Monday, March 7, 2011

Tulsa Mosque Has Extremist Ties


by Joe Kaufman

Captain Paul Fields, a 16-year veteran of the Tulsa Police Department (TPD), has filed a lawsuit against his superior, after he was demoted for refusing to order officers in his command to attend a social event being held at Masjid al-Salam, the Islamic Society of Tulsa (IST). He claimed that it was against his religious beliefs, and that his rights were being violated.

For his "insubordination," Fields, who has received countless commendations and who has never had any disciplinary action taken against him, was reassigned and placed under investigation.

It is not Fields, however, who should be investigated, but the mosque sponsoring the event.

Given the extremist ties of the Islamic center, one has to wonder why the captain would be asked to do such a thing in the first place.

Captain Fields received a directive from TPD Deputy Chief Daryl Webster on February 17, 2011, to order his officers to be in attendance of IST's Law Enforcement Appreciation Day to be held on March 4th. He refused to do [so.] According to the opening paragraph of IST's constitution, found on its official website, IST "shall establish and maintain continuous affiliation with the Islamic Society of North America." The following paragraph states, "The aims and purposes of IST shall be to serve the best interest of Islam in the greater Tulsa area [by working] in cooperation with ISNA."

According to the Tulsa County Property Assessor, IST is owned by the North American Islamic Trust (NAIT). Both ISNA and NAIT were named by the U.S. Justice Department, as recently as November 2008, as a party to the financing of millions of dollars to the terrorist organization Hamas.

In October 2006, a member of the mosque, Jamal Miftah, wrote an op-ed published by Tulsa World, denouncing al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri and violence perpetrated in the name of Islam. For this, IST representatives labeled Miftah "anti-Muslim" and a "traitor to Islam" and threw him out of the Islamic center.

In June 2007, Miftah filed suit against the mosque, alleging that IST had been involved in "money laundering" and stating that the money could "ultimately be funneled to undesirable organizations for illegal activities." According to his court petition, he and IST "were not in agreement…with regard for the need to avoid funneling cash donations to organizations with close links to Jihadist terrorists."

Today, on the homepage of IST's website, one can see an announcement for a February 2011 event hosted by IST featuring Siraj Wahhaj, a U.S. government named "unindicted co-conspirator" for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and sponsored by ICNA Relief USA, a group that, like ISNA and NAIT, has been associated with funding Hamas.

It appears that Captain Fields was right in his refusal to assign his officers attendance at the IST event. TPD should take note of the facts regarding IST and its association with extremists and act accordingly. Any contact between TPD and IST only serves to grant the Islamic center legitimacy, which it most certainly does not deserve.

Original URL: http://www.hudson-ny.org/1941/tulsa-mosque-has-extremist-ties

Joe Kaufman
Beila Rabinowitz, Director of Militant Islam Monitor, contributed to this report.

Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

1 comment:

Sally Zahav said...

Hmm - Captain Fields is under investigation for "refusing to order officers in his command to attend a social event being held at Masjid al-Salam" (a mosque with ties to extremists). But Captain Nidal Hasan, who murdered 13 people at Fort Hood and injured 32 was NOT investigated prior to his muderous spree, despite his publicly proclaimed Jihadist sympathies (see http://tinyurl.com/yj649fm). What on Earth is going on here?!

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