Friday, 12 March 2010




Politically Correct Media Bias on Display
What you DIDN’T See in the Article Below


Dear Harold,

On Monday, ACT! for America sent an Action Alert to our Virginia members, urging them to contact the House of
Delegates to protest the decision to have imam Johari Abdul-Malik give the opening prayer at the House session
 yesterday.

Below is The Washington Post story, a prime example of politically correct media bias. While there are 11 lines
devoted to allegations and concerns about Abdul-Malik, there are 29 lines providing various expressions of defense
of him. Hardly fair and balanced.


And not one line that actually quotes what he has said that causes concern.

Such as when Abdul-Malik compared the conviction and life sentence of an Islamic terrorist to the civil rights struggle:


  “Our whole community is under siege. They don't see this as a case of criminality. They see it as a
 civil rights case. As a frontal attack on their community….The feeling I get here on a daily basis
must be what it was like to be a member of Martin Luther King Jr.’s church following the case of
 Rosa Parks. People always ask, 'What is the latest from the courthouse?'”

Or when he defended a Muslim cleric who got a life sentence for counseling others to wage war against the U.S. with
these words:


  “There is a view many Muslims have when they come to America that you could not be
arrested for something you say….but now they have discovered they are not free to speak their
 minds.”

Apparently, The Washington Post couldn’t cut a few of the 29 lines defending Abdul-Malik to actually tell its readers
what he has said.

And at the end, notice how the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) once again, right on cue, engages
 in the propaganda technique of name calling.

Have you
signed our petition calling for a government investigation of CAIR? There’s still time.
 




Boycott urged for Muslim imam's prayer in Virginia House

Abdul-Malik says critics are wrong about him.
(Jahi Chikwendiu - Washington Post)

By Anita Kumar and William Wan

Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, March 11, 2010


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/10/AR2010031003909.html?hpid=newswell

RICHMOND -- Hundreds of people are urging legislators to boycott the House of Delegates' floor session on Thursday,
when a Falls Church imam whom they accuse of condoning violence and defending terrorism is set to deliver the opening
prayer.

The imam, Johari Abdul-Malik, and many other leaders in the Muslim and interfaith communities say the accusations are
false.

Two of the Sept. 11 hijackers briefly worshiped at his mosque, the
Dar al-Hijrah Islamic Center, and one of its former
imams, Anwar al-Aulaqi, has been linked to accused terrorists and subsequently denounced by the mosque, one of the
largest in the United States.

But Abdul-Malik was not affiliated with the mosque in 2001, when the Sept. 11 attacks occurred. In recent years, he has
made statements following the arrest of Muslims on terrorism charges, arguing for due process, civil rights and fair sentencing.

"To try to cast me as someone who's a terrorist and closed-minded -- they picked the wrong guy," he said.

Soon after Sept. 11, Abdul-Malik was featured in paid ads produced by a group of national Muslim organizations,
which denounced terrorism and the attacks. He has condemned terrorism and Osama bin Laden on "The O'Reilly Factor" and
 other television programs.

Still, letters and calls have poured into legislative offices since Friday, when a handful of concerned delegates let
community activists know that Abdul-Malik was coming to Richmond.

"He's an apologist for people who commit criminal acts," said James Lafferty, chairman of the Virginia Anti-Shariah Task
Force. The group, along with the Traditional Values Coalition and Act for America, will hold a rally outside the state
Capitol on Thursday morning.

Abdul-Malik said he was warned recently that similar negative comments were made about another imam --
Mohamed Magid, head of the All Dulles Area Muslim Society mosque in Sterling -- when he gave the prayer at the
General Assembly two years ago.

"All they're doing is showing that racism still lives in the Old Dominion," he said. "But at the same time, there's a new
 Dominion. That's what we're going to show people."

Del. Adam Ebbin (D-Alexandria) said he has no regrets about asking Abdul-Malik to give the prayer in the House.
"The imam is a peace-loving man," he said.

Many of the letters have asked House Speaker William J. Howell (R-Stafford) to revoke Abdul-Malik's invitation, but
Howell's chief of staff, G. Paul Nardo, said no such action is planned. The House's practice is generally to allow delegates to
 invite religious leaders of differing faiths, he said.

Ebbin said he is concerned that Abdul-Malik's presence will cause a disturbance, but added: "I haven't seen any
substantiated reason to ask him not to come. . . . I hope it would be a peaceful occasion where people could reflect."

Allies in the interfaith community have responded in support of the imam. When Abdul-Malik prays in Richmond, the
 Rev. Clark Lobenstine, executive director of InterFaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington, will be sitting next to
him on the assembly floor.

As one of the most active and outspoken imams in the D.C. area, especially in the interfaith community, Abdul-Malik has
given prayers at Howard University, where he was the college's first Muslim chaplain; at the U.S. Capitol for Muslim
 staff members; and for past D.C. mayors.

Ebbin sent a letter to his 99 colleagues Thursday defending his choice of Abdul-Malik and saying that any concerns about
him were driven by "false rumors propagated on the Internet."

Del. C. Todd Gilbert (R-Shenandoah),
who opposed a member of Dar al-Hijrah's board being appointed by
former governor Timothy M. Kaine to the state immigration commission
, said he has concerns about Ebbin's choice.

"I don't think anyone has any problem with this being a Muslim prayer," he said. "This particular imam and this particular
 mosque have been a flashpoint for controversy because of the teachings they promote and the connections they have had."

Abdul-Malik would be the first imam to deliver the opening prayer in the House or Senate during this year's legislative
session, although others have done so in the past, according to the clerks' offices.

"We're seeing this over and over. Whenever any Muslim seeks to engage in the political process or even have input in that
 arena, they come under attack," said Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Muslim civil rights group Council on
 American-Islamic Relations. "There's a whole cottage industry of Muslim bashers that's formed to do this stuff."



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