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"Us" Versus "Them" and the Holocaust
And a Nazi-like War of the Worlds radio hoax...
Muslim clerics removed from plane in handcuffs
In the video to the right, Imams Omar Shahin and
Ahmad Shqeirat describe the events surrounding their ejection from a US Airways
flight last week.
Briefly, six imams, ironically returning from a
conference "to discuss how to build more bridges with non-Muslims,"
were removed from a flight in Minneapolis in handcuffs after some passengers
had complained of "suspicious behavior." Like praying. One of them
was a US Airways "Elite" member.
In anticipation of ethnic profiling the Imams had even
notified the Minneapolis Police and the FBI that they were attending the
conference but the imams weren't even allowed a statement.
US Airways' statement? Umm, like, sorry. But not really:
"We’re sorry the imams had a difficult time. We’re sorry the men had a
difficult time, but we do think the crews have to make these calls, and we
think they made the right one." Even after they were thoroughly checked
out and released by authorities US Airways still refused to book the men
a flight.
The transcript and remainder of the interview are [below].
In the wake of this latest episode of cowardly behavior by American bigots,
liberal DC talk show host Jerry Klein ripped the proverbial sheet off a number
of heads with his on-air modest proposal to force Muslims to wear crescent
armbands or to simply tattoo them.
Listeners, unable to comprehend their own Nazi
sympathies, piled on. From Rock Strongo:
"Not only do
you tattoo them in the middle of their forehead but you ship them out of this
country ... they are here to kill us."
Another said that
tattoos, armbands and other identifying markers such as crescent marks on driver's
licenses, passports and birth certificates did not go far enough. "What
good is identifying them?" he asked. "You have to set up encampments
like during World War Two with the Japanese and Germans."
Then, after listening to earnest statements like
this for 30 minutes, not to mention at least one caller outraged by the
prospect, Klein came clean (I've condensed the show to a 7-minute segment you
can listen to or download below the video above. It contains the proposal, a
caller, and the revelation...):
"I can't
believe any of you are sick enough to have agreed for one second with anything
I said. For me to suggest to tattoo marks on people's bodies, have them wear
armbands, put a crescent moon on their driver's license on their passport or
birth certificate is disgusting. It's beyond disgusting.
Because basically
what you just did was show me how the German people allowed what happened to
the Jews to happen ... We need to separate them, we need to tattoo their arms,
we need to make them wear the yellow Star of David, we need to put them in
concentration camps, we basically just need to kill them all because they are
dangerous."
Evan Derkacz is an AlterNet editor. He writes and edits the blog PEEK. The above posted by Evan Derkacz at 8:53 PM on
December 3, 2006 at http://www.alternet.org/blogs/video/45079
Wednesday,
November 29th, 2006 [from Free Speech TV's democracynow.org]:
High-Flying Profiling: Six Muslim Leaders Removed in
Handcuffs From US Airways Plane After Praying in Airport
Six Muslim leaders were removed from a US
Airways flight in handcuffs last week and questioned for several hours after
being seen praying together before boarding the plane. After their release, US
Airways denied them passage on any of its other flights and refused to help
them obtain tickets through another airline. Two of the imams join us in our
firehouse studio.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations is
calling for congressional hearings about ethnic and religious profiling at
airports. The call comes in response to an incident last week in Minneapolis
when six Muslim imams were removed from a US Airways flight in handcuffs. They
were detained after being seen praying together before boarding the flight.
The imams were in
Minneapolis attending a conference sponsored by the North American Imams
Federation. The president of the organization, Omar Shahin, was one of the six
imams removed from the plane. He joins me here in New York along with Ahmad
Shqeirat, an imam at the Islamic Center of Tempe, AZ, who was also removed from
the plane.
We invited a
spokesperson from US Airways to joins us today but they declined. Andrea Rader,
a spokesperson for the airline told the Associated Press that prayer was never
the issue. She said the passenger overheard anti-U.S. statements and the men
got up and moved around the airplane. She said "We're sorry the imams had
a difficult time, but we do think the crews have to make these calls and we
think they made the right one."
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
AMY GOODMAN: The president of the
organization, Omar Shahin, was one of the six imams removed from the plane. He
joins me here in the studio in New York, along with Ahmad Shqeirat, an imam at
the Islamic Center of Tempe, Arizona, who was also removed from the plane. We
welcome you both to Democracy Now!.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Thank
you.
IMAM AHMAD
SHQEIRAT: Thank
you very much.
AMY GOODMAN: Why don’t you start off by
telling us what happened that day? You were just coming from this conference in
Minneapolis and went to the airport?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Actually,
after we finished our conference on Monday, November 20th, and that’s
conference for North American Imams Federation, where over 150 imams were there
to discuss how to build more bridges with non-Muslims, how to be open-minded
imams. And Congressman Keith Ellison was one of the attendees of this
conference. We left the conference hotel to the airport, six of us, because we
-- you know, we invited all imams from all over. So, we went and got our
boarding pass, as usual. And they promoted me to first class, because I’m an
elite member.
AMY GOODMAN: You’re an elite member at US
Airways.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: With
US Airways. Then we went through the security, as normal. Then we went to the
waiting area, waiting for our flight. And by then, the sunset time, as Muslims,
we pray five times a day, so we decided -- three of us decided to pray that
time. Why not six of us? In order to avoid any more attention from people. We
picked a very quiet area. We did not bother anybody. We did our prayer in a
very quiet lower voice.
Then, after that,
we waited ’til they called us according to our zones. I went first. We went to
the airplane individually, not together. I sat in my place, first row, first
class, which is suspicious also. After that, I found out that they are
suspicious of this, too. We noticed that there was a delay in the flight. The
airplane is not taking off for almost 45 to one hour.
During that time, I
moved from my seat, and I went to Imam Marwan Sadeddin -- he’s a blind guy --
offering him my seat, because he’s a blind old guy. He was very tired. So, he
said, “Thank you, Imam Shahin. I don't want -- you, being tired for the last
three days, go back to your seat, relax and enjoy it.” I went back to my seat,
and I wait. Even the passengers were asking, “What's going on? Why?” I said, “I
have no clue.” I did not know that time that we were the problem.
Then, after that,
we noticed that the policemen showed up, two of them, to the plane. And they
left the plane. Then increasing numbers of policemen showed up and went to the
end of the plane, and they start removing the imams one by one from their
seats. We did not argue with the policemen. We just complied totally and fully.
AMY GOODMAN: What did the policemen say
to you?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: He
did not say anything. The minute -- me, personally, the minute I saw the
policemen guiding all these imams, taking off all these imams, I know that I am
included. So even they did not say anything, I said I’m sure that I am
included, and I moved from my seat.
We complied totally
with the police, cooperated, fully cooperated, because we don't want to do
anything wrong. So they took us to the jet way of the plane, and they asked us
to stand there for 45 minutes, don't talk, don’t do this, don't answer phone,
don’t do any phone calls. And I asked them, “Please, just give me one minute to
say one statement,” because I want to tell them that we notified the FBI in
charge and police department of Minneapolis that we have this conference, so
traveling together is not a strange thing. But they did not allow me to say
this statement. Even one of the policemen, he said, “If you keep asking us
this, I am going to arrest you.” Then, I have no other option but to keep
silent.
Then, after that,
they handcuffed us one by one, and they took us to the police department in the
airport. And this is -- up to now, I cannot forget the passengers’ eyes were
looking at us when they handcuffed us and took us to the police department.
AMY GOODMAN: Now, Imam Shqeirat, you were
at back of the plane?
IMAM AHMAD
SHQEIRAT: Yes.
AMY GOODMAN: So you were sitting, Imam
Shahin, in the first class.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: First
class.
AMY GOODMAN: Then there were two imams in
the middle of the plane. And then, two of you were at the back. At the back,
who was it that complained?
IMAM AHMAD
SHQEIRAT: We
really did not know that there was a complaint. We just noticed the delay in
the flight. It seems I was tired, and I got a nap. I woke up maybe after half
an hour. I thought I saw the plane still on the ground. I thought we already
arrived to Phoenix, so I thought it must be it was a very comfortable flight.
So I asked my neighbor. He said, “No, we did not depart yet.” And I said,
“Why?” He said, “I don't know,” because there is -- then the pilot talked to
us. And he said, “Excuse us, but we are doing some paperwork, and the computer
turned off or down. So, we’re going to be on our way soon.”
After finishing
that, I started noticing the police cars arrived, and yeah, two police officers
came into the plane, walked from the front to the end without talking to
anybody, even without looking at us. Then they stayed a few minutes in the
back. Then they went. They left.
After they left,
Imam Omar moved from the seat from the front and came to me, said, “Did they
talk to you?” I said, “No, nobody talked to me.”
So, after a few
minutes, they came back again with more officers. A few of them stood in the
front. The rest of them came back and just told us, “You two gentlemen, please
step out and walk to the front.” So we did what they told us. And they did this
with all imams ’til they took all of us off the plane in front of all the
passengers.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to ask you about an
article that appeared in the Washington Times yesterday. The article was
headlined, “How the Imams Terrorized an Airliner.” It begins like this, quote,
"Muslim religious leaders removed from a Minnesota flight last week
exhibited behavior associated with a security probe by terrorists and were not
merely engaged in prayers, according to witnesses, police reports and aviation
security officials." The article goes on to quote a series of unnamed
sources, and then it states, quote, "Passengers and flight attendants told
law enforcement officials the imams switched from their assigned seats to a
pattern associated with the September 11th terrorist attacks and also found in
probes of US security since the attacks: two in the front row first class, two
in the middle of the plane on the exit aisle, and two in the rear of the
cabin."
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: That’s
completely wrong. I am the only person in first class, and we took -- or we sat
in the seats they assigned to us, except one of the imams, he is blind. He
asked nicely the gentleman next to Imam Mahmoud Sulaiman to switch his place,
because this imam, Marwan Sadeddin, he’s blind, and he needs help. This is the
only things happened.
AMY GOODMAN: And you had gone back to ask
if he wanted to switch with you?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Wanted
to switch with my seat.
AMY GOODMAN: For him.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Yes,
for him.
AMY GOODMAN: Because he was blind. But he
said no.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Exactly.
AMY GOODMAN: And they also raised the
issue of you asking for seatbelt extensions.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: This
is -- to be honest, this hurt me the most. It’s [inaudible] the federal law is
a crime nowadays. I asked for an extension. But as you see, I don't need to
explain myself more. So I need an extension belt. And supposedly I asked for a
not necessary extension, but what’s wrong with that if I can get to the plane
twenty of these seatbelts and nobody can ask me why you carry all of these
things? But we ask extension belt, because we need it. Me, as well as Imam
Marwan Sadeddin. He is a big guy like me. So we need the extension belt. And
even the flight attendant, she was helping him in buckling up his extension
seatbelt.
AMY GOODMAN: We’re going to break, and
we're going to come back to this discussion. We’re talking with Imam Omar
Shahin, President of the North American Imams Federation. We’re also speaking
with Imam Ahmad Shqeirat, an imam at the Islamic Center at Tempe, Arizona.
We'll be back with them in a minute.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: I want to say that we did
invite a spokesperson from US Airways to join us today, but they declined.
Andrea Rader, a spokesperson for the airline, told the Associated Press that
prayer was never the issue. She said the passenger overheard anti-US statements
and that the men got up and moved around the airplane. She said, quote,
"We’re sorry the imams had a difficult time” -- this is a spokesperson for
US Airways -- “We’re sorry the men had a difficult time, but we do think the
crews have to make these calls, and we think they made the right one."
Again, we are joined by Imam Omar Shahin, President of the North American Imams
Federation, and Imam Ahmad Shqeirat, an imam at the Islamic Center of Tempe,
Arizona. Your response, Imam Shahin?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: I
have no problem. Security is our concern in this country, too, because we are
American, and we’re concerned about the security of this country. And me, personally,
I urge myself and others, my community, to report any suspicious activity. But
what I mean by “suspicious”: legitimate, logic, a suspicious activity, not
imagination, not exaggerating, not false statement. All of this report, most of
it, imagination, and none of these suspicious things we really did.
AMY GOODMAN: You were questioned for how
many hours after? So you’re taken in handcuffs out of the jet way through the
airport?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Yes,
ma’am, to the police department in the airport, and they detained us for almost
five to six hours.
AMY GOODMAN: And who questioned you?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: I
think two security agents, FBI and another agent.
AMY GOODMAN: And what did they ask you
about?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: They
asked us -- they asked me personally about my life, since I was born up to that
time. And I told them, no need for these questions, because we are not
criminals. We are not suspicious people. We are very open-minded imams, and you
can call the governor. You can call everywhere in Phoenix, anybody in Phoenix,
and they know about us. Me, personally, I am the chairperson for the Police
Advisory Board in Phoenix.
AMY GOODMAN: For the Police Advisory
Board? So, you work with the police in Phoenix?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Yes,
ma’am. Exactly, yeah. That’s what I am doing.
IMAM AHMAD
SHQEIRAT: It’s
a volunteer position.
AMY GOODMAN: What did you say? A
volunteer position?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Yeah,
it’s a volunteer position. And I did my best to reach out to communities. I did
presentations in many areas, in federal prisons, in state prisons. I used to
visit all federal and state prisons in Arizona to educate people more and more
about Islam, because our policy is seek first to understand, then to be
understood. That’s our policy. And we try our best to educate people more and
more about Islam. Me, personally, I went with CAIR Arizona twice --
AMY GOODMAN: CAIR, the Council on
American-Islamic Relations.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Yes.
Yes, ma’am. Twice to Yuma Air Force Base in order to educate Marines about
Islam.
AMY GOODMAN: What did you do on the base?
Who did you talk to?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: I
just gave a presentation to the Marines.
AMY GOODMAN: How many?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Each
time, more than 300 Marines were there.
AMY GOODMAN: And what did you talk to
them about?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: A
presentation about Islam, because more we know about each other, more we get
close to each other. We need to build bridges, educate each other about
ourselves, about each other. That's our policy. That's what I’m doing. I’m
trying hard before and after September 11.
AMY GOODMAN: Have you spoken with the
FBI?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: You
mean, while they detained us?
AMY GOODMAN: In this kind of reaching
out.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Actually,
they asked me, while I was the imam and the President of the Islamic Center of
Tucson, I received an official letter from the FBI asking me to give a
presentation. I went with two brothers, and we gave the FBI agent in Arizona a
beautiful presentation about Islam, yes.
AMY GOODMAN: When you were finished being
questioned, did US Airways let you fly, let you fly on their plane?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: What
happened after they released us, right away I called US Airways trying to book
ourselves to the next flight. Unfortunately, she said, you are not allowed to
fly with us. I said even --
AMY GOODMAN: After all of this?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: After
all of this.
AMY GOODMAN: After they released you?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: After
they released me. She said, “Yes.” I said, “Even me?” She said, “Even you.”
Then the FBI agent, I noticed that he’s still there. I asked him, “Please, can
you call and contact US Airways?” And he did. More than 20 minutes he was
trying to convince them that we have no problem with the government. And it’s --
unfortunately, they’re still refusing. He told me, “I’m sorry, Imam Shahin, you
have to try again next morning. If not, you just go to any airlines and they
will book you.” And that's what happened.
In the morning, I
called US Airways. “Please rebook us with a new flight or a next flight to
Phoenix.” She said, “Give us a few minutes. I’ll call you back.” Then, after
that, they called us back, and she said, “Unfortunately, we cannot honor your
request.” Then Imam Ahmad asked her to please help us or book us with another
airline through you. She said, “Even that, we cannot honor this request.”
AMY GOODMAN: Imam Shqeirat, you were the
person who talked to the US Airways person then on the phone?
IMAM AHMAD
SHQEIRAT: Yes,
when Imam Omar Shahin contacted them in the morning, they said, “We are going
to talk to the manager and get back to you.” He gave them two phone numbers.
One of these phone numbers was my cell phone number. So a lady called me, and
she said, “I’m sorry, we cannot honor this request to fly you back to Phoenix.”
I told her, “If you are not comfortable to carry us, would you please then book
us with another airline?” She said, “No, we cannot do that. You go try to do
that by your own.”
Then she asked me a
question, “Do you want me to start the process of refunding your money?” I told
her, “Anyway, we are on our way to the airport, and we’re supposed to meet the
press in front of your ticketing counter. So we’re going to talk then.” She
said, “Okay.” So we hang up.
AMY GOODMAN: Now, when you came back
across the country on Monday into Reagan Airport, National Airport, in
Washington, D.C., you held a pray-in?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Yes.
We did an interfaith press conference and asked rabbi and rev to join us. And
we really appreciate what they did. And we hold our display, a prayer, so
everybody can see what we are doing. We just pray and ask the God His guidance.
We are not doing anything suspicious.
AMY GOODMAN: You were with Jewish and
Christian clergy?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Yes.
It’s interfaith press conference.
AMY GOODMAN: What are you calling for
now?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Up
to now, I am just calling for US Airways to stop smearing our image, because
they keep -- day after day, they keep saying many false statements about us.
They did a big mistake in the beginning, when they discriminate us. And they
have to stop right there, because up to now, every day I hear another thing.
They smear our image in front of the public. And that's what hurts me also the
most. So what I’m asking them now is to stop smearing our image. Stop doing
this. Stop accusing us.
AMY GOODMAN: I was at the CAIR
conference, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, in Washington, D.C.,
when your conference was taking place in Minneapolis. Keith Ellison was
supposed to come to the Washington conference, but he was double booked. He was
at your conference. He's the first congressman to be elected in this country
who is Muslim.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Yes,
ma’am. Yes, we invited him, actually, three weeks before our conference. And he
honored this invitation and he came. He joined our conference. He spoke to the
imams for more than two hours. And we really appreciate what he did.
AMY GOODMAN: One of the things they raised
at the conference was how Keith Ellison, the first Muslim congressmember
elected to Congress, was treated on the Glenn Beck show on CNN. And I wanted to
play an excerpt of that and get your response to it. We played it a few days
ago, when we had Glenn Beck asking him if he could prove that he was not
working with the enemy, Keith Ellison. Your response to that?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: To
be honest with you, it's a strange thing to accuse this gentleman with these
things, working with the enemy. If they consider us as an enemy, this is
another story. But we are Americans. We live in this country, and we love this
country. And our loyalty, to this country. We work very hard to educate people
about our faith. And he is -- he was very nice with the imams. These are the
leaders. If they consider us as an enemy, this is a real problem. We are not
the enemy of anybody.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you
both very much for being with us. We've been speaking with two of the six imams
who were taken off the US Airways flight in Minneapolis, after having prayed in
the airport before they got on the flight. Imam Omar Shahin, President of the
North American Imams Federation, and Imam Ahmad Shqeirat who is the imam at
Islamic Center of Tempe, Arizona. And a final question to you is, any advice
you have to people who are flying, to Muslims who are flying right now?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: My
advice to the American, in general, seek first to understand, then to be
understood. For the Muslim community, what I can say, that just we need to work
hard and hard, more and more and more, to educate people.
AMY GOODMAN: The Homeland Security
Department's Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties says it’s
investigating what happened at US Airways. Have they contacted either of you?
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Actually,
CAIR is taking care of our case legal-wise. So if they contact us through CAIR,
I’m not aware of that. But CAIR, Mr. Nihad Awad, is taking care of this case.
AMY GOODMAN: Thank you both for being
with us.
IMAM OMAR
SHAHIN: Thank
you.
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