<P>A radical New York imam who was once investigated as a
possible co-conspirator in the 1993 bombing of the World Trade
Center will share the stage Saturday night as a featured guest and
speaker when the Council on American-Islamic Relations celebrates
its 15th anniversary in Washington.</P> <P>Siraj
Wahhaj, imam of the Masjid Al-Taqwa mosque in Brooklyn, N.Y.,
became the first Muslim to lead the opening prayer in the U.S.
House of Representatives in 1991. Four years later, he was a
character witness for Omar Abdel-Rahman, the so-called "blind
sheik" convicted of conspiring to bomb the World Trade Center in
1993. Although Wahhaj was never charged, then-U.S. Attorney Mary Jo
White identified him in 1995 in a list of "unindicted persons who
may be alleged as co-conspirators."</P> <P>Also
speaking at the event will be the Rev. Jesse Jackson.</P>
<P>Stephen Schwartz, executive director of the Center for
Islamic Pluralism, a Washington-based think tank, calls Wahhaj one
of the most prominent and strident African-American Islamic
preachers in America.</P> <P>"He's a hatemonger,
there's no question about it," Schwartz said. "He's the No. 1
advocate of radical Islamic ideology among African-Americans. His
stuff is very appealing to young Muslims who are on a radical
path."</P> <P>Schwartz identified Wahhaj —
born in New York as Jeffrey Kearse — as a "leading
radical Islamist" in <a
href="http://www.islamicpluralism.org/documents/black-america-prisons-radical-islam.pdf">"Black
America, Prisons and Radical Islam,"</a> a 2008 report by his
organization. According to the report, which cited Federal Bureau
of Prisons figures, some 175 titles of Wahhaj's literature were
found in prison libraries that year.</P> <P>Schwartz
said Wahhaj's writings seek to radicalize Muslims behind bars,
particularly African-Americans. Saturday's speech, he said, will
likely appeal to Muslims who feel they've been targeted recently by
conservatives.</P> <P>"He'll get up and say American
Muslims are under attack, that their civil rights are being
denied," Schwartz said. "He'll say that anybody who questions the
community of these Muslim groups, that they're agents of the
Zionists. He'll say that the criticism of CAIR, and of him, is all
racism, the evil work of the Zionists and the media, and he'll say
that American should get out of Afghanistan and any involvement in
the Muslim world."</P> <P>CAIR's banquet, "Leading the
Change: 15 Years of Service," will be held Saturday night at the
Marriott Crystal Gateway in Arlington, Va., just across the Potomac
River from the Pentagon, where 125 people died during the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks.</P> <P>Ibrahim Hooper, a
spokesman for the Muslim civil liberties and advocacy organization,
said foreign affairs and "lessons learned" from the civil rights
movement are potential issues to be covered at the event, which
will be closed to the press — although members of the
press are welcome to buy a $65 ticket and attend as
guests.</P> <P>"You can buy a ticket," Hooper said.
"Fox is free to come and harass us if you want."</P>
<P>Asked what Wahhaj and Jackson plan to say in their
speeches, Ibraham characterized the inquiries as attempts to make
"an ordinary dinner" a reason "to tarnish us or harass
us."</P> <P>"At some point," Hooper said, "it becomes a
level of harassment when we're trying to exercise our civil rights
as Americans."</P> <P>Multiple calls seeking comment
from Jackson and Wahhaj, who was said to be traveling this week in
advance of the banquet, were not returned.</P>
<P>Wahhaj, a former member of the Nation of Islam who <a
href="http://www.nypost.com/p/news/regional/train_ing_day_for_jihadists_mo6w0XGjqc18VPjHMt8K6M">reportedly</a>
once called the FBI and CIA the "real terrorists," denied any
involvement in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.</P>
<P>"Law enforcement has never come to me and asked me any
questions about any of these allegations," Wahhaj told Foxnews.com
<a
href="http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,387701,00.html">last
year</a>. "I have never participated in any planning against
this nation."</P> <P>Steven Emerson, executive director
of The Investigative Project on Terrorism, said Wahhaj told a group
of Muslims in New Jersey in 1992 that they could take over the
country and institute a caliphate if they united.</P>
<P>"Brothers and sisters, if we unite, nobody can stop us,"
Wahhaj said, according to material provided by Emerson. "You
wouldn't have to vote for Bush or Clinton ... If we were united and
strong, we'd elect our own emir and give allegiance to him.
...</P> <P>"Take my word, [if] 6 to 8
million Muslims unite in America, the country will come to us.
Strong Muslims, strong and free, firm believers in Allah, I'm
telling you, the rest of the world will come to the
Muslims."</P> <P>Emerson said Wahhaj, whom he described
as a "full-fledged" radical, will tone down his rhetoric on such a
stage.</P> <P>"He'll obviously be careful," Emerson
said. "They know he's being watched. He'll talk about how CAIR is
under attack, Muslims are under attack, his typical
spiel."</P> <P>Louay Safi, director of communications
and leadership development at the Islamic Society of North America,
defended Wahhaj, a former member of the group's board of directors,
as a "sought-after speaker" among Muslim circles.</P>
<P>"He's a very popular motivational speaker," Safi told
Foxnews.com. "The sad thing is that the public is only allowed to
see him through the veil of an unindicted co-conspirator. He has
been charged in the press."</P> <P>Safi urged Wahhaj's
critics to consider context while reviewing his controversial
statements in the past.</P> <P>"Remember, he is a
motivational speaker," he continued. "If you take statements by
anyone, from the president to congressmen to anyone else, you can
take one sentence out of context."</P> <P>Safi also
credited Wahhaj's work in revitalizing the Bedford-Stuyvesant
section of Brooklyn, where in 2003, Brooklyn Borough President
Marty Markowitz declared Aug. 15 "Imam Siraj Wahhaj Day" in honor
of a lifetime of "outstanding and meaningful"
achievement.</P> <P>"He's done a lot of good work in
his community, clearing the area of drug addicts and trying to
foster a great sense of community," Safi said. "He's done a lot of
good work in the New York area."</P> <p>See
also:</p> <ul> <li><a
href="http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,568761,00.html">Colorado
Newspaper Hiring Marijuana Critic</a></li>
<li><a
href="http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,568656,00.html">UConn
Day of Silence as Lawyer Expects Stabbing
Arrest</a></li> <li><a
href="http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,568636,00.html">Fla.
Police Search for Girl, 7, Who Vanished After
School</a></li> </ul>
-

More News »