Let Them Eat Rubber
Bullets
By Imad-ad-Dean Ahmad,
Ph.D.
Minaret of Freedom Institute
12/12/01
How do you think the
world would respond if someone shut down Catholic Charities because of an
unproven allegation that they were recruiting people for the Irish Republican
Army? Imagine the horror and
indignation if the U.S. government issued orders shutting down the Red Cross
just as it was trying to assist the victim of the Sept. 11 terrorism because of
an unproven allegation that a senior official was also involved with the Ku
Klux Klan? How is it possible then that
the Bush Administration has been able to deprive orphans and the wounded
civilians of Palestine from the aid given them by the Holy Land Foundation for
Relief and Development by freezing their assets before any trial on the
accusations against the foundation has been held?
The injury of this
shutdown affects not only Palestinians, but the many other worthy causes that
the Holy Land Foundation had supported including, ironically, New York City’s
WTC funds. That injury is compounded by
the insult of shutting it down during the month of Ramadan when Muslims
concentrate their charitable giving in fulfillment of the third pillar of
Islam.
For years the usual gang
of Islam-bashers have attempted to provoke action against the Holy Land
Foundation with the charge that its charitable activities indirectly aid
Hamas. The Holy Land Foundation has
denied allegations that it provides financial aid to Hamas and have also denied
that they condone terrorism. The
foundation’s chief executive Shukri Abu-Bakr stated at a press conference last
week that “The foundation is strictly a humanitarian organization, and we have
never supported Hamas.…”
A broad assortment of
leading American Muslim organizations have joined together in issuing a
statement protesting this scandalous treatment of one of the largest Muslim
charitable organizations in America.
The text reads, in part: "No relief group anywhere in the world
should be asked to question hungry orphans about their parent's religious
beliefs, political affiliations or legal status. Those questions are not asked
of recipients of public assistance whose parents are imprisoned or executed in
the United States, and they should not be a litmus test for relief in
Palestine.”
The FBI has released a
49-page report that alleges that “most of the funds Holy Land sends to the
territories–about $8 million last year–are funneled to Hamas causes, and that
there is a close link between Hamas's charitable work and its support for
suicide bombers” (Mintz 2001). This
electrifying conclusion seems to be based on FBI monitoring of a 1993 meeting
in Philadelphia at which “top officials” of the Holy Land Foundation, the
Islamic Association for Palestine, and Hamas allegedly met for the purpose of
developing a strategy for undermining the Oslo accords. Yet one searches in vain for specific
illegal actions by the Holy Land Foundation.
The closest we get is the “recollection” by an “unnamed FBI informant”
that Shukri Abu Bakr was introduced at a 1994 conference in California as the
equivalent of a “senior vice president” of Hamas (Mintz 2001). Even if this allegation were more
specific–and true–it might call for action against Abu Bakr, not the Holy Land
Foundation.
It appears that the
government has decided to break the back of the Islamic charity by means that
do not require it to prove that the organization itself has done anything
wrong. Instead they “will seek to
deport group leaders who have violated immigration laws and will file
administrative actions against the groups like the one brought this week”
(Mintz 2001).
One cannot escape the
conclusion that the government has bought into the strange argument that
Zionists have been using in their call to shut down Islamic charitable
organizations. The argument goes
something like this: Every blanket
given a sick child by the Islamic charities frees up money that Hamas can use
to buy explosives to use against Israeli civilians. It is shocking that anyone would accept such perverse reasoning,
and for years the federal government did not cave into it.
It was sufficiently
shameful that the American government has been manipulated into its persecution
of strong and healthy innocents like Mazen an-Najar. This latest development of depriving the poor, the needy, the
wounded, orphans, widows, and the elderly from obtaining the food, clothing,
shelter, and medical relief–which in many cases our own assistance to Israel
has made necessary–is disgraceful in the extreme. The words that Thomas Jefferson (1782) wrote about the evils of
slavery apply as well to this most recent assault on the downtrodden:
“I tremble for my country
when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep for ever: that
considering numbers, nature and natural means only, a revolution of the wheel
of fortune, an exchange of situation is among possible events: that it may
become probable by supernatural interference! The almighty has no attribute
which can take side with us in such a contest.–But it is impossible to be
temperate and to pursue this subject through the various considerations of
policy, of morals, of history natural and civil. We must be contented to hope
they will force their way into every one's mind.”
References
Thomas Jefferson 1782, Thomas Jefferson: Notes on the State of Virginia.
John Mintz 2001, “Long
FBI Probe Led to U.S. Move Against Islamic Charity,” Washington Post
(12/6) A34.