R.E.A.L. Denounces UK Anti-Ahmadiyya Muslim Hatred, Praise of Murder of British Muslim for Easter Wishes to Christians

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands in support of religious liberty and universal human rights, including all those persecuted for religious liberty, such as the Ahmadiyya Muslims who have been oppressed and persecuted in Pakistan, Indonesia and other parts of the world.  In Pakistan, as R.E.A.L. has repeatedly pointed out, Ahmadiyya Muslims have been the targets of violent terrorism and legalized persecution by the Pakistan government, which seeks to deny their status as Muslims.  In 1984, the oppressive Pakistan government passed a law making it illegal for Ahmadiyya Muslims to be considered Muslims.  The United Nations also concurs in recognition of their persecution in Pakistan.  Furthermore, R.E.A.L. has recently seen and condemned religious persecution of Ahmadiyya Muslims in Indonesia which seeks to target and deny religious freedom.

R.E.A.L. has regularly stood in support of these persecuted Muslims, and continues to stand for their freedoms, as we stand for the freedoms of all as part of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.  R.E.A.L. has had Ahmadiyya Muslims at our human rights events, publicized their persecution, and met them in Ahmadiyya mosques.  Ahmadiyya Muslims have also shared calls for protection of other persecuted religious minorities at R.E.A.L. events, including standing in support of persecuted Pakistan Christians.  R.E.A.L. stands in support of Ahmadiyya Muslims’ shared universal human rights and freedoms.  R.E.A.L. has reported such persecution at our blog and on Social Media, and at R.E.A.L. human rights day events.

C. Naseer Ahmad speaks at Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) Human Rights Day Event on Behalf of Ahmadiyya Muslim Community and human rights

So it greatly distresses R.E.A.L. to hear of anti-Ahmadiyya Muslim activist groups in the United Kingdom (UK) and elsewhere praising the persecution of Ahmadiyya Muslims.  R.E.A.L. rejects such anti-human rights hatred, praise of persecution, and even those praising terroristic violence.  In the UK, there has been a series of reports of persecution of Ahmadiyya Muslims reported by the BBC  – “Ahmadiyya ‘targeted by hate campaign’,” reported by the Guardian – “Ahmadi Muslims in UK call for urgent action against hate,” reported by the Wimbeldon Guardian – ” Religious hate leaflets found in Tooting, Streatham and Kingston,” and reported by the Independent – “Hardliners call for deaths of Surrey Muslims,”  there has been reports over the past six years on a growing campaign of hate and calls for violence in the UK against Ahmadiyya Muslims.

These UK media reports have repeatedly described threats and acts of sectarian violence by extremists, who claim they have Islamic religious authority to spread such hatred against Ahmadiyya Muslims.  This has included religious leaders that have sought boycotts against Ahmadi businesses, vandalism of Ahmadi mosques, and leaflets calling for the murder of Ahmadi Muslims in Kingston-upon-Thames.

R.E.A.L. has been aware of a UK-based organization, which calls itself the Khatme Nubuwwat Academy, which has led a campaign against the persecuted Ahmadiyya Muslims.  The UK-based Khatme Nubuwwat Academy considers itself an Islamic group and focuses on disparaging persecuted Ahmadiyya Muslims,  which it calls on its website the derogatory term “Qadiyanism” or “Qadianis.”  The UK-based Khatme Nubuwwat Academy uses this derogatory slur of  “Qadianis” in calling Ahmadiyya Muslims an “unrighteous cult, kafir and non-muslim.”  The UK-based Khatme Nubuwwat Academy website calls Ahmaids as “traitors” “to Islam.”

Anti-Ahmadiyya Hatred on UK Khatme Nubuwwat Academy Website

The Khatme Nubuwwat Academy has also been linked to leaflets distributed throughout South London calling for hate and reportedly calling for violence against Ahmadiyya Muslims.  The Wimbledon Guardian reported on such hate leaflets against Ahamdis, and reported that “some of the literature is produced by anti-Ahmadi group KN, whose spokesmen delivered speeches at the TIC in Tooting, Streatham mosque and the Kingston mosque.”  An image of the anti-Ahmadiyya Muslim literature clearly showed the address of the Khatme Nubuwwat Academy.  The Wimbledon Guardian further reported that: “Kingston police confirmed a teenage Ahmadi girl, who did not want to be named, gave them a statement claiming the leaflet, which was written in Urdu, said: ‘Kill a Qadiyani and doors to heaven will be open to you.’ ”  The London Guardian also reported on this persecution of Ahmadis and the threats by Khatme Nubuwwat supporters including literature calling the Ahmadiyya Muslim faith an “apostasy” which must receive must be punished by “capital punishment” (death).  Rafiq Hayat, national president of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community UK, told The Independent: “Through leaflet distribution, posting of hate material on websites and via programmes on satellite TV (often in Urdu and other south Asian languages) our community is being made a target of hatred and hostility by preachers of hate. The perpetrators of this act are Muslims and whilst they are certainly not representative of the vast majority of Muslims in this country, they are creating hatred in society.”

However, R.E.A.L. notes that, despite the UK’s Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 law, R.E.A.L. is unaware of  Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) actions for prosecution of religious hatred in these cases.  The Wimbledon Guardian followed up on a report where Lord Avebury was critical of the failure of the UK CPS to act on such threats of hatred and violence.

R.E.A.L. has also seen such anti-Ahmadiyya Muslim hatred from Khatme Nubuwwat Academy and its supporters on social media as well.  On the Twitter site of “KhatmeNubuwwat,” we have seen praise of Pakistan persecution of Ahmadi Muslims, such as “The Punjab Police is serving the citizens by erasing the Kalima & 99 names of Allah Almighty from Ahmadiyya mosque in Sultan Pura, Lahore.”

This disturbing and continuing trend of support for threats and violence by extremists against Ahmadiyya Muslims was brought into troubling focus after the death of British Muslim on Thursday, March 24, 2016, and the response of anti-Ahmadiyya Muslim activists.  R.E.A.L. learned of the murder of a Pakistan-born Muslim shopkeeper Asad Shah on the night of March 24, who was stabbed to death in what has been described as a “religiously prejudiced” murder  in UK’s Scotland city of Glasgow.  This murder of Muslim Asad Shah occurred hours after Mr. Shah posted greetings to Christians for Easter on social media, stating “Good Friday and very happy Easter, especially to my beloved Christian nation x!”  The murder occurred before the night before the Christian religious remembrance of Good Friday on March 25 and before Easter on Sunday March 27.

On March 26, the Daily Mail reported that: “It is believed Mr Shah belonged to the Ahmadi movement, a Muslim sect which promotes non-violence and tolerance of other faiths. Ahmadis identify themselves as Muslims and a determined missionary network has helped spread their teachings around the world.”

Multiple UK news media reported the arrest of a 32 year old Muslim man suspect who reportedly had attacked Mr. Asad Shah, who was stabbed to death, reportedly in the head.  One media source reported that “Mr Shah’s brother, who was working next door, rushed out to find the killer laughing while sitting on the Glasgow newsagent’s bleeding chest.”  It also reported that “Mohammad Faisal, a family friend, said a bearded Muslim wearing a long religious robe entered Mr. Shah’s shop and spoke to him in his native language before stabbing him in the head with a kitchen knife.”  The report stated that: “The brother dragged Mr Shah away but the guy continued attacking with the blade,’ said Mr Faisal. ‘They struggled up to the bus stop where Asad collapsed. ‘It was just a clear-cut revenge attack. For posting messages about peace, messages about greeting fellow Christians and Jews. ‘That man must not have been too happy about what he was doing, what he was preaching. It was a well-planned attack. He must have been an extremist. ‘He went straight for the head. He got stomped on the head as well. His brother suffered a slash down his shoulder area because he attacked him with a knife as well.’ ” An eyewitness to the attack on Mr. Shah, who did not want to be named, told the Daily Record: “As I drove past I saw two men standing over the victim.” “One was stamping on his head. There was a pool of blood on the ground. It was horrific.”

In addition, on March 26, the first full day after this terrorist attack on Mr. Asad Shah,  it was also brought to R.E.A.L.’s attention that those supporting the anti-Ahmadiyya Muslim hatred in the UK and by those supporting the Khatme Nubuwwat also praised this terrorist attack on Asad Shah.

R.E.A.L. discovered a social media site on Facebook for a “community”,  called the “Anti Qadianiat (Tahafuz Khatme Nubuwwat).”  This is a community which shares the anti-Ahmadiyya Muslim hate and contempt, which we have frequently seen by extremists in UK, which pejoratively refers to the Ahmadi Muslim community as “Qadianis,” just as the Khatme Nubuwwat Academy does.  This community is one of several such “Khatme Nubuwwat” sites with the same references and types of content as the official Khatme Nubuwwat website.

After the murder of Asad Shah, the Anti Qadianiat (Tahafuz Khatme Nubuwwat) community on Facebook posted, a report of Asad Shah’s murder with pleasure, stating in English “Congratulations to all Muslims,” and also writing in Urdu “ابق
جھوٹی نبوت کا دعویدار مربی اسد شاہ قادیانی قتل کر دیا گیا ہے,” which R.E.A.L. roughly translates as “”Reports on Asad Shah Ghulam’s false prophecy claims has been killed.”

The Anti Qadianiat (Tahafuz Khatme Nubuwwat) Facebook community had many who approved of this posting and liked it, a number who reposted the Facebook posting of the Asad Shah murder with the message “Congratulations to all Muslims.”   There were also some who used the new Facebook message comments to leave a “laughing” response of “haha.”

Anti Qadianiat (Tahafuz Khatme Nubuwwat) Anti-Ahmadiyya Facebook Site Mocks the Murder of Asad Shah – stating “Congratulations to all Muslims” after his MURDER (Facebook Screen Shot) – it was praised by 43 followers.

Among the 43 who praised this “congratulations to all Muslims” for the murder of Asad Shah, this included followers from the United Kingdom, Pakistan, and other locations, including UK followers which state that they are Manchester and Leeds.  It included a broad range of executives, business entrepreneurs and owners, college students, college graduates, housewives, technical experts, computer specialists, and many others.  It included UK followers working in security, and those in UK businesses.  It included at least one individual who publicly stated he was an officer in the Pakistan Government.  It also included Bhai Abu Bakr of the Tablighi Jamaat organization, which has been linked to terrorism in the past.

Bhai Abu Bakr of Tablighi Jamaat organization also praises call for “Congratulations to all Muslims” after the MURDER of Asad Shah of Glasgow (Facebook Screenshot)

R.E.A.L. has obtained screen shots of all of those who praised and supported this public Facebook praise for the MURDER of Asad Shah, prior to publishing this posting, including screen shots of their individual profile information, and 140 pages of the Anti Qadianiat (Tahafuz Khatme Nubuwwat) Anti-Ahmadiyya Facebook site.

R.E.A.L. stands ready to share this information with any human rights NGOs and, of course the UK law enforcement agencies investigating Asad Shah’s murder in Glasgow, as well as those within the CPS who should be investigating his murder and this praise of his murder under the UK’s Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 law.

 

The Civil War of American Christians Against Extremism – The Lessons for Muslims Today

Today, a Muslim friend asks the question to American Christians: “Christians, since you haven’t been able to get rid of these terrorists, how do expect Muslims to get rid of ISIS?” The posting is accompanied by a photograph of members of the Ku Klux Klan with an American flag. Having fought this battle against white supremacists for 40 years, I want to reply.

Yes, it is a fair question.

But let us be clear, we will never simply “get rid of” all terrorists. That is not the real challenge we face. When we are challenging ISIS, we not simply “getting rid of” some terrorists, we must challenge and defeat the extremist ideology that it represents, and its views that members of its hate movement are superior to other human beings. We are challenging the views that its ideology has a right to deny life, liberty, security, human rights, and human dignity, to those who have different views or a different religion than the ISIS supporters. We do not fight simply a “war on terror.” – We have a war on terrorist and anti-human rights IDEOLOGIES themselves.

The United States of America has had a long, bloody, and painful war against the anti-human rights and terrorist ideology of white supremacy.

This war started at the founding of the country in July 4, 1776, but it was postponed in the interests of fighting what we thought at the time was a greater enemy. The war against such extremist views did not go away, and it returned again to haunt the conscience of the nation, over and over, until it spilled out into a national Civil War, which ripped the nation apart between April 12, 1861 – May 9, 1865.

The Civil War deaths in this battle on white supremacism resulted in the death of 214,938 soldiers and approximately 750,000 total U.S. deaths. Of the soldiers who died, 140,414 Union soldiers were killed, giving their lives in a national war against white supremacist slavery. The question is asked, “Christians, when will you get rid of white supremacist terrorists?” The answer can be partly found in Arlington National Cemetery where you can see the graves of the thousands who fought and died to stop such terrorism.

Let us also be clear, the Confederate States of America (CSA) army and its supporters also had many supporters who believed that they too were following a Christian path. But the Union American Christians could not accept such a contradiction of white supremacist slavery with the values of America, the freedoms the nation represented, and the contradiction of the majority of Americans who followed the Christian religion.

This was not just a Civil War of Americans.

It was also a Civil War of American Christians.

It is a historical guide to those fighting extremists among them, as to how to defy and challenge those who would use supremacism in their identity group and their values as a rationalization to persecute and oppress others.

In the secular United States of America, many would not immediately consider the American Civil War of the 19th century as a “Civil War of American Christians.” But this was a significant aspect of the American Civil War struggle, the Civil War between Christian defying white supremacy and those defending such an ideology to rationalize continued slavery of African-Americans. As history has shown, American Christians fought this war at great sacrifice and great bloodshed. But while the United States of America fought this Civil War as a secular nation, with people of all faiths involved, it would be naive especially in 1865, to not recognize that this was also a great American civil war in determining how Christian faith would be practiced in America, and what that American practice of Christian faith would and would not accept.

Most of the American Union soldiers fighting against the ideology of white supremacy were Christians, and the common rally song to defeat the white supremacist terrorists, was a song called the “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” The national battle hymn is clearly a Christian song. It concludes with the Christian exhortation to those fighting in the Civil War against white supremacy – “As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free.”

This Battle Hymn of the Republic was written by Julia Ward Howe, in Washington D.C., not far from where Freedom Plaza stands today, as she toured Union army camps with Reverend James Freeman Clarke and her husband. The song of American Christianity fighting against the injustice of white supremacist slavery is one of the most fundamental songs of patriotism tied to American’s national capital. The Battle Hymn of the Republic was a national theme in fighting the CSA, and has remained the battle hymn in fighting white supremacy. It remains a standard patriotic song for all Americans and all branches of the U.S. Military Services.

So when the question is asked, when will Christians fight the white supremacist ideology of Ku Klux Klan terrorism, let us never forget that a nation rallied to do just that, and it even based its battle hymn on a Christian imperative to “make men free.” Americans, and certainly American Christians, changed as the result of that Civil War.

The Civil War against white supremacism was the 19th century “reformation” of the American practice of Christianity across the nation. But what Americans learned was that first Civil War was still not enough. We had to fight yet a second Civil War in the 20th century.

The aftermath of the Civil War against white supremacism led to uprising of CSA terrorist groups, chiefly one known as the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), which resulted in a series of Congressional civil rights acts, including the Civil Rights Act of 1871, signed by President Ulysses S. Grant who led the Union army to victory over the CSA. The KKK was created and recognized as a terrorist organization to continue the white supremacist activities of the CSA after its defeat. A series of terrorist prosecutions against KKK members largely defeated the 19th century version of the organization, which would not appear again until the 20th century.

But once again a second Civil War had to be fought in the 20th century, after the all of the changes by the first Civil War had failed to take hold in every part of American society. We realized that fighting white supremacy slavery, defeating the CSA and its views, defeating and imprisoning the KKK, all of these were not enough until we took hold of the extremist ideology of white supremacy itself and we declared total national war on it – everywhere and in every form.

This is the heart of the lesson which America learned, and can offer the world, in defying and defeating extremist views. No victory can begin until the extremist ideology itself is recognized, identified, challenged, defied, disgraced, and defeated.

In the 20th century, there were still parts of America, where rampant white supremacist-based discrimination permeated society and even the law, including legalized segregation in parts of the nation. There were unrepentant supporters of the CSA that sought to reconstitute the KKK, and used the frustrations of difficulties in economic and social issues, and economic depression to try to extend their ideological reach to other parts of the nation.

The CSA-based KKK continued to disgrace American Christians with their attempts to hold white supremacist rallies around a burning cross. But in the 20th century, after the resounding victory against the CSA in the 19th century, largely by American Christians fighting against white supremacy, no major no Protestant Christian denomination officially endorsed the KKK, and it was denounced in Christian publications. However, a 20th century “Civil War” was required to continue to battle this white supremacist scourge, which included defying at some local levels those misguided Christians who continued to support white supremacy, requiring a renewed effort by American Christians and other Americans to challenge the ideology of white supremacy again. This 20th century “Civil War” also saw the white supremacist KKK attacking American Catholics, which ensured that most in the Catholic Christian faith would renounce the KKK organization.

The 20th century Civil War was a different kind of struggle, which still involved troops, but not in the way of the 19th century Civil War. It was instead, a broader, all encompassing “total war” on white supremacy by American Christian and other Americans, as a “Civil Rights movement.” While much of the social struggle started in the 1920s, it returned in the 1950s and in the 1960s, primarily between 1955 and 1968, when I personally began my own fight against white supremacy.

This movement began with a focus on defeating the last remnants of white supremacy in what were called “Jim Crow” laws that legalized segregation between African-Americans and whites in America. We fought this in our schools, in our public places, and in every part of our nation, as a total war against white supremacy. We fought in every part of this nation, in a total war to defeat the evil of white supremacy. Our Supreme Court issued a ruling in 1954 in the historic Brown v. Board of Education, which declared all laws establishing segregated schools to be unconstitutional, and called for the desegregation of all schools throughout the nation.

In Little Rock, Arkansas, where this battle against white supremacy of our schools was first waged, President Eisenhower had to call out the U.S. National Guard to protect African-American students and protect them. It would not be the last time our troops were needed to fight such white supremacy. Our National Guard, as well as the U.S. Department of Justice, under President John F. Kennedy was also used to defy George Wallace in 1963, when he sought to refuse the desegregation of the University of Alabama.

But unlike the 19th century Civil War, the 20th century Civil Rights Movement was a total war led by the common men and women of America defying and defeating white supremacists. This included many churches, and the national leadership of the great African-American Christian leader Pastor Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The struggle was long and tumultuous and in this civil war, there were still some recalcitrant local Christians who refused to accept the reformation of American Christian practices to ensure the equality of all people of all races.

But ultimately the forces of American Christian practice reformation achieved a significant victory and change in America, over white supremacy. Pastor King and those American Christians and other Americans who stood on the cause of equal civil rights for all prevailed. Segregation was defeated, laws were made to ensure equal voting protections and civil rights, and in state after state, city after city, the tide had changed in the 20th century Civil War.

The victories were not without costs, as Civil Rights activists were killed, by a new incarnation of the KKK. The criminals in the KKK committed atrocities, murders of Civil Rights activists, and even attacked and blew up Christian churches. In attacking churches across America, the “Christian” mask of their KKK anti-Christian views was now clear for all to see, and the nation rallied to defy the army of white supremacist hatred once again. We used every aspect at our disposal, our courts, our law enforcement, our federal law enforcement (including the Federal Bureau of Investigation), our schools, our newspapers, our churches, and people of all American faiths and conscience who marched and defied the evil of white supremacy.

For every march, rally, and public event which the world captured on film, there were millions of small “civil wars” taking place to end white supremacy in our homes, among families, among neighbors, at work, in public places, and among fellow citizens – who sought to remind America who and what we are. This fight was also a fight to seize and finally reform the practices of American Christianity to ensure equality for all, and was guided by the great Christian Pastor Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Christian leader Dr. King led the greatest human rights rally in history on August 28, 1963 in Washington DC at the Lincoln Memorial, a memorial to remember the president who defied the white supremacy of the CSA in the 19th century Civil War. In Washington DC, nearby, what is today the Freedom Plaza, this Christian leader finished writing his speech, which he delivered at the Lincoln Memorial, and which would change the hearts of a nation and a generation. The speech was called “I have a dream.” (The speech is still there, buried in Freedom Plaza, today.)

It was a few years later that I began my own fight in this civil war for the American Christian faith and Civil Rights for all people. It was in August 1967 in the city of Virginia Beach, Virginia, where I found myself as young boy, confronting the obscenity of a sign which read “white clientele only.” One can read or hear of these things, and shake your head in disgust, but to be faced with it, changes your outlook on the world, and the need to fight for change.

I was greatly discouraged from challenging this practice of racial segregation. But I could not and would not back down. I was an American Christian, I knew this was wrong, it was wrong as a Christian, it was wrong as an American, and most of all, it was wrong as a human being.

I began my fight as a child. So when I hear my adult Muslim brothers and sisters in humanity asking me, “when will Christians defeat KKK terrorists,” I will tell you, I have and many I know have, fought such white supremacists all of our lives. We viscerally understand first-hand the disgrace and shame that these white supremacists have brought to our nation and to American Christians. So we know how it feels very much. But I also know that you are never too weak, too powerless, too ineffective to fight.

If a child can rise up to defy extremists, you can too.

This begins with deciding you simply will not accept it anymore. I don’t mean that you don’t want to hear it, or you don’t agree with it, not something passive like that. No. I mean you decide, you will not ACCEPT it any longer. THAT moment is when you begin the fight.

As we all know, Christian leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. paid for his defiance to white supremacy with his life on April 4, 1968, stricken down by a white supremacist assassin’s bullet. 10 days before Easter Sunday. I remember his loss as if it were yesterday. Many remember his birthday and honor his success. I also remember the day he became a martyr to free American Christians from the white supremacist hate which slurred Christians who have given their lives to good in this nation and around the world.

Dr. King did not live to see his successes. But he foresaw it coming, he stated the day before he died on April 3, 1968, “I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land!” His last words as a Christian leader fighting white supremacy were “Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord!!”

Yet some still believe that Christians have not struggled to defeat the evil of white supremacy.

It is an insult to injury in the never-ending attack by the evil of white supremacy that it too did not die on April 4, 1968, after it took the life of this great Christian leader.

Yet in the grief of those Christians who remember this leader, they too have to take their tiny feet, and try to walk in the massive footsteps of this great leader. We all are, of course, not sufficient to fill the shoes of such a great man, but we have the obligation as Americans, and for those who are Christians, yes, as Christians too, to soldier on.

We have continued the fight against white supremacy into the 21st century, and someone after I am gone will no doubt write about the continued civil war into the 22nd century too. There will always be hearts that hate. But unlike the views of some, my life has been shaped on the experience and personal knowledge, that, YES, you CAN change hearts. I thank God for that. Because while the scourge of white supremacy still exists, it is the exception, it is the rarity, and most of all, it is the SHAME in America. The reformation of American Christian practice on this matter is beginning to become complete on this.

That does not mean that there are not still white supremacy advocates who continue to challenge common decency, as well as the rag tag members of the CSA-inspired KKK, out of the 300 million plus Americans. But they are the vast exceptions.

In the 21st century, I created Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.). One of our first major events was on April 4, 2010, where we remembered the martyrdom of Dr. Martin Luther, King, Jr. on the steps of the Washington Monument. On April 4, R.E.A.L. called for the freedom of those persecuted around the world, including African-Americans and people of color still facing pockets of discrimination, and calling for freedom of all people, including the end those religious minorities persecuted around the world, such as Pakistan Christians.

That same year, 2010, Washington DC faced yet another terrorist attack, this time on the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, which resulted in the death of an African-American security guard, which I had met in my visits there. This Washington DC terrorist attack spurred another of R.E.A.L.’s many campaigns for human rights, as we determined to defy such white supremacists inspired by such terrorism in our nation’s capital. As we have challenged more and more of the 21st century white supremacists, one thing is clear, they know that they are not welcome in Christianity. In the hundreds of battles that I have personally had with such white supremacists, it is very clear when we speak to them about their faith, most of them cannot accept the practice of Christianity with the hate of their extremist ideology.

Our God is marching on.

R.E.A.L. faced many threats from white supremacists as a result. I personally received many death threats. My family was affected (in ways I won’t discuss) by white supremacist attacks. As Americans and as Christians, we soldiered on. We defied white supremacist praise of terrorist attacks and calls for additional terrorism. We worked with the authorities to stop threats from materializing. We held protests in multiple states to challenge white supremacist groups. The white supremacists were not finished with me. They sought to slander me. They sought ruin me. They sought to attack me financially. They sought to bring legal action to stop me. But despite everything they tried, R.E.A.L. was not defeated.

R.E.A.L. carried on, on our own, without the help of any national group, because it was and is the RIGHT thing to do. We have challenged white supremacists for over 7 years now and we continue to do so today. We face contempt, we face hatred, we face mockery, and we continue to receive attacks. This website where you are reading this right now today has been a target of such attacks many, many times, including recently.

But we will soldier on. It is the right thing to do. It is the American thing to do. It is the Christian thing to do. Our struggle against the forces of white supremacy has not only been a cause for human rights, it is also a cause for Americans to help fulfill the mission of that great Christian leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to liberate all American Christian practices from such ideologies of hatred in every city, in every town, in every hamlet, and in every heart in America.

To the question “Christians, since you haven’t been able to get rid of these terrorists, how do expect Muslims to get rid of ISIS?,” the answer is by fighting against such evil every day of our lives. Yes, it is our job. Yes, it is our sacred RESPONSIBILITY. The answer is with ourselves.

How can we stop the forces of extremism and evil? By deciding that, we are obligated and responsible to defy their ideology and actions which would harm our fellow human beings.

We have difficult days ahead. But we have faced difficult days before, we have faced heartbreak before, we have had our martyrs before. We did not extinguish our watch-fires, and the light of the truth did not blow out. The gale winds and forces of evil have tried their hardest, but the light of truth remains burning bright. In that light, we must find the courage of acting in faith to stop the supremacist views of those who believe they are entitled to superior rights than others, they are entitled to acts of hate against others, and that they are entitled to violence against others, who they view as inferior human beings. To anyone of faith, God did not make inferior human beings. If we don’t know where to start, let us start right there.

People of all faiths must reject those supremacist views that diminish and degrade our fellow human beings, who are different, as somehow inferior. We can never fight for justice without fighting for freedom. We can never achieve liberty for any group, without respecting equality for all groups. We must accept our responsibility to struggle for such equality and liberty, not just for those like us, but most importantly for those who are different than us. We show the courage of our convictions by consistency in this struggle.

We are all God’s people. We all deserve the opportunity to share in God’s promises. We cannot achieve this by expecting someone else to lead the way. We are the pathfinders to dignity, we are guides for hope, we are the beacons for justice. We have already have the map to righteousness; it is imprinted on our hearts and our souls. We only need to open ourselves to the truth and lead the way.

You will see, the watch-fires are waiting in camps of those fighting the same struggle around the world. You just need to decide to JOIN the battle with your whole heart, and never look back.

March 17, 2016 Genocide Declaration on ISIS and Call for Immediate Halt to Any Pakistan Christian Refugee Deportations from Thailand

March 17, 2016 Genocide Declaration on ISIS and Call for Immediate Halt to Any Pakistan Christian Refugee Deportations from Thailand

On March 17, 2016, the United States of America State Department declared that persecution and violence against minority Christians by the international ISIS (aka IS, ISIL, Daesh) movement was designated as “genocide” and “crimes against humanity.”

Given the continuing threat of such genocide and crimes against humanity in the greater Middle East, including ISIS growth in the nation of Pakistan, human rights and non-governmental organizations, and friends of the United Nations and the Kingdom of Thailand, are calling for the Thailand government to immediate halt any plans for the deportation of any Pakistan Christian refugees from Thailand to Pakistan, where the forces of ISIS are increasing in number and influence.

Human rights and non-governmental organizations also call for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Thailand office to immediately re-assess any Refugee Status Determinations (RSD) denied to such Pakistan Christian refugees, and to immediately halt any activities leading to deportation, which could expose such refugees to the threat of growing genocide in the region. We call for the UNHCR Thailand to grant such refugee candidates new RSD hearings, while their cases are re-assessed to determine if they are in alignment with Refugee Resettlement Handbook requirements, and to assess the growing risk of denying refugees protection from those supporting genocide of such religious minorities.

The growing threat of genocide must be a matter for serious consideration by all organizations, nations, and individuals of conscience. This is further complicated by existing institutional persecution of Pakistan Christians and other religious minorities, including to the “blasphemy laws,” which has been condemned in reports by the United Nations (Report of the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, Gabriela Knaul, 2012, UN Doc.A/HRC/23/43/Add.2, para 57, p. 13), and in the November 2015 report by the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), provided to the UNHCR and the Kingdom of Thailand government. In the United Nations report, the United Nations Special Rapporteur has stated “the blasphemy laws are abused to target Christians.”

The state of persecution has allowed the growth of the ISIS terrorist movement to spread and expand, not only from its current genocide in Syria and Iraq, but also to expand with the nation of Pakistan.

On March 2, 2016, the Associated Press stated that: “Here in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, IS loyalists have set up their strongest presence, carrying out multiple attacks in the past year and setting up networks.” On February 10, 2016, Pakistan media The Nation reported that “Giving a briefing to the Senate Standing Committee on Interior about Intelligence Bureau’s counter-terrorism operation, the Director General of the country’s top civilian intelligence agency said Daesh is emerging threat in Pakistan as all other militant groups have soft corner for it.” On February 18, 2016, the Diplomat reported: “The Director General of Pakistan’s Intelligence Bureau (IB), in a recent testimony given before a Senate committee, admitted that the Islamic State (IS) was posing a serious threat to the security of the country.” On February 11, 2016, the Nation reported that: “Intelligence Bureau Director-General Aftab Sultan yesterday testified before a Senate committee that hundreds of fighters from Pakistan were joining” the ISIS movement. On November 10, 2014, ABC reported that “DAISH claims to have gathered 10-12 thousand followers from Hangu and Kurram Agency.”

We have already seen repeated ISIS terrorist attacks against religious minorities in Pakistan. Given the environment of persecution of religious minorities and the rise of an international movement seeking genocide against Pakistan Christians and other religious minorities, we call to conscience of the Kingdom of Thailand and the UNHCR that it would be wrong to deport such religious minority refugees back to be endangered by the growing forces of genocide.

The UNHCR must respect the challenge of genocide, in accordance with the United Nations international commitment to the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, adopted by Resolution 260 (III) A of the United Nations General Assembly on 9 December 1948. We urge the UNHCR Thailand office to make decisions on Pakistan Christian and other religious minorities, not to endanger them to the ISIS and other extremist forces of genocide. With the March 17, 2016 designation of ISIS genocide of Christian minorities by the U.S. Department of State, we urge the UNHCR to re-assess refugees coming from areas where ISIS threats are growing against such refugees.

Furthermore, we note the statement, also today, March 17, 2016, by United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon: “Human rights abuses by violent extremists directly assault the UN Charter and the Universal Declaration on Human Rights.” We agree and urge that all refugees endangered by such violent extremists get equal protection, including the Pakistan Christian refugees and Pakistan religious minority refugees who have fled to Thailand.

The Kingdom of Thailand also has a history of ethical stands of conscience, in accordance with its national respect for human rights, as well as international law which it supports. Such commitment to ethical stands on human rights has included the Kingdom of Thailand signature of the 1998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court on October 2, 2000. It has included the Kingdom of Thailand signing the Geneva Conventions I through IV, since December 29, 1954. The Kingdom of Thailand voted to adopt the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) on December 10, 1948, and has been a signatory to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) since October 29, 1996.

The Kingdom of Thailand’s ethical stand against the common enemy of terrorism includes being a signatory to numerous international acts renouncing terrorism, including the: Convention Against the Taking of Hostages 1979, Convention for the Suppression of Terrorist Bombings 1997, Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism 1999.

We call for the UNHCR Thailand office and the Kingdom of Thailand to respect the full impact of this designation of ISIS genocide and crimes against humanity for Christians and other religious minorities. We urge them do not permit the endangerment of Pakistan Christians and other religious minorities who have fled to Thailand from persecution in Pakistan, and where the ISIS forces of genocide are growing every day.

Pakistan Christian Congress, Dr. Nazir Bhatti
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), Jeffrey Imm
British Pakistan Christian Association (BPCA), Wilson Chowdhry Ilford

Thailand: Pakistan Christian Refugee UNHCR Urban Verification Cards

On March 11, 2016, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) founder Jeffrey Imm spoke with the UNHCR Thailand office Senior Protection Officer on the plan for 2016 UNHCR Urban Verification cards. This public statement is to provide a summary of the discussion for asylum seekers and refugees in Thailand, including Pakistan Christian asylum seekers and refugees, whose human rights have been supported by a number of organizations, including the Pakistan Christian Congress, British Pakistan Christian Association, R.E.A.L., and many others.

On February 12, 2016, R.E.A.L. and the Pakistan Christian Congress met with the Thailand Embassy in Washington DC and expressed our concern about the arbitrary arrest of Pakistan Christian asylum seekers and refugees who were waiting for refugee status determination decisions. It was expressed by the Thailand government that they understood our concerns and wanted to work to make improvements on this issue, as well as ensuring bail opportunities for any refugees arrested by immigration authorities.

R.E.A.L. learned this week that the UNHCR Thailand and the Thailand government held talks and agreed to introduce new UNHCR digitized Urban Verification cards to refugee applicants in Thailand, including Pakistan Christian refugees, as a method to more effectively identify such refugees to Thailand immigration authorities.

R.E.A.L. followed up in a telephone conversation with UNHCR Thailand on March 11, 2016 regarding the UNHCR Urban Verification cards. The purpose of R.E.A.L.’s discussion with UNHCR Thailand was to discuss the interests and concerns of refugees on the new Urban Verification cards, so that R.E.A.L. could provide a public statement to such refugees on this.

R.E.A.L. was told by the UNHCR Thailand Senior Protection Officer that the goal of these UNHCR Urban Verification cards are to provide a more consistent and reliable means for the Kingdom of Thailand immigration authorities to verify the identify of such refugee applicants, as opposed to only using the older paper-based UNHCR certificates. R.E.A.L. was told that the Thailand immigration authorities would more readily recognize the UNHCR Urban Verification cards as more genuine identification papers, which could be readily verified, along with biometric information on the card (photograph, fingerprint, iris scan).

R.E.A.L. was told the intent of such UNHCR Urban Verification cards is to ensure more verifiable and clear refugee identification documents, as an improvement over paper-based UNHCR certificates, which can get worn and faded over time, and which may not be as readily recognized. In addition, paper-based certificates could be more easily forged, whereas the UNHCR Urban Verification Card will provide a more reliable source of identification to Thailand immigration authorities.

The new digitized UNHCR Urban Verification cards will also have a Quick Response Code (QR Code), which is a form of a matrix barcode. This will allow ready identity verification using scanning by mobile devices, such a mobile phone.

R.E.A.L. communicated concerns that were heard from some refugees based on a history of fear and persecution, and concern that new identification documents could be used to aid in deportation of refugees. UNHCR Thailand assured R.E.A.L. that was not at all the intention of the Urban Verification Cards, and that these cards were simply intended to provide a modern, reliable, and most importantly, verifiable, means of identification for refugees, wherever it was needed, and especially with immigration authorities.

In addition, R.E.A.L. also wants to clarify that Urban Verification Cards are not official Thailand Government identification cards; they are UNHCR identification cards. These cards are not a work permit, a visa, and they do not change the status of refugee applicants.

The UNHCR Thailand office expressed to R.E.A.L. that the Urban Verification Cards have been successfully used by refugees in other parts of the world. In July 2015, in South Sudan, 3,400 refugees received such digitized identity cards in Western Equatoria. Since the launch of such digitized identification cards in June 2014 in Africa for Congo, Central African Republic, and Sudanese refugees, 10,000 refugees have received such digitized identity cards.

The UNHCR wanted to deploy such Urban Verification Cards for refugees in Thailand to help address security and identification needs of both the refugees and Kingdom of Thailand. The objective of the UNHCR is to more widely utilize such digitized UNHCR Verification Cards in other areas as well.

Obtaining the UNHCR Urban Verification Cards is a mandatory requirement for asylum seekers and refugees. The UNHCR will call all asylum seekers and refugees for individual appointments during the period of March 14 through May 8, 2016. It will be the responsibility of asylum seekers and refugees to come to the UNHCR Thailand office with all family members on the date/and time of the appointment to obtain such UNHCR Urban Verification Cards.

Later in March, R.E.A.L. will also have a follow-up conversation with UNHCR Thailand on human rights issues, which we briefly discussed with the UNHCR Thailand office. It is R.E.A.L.’s understanding that the UNHCR has expressed the desire to work with the Thailand Government for improvements in the circumstances and freedoms of asylum seekers and refugees. R.E.A.L.’s position will remain our core focus on the protection of refugees’ universal human rights, based on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). R.E.A.L. is also working to achieve follow-up discussions with the Kingdom of Thailand.

By necessity, some details on follow-up discussions will need to remain between those involved, as understandings and joint efforts for productive change mature. R.E.A.L. will certainly work to publicly share any specific commitments to change that will make a difference in the human rights and lives of refugees.

R.E.A.L. wants to thank all of those who continue to work tirelessly to improve the human rights of Pakistan Christian refugees; any progress that is achieved is thanks to the tireless efforts around the world by you.