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Flashback: The Aafia Siddiqui I Saw

In the Name of Allâh, the Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful

“She is a high security risk.”

- Christopher LaVigne, assistant US attorney, on August 11th when trying to convince a judge to prevent Aafia from seeing a doctor for her gunshot wound.

During the time of the Prophet (صلى الله عليه و سلم), those who entered Islam were of two types: those who remained in their lands with the general populace practicing the basic tenets of the religion, and those who took it upon themselves to migrate and join the Prophet in his expeditions. There are ahadith that show that the Prophet treated these two groups differently from each other due to their difference in status. For example, Muslim and at-Tirmidhi report that when appointing a leader to a battalion, he would instruct him on how to deal with those of the enemy who became Muslims, saying:

“…invite them to migrate from their lands to the land of the Muhajirin, and inform them that if they do so, they will have all the privileges and obligations of the Muhajirin. If they refuse to migrate, tell them that they will have the status of the Bedouins, and will be subjected to the commands of Allah like the rest of the believers…”

This distinction was simply of one group deciding to take upon its shoulders certain responsibilities in contrast to the other whose inactivity limited them to a very individualistic, localized, benign practice of Islam. One can in essence say that the Prophet divided the practice of the Muslims at the time into two types: the religion of the Migrants (Din al-Muhajirin, whose adherents took upon their shoulders the responsibilities of aiding and giving victory to Islam), and the religion of the Bedouins (Din al-A’rab, whose adherents did not go beyond the basics).

Although the depiction is of a situation that existed over a thousand years ago, it is an eternal pattern that Muslims will be distributed amongst these levels in every era and in every place. So, one can notice this distinction even amongst the practicing Muslims of the East and West. The Din al-A’rab of the past can be compared to the Islam that is limited to the five pillars, eating zabihah, and keeping the local mosque clean. Considering how difficult it is in the West to come across even these Muslims, imagine what joy comes to the eye and heart to see those who go a step further and reach the level of adhering to Din al-Muhajirin – those whose concern spans the entire Ummah, driving them to get up and become active workers for Islam, to dedicate their every minute to the service of Allah however they can no matter what other responsibilities clutter their busy lives, to have their hearts beat with the rest of the Muslims – all this with their heads raised high and paying no regard to those around them who eat and live like cattle, as it was said:

هكذا الاحرار في دنيا العبيد

Such are the free in a world of the enslaved…

Recently, the entire world has been speaking about one such person – a short, thin college student, wife, and mother of three small children. Her name is Aafia Siddiqui.

Dr. Aafia Siddiqui

I want you to be drawn to the story of this woman and also understand why I was drawn to it. I want you to come to know of the concern and dedication that this woman had for Islam as described by those who knew her – a dedication that was manifested by way of actions that were very simple and easy, yet seldom carried out by those who are able.

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Posted by on May 23, 2013 in Flashback

 

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Tariq Mehanna: November 24, 2012 (A Brief Conversation)

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

The photocopied lunar calendar affixed to the wall reminds me that today is the tenth of Muharram, 1434. It is the day of ‘Ashura’…

…My mind travels back 1433 years to the city of Madinah, to an important conversation that occurred on this exact date. The great Companion and scholar, ‘Abdullah bin ‘Abbas, narrated that his cousin, Muhammad – the final Prophet and Messenger sent by Allah to mankind – passed by a group of Jews who were fasting that day. He questioned them about this, and they replied: “This is a very significant day. It is the day on which Allah rescued Moses and his people, and drowned Pharaoh and his people. So, Moses fasted it out of gratitude, and we also fast it.” In another reported wording: “This is the day on which Allah gave victory to Moses and the Children of Israel over Pharaoh.” The Prophet (peace be upon him) responded: “We have more of a right to Moses than you.

This brief exchange summarizes the history of the struggle between good and evil, between Iman (faith) and kufr (disbelief). As I look at my surroundings on this day, I’m starkly reminded that the struggle has not ceased, and some thoughts come to mind:     Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on November 24, 2012 in Letters from Tariq Mehanna

 

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Tariq Mehanna: October 25, 2012 (The Happiest People on Earth)

بِسْــــــــــــــــــمِ اﷲِالرَّحْمَنِ اارَّحِيم

Today is the day of ‘Arafah.

The Prophet Muhammad (صلى الله عليه و سلم) said: “The greatest supplication is the supplication of the day of ‘Arafah, and the best thing I and the Prophets before me ever said is

لا الهَ اِلَّا اللّهُ وَحْدَهُ لا شَرِيْكَ لَهْ، لَهُ الْمُلْكُ وَ لَهُ الْحَمْدُ وَهُوَ عَلى كُلِّ شَئ ٍ قَدِيْرٌ

‘La ilaha ill Allah, Wahdahu la sharika lah, lahu al-mulk wa lahu al-hamd, wa Huwa ‘ala kulli shay’in Qadir’

[There is none worthy of worship but Allah; He has no partners; the kingdom is His, all praise is for Him, and He is Able to do all things].”

The existence of our Creator, Allah, the realization of His immense power, and singling Him out for submission and worship – known in Arabic as “Tawhid” – is what this day revolves around. In fact, it is what our existence on this Earth revolves around.

All indications are that the secular/”democratic”/capitalist/Western/whatever ideological experiment of the past few centuries to bring some meaning and happiness to humanity has ended in dismal failure. The main purveyor of this ideology (also known as “freedom”), America has become an exhausted, depressed, delusional, paranoid, debt-ridden, and overall hypocritical entity with dark circles under its eyes, and has proven itself unfit to lead humanity.

It’s time to try something new.

Tomorrow is the holiday of ‘Id al-Adha. Like other holidays, it will come and go. But for a Muslim – for an adherent to Tawhid – everyday is a cause for celebration and happiness. A Muslim from the early generations, al-Hasan al-Basri said: “Each day that a believer spends obeying his Protector (Allah), remembering Him and thanking Him, is a cause for celebration (a ‘Id).” If you learn where you came from, why you are here, and where you are going, the underlying themes of your waking moments will be nothing but tranquillity and joy. This will apply to all levels of existence (you as an individual, society, etc.).

I write these words while leaning my back against the cinder blocks which constitute the walls of my prison cell, right under a window overlooking a brick wall and razor wire fence, under a pale gray sky. Many other Muslims are also here and in various other prisons scattered around the globe. Others are putting their lives on the line each day, fighting to defend and protect humanity’s final hope for meaning and happiness – Islam. The world’s most powerful government is doing everything it can to wipe us out, along with that hope…but for some reason, we remain the happiest people on Earth.

There is none worthy of worship but Allah, and He has no partners. The kingdom is His, all praise is His, and He is Able to do all things.

 

Tariq Mehanna
On the day of ‘Arafah
Thursday, 9th of Dhu al-Hijjah 1433 (25th of October 2012)
Terre Haute CMU
United States Federal Prison

 

Tariq Mehanna #05315-748
FCI Terre Haute
Federal Correctional Institution
PO Box 33
Terre Haute, IN 47808
USA
 
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Posted by on October 25, 2012 in Letters from Tariq Mehanna, Risala

 

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Tariq Mehanna: From Within a Hostile Land

بِسْــــــــــــــــــمِ اﷲِالرَّحْمَنِ اارَّحِيم
.
Halfway around the planet from the holy desert sands,
Upon which God’s final Prophet built with his hands,
A refuge for the believers, a Madinah so grand,
I grant you these words from within a hostile land,
To get you to understand that it was planned,
To imprison a small band,
Of young men upon the Truth who found their understanding outlawed and banned,
Remanded to the custody of injustice’s American brand,
Branded for life because of a way of life passed down from Negroes of sand,
Slave masters and house Negroes conspiring to stop a force unstoppable,
Inhospitable to the proposals of RAND,
I am hostile,
To any who would revile,
The Truth even if they smile,
In my face all the while,
Yes, I live my life by the Book,
So, don’t give me that look,
You crooks,
It is you who took,
From humanity its freedom to let its soul fly,
To its sole Creator,
In Whose eyes this capitalistic, materialistic prison of a world isn’t worth the wing of a fly,
So, we wait in this prison like knights without horses,
Weeping on the nights that we recite His verses,
Or hear it,
Serious and bearded,
No one had to force us,
We just read ancient texts and decided to join forces,
With the Prophet and his Companions,
To accompany their fight,
To become companions of the Right,
Right to Heaven we hope to go and avoid Hellfire’s fright,
To Hell with the enemies who frighten us with shackles and chains,
Who go to great pains to keep us in pain,
All in vain,
Because our veins flow with blood,
That is worth less to us than the Pleasure of the Lord who created them from mud,
Their tears flow: “Why? Why won’t he submit to our manmade gods?” they furiously ask,
As I throw mud in their faces, lean back, and laugh…
.
.
.
.
- Tariq Mehanna, Ramadan 5 1433
(July 24, 2012)
 
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Posted by on October 14, 2012 in Habsiyya, Poems by Tariq Mehanna

 

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Tarek Mehanna Campaign Denounces Witch-Hunt and Bribes for Capture of Co-defendant, Ahmad Abousamra

Three years after returning to his ancestral homeland in Syria, Ahmad Abousamra was indicted in absentia with Tariq Mehanna. This 2009 indictment is the very same document that inspired the theatrical press conference by US Attorneys to unleash on the public a non-existent but undeniably dramatic plot of a mall shooting spree.

Now three years later, a new drama unfolds, featuring the release of a poorly produced public announcement in search of the alleged fugitive, “Aa-Maad” Abousamra.

Of note in the grander scheme of criminal activity is that the FBI field office in Boston is in pursuit of several fugitives; a convicted murderer who stabbed a man to death, a man who shot and beat a police chief to death, a man wanted for the molestation of three young girls, and a man wanted for the repeated rape of two young boys, who, sadly, is the only other fugitive with a reward offer and at half of that of Abousamra’s.

Yet none of the above mentioned were worthy of a video and a vast effort to spread a global campaign of media alerts and social networking awareness, especially when it seems as though a potential serial-child-rapist in one’s own backyard is a more eminent threat than a man who is not even accused of committing an act of violence, living in a foreign country. The disproportionate attention given to Abousamra and Mehanna only glaringly illustrates the political nature of such prosecutions.

As such, the video regurgitates the same conjectures of Abousamra’s supposed intentions that are found in indictments and press releases; the ‘wanted’ video merely adds a visual dimension to the propaganda.

Viewers are primed in anticipation when the video alert reveals an upcoming audio clip. What would they hear when the “armed and dangerous” Ahmad Abousamra, a man who’s crime was to believe in “the glory of dying on the battlefield,” speaks?        Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on October 13, 2012 in Campaigns, News Items

 

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|!طارق مہنا: ۱۲ اپریل ۲۰۱۲ |ہاں میں مجرم ہوں

خدا تعالی کے نام سے جو بڑا مہربان اور نہایت رحم کرنے والا ہے

ٹھیک چار سال پہلے، اسی مہینے میں میں ہسپتال میں اپنی شفٹ ختم کرکے گھر جارہا تھا۔جیسے ہی میں اپنی گاڑی کی جانب روانہ ہوا،میری جانب دوحکومتی کارندے آئے۔انہوں نے مجھے کہا کہ میرے پاس دو صورتیں ہیں۔آسان راستہ اپناؤ یامشکلات چن لو۔”آسان راستہ” یہ تھا،جیسا کہ انہوں نے وضاحت کی،کہ میں حکومت کا مخبر بن جاؤں اور اگر میں ایسا کروں گا تو مجھے کبھی بھی عدالت یاجیل کی شکل نہیں دیکھنی پڑے گی۔جہاں تک مشکل راستے کا سوال ہے تو جناب آج میں آپکے سامنے یہاں موجود ہوں۔پچھلے چار سالوں سے ایک انتہائی چھوٹی سی کوٹھڑی میں روزانہ ۲۳گھنٹے کیلئے قید رکھا جاتا ہوں۔ایف بی آئی اور ان وکیلوں نے بڑی سخت محنت کی،امریکی حکومت نے ٹیکسوں میں سے لاکھوں ڈالر خرچے،صرف مجھے گرفتار کرکےاس کوٹھڑی میں قید رکھنے کیلئے۔مجھ پر مقدمہ چلانے کیلئے اورمجھے آج یوں آپ کے سامنے لاکھڑا کرکے سزا سنانے کیلئے کہ میں جیل کی کسی تنگ کوٹھڑی میں مزید کئی سال قید رکھا جاؤں۔

آج کے اس دن کو دیکھنے سے پہلے کےکئی ہفتوں میں مجھے مختلف لوگوں نے مختلف مشورے دیے کہ مجھے عدالت سے کیا گذارش کرنا ہے۔کچھ نے کہا کہ رحم کی درخواست کروں تاکہ سزا کم ہو سکے۔جبکہ کچھ نے کہا کہ میں جو کچھ بھی کہوں گا میری سزا سخت ہی سنائی جائے گی۔مگر میں عدالت میں صرف اپنے بارے میں کچھ کہنا چاہتا ہوں۔

جب میں نے مخبر بننے سے انکار کردیا، تو حکومت نے مجھ پرپوری دنیا میں مسلمان ممالک میں جارحیت کے خلاف لڑنے والے مجاہدین کی پشت پناہی کا “جرم” عائد کردیا۔یا جیسا کہ وہ ان کو کہتے ہیں “دہشت گرد”۔میں کسی مسلمان ملک میں پیدا نہیں ہواتھا۔میں یہیں امریکہ میں پیدا ہوا اور پلا بڑا۔اور اسی بات پر بہت لوگوں کو پارہ چڑھتا ہے کہ ایسا کیسے ہوسکتا ہے کہ میں ایک امریکی ہوکر بھی یہ اور یہ نظریہ رکھتا ہوں اور میرا مؤقف ان سے مختلف ہے ۔ایک آدمی جس ماحول میں رہتا ہے، اسی ماحول کے عوامل اس کی شخصیت پر اثر انداز پوتے ہیں۔اور میرے ساتھ بھی یہی معاملہ ہے۔چنانچہ کئی وجوہات کی بنا پر میں جو کچھ بھی ہوں ،امریکہ کی وجہ سے ہوں۔

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Posted by on April 24, 2012 in Letters from Tariq Mehanna, Risala

 

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Dangerous Mind: Thoughts Inside Tariq Mehanna’s Head Deemed Illegal

Late last year, a jury in Boston convicted Tarek Mehanna, a 29-year-old pharmacist born in Pittsburgh, of material support for terrorism, conspiring to provide material support to terrorists and conspiring to kill in a foreign country, after a thirty-five day trial in which I testified as an expert witness for the defense.

On 12 April, Mr. Mehanna was sentenced to seven-teen and a half years in prison. Hearing this, most Americans would probably assume that the FBI caught a major homegrown terrorist and that seven-teen and a half years is reasonable punishment for someone plotting to engage in terrorism. The details, however, reveal this to be one of the most important free speech cases we have seen since Brandenburg v. Ohio in 1969.

As a political scientist specializing in Islamic law and war, I frequently read, store, share and translate texts and videos by jihadi groups. As a political philosopher, I debate the ethics of killing. As a citizen, I express views, thoughts and emotions about killing to other citizens. As a human being, I sometimes feel joy (I am ashamed to admit) at the suffering of some humans and anger at the suffering of others.

At Mr. Mehanna’s trial, I saw how those same actions can constitute federal crimes.

 

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Posted by on April 23, 2012 in News Items

 

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The Case of Tariq Mehanna & The Broader Implications on First Amendment Rights & Religious Discrimination

Electronic Itafada’s Maureen Clare Murphy interviews Nancy Murray of the Massachusetts Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union on the case of Tariq Mehanna, the constitution and Free Speech. Last week, a federal judge sentenced 29-year-old Boston-area pharmacist Tarek Mehanna, convicted earlier this year of various material support for terrorism charges, to 17.5 years in a supermax prison. Mehanna has been in lockdown for most of the past four years, held in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day in a cell “the size of a small closet,” as Mehanna described during his powerful statement to the judge at the hearing.

Mehanna’s case fits into the wider pattern of civil liberties violations related to the prosecution of Muslims in domestic terror cases. Like in other prosecutions, including that of three young American Muslim men in North Carolina that I have covered on my blog, the government’s case focused on Mehanna’s opposition to US foreign policy and Internet activity, as well as travel he made abroad — all activity thought to be protected by the First Amendment.

FBI Coercion

Before prosecuting him, the government tried to coerce Mehanna into becoming an FBI informant and spying on his community, approaching him after a hospital shift and telling him that he could go the “easy” way and never see the inside of a prison cell, or Mehanna could choose the “hard” way. Mehanna chose the hard way, which his lawyer says he is being punished for. Indeed, defendants’ refusal to become informants is a troubling commonality in a number of terror prosecutions.

And during the trial the prosecution used the tried and true tactic of invoking the specter of the 11 September 2001 attacks, even though Mehanna has no connection to those events whatsoever. When the word “terror” is invoked, even in cases like Mehanna’s where no act of violence is alleged to have been perpetrated, government prosecutors are nearly universally able to secure guilty verdicts — so much so that defendants are more likely to take plea deals than have their day in court.

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Posted by on April 21, 2012 in News Items

 

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The First Amendment: Muslims Need Not Apply

Hutaree Who?

It is a frightening scenario. Nine heavily armed men conduct military-style training in preparation for a terrorist attack involving the bombing of a funeral for the police officer they had killed three days earlier.

Over a two-year period, a paid FBI informant and FBI agent infiltrates their cell, discusses building bombs and getting explosives and tapes their conversations. By the time their homes are raided, they had amassed instructions and material for making bombs, night vision binoculars, machine guns, assault rifles, 148,000 rounds of ammunition, body armor, gas masks, tear gas, knifes and swords.

Before their trial started, one of their members took a plea bargain, admitting the group “advocated” and prepared for violence against local, state and federal law enforcement.  True, the government’s case was not helped when the informant who received $31,000 to infiltrate the group got arrested for shooting at his wife, but it still seemed like the case against the others would be a slam dunk – right?

Well, it almost certainly would have been if they were Muslims. It is difficult to imagine any judge extending the protection of the First Amendment to taped conversations between Muslims stating that they should “start hunting” law enforcement “pretty soon” and that “it is time to strike and take our nation back so that we may be free again from tyranny.”

But that is what a Michigan federal judge, Victoria Roberts, did on 27 March in the case involving seven members of the Hutaree militia of self-described “Christian warriors.” Throwing out the most serious charges against the four members of the Stone family and their associates, she declared that the case was “built largely of circumstantial evidence” and that the alleged plot to kill a local police officer and then attack his funeral procession is “utterly short on specifics.”

While the prosecution insisted “these individuals wanted a war,” Judge Roberts agreed with the defense attorney William Swor who said that the group’s leader, David Stone, “was exercising his God-given right to blow off steam and open his mouth.”

In the words of the judge, his “statements and exercises do not evince a concrete agreement to forcibly resist the authority of the United States government. His diatribes evince nothing more than his own hatred for – perhaps even desire to fight or kill – law enforcement; this is not the same as seditious conspiracy.

At a time when armed extremist anti-government groups may have as many as 100,000 adherents, Judge Roberts’ homage to the breadth of First Amendment protected speech may appear welcome to some and foolhardy to others. But there is no denying that it highlights the chasm between the prosecutions carried out against suspected Muslim terrorists, and the homegrown domestic brand that gave us Timothy McVeigh.
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Posted by on April 20, 2012 in News Items

 

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Free Tarek Campaign: Our Response to Tariq’s Statment & Sentencing

What follows is the response to Tariq Mehanna’s Statement as well as the sentencing itself from our friends at the Free Tarek! Campaign:

‘Thank you for your continued support of Tarek and his family. Today was, in many ways, easier than the day we received the verdict. We went in expecting the worst, expecting life without parole. Throughout this trial we saw firsthand the manipulation and lies the government is capable of. We were outraged by the utter unfairness of his conviction. It seemed only fitting that his sentencing would play out in the same manner.

We are relieved to announce that Tarek received a shorter sentence than we expected: 210 months (17.5 years) instead of life without parole. But even still, this is not acceptable. Tarek does not deserve to be in prison for even one day. We will not just wait around idly for the years to pass for Tarek to be free; we will continue to fight, and we implore you to join us.

This isn’t over. But would it have been over if Tarek had received a “time served” sentence and walked out of that courtroom with us today? Even then, we would be compelled to keep fighting. This is bigger than Tarek and it’s bigger than his family; it affects all of you reading this. For there is still no justice for Aafia Siddiqqi and Ziyad Yaghi and Omar Khadr and the Newburgh Four and the Fort Dix Five, and I’m sorry to say the list goes on and will keep going on if we think the fighting here is done. And in case you think you are safe from such morbid overreaches of the government because you don’t have a Mohamed or an Ahmed in your family, I’d like to remind you of the Martin Niemoller poem that starts, “First they came for the communists, but I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a communist,” and ends “and then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak out for me.
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Posted by on April 17, 2012 in News Items

 

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