David B. Harris
Special to IPT News
http://www.investigativeproject.org/3860/justin-trudeau-islamist-revival
Nothing says bug-eyed clerical fanaticism more than inviting a
hate-spewing Saudi cleric to address your religious revival meeting. But
this is part of the under-reported history of the Reviving the Islamic
Spirit (RIS) Convention, a conference that Justin Trudeau, a frontrunner
in Canada's Liberal Party leadership race – and son of former Prime
Minister Pierre Trudeau – will address this weekend in Montreal. It's
also why moderate Muslims and non-Muslims are aghast at the prospect of
Trudeau's presence legitimizing the conference and some of its notables.
Although organizers pitch the gathering as "A Unique Youth Effort"
"to help overcome new challenges of communication and integration" and
"reviv[e] the Islamic tradition of education, tolerance and
introspection," there is reason to be concerned. Aspects of the
multi-year history and present-day manifestations of RIS invite
questions about ideology and influences at play.
This year's conference was initially sponsored in part
by IRFAN-Canada, an international Muslim relief entity that has seen
its federal charitable tax status yanked by Ottawa, as a result of the
Canada Revenue Agency's belief
that millions in contributions went to "relieve" the Hamas terror
organization. Although exposure of this background forced IRFAN's
eleventh-hour cosmetic removal as an RIS sponsor, it is not evident that
all remaining sponsors are clear of radical taint. UBS Bank recently blocked
the overseas account of British-based charity and RIS 2012 sponsor
Islamic Relief, a situation which an Islamic Relief official reportedly
attributes to the technicalities of counterterrorism regulations.
Meanwhile, some have questions about the uneven ideological record of
one or two prominent figures attached to sponsoring organization Zaytuna
College, an Islamic institution in Berkeley, Calif.
And, yes, the inevitable Tariq Ramadan, the charming, soft-spoken and
dupe-seducing scion of the extremist Muslim Brotherhood – a man who
famously called for a moratorium, rather than a ban, on the stoning of women, and avoids condemning Hamas
– will also speak at the event. Ramadan is an RIS veteran speaker whose
apparent Muslim Brotherhood link offers little reassurance when taken
in concert with a Brotherhood strategic plan
for Canada and the United States which prescribes "a grand Jihad in
eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from within and
sabotaging its miserable house."
Meanwhile, a journalist has exposed expected RIS 2012 speaker
Yassir Fazaga as a fixture of Peace TV, an outlet with radical
presenters, including Yusuf Islam – the former Cat Stevens – who called for author Salman Rushdie's death and spoke at the 2009 RIS.
But, years ago, those of us in intelligence who studied RIS
conferences had concluded that RIS's problems exceeded even these
present-day issues.
Indeed, the RIS's history of invited speakers includes some
dignitaries who would give pause to people of conscience, especially
when speakers might be considered models for youth and other convention
attendees. For example, there was distinguished American neo-Nazi William W. Baker at the 2004 gathering. Known for
establishing something dubbed Christians and Muslims for Peace (CAMP),
Baker has rounded publicly on "belligerent American Jews." "[H]is
apparent goal," wrote a reporter a year or two before his RIS invitation, is "the creation of a united Christian-Muslim front against Jews and other groups."
Middle East scholar Daniel Pipes complained
that now-disgraced former RCMP Commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli,
then-Toronto Police Chief (and now federal Tory Minister) Julian Fantino
and Mayor David Miller appeared at the Toronto conference, "thereby
giving it – and by implication, William W. Baker – their blessing."
Zaccardelli's pander-filled speech was memorable. Even the
social-democratic NDP's Jack Layton could not resist addressing an RIS
meet.
For "bridge-building" and interfaith work, there was RIS 2006 speaker Imam Siraj Wahhaj, US unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
Another RIS invitee was Sheik Bilal Philips, a Canadian imam who is an unindicted co-conspirator
in that bombing, favors death for homosexuals in Muslim lands, and
fancies punitive amputations, lashings and public executions. From Kenya
to Germany to Australia, he has been banned and deported on national security grounds.
The bug-eyed invitee mentioned above was reportedly Sheikh Abd
Al-Rahman Al-Sudais, imam of Mecca's Grand Mosque. Well before his
invitation to speak at the 2004 RIS, Al-Sudais said
"Jews of yesterday are the evil forefathers of the even more evil Jews
of today: infidels … prophet murderers, the scum of the human race,
accursed by Allah, who turned them into apes and pigs." "[A]n ongoing
continuum of deceit, obstinacy, licentiousness, evil, and corruption,"
too. Christians?: idolators – "worshippers of the cross" – as were
hideous "idol worshipping Hindus."
This was a bridge-building too far, and Canada's government barred entry to the Saudi imam.
As it did to RIS 2010 invitee (and previous speaker) Indian physician-preacher Zakir Naik, thought to have a crush on Osama bin Laden. "[E]very Muslim should be a terrorist," says
Naik, and Jews are "our staunchest enemy." At the 2005 RIS, Naik
pressed Islamic Sharia law upon America, complete with death penalties
for homosexuals, heavy veiling for women. There was more than a dash of
false equivalence in his comparing of the targeted civilian deaths of
9/11, and the accidental civilian casualties in Afghanistan combat.
Naik's ambiguous position on suicide bombing included the view that it
"should be done under proper guidance" – surely a constructive thought
for susceptible youth juggling contemporary responsibilities and trying
to reach that life-balance between school and demolitions. Naik is
progressive inasmuch as he believes wives should be beaten only
"lightly."
Several years ago, Britain's Sheikh Riyadh ul-Haq spoke at an RIS convention in Toronto. Reports point to Indian-born ul-Haq's enthusiastic paraphrasing
of the Quran in remarks made on another occasion: "the ones who are
bitterest in their enmity towards Muslims, the most unrelenting,
unforgiving, are the Jews and the mushrikeen, idolators in all their
forms." Today's "chief idolators," he adds, are the Hindus.
U.S. authorities have taken an interest in RIS, and detained some
American Muslims returning from the 2004 RIS conference in Toronto. Department of Homeland Security:
"we had credible intelligence that conferences similar to the one from
which these individuals were leaving were being used by terrorist
organizations to fundraise and to hide the travel of terrorists
themselves." The Saudi-funded, extremist-sympathetic Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) – later an unindicted co-conspirator
in a major terror funding U.S. prosecution, and the mother group of a
Canadian chapter, CAIR-CAN, now attacking critics of this week's conference – sued the American government, and lost.
Border authorities, asserted
the supportive U.S. appeals court, "had reason to believe that
terrorists, or those with terrorist ties, would be attending the RIS
conference."
It was at this Reviving the Islamic Spirit conference – presumably in
the midst of some of its participants' condemnations of liberal
coexistence – that a jargon-laced greeting was read aloud from a letter
from then-Prime Minister Paul Martin. "[T]his year's conference," he
intoned on behalf of the Government of Canada, "adds to the fabric of
our nation and strengthens our social foundations by making our
communities more dynamic, culturally rich, and cohesive." U.S. border
authorities might have taken another view.
Now comes the Reviving the Islamic Spirit 2012 conclave. You've heard
about Tariq Ramadan and the rest, but what about other invitees who
will be joining this month's Montreal conventioneers?
Jamal Badawi: Professor Emeritus, St Mary's University, Halifax, and held by the Global Muslim Brotherhood Daily Report to be "a leader
in many of the most important organizations of the Global and U.S.
Muslim Brotherhood." Unindicted co-conspirator in the aforementioned
terror funding trial, and an executive member of the Islamic Society of
North America, an unindicted co-conspirator organization. Former board member of the Muslim Association of Canada, an organization boasting
of its Muslim Brotherhood ideology. A pamphlet by Badawi that was
available at an earlier RIS appeared to justify the practice of
polygamy.
Imam Zaid Shakir: A U.S. cleric tending to trade in 9/11
conspiracy theories, aiming for Islamic rule of America, and believing
that the U.S. government is at war with Islam – a poor example for the
Muslim youth at any conference. At the 2005 RIS, Shakir seemed consumed
with portraying the United States as a stain on humanity, a catalog of
"slavery and genocide, oppression and military aggression." It is
unsurprising that his ideology was condemned
by moderate American Muslim leader and retired U.S. naval Lt. Cmdr
Zuhdi Jasser, and by the American Anti-Defamation League. Shakir has
spoken at RIS conventions on a number of occasions, and is a senior
faculty member of RIS 2012 sponsor Zaytuna College.
Edina Lekovic: Policy director at the U.S. Muslim Brotherhood-linked Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC). Exposed in 2007
by leading American counterterrorism expert Steven Emerson as having
been managing editor of UCLA Muslim students' newspaper when its 1999
"Spirit of Jihad" issue counseled Muslims:
"When we hear someone refer to the great Mujahid … Osama bin Laden as a
'terrorist,' we should defend our brother and refer to him as a freedom
fighter." Bin Laden had declared war on the United States in 1996.
Almost all of the foregoing information was on the public record
before Trudeau accepted his speaking invitation. No wonder the moderate
Muslim Canadian Congress and Muslims Facing Tomorrow
organizations are joining so many other Canadians in raising questions
about public officials who would become involved in this kind of
enterprise.
Worse yet, there are now reports
of enormous prospective increases in Canada's already-world-beating per
capita immigration, some of it from countries associated with extremism
and subversion. As suspicions deepen that much of this intake reflects a
Harper government desire to "import" grateful voters for coming
elections and profit from resultant demographic shifts, Canada is left
to face policy outcomes that will continue to inflate its radical ranks,
fill conferences of the RIS sort, and imperil Canadians' future. In the
end, the Reviving the Islamic Spirit Convention stands as a warning of
the need to press ambitious political figures of all stripes to resist
the temptations and perverse political incentives endangering that
future.
David B. Harris is a Canadian lawyer with three decades'
experience in intelligence affairs, and serves as Director of the
International Intelligence Program, INSIGNIS Strategic Research
Inc. He is on the advisory board of the Council for Muslims Facing
Tomorrow (MFT), although opinions expressed here are his alone.
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