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Saudi Venom in U.S.
Mosques - by Daniel Pipes
Those of us following the
development of Islam in America have for years worried about
the unhealthy influence of Saudi money and ideas on American
Muslims.
We watched apprehensively as the
Saudi government boasted of funding mosques and research
centers; as it announced its support for Islamist
organizations such as the Council on American-Islamic
Relations; as it trained the imams who became radicalized
chaplains in American prisons, and as it introduced
Wahhabism to university campuses via the Muslim Student
Association.
But through the years, we lacked
information on the content of Saudi materials. Do they water
down or otherwise change the raw, inflammatory message that
dominates religious and political life in Saudi Arabia? Or
do they replicate the same outlook?
Now, thanks to excellent
research by Freedom House (a New York-headquartered
organization founded in 1941 that calls itself "a clear
voice for democracy and freedom around the world"), we
finally have specifics on the Saudi project. A
just-published study, "Saudi Publications on Hate Ideology
Fill American Mosques," provides a wealth of detail on the
subject.
(Two points about it bear
noting: This important study was written anonymously, for
security reasons, and it was issued by a think tank, and not
by university-based researchers. Once again, an off-campus
organization does the most creative and timely work, and
Middle East specialists find themselves sidelined.)
The picture of Saudi activities
in the United States is not a pretty one.
Freedom House's Muslim
volunteers went to 15 prominent mosques from New York to San
Diego and collected more than 200 books and other
publications disseminated by Saudi Arabia (some 90% in
Arabic) in mosque libraries, publication racks, and
bookstores.
What they found can only be
described as horrifying. These writings - each and every one
of them sponsored by the kingdom - espouse an
anti-Christian, anti-Semitic, misogynist, jihadist, and
supremacist outlook. For example, they:
-Reject Christianity as a valid
faith: Any Muslim who believes "that churches are houses of
God and that God is worshiped therein is an infidel."
-Insist that Islamic law be
applied: On a range of issues, from women (who must be
veiled) to apostates from Islam ("should be killed"), the
Saudi publications insist on full enforcement of Shariah in
America.
-See non-Muslims as the enemy:
"Be dissociated from the infidels, hate them for their
religion, leave them, never rely on them for support, do not
admire them, and always oppose them in every way according
to Islamic law."
-See America as hostile
territory: "It is forbidden for a Muslim to become a citizen
of a country governed by infidels because this is a means of
acquiescing to their infidelity and accepting all their
erroneous ways."
-Prepare for war against America: "To be true Muslims, we must prepare and be ready for jihad in Allah's way. It is the duty of the citizen and the government."
The report's authors correctly
find that the publications under review "pose a grave threat
to non-Muslims and to the Muslim community itself." The
materials instill a doctrine of religious hatred inimical to
American culture and serve to produce new recruits to the
enemy forces in the war on terrorism.
To provide just one example of
the latter: Adam Yahiye Gadahn, thought to be the masked
person in a 2004 videotape threatening that American streets
would "run with blood," became a jihadi in the course of
spending time at the Islamic Society of Orange County, a
Saudi-funded institution.
Freedom House urges that the
American government "not delay" a protest at the highest
levels to the Saudi government about its venomous
publications lining the shelves of some of America's most
important mosques. That's unobjectionable, but it strikes
this observer of Saudi-American relations as inadequate. The
protest will be accepted, then filed away.
Instead, the insidious Saudi
assault on America must be made central to the (misnamed)
war on terror. The Bush administration needs to confront the
domestic menace that the Wahhabi kingdom presents to
America. That means junking the
fantasy of Saudi friendship and seeing the country, like
China, as a formidable rival whose ambitions for a very
different world order must be repulsed and contained.
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