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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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December 19, 2016
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Muslim
Scholar: Group That Sponsored Ellison's Hajj a 'National Security Threat'
by John Rossomando
IPT News
December 19, 2016
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The group that paid for U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison's December 2008 hajj
to Mecca is a "national security threat," a Muslim scholar wrote
in a 2010 email.
Ellison now is vying to become the next Democratic National Committee
chief.
The Muslim American Society (MAS), the group that paid $13,500 for Ellison's pilgrimage, had ties with
terrorism and had a phony commitment to the American constitutional order, al-Husein Madhany wrote in the email, which was posted
on the "Muslim Justice League" listserv. He made these assertions
as part of a discussion of how the Muslim community should respond to the
Ground Zero mosque controversy.
The listserv included top U.S. Islamist and liberal intellectuals, as
well as Obama administration representatives. CNN terrorism analyst Peter
Bergen and prominent American Muslim playwright and polemicist Wajahat Ali
also were part of the list. "When I said that I believe MAS halaqas (religious gatherings) to be a national security threat,
it was only part in jest. My caution comes from what I have personally
heard said at MAS halaqas during my time in graduate school and based on
what I know about their ideological (but financial) ties to the Muslim
Brotherhood and Hamas," Madhany wrote .
Madhany, who has ties to the Brookings Institution, Council on Foreign
Relations, Georgetown University, and New America Foundation, co-authored a 2008 piece for Brookings with President
Obama's former U.S. Special Envoy to the Organization of the Islamic
Conference, Rashad Hussain, about the role of Islam in
counter-terrorism policy.
At the time, Madhany wrote, some non-governmental groups were building a
case for designating the Muslim Brotherhood and its affiliates as terrorist
groups.
Part of that case was built on the fact that "MAS continues to
teach to their members -- at its highest levels of leadership -- that all
governments should become Islamic and that non-Islamic judicial systems
should be boycotted or replaced, by soft power and by force, Madhany wrote. "They do this while promoting the idea in
public that their goal is to support and defend the U.S.
Constitution."
Madhany is no conservative. His 2008 Brookings piece argued that using the terms
"Islamic terrorism" or "Islamic extremist" gave
religious legitimacy to Al-Qaida, suggesting "Al-Qaida terrorism"
instead.
Madhany was not the first or the only person to connect MAS with the
Muslim Brotherhood.
"In recent years, the U.S. Brotherhood operated under the name
Muslim American Society, according to documents and interviews," the Chicago
Tribune reported in 2004. In 2008, federal prosecutors said that MAS was founded as the "overt arm"
of the Muslim Brotherhood in America.
Convicted Al-Qaida financier and jailed prominent U.S. Muslim
Brotherhood leader Abdurrahman Alamoudi confirmed this assertion in 2012: "Everyone knows
that MAS is the Muslim Brotherhood."
Brotherhood bylaws
call for "the need to work on establishing the Islamic State, which
seeks to effectively implement the provisions of Islam and its
teachings."
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) classified MAS as a terrorist organization in 2014.
Madhany's e-mail offers a glimpse of how people on the inside view MAS,
Islam scholar Daniel Pipes told the Investigative Project on Terrorism.
Right after the Sept. 11 attacks, Pipes detailed several instances in which American Islamists
preached that the U.S. Constitution ought to be replaced with Islamic law.
"This is an insight into what people who understand this
organization actually think of it," Pipes told the IPT. "It fits
into a context of frank discussion that in recent years has been closed
down, and it shows what sort of organization that Keith Ellison takes money
from and endorses."
The MAS Connection to Ellison's 2010 Fundraiser
During his 2010 re-election campaign, MAS President Esam Omeish hosted a
fundraiser for Ellison in which Ellison criticized what he saw as Israel's
disproportionate influence on U.S. foreign policy. The IPT exclusively reported on his comments Nov. 30.
"The United States foreign policy in the Middle East is governed by
what is good or bad through a country of 7 million people. A region of 350
million all turns on a country of 7 million. Does that make sense? Is that
logic? Right? When the Americans who trace their roots back to those 350
million get involved, everything changes. Can I say that again?"
Ellison said.
Omeish, Ellison's host at the fundraiser, has voiced support for Hamas.
Following Israel's 2004 assassination of Hamas founder Sheikh Yassin,
Omeish, a Libyan by birth, mourned the terrorist leader as "our
beloved Sheikh Ahmed Yassin."
During a December 2000 Jerusalem Day rally in Washington's Lafayette
Square, Omeish praised Palestinians for knowing "that the Jihad
way is the way to liberate your land."
Ellison Speaking at Next Week's MAS Convention
Ellison first
addressed a MAS convention in 2006 and has made repeated appearances at
the organization's events. He is scheduled to
speak at MAS's joint convention with the Islamic Circle of North
America (ICNA) starting next Monday in Chicago. ICNA is a predominately
South Asian Islamist group that advocates creating a global Islamic state ruled by
shariah.
Ellison also is listed as the keynote
speaker at MAS-ICNA's appreciation dinner.
The MAS convention Ellison will address will hear from radical speakers
such as Ali
Qaradaghi (Alternately spelled Al-Qurra Daghi in the MAS-ICNA program),
secretary general of the pro-Hamas International Union of Muslim Scholars
(IUMS), one of the world's most influential groups for Sunni Islamist
clerics. It counts former Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh as a
member.
The Clinton administration banned this organization's founder Yusuf al-Qaradawi
from entering the U.S. in 1999 due to his support for terrorist attacks
against Israel. In 2014 the UAE classified the IUMS as a terrorist organization, along
with MAS and dozens of other Islamist groups.
Qaradaghi's Twitter feed is replete with praise for Hamas and calls for
Israel's destruction. He also has attacked the anti-ISIS coalition for
killing Sunnis in Fallujah and Mosul.
"Hamas is an Islamic resistance movement. It defends its people and
our first Qibla (The place where Muslims face to pray.) It endeavors to
liberate Occupied Palestine. And any attack on it is on the interests of
the Zionist Project," Qaradaghi wrote in a July tweet.
Like Omeish, Qaradaghi eulogized
Hamas founder Sheikh Yassin as recently as March: "On such a day like
this in 2004. Shiekh_Ahmed_Shahid# was martyred. By three rockets from
Zionist Apache planes. After his leaving dawn prayer."
Several pictures show Qaradaghi posing with top Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal. "The
Commander Mujahid Khaled Meshal honored me with a noble visit," he
wrote in September 2015. "We conferred on the conditions of the
Muslims, al Aqsa and Gaza; and we saw good prospects for the steadfastness
and Ribat of our people in the interior."
In March 2015, Qardaghi signed
an IUMS declaration condemning an Egyptian court's classification of Hamas as a terrorist
organization. An Egyptian appeals court later reversed the decision.
The MAS-ICNA conference heard a similar sentiment during its 2014
convention. Tariq Ramadan, grandson of Muslim Brotherhood founder Hasan
al-Banna; described
Palestinian terrorist attacks against Israel as "legitimate
resistance."
"I'm sorry to tell you, and this is where you have to stand as
American Muslims—the Palestinian resistance is a legitimate resistance and
they have the right to resist," Ramadan said.
No record exists of Ellison ever calling MAS out for its extremism, as
he previously did when he repudiated Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.
Ellison wrote in The Washington Post in a Dec. 2 op-ed that he "should have listened more and
talked less" when it came to Farrakhan's anti-Semitism, but his
continued involvement with MAS suggests he is deaf to its rhetoric.
Related Topics: Muslim
American Society (MAS) | John
Rossomando, Keith
Ellison, Democratic
National Committee, al-Husein
Madhany, Muslim
Brotherhood, Abdurrahman
Alamoudi, Daniel
Pipes, Esam
Omeish, MAS-ICNA
convention, Ali
Qaradaghi, IUMS,
Yusuf
al-Qaradawi, Hamas,
Tariq
Ramadan, Muslim
American Society (MAS)
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