Nov 172009
Muslim Mafia

Muslim Mafia

If you have not yet purchased this book, you should do so. A six month undercover operation that penetrated deep into the heart of the Council of American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) discovered that this organization, which bills itself as a civil rights group for all Muslims, is anything but. The thousands of documents smuggled out of CAIR show it to be another front group for the Muslim Brotherhood and a money funnel for radical Islamist groups worldwide.

Since the release of the book, Congresswoman Sue Myrick, who wrote the forward for the book, has issued an official call for a full congressional investigation of CAIR. But the rest of congress does not seem to be listening. So Brigitte Gabries of ACT for America has started a petition drive to collect enough signatures to get the attention of congress and kick start the investigation.

Meanwhile, a judge has ordered the return of the documents obtained from CAIR offices. If CAIR successfully sues to suppress the evidence against them, this book could become forbidden and removed from store shelves. It would not be the first time a Muslim group has applied pressure to have certain books censored. Try looking for a book called Alms for Jihad, published by Cambridge University Press. You won’t find it. Cambridge pulled it for essentially the same reason, fearing backlash against them from radical Muslims.

Nov 162009
Rifqa Bary

Rifqa Bary

Today is the scheduled hearing in Ohio for young Rifqa Bary to determine her final status: if she will be returned to her parents, allowed to remain with foster parents until she turns 18, or possibly another arrangement.

If you have not been following her story, here is a quick recap. Four years ago, Rifqa became a Christian as a girl of 13 years of age. She successfully hid her religious conviction from her Muslim family until earlier this year, when her father discovered she had been reading the Bible. According to Rifqa’s testimony, her father threatened to kill her. She then fled to Florida to seek protection with a Christian minister she had been conversing with online. The family attorney successfully argued for her return to Ohio based on jurisdictional grounds and won.

Meanwhile, CAIR even got involved. When the Florida Department of Law Enforcement interviewed Rifqa’s parents, a representative of CAIR was present. Why? For intimidation? To pressure the FDLE for a favorable report? We will really never know. Nor will we really never have a complete understanding of what Rifqa’s parents may have said had CAIR not been present.

But the bottom line is that this young woman’s life is in danger. She has been threatened with death by her father, who is fully capable of carrying out that threat. Yet our law enforcement and media continue to downplay the threat, in spite of many similar stories that have surfaced over the past few years: Amina and Sarah Said, Aqsa Parvez, Sandeela Kanwal, Assiya Hassan, the Shafii family.