by Samantha Rose Mandeles and Sean MacCormac
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One such organization is the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), which, among other pursuits, organizes annual "Education Forums" all over the country. Now in their 20th year and drawing hundreds of American Muslim educators with each occurrence, this ISNA educational conference claims to integrate Islamic teachings with social justice activism, working with Muslim educators who teach the next generation of American Muslims.
American Islamist organizations use the language of social justice activism to impose illiberal values on Muslim communities.
But at its core, ISNA is an Islamist organization with deep ties to overseas terror networks. In the infamous 2007 Holy Land Foundation (HLF) terrorist financing case, the U.S. Department of Justice named ISNA an "unindicted co-conspirator" — naming the group as one of a number of "entities who are and/or were members of the U.S. Muslim Brotherhood." Accordingly, ISNA's conferences — replete with extreme speakers and exclusionary ideology — facilitate the tendentious education of Muslim American youth by narrowly defining "authentic Islamic studies curricul[a]" and the "Muslim American Narrative" according to ISNA's Islamist ideals.
Mehdi Hasan
On April 19, ISNA's latest nationwide educational conference took place outside Chicago, Illinois. This year, the theme was "Integrating Social Justice in Islamic Education: Ensuring equal access to success for all students, parents, and teachers." Indeed, the keynote speaker, British journalist Mehdi Hasan, is an outspoken commentator on the topical question of "Islamophobia" (a frequent ISNA educational conference topic). However, he is also known for a 2009 speech at a Shia mosque in London in which he stated, "Once we lose the moral high ground we are no different from the rest, of the non-Muslims, from the rest of those human beings who live their lives as animals, bending any rule to fulfill any desire." He was also recorded describing disbelief in Islam as an "infirmity" and approvingly citing the Qur'anic classification of atheists as "a people of no intelligence."
While Hasan later published an article apologizing for his "phraseology" in those cases, he concurrently justified his speech by pointing out that he had also called fellow Muslims "cattle." And while he recently issued a sincere-sounding apology on Twitter, reminding his readers that "words matter," he has now nullified his own apology by agreeing to speak for such an extremist organization as ISNA.
Rania Lawendy's Facebook page is littered with images of the four-fingered Brotherhood symbol.
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One might hope that these poor speaker choices represent momentary lapses in judgment by ISNA staff. Unfortunately, the radical lecturers at the recent ISNA educational conference are not anomalies. For example, in January, ISNA hosted a regional West Coast educational forum on the theme of "Teaching Values to Empower Students." The conference's banquet featured Islamist cleric Yassir Fazaga — whose values seem like a poor choice with which to "empower" American students. Fazaga was exposed in 2012 for his extensive involvement with Peace TV, an extremist media outlet founded by the Islamist televangelist Zakir Naik, who says that "every Muslim should be a terrorist," and that Jews are "our staunchest enemy."
Yassir Fazaga
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Teachers who attend ISNA's education forums do not encounter genuinely liberal, pluralistic ideas.
At other past ISNA education conferences, ISNA has even honored the overtly anti-Semiticactivist Yahia Abdul-Rahman with a "Community Service" award. Among other indiscretions, Abdul-Rahman has approvingly posted a Facebook link to "The Ugly Truth," a website that describes itself as "intelligent 'anti-Semitism' for thinking Gentiles." The site features claims that Israel orchestrated the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and discussions about "de-Judifying America." Astonishingly, his Ugly Truth and other anti-Jewish conspiracy posts remain public and visible on his Facebook page.
Given the extremism of Lawendy, Abdul-Rahman and other speakers, teachers who attend ISNA's education forums do not encounter genuinely liberal, pluralistic ideas — but rather encounter fig leaves for something more sinister. If ISNA's vision of "authentic Islamic studies" includes these speakers' Islamist ideologies, Americans might well worry about what the next generation of our Muslim youth is imbibing.
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