|
Muslim Brotherhood makes its way into the USA thru its front
organization MAS : Does MAS - the Muslim American Society want an
Islamic government in the United States? -by Daveed
Gartenstein-Ross PAX-TV's Faith Under Fire broadcast a debate
that I (Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, an international counter-terrorism
consultant and an attorney with Boies, Schiller & Flexner), took part
in against Mahdi Bray, the executive director of the Muslim American
Society's (MAS) Freedom Foundation. The MAS is a front organization
of the Muslim Brotherhood.
 The founder of the Muslim Brotherhood al-Banna
wrote, "Islam is faith and worship, a country and a citizenship, a
religion and a state. It is spirituality and hard work. It is a
Qur'an and a sword." The group also emphasizes that Islam is a
universal faith. As al-Banna put it, Islam "has encompassed all
aspects of human life, for all peoples and nations, and for all times
and ages."
Anticom_________
____________
Bray had selected the debate topic in advance, and chose to argue
about "The United States of Islam?"--that is, whether American
Muslims wanted to see Islamic law (sharia) implemented in the United
States. While I unwaveringly agreed that most American Muslims don't
want to see the United States ruled by Islamic law, I nonetheless
jumped at the chance to debate this topic against Bray. After all,
the Chicago Tribune recently published a story detailing how the
fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood operates in the United States as
none other than MAS. So while most American Muslims don't want to see
the United States governed by sharia, Bray's organization does. And
while researching for the debate, I found that MAS--except in its
most public of statements--is quite open about its agenda and
allegiances. Even a brief review of various MAS chapters' websites
provides a revealing look at what the national organization is
teaching its members.THE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD is an international
Islamist group that largely operates underground and behind the
scenes, with branches in about 70 countries. The Brotherhood was
founded in 1928 by Hassan al-Banna, an Egyptian schoolteacher who--in
the wake of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and abolition of the
caliphate--bemoaned the sickness of the Ummah, or larger Muslim
community. The Brotherhood's response to this perceived sickness was
to emphasize doctrinally that Islam encompasses all the affairs of
man. As al-Banna wrote, "Islam is faith and worship, a country and a
citizenship, a religion and a state. It is spirituality and hard
work. It is a Qur'an and a sword." The group also emphasizes that
Islam is a universal faith. As al-Banna put it, Islam "has
encompassed all aspects of human life, for all peoples and nations,
and for all times and ages."
Because the Brotherhood views Islam as all-encompassing and
universal, one of its highest goals is to spread Islamic law. The
Chicago Tribune explains that the controversial "ultimate goal" of
the U.S. Brotherhood is "to create Muslim states overseas and, they
hope, someday in America as well." Brotherhood members did emphasize
to the Tribune that they operate within the laws of the countries
where they live: They stress that they do not believe in
overthrowing the U.S. government, but rather that they want as many
people as possible to convert to Islam so that one day--perhaps
generations from now--a majority of Americans will support a society
governed by Islamic law. (So they want to subvert the US from within -
WoJ)
Despite these pronouncements, the Muslim Brotherhood has not always
been known for non-violence. The "Qur'an and a sword" outlook
trumpeted by al-Banna is, for example, evident in the organization's
militant motto: "Allah is our objective. The Prophet is our leader.
Qur'an is our law. Jihad is our way. Dying in the way of Allah is our
highest hope." Consistent with this motto, Muslim Brotherhood members
have been involved in such episodes as the assassination of Egyptian
Prime Minister Mahmud Fahmi Nokrashi and the attempted assassination
of Gamal Abdel Nasser. One of the Muslim Brotherhood's most violent
theoreticians was Sayyid Qutb, whose ideas heavily influenced Osama
bin Laden's current conception of jihad. The 9/11 Commission Report
explains Qutb's writings: Three basic themes emerge from Qutb's
writings. First, he claimed that the world was beset with barbarism,
licentiousness, and unbelief (a condition he called jihiliyya, the
religious term for the period of ignorance prior to the revelations
given to the Prophet Mohammed) (jihiliyya or jahiliya also covers
all Christians, Jews and other non-Muslims - WoJ). Qutb argued that
humans can choose only between Islam and jihiliyya. Second, he
warned that more people, including Muslims, were attracted to
jihiliyya and its material comforts than to his view of Islam;
jihiliyya could therefore triumph over Islam. Third, no middle
ground exists in what Qutb conceived as a struggle between God and
Satan. All Muslims--as he defined them--therefore must take up arms
in this fight. Any Muslim who rejects his ideas is just one more
nonbeliever worthy of destruction. THIS BRINGS US to MAS, which was
incorporated in Illinois in 1993 and today has 53 chapters nationwide
and about 10,000 members. According to the Chicago Tribune, a
contentious debate among Brotherhood members preceded MAS's
incorporation, and the Muslim American Society is now the name under
which the U.S. Brotherhood operates. While MAS leaders admit that
their organization was founded by the Muslim Brotherhood, they claim
that the two are now completely distinct. For example, MAS official
Shaker Elsayed told the Chicago Tribune, "Ikhwan [Brotherhood]
members founded MAS, but MAS went way beyond that point of
conception." The fact that a MAS
spokesman such as Bray feels comfortable publicly arguing that MAS
does not want to see an Islamic state in America demonstrates the
strength of its public disavowal of the Muslim Brotherhood. On
Faith Under Fire I stated that, consonant with the Muslim
Brotherhood's agenda, MAS has made clear that it would like to see
our constitutional order replaced with rule according to the Koran
and Sunnah. In response, Bray stated definitively, "I would be very
happy if we could just maintain the constitutional principles that we
have in the United States." He went on to say that, for the past two
years, the MAS Freedom Foundation has been training Muslims about the
Constitution and showing them how to "take full benefit of those
beautiful things called the Bill of Rights." In fact, he accused
me of taking words from MAS's websites out of context, and claimed
that MAS's true agenda was "to support . . . the U.S. Constitution
and to defend the Constitution against enemies both domestic and
foreign." Let us examine what MAS stands for today--with reference
only to its own material that is readily available on the internet--
and determine who was taking MAS's agenda out of context. MAS's
outlook is best reflected in its curriculum. While any Muslim can
join MAS by paying $10 a month in dues, the group has various
gradations of membership. MAS's highest membership class is "active"
membership. To attain active member status, a Muslim must complete
five years of community service and education. The website for MAS
Minnesota outlines the objectives of MAS's active member program.
These objectives include: (1) Continue building the correct unified
comprehension of Islam as outlined in the Message of the Teachings by
Imam Al-Banna. . . . (9) Make the member fulfill his duties as
outlined in the Message of the Teachings by Imam Al-Banna. Although
these objectives appear on MAS Minnesota's website, there is no
suggestion that they apply only to the regional chapter. Instead, MAS
Minnesota's website discusses the MAS curriculum in general terms
that suggest that it is presenting the national organization's
curriculum and objectives. And the listed objectives are telling.
Even a cursory review of The Message of the Teachings indicates that
al-Banna's "unified comprehension of Islam" falls short of a call to
defend the Constitution against enemies both foreign and domestic. In
that book, al-Banna tells his fellow Muslims that they must work
toward "[r]eforming the government so that it may become a truly
Islamic government, performing as a servant to the nation in the
interest of the people. By Islamic government I mean a government
whose officers are Muslims who perform the obligatory duties of
Islam, who do not make public their disobedience, and who enforce the
rules and teachings of Islam." Moreover, al-Banna implores his
followers to "[c]ompletely boycott non-Islamic courts and judicial
systems. Also, dissociate yourself from organisations, newspapers,
committees, schools, and institutions which oppose your Islamic
ideology." The message that all countries should be ruled by
Islamic law is echoed throughout MAS's membership curriculum. For
example, MAS requires all its adjunct members to read Fathi Yakun's
book To Be a Muslim. In that volume, Yakun spells out his expansive
agenda: "Until the nations of the world have functionally Islamic
governments, every individual who is careless or lazy in working for
Islam is sinful." Al-Banna flatly states in The Message of the
Teachings that violence is an acceptable means for spreading
Islamic ideology: "Always intend to go for Jihad and desire
martyrdom. Prepare for it as much as you can." Nor is al-Banna's
work the only one in MAS's curriculum to advocate the promotion of
Islam through violence. MAS's adjunct members are required to read
Syed Qutb's Milestones. Among other things, Milestones contains
Qutb's exposition on "Jihad in the Cause of God," which is a
refutation of those who claim that jihad encompasses only defensive
warfare (and pull wool over your eyes - WoJ). Qutb states that jihad
is, in fact, justified when the sole purpose is the establishment of
Islam. While Bray tries to portray MAS as an organization that
embraces these shared values, the group simultaneously teaches its
members that all government should become Islamic and that non-
Islamic judicial systems should be boycotted. MAS has long played a
double game where, despite its fringe outlook, it attempts to pass
itself off as mainstream. When the Chicago Tribune began to lift the
curtain on this deception with its investigative report, MAS's
leadership quibbled with the portrait that the newspaper painted. Yet
an even bigger indictment lies in the material that MAS requires its
members to read--and in the book that it touts as "the correct
unified comprehension of
Islam." __________________________ Daveed Gartenstein-Ross is an
international counter-terrorism consultant and an attorney with
Boies, Schiller & Flexner. Story Credits: Weekly Standard
__________________________________________________
Discuss this
article
|