Soldier4Christ
|
 |
« Reply #1 on: February 03, 2008, 08:57:21 PM » |
|
State House Proselytism
The cultural traditions and values of American society originate from the Judeo-Christian heritage of our Founding Fathers. They pledged allegiance to “one nation under God,” with the Creator as the source of our inalienable civil rights and liberties. In that spirit, Congressional invocations by clergy are a time-honored ritual from the birth of the American republic to the present. Public recognition and celebrations of the role of religion in helping establish our precious freedoms have also long been part of American public life. But now, those traditions are under attack from militant Islamists who have, under the guise of political and religious acceptance, steadily advanced their own messages with the goal of undermining our status as a nation of free individuals and the intent of the Founders to insure liberty and justice for all.
Iowa
Last week, Mohammed Khan, the imam of the Islamic Center of Des Moines, led the opening prayer in the Iowa legislature at the request of Iowa State Representative Ako Abdul-Samad, a former Iowa school board member who has worked as a counselor in the Iowa prison system, and has questionable associations with Islamic extremists.
In his four-minute prayer before the Iowa legislative session, Khan made a plea for “victory over those who disbelieve” and “protection from the Great Satan,” comments which sparked outrage. Pastor Steve Smith of the Evangelical Free Church in Albert City took issue with Khan’s appeal for victory, explaining, “This is a request in the Iowa Legislature for God to grant the Muslims victory over every non-Muslim; not a request for salvation.”
Iowa State Representative Gary Worthan, the father of two decorated Army officers with eight combat deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan between them, was incensed over the reference to infidels or “disbelievers” and “the Great Satan.” He plans to protest to the Speaker of the House. Worthan recognized the phrase, “the Great Satan,” as a commonly used Islamic reference to the United States and, thus, felt the prayer called for the conquest of our nation. People in his district were also upset by the prayer and complained to the Iowa legislature.
Further, victory over “unbelievers” has specific violent references in the Koran. The most well-known is the Verse of the Sword (9:5): “Slay the unbelievers wherever you find them, and take them captive and besiege them and lie in wait for them in every ambush.”
Another frequently quoted verse is 47:4, “If you encounter the unbelievers, strike their necks until you have bloodied them, then fasten the shackles.” Finally, the term “unbeliever” is interchangeable with “infidel” and refers to the inhabitants of the Dar-al-Harb, the world of war that must be defeated according to the wishes of Allah and Mohammed by the Dar-al-Islam, the world of Islam.
That such language would be permitted within the state house of Iowa – a middle American state and the home of the first presidential sweepstakes – should be surprising. However, public expressions of Islamic support have increased dramatically:
* Rep. Abdul-Samad is a former president of the Islamic Center in Des Moines, which first achieved notoriety in 2004 when it welcomed Muslim extremist Ibrahim Dremali as its new imam. Dremali came to Des Moines after a hasty departure from a position at the Islamic Center of Boca Raton, shortly after a local physician and congregant, Rafiq Sabir, was arrested and pled guilty for swearing allegiance to Al Qaeda. In Des Moines, Dremali founded the Islamic New Horizons School with funds from the Islamic Society of North America, a Saudi-sponsored Wahhabi organization that controls most U.S. mosques, espouses a radical form of Islam, has sponsored extremists who call for jihad and is an “unindicted co-conspirator” in the terrorist support trial in Texas of the Holy Land Foundation.
* In February 2007, in a blatant violation of the religious establishment clause, a seventh-grade public school class visited a Des Moines mosque for a school field trip and was asked by the presiding imam to join him in prayer.
* In 2005, Governor Tom Vilsack – a potential 2008 Democratic vice presidential candidate – welcomed members of four local mosques and fellow Iowans to celebrate “Muslim Recognition Day” and “join in the making of history and get a taste of what it feels like to be Muslim.” This, despite residents being unable to recall any instance in which the state declared a special day to recognize Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus, or any other religion.
* In March 2006, Cedar Rapids Mayor Kay Halloran welcomed a new chapter of the Muslim American Society at the Cedar Rapids Public Library, saying she was “honored and delighted” to have them in the community. Yet, according to the FBI in the terror-support trial of the Holy Land Foundation, the Muslim American Society is the representative for the Muslim Brotherhood in the United States. The Muslim Brotherhood, founded in Egypt in 1928, is one of the largest and most influential Islamist organizations in the world and believed to be the parent organization for Hamas and al-Qaeda.
* In September 2005, the first conference of the Islamic Foundation of Iowa was held in Central Middle School in Waterloo with Mohammed Kahn and Ako Abdul-Samad as featured speakers. The program for “The Way to the Future” Conference included: The Practical Structure of Building an Islamic Society and The Future Vision and Plans for Muslims in Iowa. One of the prayers recited chided the Children of Israel (Jews) for their wickedness in not remembering Allah. Another prayer recited included the proclamation, “There is no God except Allah, alone with no partner,” a specifically anti-Trinitarian prayer found in many parts of the Koran. A personal ad in the conference program referred to “Allah SWT,” which according to Robert Spencer has anti-Christian connotations. Spencer says SWT stands for “Subhanahu wa ta'ala,” which Muslims commonly understand to mean, “Allah is pure of having partners, and he is exalted above having a son.”
Iowa is not alone in honoring Islam with a legislative convocation. Texas, the State of Washington, and the Democratic National Committee (DNC) have also conferred this privilege on Muslim clergy who have similarly misused the opportunity.
Texas
In April 2007, Imam Yusuf Kavakci of the Dallas Central Mosque, who has served the Dallas area for 20 years and claims to be a “moderate,” was hosted by Texas Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst and Senator Florence Shapiro. Kavakci was asked to open the Texas Senate with its first Islamic prayer. This event was attended by members of the Baptist General Convention of Texas Christian Life Commission, the Texas Conference of Churches, Texas Impact, and the Texas Islamic Council. It was promoted by the Dallas-Fort Worth chapter of the Council of American Islamic Relations (CAIR), an organization terrorism expert Steven Emerson characterizes as “a radical fundamental front group for Hamas.”
At the invocation, Dr. Kavakci, a board member of the Wahhabist Islamic Society of North America, read from the opening chapter of the Koran, Al-Fatehah. The text included: “All praise is for Allah, our lord, the lord of the worlds, the compassionate, the merciful, master of the day of judgments. Oh, God, Allah, you alone we worship, and you alone we call on for help. Oh, Allah, guide us to the straight path, the path of those whom you have favored, not of those who have earned your wrath or of those who have lost the way….”
According to Spencer who cites mainstream Muslim authorities, traditional Islamic understanding of this passage is that the “straight path” is Islam, the path of those who have earned Allah’s anger are the Jews and those who have gone astray are the Christians. Spencer concludes “it is likely that Imam Yusuf Kavakci was leading the Texas State Senate in a prayer that they become Muslims, and not remain Christians or Jews. Clearly, this was a prayer that excluded Jews and Christians and was a prayer against them.”
Republican Senator Dan Patrick, R-Houston, decided not to be present for the convocation, explaining, “In many part of the world, Jews and Christians would not be given that same right afforded Dr. Kavakci.”
This is certainly the case in most of the Muslim world, where those who choose to leave Islam often face death sentences for apostasy.
In a 2005 Freedom House study, “Saudi Publications on Hate Ideology Invade American Mosques,” materials collected from Kavakci’s mosque included religious tracts or fatwas calling for the destruction of Israel and for Muslims to refuse to support non-Muslims and view them as the enemy. In other literature found at the mosque, the United States was characterized as “The Great Satan,” whose global reach and influence was leading a worldwide conspiracy against Islam.
Meanwhile, Kavakci has also hosted a quiz competition for children who were tested on the teachings of Qutb, recognized as the intellectual architect of modern radical jihadist ideology and traducer of Western societies and liberal, democratic values.
cont'd
|