IPT News
http://www.investigativeproject.org/3871/islamist-group-tries-to-kill-use-of-islamist
After doing everything it can to ensconce a new word, "Islamophobia,"
into conversational English, the nation's most visible Islamist group
is trying to stop use of a well-established word: Islamist.
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) national spokesman Ibrahim Hooper released a column urging journalists to "Drop the term 'Islamist.'"
It was added to the latest Associated Press Stylebook
– the guide for spelling, punctuation and other rules – that is used by
journalists at the smallest community papers and the largest television
networks, Hooper wrote. AP defines Islamists as "Those who view the
Quran as a political model encompass a wide range of Muslims, from
mainstream politicians to militants known as jihadi."
Journalists should ignore that, Hooper argued, because it is used in a
negative way, and used by "Islam-bashers" who really hate the faith of
Islam but want to cover their tracks. "Yet they fail to explain how a
practicing Muslim can be active in the political arena without
attracting the label 'Islamist.'"
Plenty of practicing Muslims work bravely in opposition to Islamist
ideology. Britain's Quilliam Foundation was started by Muslims who
walked away from radical Islamist thought and now counter the arguments
Islamists offer.
"Challenging extremism is the duty of all responsible members of society," the foundation's website says.
Not least because cultural insularity and extremism are products of the
failures of wider society to foster a shared sense of belonging and to
advance liberal democratic values. With Islamist extremism in particular, we believe a more self-critical approach must be adopted by Muslims." [Emphasis added]
Hooper may have had the Investigative Project on Terrorism in mind with his comment, as we try to distinguish
between the faith of Islam as practiced by individuals, and its
application as the foundation for political action and law. When devout
Muslims espouse this "separation between mosque and state," Hooper dismisses them as "a mere sock puppet for Islam haters and an enabler of Islamophobia."
Hooper's demand that "Islamist" be removed from the lexicon is
ironic, since his bosses seemed more than comfortable placing themselves
firmly in the world of "Islamists" back in 1993. CAIR founders Omar
Ahmad and Nihad Awad joined two dozen Hamas supporters in Philadelphia
for a fall weekend in an urgent meeting called to discuss ways to "derail" the U.S.-brokered Oslo Accords.
The FBI bugged the meeting room. Transcripts entered into evidence
during a 2008 Hamas-financing trial show the participants referred to
"Islamists" dozens of times. Ahmad helped lead the meeting, helping determine who might attend and calling it to order.
The FBI described the group as Hamas members and supporters. "Hamas' agenda was not only to eliminate Israel," prosecutors wrote,
"but also to sabotage the Oslo Accords and to replace the secular PA
regime with an Islamist government that would control all of Israel, the
West Bank and Gaza."
Awad, who remains CAIR's executive director nearly 20 years later, addressed the meeting about media strategies.
"The fourth goal is becoming open to the media in the U.S. and the
Western society to ease the intensity of the campaign and to explain the
legality of the opposition led by the Islamists," he said. [Emphasis added]
Ahmad, who served as CAIR chairman emeritus until 2009, also discussed media strategy for Islamists in America.
"The first goal was relating to activism among Muslims and
Palestinians but we must broadcast our point of view in U. S. media.
There is a very good reason for that which is bringing the voice of the Islamists to the surface,
keeping them informed and explaining their positions in order to case
the severity of allegations of radicalism and other things," Ahmad said.
[Emphasis added] "This will also make our position known to Muslims and
sympathizers whom we cannot reach via our media tools."
A speaker identified only as "Akram" told the group
opposition to the Oslo deal did not "have anything to do with any
living conditions. We have undisputable rights in Palestine as
Islamists. They don't change with the changing of the events." Later, he
said Islamists were the only ones willing to oppose the agreement
publicly.
"We must be clear that we oppose this thing 100% and that we, the
Islamists ... different from what is being suggested for Palestinian
activism," Akram said. No one disagreed.
Their claim on Palestine was not limited to the West Bank and Gaza,
Ahmad said, agreeing it was not a wise strategy to say so publicly.
"We've always demanded the 1948 territories," Ahmad said.
"Yes," an unidentified speaker responded, "but we don't say that
publicly. You cannot say it publicly. In front of the Americans..."
"No," Ahmad agreed, "we didn't say that to the Americans."
Nearly 20 years later, Ahmad's organization doesn't want Americans to say the same words he and his colleagues embraced.
"Unfortunately, the term 'Islamist' has become shorthand for 'Muslims
we don't like,'" Hooper wrote. "It is currently used in an almost
exclusively pejorative context and is often coupled with the term
'extremist,' giving it an even more negative slant."
This is revisionist history. In addition to Hamas supporters,
fundraisers for the Palestinian Islamic Jihad used the "Islamist" in
laudatory fashion. During a 1989 conference by Sami Al-Arian's Islamic
Committee for Palestine, Cleveland Imam Fawaz Damra described heroic battles Islamists waged in sparking the intifada against Israel.
"We acknowledge that Islamists were absent from the arena of jihad for a long while, Damra said.
"This is not the time to examine the causes of that absence. But this
was their return with an unflagging spirit, determined to do battle and
to confront ....an important development. Then occurred the fleeing
operation, executed by six mujahideen towards the middle of the fifth
month of '87. This was followed by specific operations executed by these
youth, one of the most important of which was the killing of the
Military Police chief in Gaza. In other words, the events rekindled the
spirit of hope and the spirit of self-confidence in the people."
Damra would later describe Al-Arian's committee as "the active arm of the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine" and urge people to write checks intended for the Jihad to "write it in the name if the Islamic Committee for Palestine, 'ICP' for short."
Evidence also showed that Al-Arian served as secretary on the Palestinian Islamic Jihad's governing board.
CAIR defended both men.
CAIR officials also have supported
the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, even as it rammed through a
constitution that epitomizes Islamist aspirations and makes religious
law the law of the land. The Brotherhood has no problem calling itself Islamist.
If the word is to be used, Hooper wrote, it "should not be used
unless a group applies the term to itself." So the Brotherhood can be
called "Islamist."
CAIR doesn't use the term itself, not "to the Americans," anyway, but
we've offered a tiny sample of the examples of Islamists using the word
privately. CAIR's background – the FBI cut off contact
with the group in 2008 over questions about "whether there continues to
be a connection between CAIR or its executives and HAMAS – should be
taken into consideration by anyone entertaining Hooper's request to
serve as language cop.
By the way, the AP did remove a related word from the newest Stylebook: Islamophobia.
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