By Chris Zambelis
Since the arrest of members of the Seas of David, due to allegations
that they sought al-Qaeda support in facilitating a plot to attack
targets in Chicago and Miami, law enforcement and intelligence
officials have been paying closer attention to radical trends in the
African-American Muslim community. Despite its rhetoric and embrace of
Islamic discourse, Seas of David is not a Muslim organization. Instead,
its ideology appears to reflect an array of influences that includes a
heavy dose of Judaism, Christianity and an affinity for pan-African
nationalist ideals. Nevertheless, the group's predominantly
African-American and Afro-Caribbean immigrant membership and its
reported intent to seek out al-Qaeda raised alarm bells about the
potential radicalization of Black Muslims in the United States,
especially Muslim converts (Terrorism Focus, July 11).
Inner City Islam and Identity
Fears of the threat of al-Qaeda's influence spreading among
African-American Muslim converts and underprivileged minorities in
impoverished inner cities is in part based on alarming trends in
Europe. Evidence of the presence of Black and Latino American-born
Muslims in terrorism training camps in the Middle East and South Asia
is one point of concern [1]. Richard C. Reid, the infamous "shoe
bomber," also known as Abdul Raheem or Abu Ibrahim, was the
British-born son of an English mother and a Jamaican father. He
converted to Islam while serving a prison sentence and is alleged to
have had close links with al-Qaeda [2]. Germain Lindsay, also known as
Abdullah Shaheed Jamal since his conversion to Islam in his early teens
and one of the four participants in the 2005 suicide bombings in
London, was born in Jamaica and raised in Great Britain (Telegraph,
July 17, 2005). Trinidad and Tobago's Jamaat al-Muslimeen, a radical
Islamist organization comprised mostly of Afro-Trinidadian Muslim
converts that has a history of violence and crime, also counts on
support from impoverished Blacks in Trinidad's urban centers (Terrorism
Monitor, March 9).
Despite these concerns, it is important to emphasize that Muslim
conversion in the African-American community has a long history as a
positive force for empowerment. In many respects, conversion to Islam
has traditionally represented an assertion of social, political, ethnic
and racial identity in a society where Blacks and other minorities face
discrimination and obstacles. As the descendants of slaves who had
adopted the Christianity practiced by their former slave owners, but
who were at the same time subject to severe discrimination and
relegated to churches and societies segregated along racial lines, many
African-Americans see in Islam an opportunity to formally break with
the injustices of the past. Others believe that they are reverting to
the faith of their enslaved ancestors and hence are adopting a proud
native tradition that they can call their own.
Many Muslim converts identify with the greater ummah (Muslim
community). Some may learn Arabic in order to read and study the Quran
in its original form. The plight of the Palestinians and U.S. foreign
policy in the Middle East, issues typically important to Muslims, often
become of interest. At the same time, many African-American Muslims
identify with the issues affecting the Black community as a whole,
regardless of sectarian affiliation.
Black Power and Nationalism
In order to assess the potential threat of radicalism in the
African-American Muslim community, it is important to distinguish
between the myriad of ideologies that influence the outlook of Black
Muslims today from the groups and individuals on the extreme fringe
implicated in terrorism. This holds especially true when one considers
social protest movements that fought for racial equality during the
U.S. civil rights struggle that continue to wield influence today, such
as the Nation of Islam (NOI). Founded in 1933, in its early years NOI
encompassed a mix of Islamic discourse and a worldview that held that
Blacks were God's chosen people. Whites were seen as inferior,
oppressors and regularly referred to as "devils," in what many
observers contend was a reaction to the ideals of white supremacy that
prevailed in society [3].
NOI borrowed heavily from the beliefs held by the Moorish Science
Temple. Founded in 1913 by Timothy Drew, later known as Noble Drew Ali,
the Moorish Science Temple of America (MSTA), as it is referred to
today, is regarded as the first major Black identity movement. MSTA's
worldview was shaped by Islam, Judaism, Christianity and other belief
systems. MSTA declared that African-Americans are the descendants of
the ancient Moorish Muslim civilization whose culture had been
suppressed by the legacy of slavery.
NOI helped inspire the radical Black Power movement of the 1960s that
broke with the non-violent approach of activists such as Martin Luther
King, Jr., including the Black Panther Party for Self Defense, later
known as the Black Panther Party (BPP). BPP did not rely on religious
discourse and instead emphasized popular revolutionary struggle in the
name of social justice and Black liberation. NOI also influenced Black
identity movements across the English-speaking Caribbean, Canada and
Great Britain. In many respects, the agendas of NOI and BPP converged
in a number of areas.
The Nation of Gods and Earths, also known as the Five Percent Nation of
Islam or simply as the Five Percenters (FP), represents another side of
the Black identity movement that mixes aspects of Islam, Judaism,
Christianity and other beliefs (http://www.allahsnation.net). FP, which
split from NOI in 1964, is adamant that it is not a religion, but
maintains that Islam represents a way of life. Its worldview declares
Blacks as the original people of the earth and the founders of
civilization. FP sees Black men as Gods, which they refer to as ALLAH
(Arm, Leg, Leg, Arm and Head), not to be mistaken with the Arabic word
for God. FP ideology also espouses the theory of "Supreme Mathematics,"
which among other things maintains that followers represent the chosen
five percent of mankind who lead a virtuous life. FP enjoys a large
following among popular Hip Hop artists and African-American activists
[4]. It also has a following in the U.S. prison system, where some
members have been linked with gang activity and violence [5]. FP made
headlines when false allegations surfaced linking convicted Washington
DC-area snipers John Allen Muhammed and John Malvo to the group.
Muhammed was actually a former member of NOI, but had left the group
years before the attacks.
Orthodox Sunni Muslim organizations regard MSTA, NOI and FP as
heretical cults. India's Ansar us-Sunnah Library and Research Center
refers to NOI as the Nation of Kufr (unbelievers) for its emphasis on
Black nationalism and identity and what it describes as a blend of
false Muslim and Christian beliefs. The group's website places NOI
alongside Shiites, which they describe as rafidah (rejectors), and
other groups they consider heretics such as Sufis, Druze and Amhadis in
a section warning Muslims to guard their faith
(http://www.allaahuakbar.net).
The NOI continues to grapple with the dilemma of reconciling its
origins as a Black identity group with orthodox Islam. This has led to
major rifts and splits within the movement over the years. Despite the
influence of NOI under the charismatic leadership of Louis Farrakhan,
the vast majority of Black Muslims today subscribe to orthodox Islam, a
trend that has been growing over the years. Most African-American
Muslims look to mainstream orthodox Muslim organizations such as the
Muslim Society of America (Christian Science Monitor, February 14,
2002). This includes believers once affiliated with NOI who eventually
parted ways with the group due to its emphasis on Black identity.
Homegrown Terrorism
The highly publicized Seas of David case was not the first of its kind.
The case of the obscure Jamaat al-Fuqra (Community of the Impoverished,
JF), a Muslim association with branches in South Asia and North
America, once raised concerns about radical trends in the
African-American Muslim community. According to some reports, JF was
founded in the early 1980s by Sheikh Mubarak Ali Shah Gilani. Gilani is
a Sufi cleric from Pakistan. In the United States, JF is reportedly
comprised mostly of African-American Muslim converts. Gilani also heads
the International Quranic Open University (IQOU), which is affiliated
with the Muslims of the Americas (MOA).
U.S. and Pakistani intelligence officials have accused JF of militant
and criminal activities in the United States and abroad, including the
murder of religious and ideological rivals on U.S. soil [6]. Prior to
his abduction and eventual murder, American journalist Daniel Pearl was
on his way to interview Gilani to investigate reports that Richard C.
Reid studied under him in Lahore, Pakistan. Gilani denies any links to
Reid and Pearl's kidnapping and death (Dawn, February 1, 2002). In a
statement on the IQUO-MOA website, Gilani also denies any connection to
or knowledge of Jamaat al-Fuqra or radical activities and attributes
such allegations to sinister political agendas meant to tarnish his
image (http://www.iqou-moa.org).
JF also made headlines when news spread that followers of Gilani
established a series of isolated rural communities across the United
States, including Baladullah (God's Village) outside of Fresno,
California. According to MOA representatives, these communities were
intended for believers to live and worship in peace. Given Gilani's
background, however, U.S. security officials worried about their
potential use as radical training grounds (The San Jose Mercury News,
February 3, 2003). The group established other settlements in Colorado,
Virginia, South Carolina and upstate New York
(http://www.iqou-moa.org).
In another incident, the recent case involving Jam'iyyat Ul-Islam
As-Saheeh (Assembly of Authentic Islam, JIS), an extremist Islamist
group based in the California prison system, was the first major
publicized incident of its kind involving a homegrown terrorist plot
hatched by radical African-American Muslim converts. Led by Kevin
James, an African-American Muslim convert currently serving a lengthy
sentence for a robbery conviction, JIS is alleged to have planned
attacks against a number of targets in California in the fall of 2005,
including U.S. military installations, Israeli government facilities
and Jewish synagogues (Terrorism Monitor, January 26). JIS is comprised
of African-American Muslim converts, as well as a legal U.S. resident
of Pakistani descent. Members of the group allegedly swore a bayat (an
oath of allegiance) to James [7]. The JIS case also highlights the
threat posed by the spread of radical Islamist ideologies in U.S.
prisons
Conclusion
Given the current trajectory of the threat posed by radical Islamist
terrorism in the form of homegrown cells or possibly individuals
plotting and acting independently of organizations such as al-Qaeda,
security officials need to be alert to emerging radical trends within
U.S. borders. This includes extremist tendencies in the
African-American Muslim community. Based on al-Qaeda's success in
inspiring others to act on behalf of its radical agenda, however, this
threat does not differ from the larger issue at hand and should instead
be considered in the larger context of homegrown terrorist threats.
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