behind the networks and funding of
ISLAMOPHOBIA IN AMERICA
by
WAJAHAT ALI
__________________________________
Wajahat
Ali is a researcher at the Center
for American Progress and a researcher for the Center
for American Progress Action Fund. For more of Ali, consult
his blog.
On
July 22, a man planted a bomb in an Oslo government building
that killed eight people. A few hours after the explosion, he
shot and killed 68 people, mostly teenagers, at a Labor Party
youth camp on Norway’s Utoya Island.
By
midday, pundits were speculating as to who had perpetrated the
greatest massacre in Norwegian history since World War II. Numerous
mainstream media outlets, including The New York Times,
The Washington Post and The Atlantic, speculated
about an Al Qaeda connection and a ‘jihadist’ motivation
behind the attacks. But by the next morning it was clear that
the attacker was a 32-year-old, white, blond-haired and blue-eyed
Norwegian named Anders Breivik. He was not a Muslim, but rather
a self-described Christian conservative.
According
to his attorney, Breivik claimed responsibility for his self-described
“gruesome but necessary” actions. On July 26, Breivik
told the court that violence was “necessary” to
save Europe from Marxism and “Muslimization.” In
his 1,500-page manifesto, which meticulously details his attack
methods and aims to inspire others to extremist violence, Breivik
vows “brutal and breathtaking operations which will result
in casualties” to fight the alleged “ongoing Islamic
Colonization of Europe.”
Breivik’s
manifesto contains numerous footnotes and in-text citations
to American bloggers and pundits, quoting them as experts on
Islam’s “war against the West.” This small
group of anti-Muslim organizations and individuals in our nation
is obscure to most Americans but wields great influence in shaping
the national and international political debate. Their names
are heralded within communities that are actively organizing
against Islam and targeting Muslims in the United States.
Breivik,
for example, cited Jihad Watch blogger Robert Spencer -- one
of the anti-Muslim misinformation scholars profiled in this
report -- 162 times in his manifesto. Spencer’s website,
which “tracks the attempts of radical Islam to subvert
Western culture,” boasts another member of this Islamophobia
network in America: David Horowitz, on his Freedom Center website.
Atlas Shrugs blogger and frequent Spencer collaborator Pamela
Geller was mentioned 12 times.
Geller
and Spencer co-founded the organization Stop Islamization of
America, a group whose actions and rhetoric the Anti-Defamation
League concluded “promotes a conspiratorial anti-Muslim
agenda under the guise of fighting radical Islam. The group
seeks to rouse public fears by consistently vilifying the Islamic
faith and asserting the existence of an Islamic conspiracy to
destroy “American values.” Based on Breivik’s
sheer number of citations and references to the writings of
these individuals, it is clear that he read and relied on the
hateful, anti-Muslim ideology of a number of men and women and
a select handful of scholars and activists who work together
to create and promote misinformation about Muslims.
While
these bloggers and pundits were not responsible for Breivik’s
deadly attacks, their writings on Islam and multiculturalism
appear to have helped create a world view, held by this lone
Norwegian gunman, that sees Islam as at war with the West and
the West needing to be defended. According to former CIA officer
and terrorism consultant Marc Sageman, just as religious extremism
“is the infrastructure from which Al Qaeda emerged,”
the writings of these anti-Muslim misinformation experts are
“the infrastructure from which Breivik emerged.”
Sageman adds that their rhetoric “is not cost-free.”
These
pundits and bloggers, however, are not the only members of the
Islamophobia infrastructure. Breivik’s manifesto also
cites think tanks, such as the Center for Security Policy, the
Middle East Forum and the Investigative Project on Terrorism
-- three other organizations profiled in this report. Together,
this core group of deeply intertwined individuals and organizations
manufacture and exaggerate threats of “creeping Sharia,”
Islamic domination of the West, and purported obligatory calls
to violence against all non-Muslims by the Quran.
This
network of hate is not a new presence in the United States.
Indeed, its ability to organize, coordinate and disseminate
its ideology through grassroots organizations increased dramatically
over the past 10 years. Furthermore, its ability to influence
politicians’ talking points and wedge issues for the upcoming
2012 elections has mainstreamed what was once considered fringe,
extremist rhetoric.
And
it all starts with the money flowing from a select group of
foundations. A small group of foundations and wealthy donors
are the lifeblood of the Islamophobia network in America, providing
critical funding to a clutch of right-wing think tanks that
peddle hate and fear of Muslims and Islam -- in the form of
books, reports, websites, blogs and carefully crafted talking
points that anti-Islam grassroots organizations and some right-wing
religious groups use as propaganda for their constituency.
Some
of these foundations and wealthy donors also provide direct
funding to anti-Islam grassroots groups. According to our extensive
analysis, here are the top seven contributors to promoting Islamophobia
in our country:
•
Donors Capital Fund
• Richard Mellon Scaife foundations
• Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation
• Newton D. & Rochelle F. Becker foundations and charitable
trust
• Russell Berrie Foundation
• Anchorage Charitable Fund and William Rosenwald Family
Fund
• Fairbrook Foundation
Altogether,
these seven charitable groups provided $42.6 million to Islamophobia
think tanks between 2001 and 2009, funding scholars and experts
as well as several grassroots groups.
And
what does this money fund? Last July, former Speaker of the
House of Representatives Newt Gingrich warned a conservative
audience at the American Enterprise Institute that the Islamic
practice of Sharia was “a mortal threat to the survival
of freedom in the United States and in the world as we know
it.” Gingrich went on to claim that “Sharia in its
natural form has principles and punishments totally abhorrent
to the Western world.”
Sharia,
or Muslim religious code, includes practices such as charitable
giving, prayer, and honouring one’s parents -- precepts
virtually identical to those of Christianity and Judaism. But
Gingrich and other conservatives promote alarmist notions about
a nearly 1,500-year-old religion for a variety of sinister political,
financial and ideological motives. In his remarks that day,
Gingrich mimicked the language of conservative analyst Andrew
McCarthy, who co-wrote a report calling Sharia “the preeminent
totalitarian threat of our time.” Such similarities in
language are no accident. Look no further than the organization
that released McCarthy’s anti-Sharia report: the aforementioned
Center for Security Policy, which is a central hub of the anti-Muslim
network and an active promoter of anti-Sharia messaging and
anti-Muslim rhetoric.
In
fact, CSP is a key source for right-wing politicians, pundits
and grassroots organizations, providing them with a steady stream
of reports mischaracterizing Islam and warnings about the dangers
of Islam and American Muslims. Operating under the leadership
of Frank Gaffney, the organization is funded by a small number
of foundations and donors with a deep understanding of how to
influence U.S. politics by promoting highly alarming threats
to our national security. CSP is joined by other anti-Muslim
organizations in this lucrative business, such as Stop Islamization
of America and the Society of Americans for National Existence.
Many of the leaders of these organizations are well-schooled
in the art of getting attention in the press, particularly Fox
News, The Wall Street Journal editorial pages, The
Washington Times, and a variety of right-wing websites
and radio outlets.
Misinformation
experts such as Gaffney consult and work with right-wing grassroots
organizations such as ACT! for America and the Eagle Forum,
as well as religious right groups including the Faith and Freedom
Coalition and American Family Association, to spread their message.
Speaking at their conferences, writing on their website, and
appearing on their radio shows, these experts rail against Islam
and cast suspicion on American Muslims. Much of their propaganda
gets churned into fundraising appeals by grassroots and religious
right groups. The money they raise then enters the political
process and helps fund ads supporting politicians who echo alarmist
warnings and sponsor anti-Muslim attacks.
These
efforts recall some of the darkest episodes in American history,
in which religious, ethnic and racial minorities were discriminated
against and persecuted. From Catholics, Mormons, Japanese Americans,
European immigrants, Jews and African Americans, the story of
America is one of struggle to achieve in practice our founding
ideals. Unfortunately, American Muslims and Islam are the latest
chapter in a long American struggle against scapegoating based
on religion, race, or creed.
Due
in part to the relentless efforts of this small group of individuals
and organizations, Islam is now the most negatively viewed religion
in America. Only 37 percent of Americans have a favorable opinion
of Islam: the lowest favorability rating since 2001, according
to a 2010 ABC News/Washington Post poll. According to a 2010
Time magazine poll, 28 percent of voters do not believe Muslims
should be eligible to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court, and nearly
one-third of the country thinks followers of Islam should be
barred from running for president.
The
terrorist attacks on 9/11 alone did not drive Americans’
perceptions of Muslims and Islam. President George W. Bush reflected
the general opinion of the American public at the time when
he went to great lengths to make clear that Islam and Muslims
are not the enemy. Speaking to a roundtable of Arab and Muslim
American leaders at the Afghanistan embassy in 2002, for example,
President Bush said, “All Americans must recognize that
the face of terror is not the true faith -- face of Islam. Islam
is a faith that brings comfort to a billion people around the
world. It’s a faith that has made brothers and sisters
of every race. It’s a faith based upon love, not hate.”
Unfortunately,
President Bush’s words were soon eclipsed by an organized
escalation of hateful statements about Muslims and Islam from
the members of the Islamophobia network. This is as sad as it
is dangerous. It is enormously important to understand that
alienating the Muslim American community not only threatens
our fundamental promise of religious freedom, it also hurts
our efforts to combat terrorism. Since 9/11, the Muslim American
community has helped security and law enforcement officials
prevent more than 40 percent of Al Qaeda terrorist plots threatening
America. The largest single source of initial information to
authorities about the few Muslim American plots has come from
the Muslim American community.
Around
the world, there are people killing people in the name of Islam,
with which most Muslims disagree. Treating Muslim American citizens
and neighbours as part of the problem, rather than part of the
solution, is not only offensive to America’s core values,
it is utterly ineffective in combating terrorism and violent
extremism.
The
White House recently released the national strategy for combating
violent extremism, “Empowering Local Partners to Prevent
Violent Extremism in the United States.” One of the top
focal points of the effort is to “counter al-Qa’ida’s
propaganda that the United States is somehow at war with Islam.”
Yet orchestrated efforts by the individuals and organizations
detailed in this report make it easy for al-Qa’ida to
assert that America hates Muslims and that Muslims around the
world are persecuted for the simple crime of being Muslims and
practicing their religion.
Sadly,
the current isolation of American Muslims echoes past witch
hunts in our history -- from the divisive McCarthyite purges
of the 1950s to the sometimes violent anti-immigrant campaigns
in the 19th and 20th centuries. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg
has compared the fear-mongering of Muslims with anti-Catholic
sentiment of the past. In response to the fabricated ‘Ground
Zero mosque’ controversy in New York last summer, Mayor
Bloomberg said:
In
the 1700s, even as religious freedom took hold in America, Catholics
in New York were effectively prohibited from practicing their
religion, and priests could be arrested. Largely as a result,
the first Catholic parish in New York City was not established
until the 1780s, St. Peter’s on Barclay Street, which
still stands just one block north of the World Trade Center
site, and one block south of the proposed mosque and community
center . . . We would betray our values and play into our enemies’
hands if we were to treat Muslims differently than anyone else.
We
don’t use this term ‘Islamophobia’ lightly.
We define it as an exaggerated fear, hatred and hostility toward
Islam and Muslims that is perpetuated by negative stereotypes
resulting in bias, discrimination, and the marginalization and
exclusion of Muslims from America’s social, political
and civic life.
It
is our view that in order to safeguard our national security
and uphold America’s core values, we must return to a
fact-based civil discourse regarding the challenges we face
as a nation and world. This discourse must be frank and honest,
but also consistent with American values of religious liberty,
equal justice under the law, and respect for pluralism. A first
step toward the goal of honest, civil discourse is to expose
-- and marginalize -- the influence of the individuals and groups
who make up the Islamophobia network in America by actively
working to divide Americans against one another through misinformation.
COMMENTS
user-submission@feedback.com
What a nice relief from those David Solway editorials, with
their blind and obsessive insistence on racist Israel's pervasive
righteousness and Arab perfidy. An excellent overview of the
plague of Islamophobia. Many thanks to the editors for printing
it.