John Rossomando
IPT News
http://www.investigativeproject.org/4131/icna-mas-linked-professor-attacks-christians-on
Amjad Qourshah,
an Islamic studies professor at the University of Amman in Jordan with
ties to the Muslim American Society (MAS) and the Islamic Circle of
North America (ICNA), has unleashed a tirade of anti-Christian venom
against Egypt's Copts, accusing them of burning their own churches.
His Facebook tirade, translated here
by the Investigative Project on Terrorism, also included an image of
Jesus that is reminiscent of the 2006 Danish cartoon depicting the
Muslim prophet Muhammad with a bomb in his turban.
In this case, the Sacred Heart image depicts Jesus
with an AK-47 over his shoulder with a bomb halo surrounding his head,
saying "Jesus says: 'Sell your clothes and buy arms." The caption above
the image says: "The way to hypocrisy For the Orthodox Copts."
Qourshah has spoken to MAS audiences twice this year – appearing at events in Chicago in May and in Dallas earlier this month. He also spoke at the MAS-ICNA convention last December.
The publication of the Muhammad cartoon led to widespread rioting and
was condemned by MAS and by other Muslim groups around the world.
"This has nothing to do with free speech," Mahdi Bray, then-head of MAS's political arm, said after the Philadelphia Inquirer republished the Muhammad cartoon in February 2006. "It's pure sensationalism that reeks of religious disrespect."
MAS and fellow Islamist groups, the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Islamic Circle of North America
(ICNA), have been silent about the violence against Egypt's Christians
by the Muslim Brotherhood. Those groups either have roots in the Muslim
Brotherhood or have worked with it. The Muslim Public Affairs Council
(MPAC) has similarly been silent.
"It is entirely predictable that such a person would be invited to
speak for the Muslim American Society (MAS), which has been referred to
as part of the 'nucleus' of the Muslim Brotherhood here in the United
States," said Zuhdi Jasser, president
of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy. "Only a brief perusal of
the responses to the current situation in Egypt from Muslim Brotherhood
legacy groups in the United States reveals a deep and abiding loyalty to
the Muslim Brotherhood, a disdain for pro-liberty Muslims and
dissidents, and ambivalence at very best when it comes to the plight of
Christians and other minorities in the Middle East.
"Lines are being drawn in the sand, and as more of this rhetoric
reveals itself, Americans and others will see the true nature of groups
like MAS and others," Jasser continued. "As we are alarmed, may we be
also inspired to act – empowering Muslims and our allies who seek reform
of our community and the protection of liberty."
Qourshah is not an exception when it comes to radical speakers at MAS-ICNA conferences.
Saudi Sheikh Ayed Al-Qarni was considered too radical to be admitted to the United States for last year's national convention. And MAS violated a promise
to no longer invite Egyptian Islamist Ragheb Elsergany to its events
after he launched into an extreme anti-Israel diatribe at the December
2009 MAS-ICNA convention.
At least 58 churches, Christian schools and monasteries have been torched by Muslim Brotherhood supporters in the past week in the worst anti-Christian violence in Egypt in 700 years. Egypt's Youm7
reports that more than 200 homes and businesses owned by Copts and
other Christian groups also have been torched since Egyptian security
forces stormed the Muslim Brotherhood's encampments in Cairo last
Wednesday. At least nine Christians have been killed around Egypt in the past week.
Qourshah alleged it is all a conspiracy. "The Christians are burning
their churches on the instructions of State Security to win the sympathy
of the West so that it continues to support the coup," he wrote Aug. 14
on his Facebook page.
The absurdity of Qourshah's rhetoric is underscored by the fact rioters who torched St. George Cathedral in Sohag were heard screaming "Allahu Akbar!" as they burned the church to the ground. A memo
published last week purportedly from the Muslim Brotherhood's political
wing, the Freedom and Justice Party, similarly attacked the Copts and
appears to endorse the church burnings. Anti-Christian graffiti with slogans such as "Mohamed is the prophet of Allah" and "Islam is the solution" have been commonplace. The Coptic Catholic bishop of Luxor reported that Islamists tried breaking into his house to torch it.
In at least one instance, a banner resembling al-Qaida's black flag was hoisted over a gate where the cross had been.
Additionally, Muslim Brotherhood gangs marked Christian homes and businesses
with check marks before they were torched. In the town of Minya black
"X"s were scrawled on Christian-owned stores while red "X"s were painted
on Muslim-owned stores.
Moderate Muslims who have no connections with the Brotherhood have helped their Christian neighbors fight the fires.
Qourshah repeats many of the same canards found in the alleged
Freedom and Justice Party memo, libeling them as responsible for the
violence in Egypt. In fact, the Coptic Church has urged its followers to
refrain from violence even when they are attacked.
"The Pope of the Copts in Egypt encourages and supports the killing
of innocent people at the peaceful sit-in and encourages burning of
blameless women in their tents ... He calls on the Egyptian army to
annihilate the peaceful protesters!!!!!" Qourshah wrote in his Facebook
post. "Where are you, oh hypocrites who claim to love freedom and peace,
when you are at the head of sedition. Your channels were the first to
call for war, strife and lies. Your chiefs were the first to ignite
sectarian strife set fire."
The truth is that many of the protesters were neither peaceful nor
blameless. Reports that Brotherhood opponents were being tortured or
killed were conveyed by Amnesty International,
an organization that can hardly be labeled right-wing or sympathetic to
autocratic governments. Some Muslim Brotherhood members stockpiled weapons and armed themselves with AK-47s and other automatic weapons.
Such weapons caches were found in the Al-Adawiya mosque adjacent to the Rebaa al-Adawiya Square where one of the encampments was located.
As soon as the military dispersed the encampments, Islamists sought to exact their revenge on Egypt's Christian minority, who comprise about 10 percent of Egypt's 85 million people.
In his rant, Qourshah also forgets that the army sided with millions
of Egyptians, Muslims and Christians alike, who took to the streets
demanding an end to the Muslim Brotherhood's extremist rule.
"The Egyptian army on July 3rd, 2013 simply sided with the
twenty-five million Egyptians who took to the streets to say 'no' to the
radicalization of Egypt by the Muslim Brotherhood. Morsi was doing his
utmost to turn Egypt into a replica of what Afghanistan was before
2001," Tarek Heggy, a member of Egypt's liberal intelligentsia told Catholic World Report.
"The Muslim Brothers' 369 days in power in Egypt are there to show that
a theocratic organization cannot govern democratically. Let's just
think a moment about what Hamas is doing in Gaza. Theocracy is the exact
opposite of democracy. The West must remind itself that there is no
difference between Al Qaeda and political Islam."
The Coptic Church has consistently called on Egyptians to avoid violence since Morsi fell.
"I ask all Egyptians to use their heads wisely, practice
self-restraint and avoid any violence, attacks or recklessness against
humanity or property," Pope Tawadros II wrote on his Twitter feed Aug. 13, the day before the Egyptian security forces ousted the Muslim Brotherhood from their encampments.
Despite this plea, and despite lacking anything close to evidence to
support his claims, Qourshah insists it is the Copts instigating
violence.
"You burn our chiefs and you talk about the inadmissibility of the
interference of clerics in politics, and you attack Islamists on that
basis," he wrote."Did any of you dare to utter a letter of the Pope of
the Copts and the heads of the Coptic Church forbidding plunging into
politics 24 hours on the satellite channels and their incitement to
murder and encouraging poor ignorant uncultured Copts to descend to the
streets for use the, as fuel for violence!!!"
The Copts have remained unarmed despite brutal Islamist attacks.
Jordan's Saraya News
blasted Qourshah's depiction of Jesus and his comments about the
violence against Christians in Egypt: "We say to Dr. Amjad Qourshah –
like it or not –you are a public figure, and calculated against you is
every letter you speak or write, therefore fear God for yourself and for
Islam and Muslims, and keep what you publish from what is not worthy of
you as an Islamic thinker and preacher of the religion of God as you
think yourself.
"We consider you far from the true preacher committed to the
fundamentals of Da'wa. O God, how we follow you and love you, oh God,
how we wish you were silent ... Speak well or or shut up ... Shut up
Qourshah, you destroy and do not fix things ... Shut up!"
The Muslim American Society and Islamic Circle of North America
should consider this rebuke when drawing up its next list of conference
speakers.
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