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Robert Spencer, the author of JihadWatch.org, says he first became aware of the threat of Sharia "after seeing repeated attempts to assert the primacy of Islamic law over American law." One of those early attempts, he told TPMmuckraker, came in late 2006, when Muslim cab drivers in Minnesota made news by refusing to take passengers carrying alcohol. The incidents resulted in the cabbies going to the back of the queue, letting passengers with booze get into another cab.
Spencer has been one of a handful of neocons -- along with Frank Gaffney and Daniel Pipes, among others -- who have been sounding the alarm about Sharia law for years. They warn that Sharia, a system of laws defined by the Koran, is taking hold in the United States, and that it will eventually threaten the very Constitution.
Their warnings, so long spoken from the fringe, are now at the heart of today's anti-mosque rhetoric.
We started digging in the archives to find the origin of this fear. What we found may not be conclusive, but it shows a path that has lead to increasingly mainstream figures, like former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, calling for a federal ban on Sharia law.
In January 1999, a Muslim cleric, Sheik Hisham Kabbani, said at a State Department event that "the ideology of extremism has been spread to 80 percent of the American Muslim population." He also claimed that Muslim leaders were sending charitable donations from their congregations to terrorist organizations in the Middle East. Other Muslim groups condemned the statements, and Kabbani later clarified, explaining that he meant that although the majority of American Muslims are moderate, the extremists had gained leadership positions at 80 percent of the country's mosques.
That idea -- apparently rooted in no substantive research -- has since taken hold among even mainstream conservatives. In 2004, for example, Rep. Peter King (R-NY) told Sean Hannity that "80 to 85 percent of mosques in this country are controlled by Islamic fundamentalists." He added that although the "average Muslim is loyal" to the U.S., "they don't come forward, they don't tell the police."
Over the years, little things -- like the defiant cabbies in Minnesota -- sustained this belief among some conservatives. But the true "smoking gun" came to light in 2007.
That year, the Holy Land Foundation stood trial in Dallas. The foundation, a Muslim charity, was charged with and eventually convicted of supporting terrorism by sending money to Hamas. Prosecutors accused its leaders not of directly funding suicide bombers or other violence, but rather of supporting terrorism by helping Hamas spread its ideology through its more humanitarian endeavors.
It was during the trial "that much of the documentation of the stealth jihad initiative and agenda came to light," according to Spencer. One document was a 1991 strategy paper written by leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood. The memo told followers they "must understand that their work in America is a kind of grand jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from within."
Many, including Spencer, believe that most Muslim groups and mosques in the U.S. subscribe to the same ideals as the Muslim Brotherhood -- the ideals outlined in the 1991 memo.
"They're not gonna carry a card," says M. Zudhi Jasser, a Muslim physician who stars in the fear-mongering movies "Third Jihad" and Gingrich's "America At Risk". "It's an ideology."
And so this document from 1991 has become the main source of "proof" that most American Muslims wish to bring down America from within using Islamic law. Read more at tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com
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