“Better to write for yourself and have no public, than to write
for the public and have no self.”- Cyril Connolly (1903 - 1974)
The Future Islamic
State of America Part
III
By de Andréa
Opinion Editorialist for
‘THE BOTTOM LINE’
Posted July 17, 2019
If you would like to write me direct with a question or a
comment on this or other articles, you can email me at writedeandrea@hotmail.com
Clarion
Intel EXCLUSIVE: Nationwide Militant Islamist Network
This Clarion project Intel
exclusive report - documents an Islamist movement in America composed of
terrorist, paramilitary and criminal components.
Note: Members of the Council
on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) have threatened the life of yours truly ‘de
Andréa’ and the lives of his family. They wrote: “If we find out who you are, we
will hang you and your family upside down, slit your throats, and bleed you
like the pigs that you are.” This
from the nice folks from the “Peaceful Religion”.
Part III - CAIR’s Links to Ummah
The criminal complaint against
Imam Abdullah and his accomplices reveals a previously unknown link between
Ummah and the U.S. Government protected Counsel on American Islamic Relations (CAIR).
One of Abdullah’s indicted
accomplices was his oldest son, Mujahid Carswell (also known as Mujahid
Abdullah).
In February 2009, Carswell
told an associate that he had moved to Windsor, Canada. Notably, Imam Abdullah
had privately said that the majority of Ummah’s funding was coming from Canada,
a fact that he tried to keep known only to his inner circle.
According to the complaint:
“Carswell said he goes to
a large masjid [mosque] in Windsor and the people there are serious and
organized. The mosque is also affiliated with CAIR. Carswell said he trains
approximately sixty children, ages 8 to 18, in martial arts at the mosque.”
The Justice Department made a
point of mentioning Ummah’s link to CAIR. They did not have to include that
detail. They obviously saw it as significant and necessary to explain Ummah’s
activities at the CAIR-linked mosque.
Here’s what else the complaint
had to say about Carswell:
“He has no prior felony
convictions. He is known to carry a .40 caliber handgun and to be a member of
the Sutra [security] team at the mosque…[Source] has observed Mujahid Carswell
‘training’ children as young as 7 years old in martial arts, and beating them
with his hands and with a stick to instill bravery and obedience in them.
“Mujahid Carswell has
expressed a willingness to participate in firearms training with [source] on
multiple occasions. [Source] related having seen Mujahid Carswell use toilet
bowl cleaner to clean up blood in the basement of the Masjid Al-Haqq following
a murder [source] witnessed there.”
In describing Ummah’s Detroit
mosque to an associate, Carswell said that people had different roles. One of
them was to be the “butcher” who may need to murder someone without anyone
knowing about it.
Carswell moved back and forth
between the U.S. and Canada while trafficking in stolen goods like laptops and
fur coats. He also sold cocaine. He privately said that Ummah had low-level
sources in law enforcement who would help them by looking up license plates for
them.
Carswell worked with another
Ummah member in Windsor, Canada named Mohammad Phillistine, also known as
Mohammad Al-Sahli and Mohammad Palestine. Imam Abdullah described him as a
businessman who helped financed the group and “a soldier and a warrior.”
This linkage between Carswell
and the CAIR-linked mosque in Canada may help explain CAIR’s self-damning
behavior after Imam Abdullah’s death.
Imam Abdullah’s funeral was
attended by over 1,000 people in Detroit. CAIR and its fellow Muslim
Brotherhood entities immediately turned on their spin machine and went into
overdrive in order to create a controversy around the death.
The executive-director of
CAIR’s Michigan
branch, Dawud Walid, vouched
for Imam Abdullah’s innocence, saying,
“I knew him [Abdullah] for a long time and he was an essential part of that
West Side Detroit community.”
The CAIR official said,
“The entire investigation and subsequent killing of Imam Abdullah was nothing
less than a cover-up and a fraud engineered on the part of the
government.”
“This is a historically
unprecedented killing of a Muslim leader in the U.S. by the FBI,” Walid claimed.
Walid made it sound like
Abdullah’s death was a pre-meditated murder, claiming there was no evidence
that he violently resisted or posed a threat.
As for Abdullah’s killing of a
police dog, Walid suggested that he was merely defending himself.
In the aftermath, an attorney
with CAIR-Michigan, Lena Masri, helped Abdullah’s
family file a lawsuit against the U.S. government. CAIR also worked with
Ummah-allied leaders in Michigan to turn Abdullah’s death into a rallying call
for Muslim unity against law enforcement.
Other community leaders
involved included Imam
Abdul-Latif Azom of the Masjid Al-Falah mosque in Detroit and Imam Abdullah
El-Amin of the Detroit Muslim Center. The Nation of Islam’s Final Call newspaper
also promoted the coalition’s protests.
Another link between Ummah and
CAIR is Imam Siraj Wahhaj’s MANA coalition, which included Imam Abdullah as a
member of its governing body. The coalition includes organizations allied to
Ummah and intertwined with CAIR and other Brotherhood entities.
Wahhaj is a former member of CAIR’s advisory board and continues to speak at
CAIR events, including fundraisers. He’s held multiple leadership positions in the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), CAIR’s fellow Brotherhood entity.
Other links between Ummah and the U.S. Muslim Brotherhood Network
In 1993, Al-Amin’s National
Ummah, Imam W. Deen Mohammad’s organization and two other Islamist
groups—the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) and Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA)— formed a
new umbrella called the Islamic Shura Council.
ISNA was identified by federal
prosecutors as an “entity” of the Muslim Brotherhood, as well as designated as
an “unindicted co-conspirator” in the Holy Land Foundation trial, a Brotherhood
charity whose officials were found guilty of financing the terror group Hamas.
While Ummah and Imam W. Deen
Mohammad’s organization could rally the African-American Muslim community, ISNA
was more oriented towards Arabs.
ICNA, a radical group with a “moderate” veneer, originated with the Jammat-e-Islami group of Pakistan. It
was more oriented towards Southeast Asians and also linked to the Muslim
Brotherhood.
Throughout the 1990s, Al-Amin
participated in events including fundraisers for CAIR and similar groups. His
extremism was a known fact—nevertheless, these groups chose to promote him as a
partner and leader for Muslim-Americans.
For example, in 1994—while
Ummah was in a coalition with ISNA and ICNA—Al-Amin said,
“When we begin to look critically at the Constitution of the United States, we
see that in its main essence it is diametrically opposed to what Allah has
commanded.”
In a 1995 interview, he said, “Tyranny and oppression is worse than slaughter … ‘Fight them
wherever you might find them.’ That’s a command from Allah.” Found in the
Quean.
After he was arrested, the
U.S. Muslim Brotherhood groups began a political assault on the U.S. government
in the media. Despite the overwhelming evidence against him, the top
Muslim-American groups asserted his innocence, continued to honor him and
fundraised for his legal defense.
CAIR, ISNA, the Muslim American Society and American Muslim Council said in
a joint statement, “The charges against Imam Jamil are especially troubling
because they are inconsistent with what is known of his moral character and
past behavior as a Muslim.”
The executive-director of CAIR
and (despite their differences) Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan visited
Al-Amin in prison.
The Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) likewise helped fundraise
for Al-Amin’s defense in 2001. The MPAC leader at that time expressed
solidarity with Al-Amin as “our brother” at least six times in a single
fundraising speech.
The hysteria over his case was
so much that Dr. Daniel Pipes, one
of the top experts on Islamic extremism, referred to
Al-Amin as “The Muslim O.J.”
Dr. Pipes wrote:
“Incredibly, rather than
condemn Al-Amin’s 35-year history of ideological extremism, political violence
and personal criminality, the Islamic organizations praised his ‘moral
character.’
Rather than collect money
to help pay educational expenses for Officer Kinchen’s two young, fatherless
daughters, they raised money for Al-Amin’s legal defense fund.
Sadly, it looks like Jamil
Al-Amin has turned into the Muslim version of O.J. Simpson. His admirers seem
to care much less about justice than about his vindication.”
Sufi Extremist Network in Pennsylvania
Our sources state that this
militant black Islamist movement also includes a very radical Sufi network
based in (but not limited to) Pennsylvania: The Sankore Institute of Islamic African Studies
International (SIIASI).
SIIASI is an extremely radical group led by a Sufi cleric who moved to the U.S. from
Sudan and now lives in Mali.
The SIIASI website currently
hosts a video featuring its leader, Muhammad Shareef, inviting supporters to
Mali.
According to SIIASI’s website, Sankore Institute is linked to Ummah.
Imam Shareef says, “[O]ne of
the first things I did was answer the invitation of Imam Jamil al-Amin … our
growing community confederated with his national Ummah community” in 1999.”
There was then a meeting in
the United Kingdom with Sufi Imam Hamza Yusef. The result of Al-Amin’s
initiative was the creation of the Muslim Alliance in North America (MANA),
Shareef recalls.
Shareef is a co-founder of
MANA and a member of its governing body.
Our sources say that SIIASI is
involved in the arming of felons and paramilitary training. This was previously
known because pictures were posted of its members with swords and rifles.
Many SIIASI members are felons
who are barred from handling firearms. The organization also said that
it is “active in the area of prison reform and outreach as it pertains to
Muslim inmates.”
SIIASI is also linked to the Jawala Scouts, which is accused of indoctrinating boys and giving them
basic combat training while dressing them in military fatigues.
In a 2010 article, Shareef condemned “pacifist ‘imams’ who deny the
obligation to jihad and who have deluded their followers into fruitless
activity of supporting democratic constitutional government.”
The group has also urged Muslims to wage “litigation jihad” against the U.S. government.
SIIASI’s mosque in Pittsburgh,
Masjid an-Nur (Light of the Age Mosque), was raided by the FBI on June 30, 2006.
One member of the mosque
for three years, Larry M. Williams (also known as Hasan Ali), was arrested
outside of the building. He was charged for being a felon in possession of a
pistol and for failing to register as a sex offender, as was required after he
was convicted of rape. He was also convicted for committing a robbery in
Washington.
The raid was immediately
condemned by Imam Siraj Wahhaj’s MANA coalition that included Ummah official
Luqman Abdullah. The Islamic Council of Greater Pittsburgh likewise came to the defense of the radical group.
END OF PART III
Next: SHASI’s Broader
Network
THE BOTTOM LINE: The significant issue here is
that in the past these Muslim groups generally worked independently, but now,
although they mostly were spinoffs of each other, are beginning to unite with
one thing in common…Islamic Jihad of ’The World Nation of Islam’. This unification
of Islam will make the nearly 2 billion Muslims worldwide the most dangerous
enemy the world has ever known.
Thanks for listening my friend. Now
go do the right thing, pray and fight for truth and freedom.
-
de Andréa
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pass on this article to everyone on your email list. It may be the only chance for your family and
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