Mainstream Muslim organizations in America claim
to be institutions of peace, but the reality hasn’t matched the rhetoric. A
history of terrorist links has done irreparable damage to these groups’ public
pronouncements, rendering their words empty. One of the links, a former
Al-Qaeda web designer named Mazen Mokhtar, has been making the rounds of many
of the groups, most recently being featured on a video aimed at converting
non-Muslims. It is individuals such as him who expose the grand American
Islamist lie.
On April 24, 2007, Egyptian-born Mazen Moein Mokhtar was
arrested at his North Brunswick, New Jersey home, charged
with failing to file tax returns and filing false tax returns. While the
charges, on their face, weren’t related to terrorism, Mokhtar’s terror-filled
past suggested that there was more to the indictment than just taxes.
One of the tax years in question was 2000, where Mokhtar
failed to report nearly $90,000 in net income. That year he had received a
gross income of over $162,000 through his computer consulting business,
Mindcraft. One of the jobs he undertook in 2000 was the creation of a website,
minna.com, which corresponded to the name of the group both it and Mindcraft’s
site were registered under, Minna International Corporation. “Minna” possibly
alluded to an individual who resided at the same North
Brunswick address as Mokhtar, Meena Shah.
Shortly before and after the September 11th attacks, an
English language website, qoqaz.net, a.k.a. Jihad in Chechnya, was raising funds and
recruiting fighters for Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. The site was a project of
Azzam Publications, an organization named for Osama bin Laden’s mentor,
Abdullah Azzam. The Arabic companion to the site was qoqaz.com, which exists
today as alqoqaz.net. “Qoqaz” connotes Chechnya’s Caucasus
Mountains, where Al-Qaeda-related mujahideen fighters have warred
against Russian military forces.
Because of the nature of the website, qoqaz.net was
predisposed with producing “mirror sites” or replicas of itself, so that, in
the aftermath of an attack such as 9/11, if one site was shut down by
authorities, others would be able to continue to raise funds and recruit
fighters for the cause.
Babar Ahmad, the London-based director of qoqaz.net, is
currently in custody in England
awaiting extradition to the United
States to face terrorism charges. According
to law enforcement, Ahmad recruited Mokhtar to create these mirror sites, one
of which was Mokhtar’s
minna.com.
Aside from its connection to Al-Qaeda, Mokhtar’s Minna site
also contained a portal to the Palestinian
Information Center,
a.k.a. the official website of Hamas, a group that Mokhtar has held many strong
feelings for. From 1992 to 1996, on an internet
newsgroup forum, Mokhtar spoke openly about his support for the terrorist
organization, as well as suicide bombings.
Concerning Hamas, he stated:
- “One
of the reasons of my support for Hamas is that they have very high moral
standards.”
- “I
have read the [Hamas] covenant. I support the covenant…”
- “Hamas’s
path is the only path in the history of the Palestinian struggle against Israel
that has produced results, and the results are impressive, I must say.”
- “[T]he
operations of HAMAS are heroic.”
- “In any action of mass self defense, there is the
possibility that some innocent people will die... I have enough
trust in Hamas to feel that no one is killed before being identified as a
collaborator.”
About suicide bombings, he said:
- “Yes,
[suicide bombing is allowed], assuming that the targets are legitimate
(and the suicide bombing is a sacrifice, not a suicide.)”
- “[Blowing
yourself up is not considered suicide], because it’s an effective method
of attacking the enemy and continuing jihad… These are not people
committing suicide because they are fed up with life, these are people who
are sacrificing their lives for Allah.”
Mazen Mokhtar’s actions with
regard to Al-Qaeda and Hamas are unconscionable, yet mainstream Islamic groups
which purport to be against terrorism have openly embraced him.
In August of 2004, Magdy Mahmoud,
speaking as President of the New
Jersey chapter of the Council on American-Islamic
Relations (CAIR-NJ), described
Mokhtar to the Washington Post as “a wise man in the community, a
humble man.”
Mokhtar has
spoken at events sponsored by the Muslim Students Association (MSA), Young Muslims (YM), and the Muslim American
Society (MAS). Indeed, Mokhtar
worked for MAS as the Youth
Director for its New Jersey
chapter. As well, he has been an imam at the New Brunswick Islamic Center
(NBIC), a.k.a. Masjid Al-Huda, and he has been involved with the North American
Imams Federation (NAIF).
Now, following his 2007 arrest, he
has resurfaced – on a video for Why Islam (WI), an outreach or dawah project
run by the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA). The video, titled ‘Why Islam
Introduction,’ was released at the end of July and is currently being featured on the homepage of WI’s
Sacramento, California chapter website. The objective of
the video, much like the group that created it, is to bring non-Muslims to
radical Islam through deceitful means.
In the video, which also features “unindicted
co-conspirator” of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing Siraj Wahhaj [whom Mokhtar’s
Al-Huda mosque co-sponsored a speech for just three weeks after 9/11], Mokhtar
is pictured sitting at a desk, staring at a computer screen. Given Mokhtar’s
website troubles, it’s interesting that WI would choose this scene for him. Of course, just having Mokhtar in the video shows the true
face of WI.
In July of 2005, CAIR,
MSA, MAS,
ICNA and a large list of other American mainstream Muslim organizations and
Islamic centers endorsed a religious ruling or fatwa against terrorism. But
the document was a lie – a scam meant to fool the American public into
believing that these groups truly were and are against terrorism.
Mazen Mokhtar’s representation in these groups’ functions and
institutions reveals an entirely different reality than the one they attempt to
portray to the masses. Mokhtar, an Al-Qaeda operative and devout supporter of
Hamas, is but one example of many in proving the alternative goals of the organizations
he is invited to affiliate with. If he is to serve any purpose, it is to shine
light on their deep-seated hateful and violent agendas.