900 Reasons to Defy Racial Supremacism – But You Only Need One

On Saturday, April 4, I will be speaking in Washington DC at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool Steps from 4 to 6 PM. I will be addressing the rise of racial supremacism in America and what we must do about it as a free people. I will be asking Americans to be counted in defiance against racial supremacism by signing our petition. I will be asking Americans to join me in prayer at 6 PM to pray for those whose hearts are hardened by hate and who minds reject our universal human rights of equality and liberty.

April 4 is the day that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated at 6 PM in Tennessee in 1968. We honor Dr. King in many ways today. But we must remember that he gave his life so that we as a nation could gain the courage of our convictions as free men and women today. We must also remember that he gave his life so that the words “all men are created equal” were not just on paper and not just in our memorials, but were a part of how we live as Americans and as free people. On April 4, I ask you to take a moment at 6 PM, wherever you are, whatever you are doing, to say a word of thanks, and to say a prayer for those who have yet to learn this lesson in humanity. On April 4, I ask you to live your life being responsible for equality and liberty, so that Dr. King’s sacrifice will never be in vain.

This April, also in Tennessee, we will see the court appearance of two white supremacists who had stated that they sought to murder 88 black Americans and to murder Barack Obama. These two accused white supremacists in Tennessee, Daniel Cowart and Paul Schlesselman, showed their hate in October by shooting at a church in Tennessee, simply because black Americans worshipped there. A year ago last April, Daniel Cowart joined his white supremacist Nazi friends in a birthday party for their idol, Adolf Hitler. Like many racial supremacists, these two met via hate groups on the Internet. Daniel Cowart was a member of that “veritable supermarket of online hate,” the white supremacist Nazi StormFront group. Such hate groups and racial supremacist groups are growing in America today, and it is time that we publicly reject them.

There are some in America who are angry simply because a black American man became president. They want to bring back the days when such a thing was just a dream. Now many of us have differences on politics. We have differences on policies. We have differences on the right approach to take America and the world in the future. As a democratic nation, we need to work out those differences – together.

But the people I am talking about today don’t merely have a difference in politics. They don’t merely have a difference on policies or programs. They have a difference on the meaning of what it means to be a human being. They have a difference on the very idea that “all men are created equal.” But to those who still think that “all men are created equal” is a question, I have news for those people. “All men are created equal” is not a question. It is a declaration.

Our shared human rights of equality and liberty are universal, not just for all Americans, but for all humanity. Those who attack others because of their race don’t just attack that race – they attack all of humanity. Their racial slurs are slurs against all people. Their defacing of property is defacing of all our homes. Their racial hate is hatred against all of humanity.

You can’t hide behind your race and believe that this growth of racial supremacism is not your problem. As we will also see this April in a trial in New Orleans, a white supremacist Ku Klux Klan leader Raymond Foster will be on trial, not for killing a black woman, but for killing a white woman who was recruited to join the Ku Klux Klan and who changed her mind. The penalty for rejecting such white supremacism by the Ku Klux Klan was DEATH – even if you are white.

Hate is color-blind. Supremacism is color-blind. We must consistently reject hate, we must consistently reject supremacism, because hate and supremacism consistently rejects humanity itself.

I have supported black American politicians in the past, and I know about the hate that I have seen from others for doing so. I have had a brick thrown through my car window for daring to publicly support a black American for elected office. They didn’t ask me what my race was before they threw that brick. They didn’t care about my race when they showed me hate in person. Hate is color-blind. Even in this 21st century America, such racial hate and supremacism still exists, and now it is beginning to grow.

As the Southern Poverty Law Center has reported, there are 926 hate groups it has found in America today. Those are 900 good reasons to defy racial supremacism. I ask you to take a moment to look at this map of hate groups. It is an important visual to see with your own eyes to grasp the magnitude of the racial supremacist problem before us today. You will the many white supremacist Ku Klux Klan groups, the many Nazi groups, the many black supremacist groups, and others. This growth of racial supremacism is a national disease and a national disgrace.

I have a copy of this map of these 900 hate groups on my wall to remind myself that the terrorist problem we face is not only just one kind – it is a supremacist kind of every type. While we are well aware of terrorist plots of other kinds against America, many forget the racial supremacist plots of violence and terrorism. Many forget the goals of white supremacists to build a cyanide bomb to use on the American homeland. Many forget Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh’s links to white supremacist, Nazi organizations. Many are unaware of reports in February 2009 of a white supremacist Neo-Nazi’s plot to develop a radioactive “dirty bomb” in Maine. And if a plot to kill nearly one hundred black Americans by those on trial in Tennessee is not a “terrorist plot,” then what is a terrorist plot? Those who spread hatred and supremacism are always a threat to our security, as well as to our equality and liberty. Their goals of hatred and violence have no racial boundaries as to their victims. Their war of hate is a war against all humanity.

So if anyone wonders if there is a good reason to defy racial supremacism, you can point to this map of hate groups and show them 900 good reasons today. You can tell them what racial supremacist organizations have done and continue to do in spreading hate and plotting violence in America.

But we don’t need 900 reasons, we only need one reason – our universally shared human rights of equality and liberty.

The threat of racial supremacists to all of humanity is the same threat that every other supremacist group poses to all of humanity. They are no different. They are not an afterthought to other threats. They are the same threat, the same problem. They demand the same response and attention from all of us.

That response must be a consistent defiance to those who seek to promote supremacism and hate – whether they are people at work, people we know, people we meet, or people in our own families. We can only honor Dr. King’s sacrifice by showing zero tolerance for supremacism and hatred, and by telling those who we see that would promote such ideologies – that we support humanity. We support humanity’s inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.

We must NEVER try to match hate with hate. Our defiance of supremacism is not hate. Our unwillingness to submit to those who would destroy our freedoms is not hate. Our resolve is our refusal to give in to fear. Our determination is to say to supremacism in America – never again. But we must never hate supremacists — we must hope for the redemption of supremacists in accepting our shared human rights of equality and liberty.

We need to teach those who hate that our support for the universal truths of human equality and liberty, and our respect for the dignity of humanity, is greater and larger than hate.

So on April 4 at 6 PM, I will ask you do to the right thing, the human thing, for those who are misguided and angry, for those who are consumed with rage and anger, and for those whose vision has been blinded by hate so much that they no longer realize that there is not a white America and a black America – that there is not any racial America – that there is only ONE America. That America – is our United States of America.

Do the right thing about those consumed by hatred and supremacism — and forgive them. Seek their redemption back into the family of humanity. Show that humanity’s love is greater than its hate. Demonstrate that we have learned the lessons from the past, and that we will forge a better future.

Show them that we are not afraid.

April Court Date for White Supremacists in Terror Plot to Murder African-Americans, Assassinate Barack Obama

The Jackson Sun reports on updated dates for court appearances of white supremacists Paul Schlesselman and Daniel Cowart accused of plotting the murder of 88 African Americans and plotting to assassinate Barack Obama.   The two are to appear in federal court in Jackson, Tennessee in April.  The Jackson Sun has had periodic reports on the case.

According to the Jackson Sun: “Schlesselman will appear before Judge J. Daniel Breen at 9:30 a.m. April 16 at the U.S. Courthouse in Jackson so Breen can hear his petition asking that the court suppress evidence in the case, according to court records.”  “A report date, set for April 17 at Cowart and Schlesselman’s last court appearance, has been reset to April 16 as well.”

The Memphis Commercial Appeal has also reported recently that U.S. District Judge J. Daniel Breen has refused motions by Paul Schlesselman’s attorneys to dismiss charges on his alleged plot to assassinate Barack Obama.

Additional information on the background, charges, and history of white supremacists Paul Schlesselman and Daniel Cowart can be found in True Crime Report storyCBS News Investigative Report, Report “Skinheads in Obama Assassination Plot,” SPLC report, Wikipedia report, and newslinks at Against Racial Supremacism Yahoo news group.

Online version of the three count federal felony affidavit of complaint is also available on four pages: page 1, page 2, page 3, page 4.   Three pages of the affidavit are also available in PDF format online.

According to this federal felony affidavit:

— “Each individual  claims to have very strong beliefs and views regarding ‘White Power’ and ‘Skinhead’ views.  The individuals began discussing going on a ‘killing spree’ that included killing 88 people and beheading 14 African Americans.”
— The accused “discussed the killing spree to include targeting a predominantly African-American school going state to state while robbing individuals and continuing to kill people.”
—  “They further stated that their final act of violence would be to attempt to kill/assassinate Presidential Candidate Barack Obama.”
— In October 2008, the affidavit also states “while driving around Cowart and Schlesselman observed a church and decide to shoot a window out.”  The affidavit identifies the target as the Beech Grove Church of Christ in Brownsville, Tennessee.

According to U.S. federal agent Brian Weaks, white supremacists Paul Schlesselman and Daniel Cowart met through a web site “approximately one month” before their arrests in October 2008.   Both Paul Schlesselman and Daniel Cowart maintained MySpace web accounts, as described in True Crime Report’s article on their background.

The Southern Poverty Law Center’s investigation shows that Daniel Cowart was linked to a social networking web site for the “Supreme White Alliance” (SWA); Cowart was also shown in a photograph with SWA members in a “birthday party  held for Adolf Hitler last April” [2008].

According to a CBS News investigative report, “CBS News traced Cowart’s email and discovered that he is a forum member of the website StormFront.org, reportedly the nation’s largest website for white supremacists known as ‘white-power.'”   The neo-Nazi, white supremacist StormFront.org website has long been a haven for those promoting Nazism and white supremacism.  This notorious hate web site described as a “vertiable supermarket of online hate” has been repeatedly in the national news, including providing a $500 donation to a candidate for U.S. president; when interviewed, a spokesman for the candidate stated what was described about StormFront was “certainly repugnant,” although the candidate decided to keep StormFront’s contribution.

Tennessee: Judge refuses to dismiss charges – white supremacist terror and assassination plot on Obama

A federal judge in Tennessee has refused to dismiss charges against accused white supremacist Paul Schlesselman.  AP reports that Paul Schlesselman of Arkansas and Daniel Cowart of Tennessee “are charged with planning a killing spree targeting black victims that would end with an attack on Obama.”

Additional reports of this story are found at the Memphis Commercial Appeal, NWTN, and Volunteer TV. The Memphis Commercial Appeal reports that “If convicted on all counts, Schlesselman and Cowart face up to 50 years in prison.”

Additional information on the background, charges, and history of accused white supremacists Paul Schlesselman and Daniel Cowart can be found in True Crime Report storyCBS News Investigative Report, Report “Skinheads in Obama Assassination Plot,” SPLC report, Wikipedia report, and newslinks at Against Racial Supremacism Yahoo news group.

Online version of the three count federal felony affidavit of complaint is also available on four pages: page 1, page 2, page 3, page 4.   Three pages of the affidavit are also available in PDF format online.

According to this federal felony affidavit:

— “Each individual  claims to have very strong beliefs and views regarding ‘White Power’ and ‘Skinhead’ views.  The individuals began discussing going on a ‘killing spree’ that included killing 88 people and beheading 14 African Americans.”
— The accused “discussed the killing spree to include targeting a predominantly African-American school going state to state while robbing individuals and continuing to kill people.”
—  “They further stated that their final act of violence would be to attempt to kill/assassinate Presidential Candidate Barack Obama.”
— In October 2008, the affidavit also states “while driving around Cowart and Schlesselman observed a church and decide to shoot a window out.”  The affidavit identifies the target as the Beech Grove Church of Christ in Brownsville, Tennessee.

Omaha – White supremacist Nazis arrested for gun, drug

March 20, 2009 – Nebraska’s Omaha: Operation Red Swastika nets guns, drugs
— investigation culminating Friday, March 20, 2009 “in the indictment of a group of men on charges ranging from conspiring to distribute cocaine and methamphetamine to being a felon in possession of a firearm. Authorities also seized 10 firearms, more than 5,000 rounds of ammunition and an unspecified amount of methamphetamine. The federal agents called the operation Red Swastika.”
— “Some of the men developed their affiliation with white power groups in prison, according to the ATF. The groups include the United Aryan Soldiers and the Church of the Creator.”

Supremacism Isn’t American

Over the past six months, reports have continued to be published about a resurgence of racial supremacism in America.  Madeleine Gruen has reported on her concern regarding counterterrorism reporting that in “the post 9/11 era, white supremacist groups no longer receive the same sort of news media attention they once did.”  Last week, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) reported that  “926 hate groups were active in the U.S., up more than 4% from 888 in 2007″… and “more than a 50% increase since 2000.”  The SPLC map of such groups shows a wide range of such groups including both white and black racial supremacist organizations.  We continue to see reports of white racial supremacist groups activities, including reports of a terrorist plot against President Barack Obama (trial scheduled for April 2009), reports of a recent Ku Klux Klan murder reported in Louisiana, reports of white supremacist vandalism, reports of police officers in Nebraska and Florida ordered to resign due to their affiliation with the Ku Klux Klan, and reports of white supremacist racial fliers passed out in Tennessee, Florida, and Pennsylvania.

Such white supremacist groups should be taken as a serious threat – they have a history of violence and terrorism in America.  They have been involved in activities such as the cyanide bomb plot led by white supremacist William Krar in 2003 and have advocated violence against the American government, such as white supremacist Neo-Nazi Hal Turner’s support for terrorist attacks on the Senate.  Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh was associated with Neo-Nazi and white racial supremacists.

While some racial supremacists seek to gain adherents while they think that no one is looking, on twisted web sites of hate, and in dark corners of our nation, other such groups do so in the light of day and with the media reporting their meetings.   They call their activities as promoting “nationalism.”  On the web site by photojournalist Anthony Karen, he reports about “white nationalism,” stating that “white supremacism” is a “subgroup within white nationalism,” and that “[t]hey avoid the term ‘supremacy’ saying that it has negative connotation

March 8, 2009 – Save Women Now Rally

On March 8, International Women’s Day, we held a public rally from 1 PM to 3 PM in the front of the Capitol Reflecting Pool in Washington DC to address the global challenge of women oppressed and killed in the name of extremism.  We demanded that the American government, the United Nations, and international leaders recognize the extremist war on women in America and around the world. Moreover, we demanded action on this extremist threat to women. 

We spoke out on the abuses to women from extremism, who had posters challenging Sharia, and who sought to educate the public on attacks on American girls and women in so-called “honor killings,” such as the attacks on Sarah and Amina Said in Dallas.

We called for the focus of International Women’s Day to be changed to saving women from such supremacists who believe that they have “right” to oppress, mutilate, beat, and murder women.  We stated that extremists have no such “rights,” nor does anyone have any “rights” to oppress and attack women.  We called for the U.S. Congress, our President, and the federal government to recognize that women under attack by extremists are not expendable in tactical designs to negotiate with extremists around the world.  The inalienable human rights of equality and liberty for women and all people must always be our first priority in our foreign policy, domestic policy, and our national security policies.

We called upon the public to convey to their government leaders that tactics based on fear of extremists that would sacrifice women as expendable are immoral and unjust policies, and they must be rejected and challenged.

We encouraged members of the public to sign our petition regarding the extremist war on women to “Save Women Now.”  Since the rally, nearly another 100 have signed our petition – please share our “Save Women Now” petition with your friends and family!

Our rally location at the Capitol Reflecting Pool ensured reasonable foot traffic given the mild temperatures and we were able to reach many individuals who might otherwise never heard about these issues.  Tourists visiting Washington DC stopped to listen to our message, view our placards, and we got a number of “thumbs up” signals from the public crowds.  We were also approached by several individuals interested in further working with us on this cause, including a supporter of the group, the International Campaign Against Honour Killings.

The primary objective of such public rallies is not merely to gather those who share our views together, but to reach out to the general public.  We don’t believe that our campaign for equality and liberty is served by focusing our missionary work of freedom on only “preaching to the choir.”  So you will see us in other public rallies again and again in the future!

We spoke numerous times to the public crowds, and began and ended our rally with a verse from a song that we believe must be the new theme song of the continuing defiance against supremacism.  Our song consists of the fifth verse of “We Shall Overcome,” and its lyrics are as follows:

“We are not afraid, we are not afraid,”
“We are not afraid today;”
“Oh, deep in my heart, I do believe,”
“We are not afraid today.”

To the supremacists of the world, free people are NOT AFRAID of you!

We will Fear No Evil! that the American government, the United Nations, and international leaders recognize the extremist war on women in America and around the world. Moreover, we demanded action on this extremist threat to women.

Thank you to all those who attended, all those who listened, and to all those who signed our petition!


NOTE: Our next public rally challenging extremism is scheduled for Sunday, May 17 between 1 to 4 PM in Washington DC at the Capitol Reflecting Pool.  We are also looking to have a public rally challenging the resurgence of white supremacism and calling for a renewed focus on our shared human rights on Saturday April 4 between 4 to 6 PM in Washington DC on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial; we are still awaiting our National Park Service permit for the April rally.

More information will be available on upcoming rallies in Washington DC, and hopefully this summer in New York City and the West Coast on Responsible for Equality And Liberty’s (R.E.A.L.) website at https://www.realcourage.org

We will also be looking to see our options for further DC rallies this summer on Saturdays.  Our challenge to hold some rallies on Saturdays is that dates and areas for first amendment rallies are difficult to obtain because many are obtained up to a year in advance.

When Supremacism Uses A Religious Disguise

Prior to World War II, what if Adolf Hitler had tried to infiltrate the United States, not with a series of German “Bund” organizations, but with a series of groups claiming that they were “religious” organizations? What if American federal, state, and local government organizations then engaged with such groups, gave them respectability, and even offered government support for their propaganda mission for fear of offending such “religious” organizations?  During the 1960s, what if the American federal government feared to act against the Ku Klux Klan, white supremacist organizations, and white supremacist segregation laws for fear of offending their “religious” beliefs?

Far-fetched? In fact, supremacist ideologies using the disguise of “religion” is one of the most serious propaganda threats to our human rights of equality and liberty today.

All Americans are entitled to freedom of speech and freedom of conscience.

But we must recognize that supremacist organizations have been leveraging these freedoms to gain institutional support within America by disguising their supremacist goals with “religious” identities. If we support the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty, our citizens and our government agencies should denounce supremacist organizations that promote hate, inequality, and even violence, regardless of their use of such “religious” disguises. The solution to unmasking such disguises is to honestly ask if such organizations support equality and liberty.

By looking at threats to our liberties from a human rights perspective, we can see threat patterns and avenues for public action in struggles with supremacist ideologies – past and present – whether we are dealing with extremism, racial supremacism, Aryan Nazi supremacism, or other supremacist ideologies. We need to remember that our response must be a consistent responsibility to equality and liberty in defiance of such supremacism, no matter how it is disguised.

The Growing Extremist Threat to Virginia

The Northern Virginia suburb of Washington DC has been growing as an Islamic supremacist haven. Amidst the many hard-working Virginians who serve our nation’s defense, civilian federal government, homeland security, and commercial businesses, extremist groups, organizations, and institutions have quietly expanded and gained members. Northern Virginia has been home to a wide series of extremist groups and leaders that have resisted investigations and challenge by the government and concerned citizens.  For years, Northern Virginia has long been a target of a network of extremist organizations.

Among these have included:

— Dar Al Hijra Islamic Center in Falls Church, Virginia – Freedom House has reported that Dar Al Hijra has had publications that spread hate, demanding that Islamic nations be given nuclear weapons “to face Israel and India,” (p. 46), and demanding segregation of the sexes (p. 64).   Dar Al Hijra’s previous imam, Anwar al-Aulaqi, has been suspected of links to Al-Qaeda’s 9/11 jihadists, and has been described as an “inspiration” to terrorists, suspected in “plotting attacks against America,” reported as praising Palestinian suicide bombers, and posting an essay on “Why Muslims Love Death.”  Dar Al Hijra’s subsequent imam, Sheikh Shaker Elsayed, has also been reported praising Palestinian suicide bombers, stating that “Violent Extemism is a must for everyone, a child, a lady and a man.”  Per Dal Al Hijra’s web site, this supporter of Violent Extemism continues to preach to Muslims in Northern Virginia.

— Dar Al-Arqam Islamic Center in Falls Church, Virginia – also known as the “Center for Islamic Information and Education” was a place where Ali al-Timimi frequently lectured.  Ali al-Timimi was convicted “on charges that he encouraged followers to join the Taliban and fight U.S. troops.”  It was also a focal point for the “Virginia Violent Extemism Network” that trained to support the extremist Lashkar-e-Taiba group — the same Lashkar-e-Taiba suspected in the November 2008 Mumbai attacks and that is suspected of designs for attacks on the United States.  According to the FBI, “eight individuals from Dar Al-Arqam … either obtained jihad training from Lashkar-e-Taiba or otherwise associated with the group in Pakistan, another from Dar Al-Arqam who joined Al-Qaeda in Saudi Arabia in 2003, two specially designated global terrorists, and an individual suspected of being an aide to Abu Musab al Zarqawi and affiliated with Al-Qaeda of Iraq.”  Al-Timimi and Al-Arqam have also been linked to terror groups in the United Kingdom.

International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT) in Herndon, Virginia – created from “seed money from the Muslim Brotherhood”… the same Muslim Brotherhood that calls for creation of an Islamic supremacist caliphate and whose motto is “Violent Extemism is our way.”  IIIT has been under investigation for financing terror organizations, and was part of the Operation Green Quest investigation.  This is also the same IIIT, whose Yusuf Talal DeLorenzo has gone on to advise on Sharia Finance boards for the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones, and who last month advised on Sharia Finance (PDF of presentation) in a conference in Washington DC.  This same IIIT provided a $1.5 million grant to Virginia’s George Mason University a few months ago to expand its “Islam studies program.”

— Muslim World League in Falls Church, Virginia – reported in 2005 that “U.S. agencies have been investigating the Muslim World League for years because of suspicions that it knowingly or unknowingly provided funds to Osama bin Laden.”

— The Institute of Islamic and Arabic Sciences in Fairfax, Virginia – where the Freedom House Center found “[s]everal hate-filled publications” (page 3), publications to “show that religious freedom is un-Islamic” (page 45), and promoting jihad (page 61).

This history should make Northern Virginia government officials and citizenry rightly concerned about the growth of extremism in their area.   The Washington Times has reported that those individuals in Falls Church, Virginia that have exercised their freedom of religion and have converted from Islam to Christianity live in fear.

But while federal government individuals are willing to challenge those extremists in Northern Virginia who have clearly been documented in committing a crime (like any other citizen would be), there remains little willingness to challenge the anti-equality, anti-liberty ideology of extremism itself, or even acknowledge that the ideology of extremism exists.

So it should not be surprising that supermarkets in Northern Virginia sell pro-Violent Extemism books, as Dave Gabautz has researched and found at the Halaco supermarket in Falls Church, Virginia a book that calls for:
— “It is, in short, time to identify the enemy and declare the Violent Extemism.”
— “He who equips a fighter in the way of Allah, or looks after a fighters family at home is as good as one who fought”
— “Priests in their churches, unlike recluse worshipping monks, should, of course be killed without any exception. Nuns along with Monks, deserve killing even more”
— “Not taking the Jews and Christians as friends, not following their deen, not submitting to bid’a, neither its holidays (National Days, etc), nor in habits, not entering their places of worship, nor participating in their festivals-all this is vital in the prelude to the attack of a new Violent Extemism.”
— “Strike at the time least expected. It follows that one should also strike at the place not expected. By extension, in light of the current situation, one may strike at several centres all at the same time, thus causing havoc in the enemy and in their response”.

In 2007, Virginia Governor Kaine appointed former Muslim American Society (MAS) president Esam Omeish to a Virginia state commission on immigration.  This is the same Muslim American Society founded by the “Violent Extemism is our way” Muslim Brotherhood.  Not surprisingly, there were online videos available shortly thereafter of Omeish calling for “the jihad way,” which prompted his resignation.  But two years later, we have a different story.  Now this same jihad-supporting Esam Omeish is running for office for the 35th district of the Virginia House of Delegates, portraying himself as the all-American immigrant success story.  Esam Omeish is meeting with voters at public libraries to discuss issues… but conveniently ignoring his background with the MB-founded MAS or his support for Violent Extemism – asking voters to “meet and greet with Esam Omeish, and talk to Esam about the issues most important to you.”  How about equality and liberty?  How about defying Islamic supremacism?

It is in this same Northern Virginia, where Violent Extemism books are sold in supermarkets, where Violent Extemism supporters are running for public office, where extremist organizations donate large sums of money to influence universities, and where extremists can lead “houses of worship” largely unchallenged by the majority of the citizens and its government, that we also see a growing academy designed to indoctrinate youth with the ideology of extremism.

In Fairfax County, Virginia, the Islamic Saudi Academy (ISA) has had a long and disreputable history, reported by the Washington Post as an institution whose “indoctrination begins in a first-grade text and is reinforced and expanded each year, culminating in a 12th-grade text instructing students that their religious obligation includes waging jihad against the infidel to ‘spread the faith.'”

This is the same Islamic Saudi Academy whose textbooks taught jihad to children, attacked all other religions, and told its children “As cited in Ibn Abbas: The apes are Jews, the people of the Sabbath; while the swine are the Christians, the infidels of the communion of Jesus.”  This is what the Islamic Saudi Academy books previously read AFTER the hate and intolerance was removed from them.

As the Associated Press has recently reported:
“In December 2001, two former ISA students, Mohammed El-Yacoubi and Mohammed Osman Idris, were denied entry into Israel when authorities there found El-Yacoubi carrying what the FBI believed was a suicide note linked to a planned martyrdom operation in Israel.  In 2005, a former ISA valedictorian, Ahmed Omar Abu Ali, was convicted in federal court of joining al-Qaida while attending college in Saudi Arabia and plotting to assassinate President George W. Bush.  Last year, the school’s then-director, Abdalla al-Shabnan, was convicted of failing to report a suspected case of child sex abuse.  Last year also was when the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom released a report saying the school’s textbooks contained several troubling passages, including one saying it is permissible for Muslims to kill adulterers and converts from Islam and another saying ‘the Jews conspired against Islam and its people.'”

During this time, the Fairfax County Government has leased the Islamic Saudi Academy facility to spread such hate and incite such violence.  As the Mount Vernon Gazette has reported, “The school building at 8333 Richmond Highway, is leased from Fairfax County. That lease recently came up for renewal and was renewed for one year with an option for two one year extensions on a motion from Mount Vernon District Supervisor Gerald Hyland, in whose district the school is located.”  Would the Fairfax County government have offered such leases to racial supremacist organizations?  But when supremacism wears a “religious” disguise, there is no willingness to ask this question by local officials.

On March 12, 2009, the Islamic Saudi Academy has now claimed (once again) that it has now truly removed all of the hate and intolerance from its textbooks.  However, AP reports that Institute for Gulf Affairs in Washington Director Ali “Al-Ahmed, whose group monitors politics and education in the Gulf, said the revised texts now being used at ISA make some small improvements in tone. But he said it’s clear from the books that the core ideology behind them — a puritanical strain of Islam known as Wahhabism that is dominant within Saudi Arabia — remains intact. ‘It shows they have no intention of real reform,’ al-Ahmed said.”

The timing is not likely to be a surprise, since on Wednesday, March 18, the Fairfax County Planning Commission will be considering a “special exception” to zoning laws to allow a further expansion of the Islamic Saudi Academy.   The Fairfax County government will be holding this meeting at 8:15 PM at the Board Auditorium of the Fairfax County Government Center, 12000 Government Center Parkway, Fairfax, Virginia 22035.  Activist groups are encouraging local citizens to attend and speak out.  I will be speaking as will others, who are opposed to the growth of Islamic supremacism intolerance, as represented by the history of the Islamic Saudi Academy’s teaching in Fairfax County.

This expansion of intolerant extremism is not unique to Washington DC’s suburb of Northern Virginia. In Michigan, Minnesota, New York, New Jersey, California, and states around the country, new beachheads of extremism are developing.  Many in Virginia and around the nation are not yet willing to act in the face of growing such havens for intolerance and extremism. But lessons can be learned from dealing with other supremacist ideologies on the vital necessity to confront supremacist groups in communities and states, before they develop a stanglehold of fear and intolerance in an area.

Those struggling with the growing institutionalization and development of facilities to promote extremism in Virginia and around the United States feel that they are dealing with a unique challenge. And in important ways, they are correct. The large-scale tolerance of Islamic supremacism disguised as “religious” freedom is unparalleled.  But in other ways, we have seen this challenge before in defending human rights. Nazis and white supremacists have been using this tactic long before 9/11 to gain respectability, influence, and acceptance. Like extremists, they remain a threat to equality and liberty. Like extremists, those responsible for equality and liberty must defy their ideology and those who would appease them.

Our freedom of religion ensures that individuals will not be unfairly discriminated against because of their beliefs.  Such freedoms are designed to ensure equal rights.  But these equal rights – are simply that – rights of equality, not superiority.  With such equal rights come the equal responsibilities to be accountable for intolerance, promotion of hate, and incitement of violence, like any other citizen.

Lessons Learned From Other Supremacist Threats

In Idaho, Richard Butler’s Nazi Aryan Nations organization maintained a 40 acre compound, where 300 to 400 Nazis joined Butler in his quest for a new “Aryan nation.”  In a 1999 report, the FBI said the goal of Aryan Nations was to forcibly take five states — Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Washington and Montana — and form an Aryan homeland.  Some of the Aryan Nations members broke into small groups that “carried out string of bank robberies, murders and counterfeiting activities.”

In a twisted move designed to gain further credibility for the Nazi organization, Richard Butler also created a “religious” organization for the Nazis called the “Church of Jesus Christ Christian.”  This shows the danger in interpreting our religious freedoms as providing superior, rather than equal rights.  While Adolf Hitler may not have thought of using “religious” organizations to infiltrate America with Nazi hatred, Nazi Richard Butler did.   The “religious disguise” of a Nazi organization claiming religious protection for hatred, intolerance, and incitement demonstrates the folly of ignoring supremacist threats in “religious” disguises.  The fact that the Nazi Aryan Nations had relatively small recruitment and success in its supremacist goals does not make it any less of a lesson on why a “religious” disguise must never be tolerated to mask supremacism – whether it is Nazi supremacism, racial supremacism, or extremism.

As the people of Idaho were initially slow to respond, they paid a price for allowing supremacist hate and intolerance to grow in Idaho.   Marshall Mend, a member of Idaho Human Relations Task Force, said “There are still people who will not come to Idaho because they think it’s a haven for hatred.”   Tony Stewart, a political science professor from North Idaho College, warns “Never, never take the position that because there are few of them, they will not do harm.”  Over time, the people of Idaho responded to this Nazi supremacist threat.   The Aryan Nation Nazis eventually made a mistake, and when their security guards attacked a woman and her son, a court awarded a $6.3 million judgment against the Aryan Nations, bankrupting them and costing them their 40 acre compound in Idaho.  The lawyer leading the lawsuit against the Aryan Nations, Norman Gissel, stated “Other than our professions and our families, that’s all we did for 15 to 20 years was fight the Nazis.”

Idaho is still recovering from the stigma of supremacism. The press later reported that “[t]he compound has been renamed Peace Park, Mend said, but northern Idaho’s image has not recovered.”  “‘It’s difficult to quantify the amount of the impact,’ said Jonathan Coe, president of the Coeur d’Alene Chamber of Commerce. ‘But I can tell you for a fact, we lost business because of them. Some vacationers didn’t visit, businesses didn’t locate here, and people chose not to retire here.”

But the people of Idaho have a message for you on the seriousness of supremacism: “Please, please never remain silent. Please do not confine yourselves to a counter-rally, and please commit your life to the dignity of others.”

Other racial supremacists have tried the same tactics to gain credibility with a religious “disguise,” ranging from the white supremacist “Christian Identity” hate group, the white supremacist “World Church of the Creator” hate group, and absurdly even a Ku Klux Klan group that calls itself the “Church of the National Knights.” But the Indiana-based “Church of the National Knights” group didn’t have the people of Indiana laughing with a five acre property designed to promote Ku Klux Klan white supremacism and hatred.  The LA Times reported that “[r]esidents there can hear the gunshots, the shouts and the screech of the public-address system the Klan has used at some ceremonies. When the corn is low, several can see the cross burnings from their backyards. Property values in this modest neighborhood are shot. ‘Our homes aren’t worth a plug nickel now,’ one resident said bitterly.”

Some may ask, what relevance such lessons have to such transnational challenges as extremism.  The relevance is not in the relative “legitimacy” of a “religious” disguise for supremacist hatred and intolerance.  Nor is it in the degree to which such supremacism is widely adopted, accepted, or tolerated.  The relevance is in what supremacists have in common and what those of us responsible for equality and liberty have in common.

Despite their differences and their different “religious” disguises, supremacists have one thing in common — hate.   This hate is always the same hate — whether it is a Neo-Nazi “church” calling for hatred against Jews, whether it is a white supremacist “religious group” calling for hatred against blacks, whether it is the so-called “Westboro Baptist Church” desecrating the funerals of soldiers and calling for the death of homosexuals, whether it is the “Nation of Islam” group sadly tolerated and accepted by some traditional human rights groups while its leaders spread hate, intolerance, racial bigotry, and extremism — or whether it is extremists calling for jihad, calling Jews apes and Christians pigs, and oppressing women around the world.

Hate is hate.  No matter what its color, no matter what its brand, and no matter what its “religious” disguise.  Such hatred, intolerance, and incitement to violence deserves no “religious” disguise and “religious” protection.  In every case, and every permutation, such hatred against equality and liberty is wrong – and is an attack on our inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.

There are plenty of important lessons to be learned in looking at these things that supremacists have in common, regardless of whether they use a “religious” disguise or not to justify hate and intolerance.   The Nation of Islam’s Louis Farrakhan has been proud of being compared to Adolf Hitler, who he calls “a great man.”  The Nazi Aryan Nation’s later leader August Kreis has praised Al-Qaeda and has said that “I want to instill the same jihadic feeling in our peoples’ heart, in the Aryan race.”  The Nazi Aryan Nations gladly promoted the hate-mongering rants of ex-Nazi David Myatt, now Violent Extremist Abdul-Aziz ibn Myatt.  And the list of the common campaigns of hate among supremacists goes on and on and on.

Such campaigns of hate and division are why it is so essential to recognize the common characteristics and goals of supremacism.  This is why it is so essential to acknowledge them as “supremacist.”  This is why it is vital that we do not allow “religious” characterizations to protect those who seek to promote hate, intolerance, and violence.   While there are many who would employ euphemisms in describing supremacist organizations — such as calling racial supremacists as “nationalists,” or calling Islamic supremacists as “Islamists” (as it has currently been re-defined by Washington policy wonks, not as previously defined by the 9/11 Commission) — such euphemisms simply shield supremacist ideologies from the bright light of the truth of equality and liberty.

This challenge is further compounded by those who believe that supremacism that claims a “religious” origin is automatically exempted from scrutiny, criticism, and challenge.  If we accept the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty within the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the American Declaration of Independence, we must reject such false protections from those would turn our own freedom of conscience against us by claiming “religious” supremacism as an untouchable platform to promote hatred and the destruction of equality, liberty, and freedom itself.   For Americans, we fiercely defend freedom of conscience and religion.  But we also recognize that all citizens share both equal rights and equal responsibilities.  The Free Exercise Clause of the American Constitution ensures that those claiming exercise of their religious beliefs are not singled out for discriminatory treatment — not that they have any superior rights or lesser responsibilities to the law from other citizens.  We believe in equality for all.

For those religious individuals who worship a God of love, there should be no fear in challenging those who would leverage so-called “religious” beliefs as a safe haven and harbor for hate.

A New Hope – Our Common Bond of Humanity

Consistency in challenging supremacist organizations truly matters.  Some traditional human rights communities have not grasped that challenging supremacist groups is the same problem — whether they claim to be empowered to spread hatred, intolerance, and violence based on a “religious” claim — or not. That must change. We must recognize the problem of supremacism itself as a monolithic threat to all of humanity’s equality and liberty.   We must defy those who would give supremacism any other name and allow it to fester in the darkness of public inattention.

What supremacists believe is that they can endless draw upon the weakest parts of humanity, on hatred, on differences, and on divisions.  Supremacists are dependent on our inhumanity to others.   They believe that the truths that we hold self-evident that all men and women are created equal is a lie.  They count on you questioning it too.  They depend on our unwillingness to seek out the true essence of the goodness and decency in humanity.   They live to exploit the divisions among us.   They count on our FEAR.  They hope to manipulate our fear over our hope in human rights.  They seek to leverage our fear to further divide us away from each other as human beings and to get us to deny our shared human rights in equality and liberty.   They play upon on our fear to deny that those of us who are different from each other may not deserve the same human rights.

But the fears that we have as individuals are smaller than the hope that we can offer one another by our shared consensus in the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.  When we say the words that “all men and women are created equal,” we tap into a force greater than ourselves as individuals by recognizing, just as supremacism has a common bond in hate, humanity has a common bond in the hope of equality and liberty for all.

Those responsible for equality and liberty have no choice but to oppose supremacism — to do otherwise we be to deny who we are as human beings and our common bond and destiny together.

This leads to the fundamental decision that all free people must make – you can’t hold two different standards on equality and liberty. You either support these inalienable human rights or not. In the same way, you can’t have two different standards in defying supremacists threatening equality and liberty – you are against them or you’re not.

There are no “but not in this case” clauses in the American Declaration of Independence’s support of the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty. There are no “exception rules” in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Everyone deserves equal rights, not just those who are like us, and not just people who we like. Everyone means everyone. The inalienable human rights of equality and liberty are for all of humanity.  It is “ideological” to believe in the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.  It is the ideology of what humanity is all about.

The survival of our common bond of hope means setting aside our differences to stand united against the existential threat of supremacism. Supremacists of every kind share their common goal of spreading hatred and exploiting fear to divide and conquer all of humanity.  The shared goal of supremacists is to enslave the human spirit and to crush the human rights of equality and liberty. Our responsibility for equality and liberty must be to defy supremacists and to deny them a safe haven or protection by using a “religious” disguise to spread hate and violence throughout society.

We have a new hope.  That hope lies in a humanity that can reach out to each other and find the good and decent part within each other.  That hope lies in our ability to remember the importance of respect and decency towards one another.  That hope lies in humanity’s ability to reject blind hate and deny those who would manipulate us with fear to ignore the threat of supremacism.

But most of all, that hope lies in our common bond within a humanity that defends the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.   It is this new hope that will demand that we…

Fear No Evil.  Because We Are Not Afraid.

[Postscript – see also Sources documents for additional reading and background information.]