
The NCRP claims to promote
"philanthropy that serves the public good, is responsive to people and
communities with the least wealth and opportunity, and is held accountable
to the highest standards of integrity and openness."
It's difficult to see how NCRP lived up to that standard when it
showcased two Islamist activists with a history of bigoted and anti-Semitic
views: Zainab Arain and Abbas Barzegar. Both work in the Council on
American-Islamic Relations' (CAIR), research and advocacy department, which
Barzegar directs and Arain serves as manager.
Arain has peddled
anti-Semitic conspiracies suggesting Israel harvests
dead Palestinians' organs, akin to a modern-day blood libel. She has promoted
articles from fringe and conspiratorial websites promoting the anti-Semitic
view that Israel controls U.S. foreign policy.
So how did the CAIR officials respond to NCRP's question?
They "simply ask that funders commit to divesting from anti-human
agendas: Those that advocate separation of families, ethnic and religious
bigotry, and toxic political discourses."
Unfortunately, NCRP needs to be held accountable for highlighting two
Islamist activists that have a history of making radical comments and work
for an organization that propagates anti-Semitic views.
In 2009, Arain shared
a report from Iran's Press TV that the U.S. and Israel finance the Taliban
and other terrorists. "Is it surprising?" she asked. Yeah, and
it's entirely false, too. What's surprising is someone who now is treated
credibly by NCRP bought into raw propaganda from Iran's state-run media.
Meanwhile, she openly defends Palestinian
terrorists trying to kill Israelis and voiced disdain
for pro-Israel supporters.
Abbas Barzegar, CAIR's research and advocacy director, similarly shared
conspiratorial and discredited claims, including that the Coptic Egyptian
creator of an anti-Islamic video was an Israeli citizen. Barzegar also praised the 2009 re-election of former Iranian
president, and Holocaust-denier, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
"For over a week the same social impulses of anti-corruption,
populism, and religious piety that led to the revolution have been on the
streets available to anyone who wanted to report on them," Barzegar
wrote. "Ahmedinejad, for most in the country, embodies those
ideals."
In May, CAIR released a co-authored report by Arain and Barzegar which tried to identify
and embarrass philanthropic institutions that fund the so-called
"Islamophobia Network." This "network" includes
legitimate research
institutes that conduct reputable work and highlight the threat from
Islamist ideologies worldwide. It included the Investigative Project on
Terrorism (IPT), though it offered no evidence to support the smear. IPT
has spent years documenting CAIR's ties to a Hamas-support network and exposing the extreme views expressed by many of its leaders. CAIR seems to believe its most effective
defense is to attack the messenger.
The Islamophobia report, meanwhile, is full of inconsistencies and serious falsehoods.
Barzegar and Arain also published an article last month featured on NCRP's site entitled:
"Philanthropy Must Exclusively Support Causes That Indicate a Love of
Humanity." It is ironic that activists with a history of sharing bigoted
views think that they are in a position to dictate the use of charitable
donations.
It should not be surprising that CAIR officials are pressuring others on
how to allocate their donations or support. In April, the organization
devoted considerable attention to pressuring Congress to oppose the
"Anti-Semitism Awareness Act of 2019."
The Act directs the Department of Education to adopt the International
Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA)'s working
definition of anti-Semitism, which the State Department embraced in
2016.
Elements of this working definition encompass modern anti-Israel
sentiment that "crosses the line into anti-Semitism." That
includes denying the Jewish people's right to self-determination, claims
that Israel was founded as a racist entity, and applying double standards
against Israel not expected of other democracies.
CAIR is worried that if the U.S. Department of Education adopts this
definition, U.S. Islamist groups will be inhibited in their efforts to
stoke anti-Israel sentiment on college campuses and in other political
debate.
These bigoted views are similarly driving CAIR to pressure
philanthropists to divest from the Jewish state and cease supporting
research institutes that highlight Islamism's problematic aspects or
support Israel's right to defend itself.
This is not the first time a seemingly benign philanthropic organization
has honored a radical CAIR member.
In October, anti-Semitic CAIR official Zahra Billoo received
the Community Builder Award from People Acting in Community Together
(PACT). Billoo has repeatedly spewed divisive rhetoric, drawing a line in
the sand between who is a legitimate Muslim leader and who is not. For Billoo,
one cannot be a Muslim leader or activist while opposing a boycott campaign
targeting the world's sole Jewish state.
Like Zainab Arain and other U.S.-based Islamists, Billoo often rails
against supposed "Zionist influence" in the United States.
This sentiment is expected of Billoo who, like other U.S. Islamist
figures, consistently opposes any type of engagement or
interfaith dialogue with organizations that maintain ties to Israel.
Advocating for sanctions and boycotts targeting Israel, while avoiding
similar calls against other states who violate human rights on a far larger
scale, is a double standard that amounts to anti-Semitism. It is
the same type of anti-Semitism CAIR and its officials repeatedly propagate.
National community and philanthropic organizations that seek to make the
world a better place diminish their own work by spotlighting U.S.-based
Islamists and anti-Semites. Hate mongers and conspiracy theorists are the
last people who should be advising how charities and philanthropists
allocate their donations.
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