Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Friday, June 23, 2006

CAIR: Miami Cult not Muslims

I just saw the spokesman for the Council on American Islamic Relations on CNN saying that the Miami cult members just arrested are not Muslims. I'd say that is a fair statement.

For one thing, they are vegetarians!

It seems pretty obvious that they are just a local African-American cult which mixed Judaism, Christianity and (a little bit of) Islam. It seems to be a of vague offshoot of the Moors group founded by Dwight York. I heard on CNN that one of them talked of being Moors. And Batiste, the leader, called whites "devils" in the tradition of the original Nation of Islam and York's Moors. Now CNN is saying one member said they practiced witchcraft [likely meaning Haitian voodoo or perhaps Santeria-like rituals]. One former member is called Levi-El, suggesting he might be associated with the Black Hebrew movement or an offshoot. Now a relative of one of the members, Phanor, said that they wore black uniforms with a star of David arm patch and considered themselves of the Order of Melchizadek. I wonder if it is "Seas of David" or "C's of David", with "c" meaning commando or some such?

I define cult as a religious group that has values that put it in a high state of tension with the norms of mainstream society, and that has a leadership that imposes high levels of discipline and demand for control of adherents' lives.

This Seas of David group primarily seems to have been studying the Bible. The mother of one insisted that he is a Catholic. Then there is all that Jewish symbology and terminology, even in their names. Islam was nothing more for them but a set of symbols they could pull into their syncretic local culture. The group drew on poor Haitian immigrants and local indigent African-American youth. If this were the 1960s, they'd have been Black Panthers or Communists.

American folk religion, pursued in small groups with charismatic leaders, is replete with such groups, from Father Divine to Jim Jones of the People's Temple to David Koreish.

The group never got past the stage of talking big, and violently. They talked dangerously, and some sort of intervention was warranted. Since they begged the FBI informant for "shoes," they weren't exactly a well-heeled group that seems very dangerous in actual practice. And, to what extent did the FBI informant press an al-Qaeda connection on these otherwise clueless but imaginative zealots?

But contrast the grandstanding of Alberto Gonzales on this group of poor unarmed ghetto folk with the way in which the Robert J. Goldstein case was treated. He actually had the bombs in his house and was going to blow up Floridians. No press called him a "Jewish" terrorist and no questions were ever raised about his possible international links.

Imagine the horror of an urbane Arab-American professional with university higher degrees, steeped in Islamic culture and contributing to American society, at being lumped in by the American press and officialdom with these cultists who appropriated his religion for their violent religious fantasies.

The other thing to say is that American law is soft on cultic practices, of dirty tricks against and smearing of critics, enforced third-party shunning, manipulation, and group coercion. These things are not protected by the First Amendment and I think one part of our counter-terrorism strategy must be to develop legal strategies to make it easier to disrupt the workings of cults before they accumulate a critical mass for violent action. The practice of just letting the head of the Internal Revenue Service decide if a group is a tax-free religion should also be revisited. In the past, some IRS heads appear to have been blackmailed by cults into granting them that status, which allows them to accumulate more wealth.

Whereas most terrorism is a form of educated, middle class politics, this particular group clearly grew out of the grievances and resentments of race and class inequality in the United States.

The sister of one was just on MSNBC saying that he deeply resented Bush spending money to drop bombs on poor people who could not defend themselves, while depriving the poor in the United States of any support. "We are not capable," she said. This is a theory of class war, connecting the poor of Kut with the poor of Miami's inner city. The city, by the way, has horrific levels of unemployment.

The position of the poor and workers in particular is deteriorating in the US, as more and more of the privately held wealth is concentrated in the hands of a white, privileged, few. The unions have been gutted, the minimum wage is inadequate, and racist attitudes are reemerging on a worrisome scale. Cities such as Detroit, New Orleans and Miami continue to witness enormous strains coming mainly from racist attitudes. In this case, the best counter-terrorism would be more social justice.

10 Comments:

At 2:04 PM, Blogger Rudi said...

Juan,
I live in the Detroit area and have been disgusted by the press coverage on the Miami situation. I find the degree of threat in Miami near 0, this story is worse than the "Detroit Sleeper Cell" story. At least it will dilute the Duke Lx BS.

 
At 2:27 PM, Blogger James-Speaks said...

The BBC quotes Miami Herald reporter Mani Garcia as calling the arrests "overblown." Be sure to check out this link to a BBC story about the new division in the FBI devoted to domestic spying and the need for home grown terrorist cells, which Attorney General Alberto Gonzales calls no less dangerous despite a clear link to al Qaeda, becomes apparent.

It would not matter if some CNN news reader were to blather on about them not being Muslims. The short attention span mechanism atr work here merely puts the words "terror" and "Muslim" in the same sentence and the connection has been made.

It would be a hoot if some anchor seeking early retirement were to issue statements to the effect the terror cell has no link to Jewish study groups, no link to Black Hebrew cells, no link to AIPAC. Despite the denials, the proximity would be enough to form a connection in the minds of a fair percentage of viewers.

There is too much eagerness to slur anyone who criticizes the excesses of the George W. (I can ignore any law) Bush, and the ease with which he, Cheney and his minions and the media airheads such as Ann Coulter and Jonah Goldberg conjure jihadist connections to real or imagined criminal activity threatens our peace more than al Qaeda ever could hope to.

The irrational behavior on the part of this administration is supported by the FOX types and allowed to continue by their unthinking viewers.

A cure for all this is to reinforce critical thinking but to do so requires honest discussion of the real causes of cults, violence and racism. The racist policies of the Israelis would have to be discussed, and I mean to include people with Israeli citizenship such as Douglas Feith and Paul Wolfowitz. Charges of anti-semitism would come flying as soon as this were to start. I think this would be a good time for a fair percentage of Americans to accept rather than deny the label "anti-semite" when it is misused as in shouting down reasoned debate. After a time, those who need the protection of reasoned Americans might stop using the slur as a weapon.

As it stands, it looks as though they are trying to subjugate us instead.

 
At 3:15 PM, Blogger Dr. Rudy Kastner said...

Who's this "al Qaeda representative" cited throughout the indictment? This so called representative seemed to have all the money, weapons, and connections. The Justice Department, nor the media, seems to interested finding out or revealing who is this "al Qaeda representative." Anyway, how "fortunate" for these seven impoverished black men in Miami to have this "Sugar Daddy" show up out of no where to take these poor men under his wings with the promise of money and adventure.

Can you say FBI AGENT PROVOCATEUR?

 
At 4:22 PM, Blogger Da' Buffalo Amongst Wolves said...

One of my favorite news commentators, Travus T. Hipp, mentioned that this operation was a "sting", and suggested quite bluntly that it means the FBI did most of the "War planning" and sold it to the group.

When I read this:
"Dwight York, a former Black Panther..."

...in the SPLC's write-up on David York, it brings to mind so many infitrated organizations of the 60s, and where all the independent informers, opportunists, and provocateurs went.

They went into the cult business.

Your take on how this affects the residents of Liberty City and the poor communities of America is right on the mark and would point to an attempt to put social and police pressure on the outcasts and downtrodden of our society, as was a stupid suggestion a few years ago that the homeless could be terrorists (and the police did go around my community dutifully checking their identification).

 
At 6:27 PM, Blogger Abu Mahmoud said...

While I agree with the substance of your analysis, I would like to mention that vegetarianism, while not the norm in Islam, is not completely foreign to it. A number of prominent Sufis (such as Rabbiyah al-Basri) have practiced it and it is advocated by the Bawa Muhiyaddeen Fellowship, a modern Sufi group. I am a Muslim vegetarian and I know several others; it is not all that uncommon, especially in the West (where there is concern not only for the animals themselves, but for the purity of the meat). That being said, it seems odd that a group of vegetarians would be planning terror attacks. How far can we trust either the government or the media in a case like this, where there is an imperative operative among certain circles to find evidence of "home grown jihadis" and where there is a substantial background of racism and class oppression?

 
At 8:16 PM, Blogger daryoush said...

This incident, and the Canadian one a few weeks ago, is rather fishy. It seemed to me the government of each country needed a PR campaign and it got is at expense of a few young hot headed guys.

You get a few frustrated teenagers, have a few adults with police background fanning their flame and taping their conversations, soon you have good photo ops for the otherwise incompetent politicians.

The timing is rather interesting isn't the Florida case, "The Terrorist from within" campaign going to fit well into the government debate on:

Monitoring bank transactions called "government at its best"

 
At 9:34 AM, Blogger wemistikoshiw said...

Juan,

To clarify, the People's Temple based initially in the Bay Area was led by Jim Jones, and as most know, ended at gunpoint and cyanide in the jungles of Guyana. The Branch Davidians were led by David Koresh, whose most recent incarnation ended in cataclysm at the hands of the ATF and the military units of the FBI. The Branch Davidians or Koreshan had a relatively long and benign history in the U.S., in southwest Florida in particular, where they had a settlement near Bonita Springs at the beginning of the 20th century.

I see the arrests in Miami and Atlanta and the so- called plot in Chicago as an opportunity to widen the circle of political repression by the state. They found no guns, no bombs, no bomb making material, nothing. At the same time, they had a minor group, conveniently African American with little history of serious political activity.

It seems likely the FBI had their informer wave a suitcase full of cash at these folks and swore them to an oath of loyalty to Al Qaeda and say the proper plot oriented statements into the microphone. For this, they would receive the cash at some point in the future. Before that happened, the federal commandos swooped in and detained members of the group.

It really is a simple equation. The state, with a complicit media proves that they are protecting the American citizenry, while looking heoric in the process. It is a classic wag the dog story. Did you or your readers watch a breathless Anderson Cooper report on the situation the other night, with talking heads in tow? What a joke. They even had an expert from the DHS named Clark Kent Ervin talking about how unsurprising it is for these radical groups to be comprised of African Americans! The vicious racism of the state was laid bare once again for all to see on CNN. There is no end to the audacity of the lies and their need for the state to continue to consolidate power.

The whole news media reportage of the non- event was a highly disciplined mode of propaganda construction and dissemination, perfected during this age of security threats, home grown terrorism, and fear mongering. The state was able to 'dovetail' the so- called Islamic terrorist threat with a predominantely African American fringe political group. A perfect formula for what we are seeing now.

There was no threat. In all likelihood, there was no plot without the entrapment shell game of the FBI and their informer. I would like to know the new legal definition of entrapment under the patriot act. It sounds eerily like the thought police to me.

We continue to face repression and removal of the right of political dissent, first from the so- called fringe and then from you and me.

Juan, have you ever received warnings about what you write? Do you think it is paranoid fantasy to imagine those warnings on the horizon?

We will not go quietly.

 
At 4:26 PM, Blogger Don Singleton said...

Is there some aspect of Islam that prevents Muslims from being vegetarians?

This is not saying they were, or were not Muslim. Just why does being a vegetarian rule it out?

 
At 4:28 PM, Blogger Aaron B. Brown said...

As a longtime resident of South Florida, I am quite familiar with Liberty City and the surrounding neighborhoods, Little Haiti etc. Just to be totally clear about who were talking about, this is the most depressed area in South Florida, perhaps the most concentrated depressed urban area in the state.

It's the kind of place where you might get carjacked by drug addicts, in fact my aunt and uncle were victims of a smash and grab robbery there back in the 1990s. But it's also the kind of place where local people, seeing that you've been assailed, will come to your assistance, invite you into their homes or shops and give you something to drink while they call the police, or send someone to call the police if they don't have a phone which is often the case in this neighborhood. Most people who live in Liberty City are just hard-working decent Americans and legal immigrants.

Regarding the storage warehouse which was being described as a "bunker" by Fox news/propaganda, this is something I'm also well familiar with. In this vast megalopolis, areas which were once zoned only for warehouses, were long ago absorbed into residential neighborhoods. So young people often rent these storage and work facilities out cheaply and use them for part-time residences or just places to hang out. This is quite common in all the older South Florida neighborhoods. I myself did this when I was young.

Concerning the two Haitians which were arrested, and the assertion that they are Muslims or Black Muslims. I have no doubt there are Muslim Haitians, but in the 30 plus years I've lived in this area, I have yet to meet one, and I have many friends in Haitian community.

Most Haitians from my generation or older, are hard-core Christians, Catholics or follow some type of Pentecostal Christianity if I'm not mistaken. The kind of Christians which were once to be found all across the southern US... back in the 1930s. The type of people who believe deeply in the teachings of Jesus, and genuinely strive to adhere to them. Not the kind of people whose children would be easily converted to Islam

It appears from reports that these individuals have developed some type of openly paramilitary organization, drawing attention to themselves. Perhaps this is what drew the FBI's attention.

It concerns me that our intelligence people could be acting as provocateurs or interlocutors in such depressed areas with these types of disaffected people. That kind of thing could blow up in their faces if poor people across America start viewing Al Qaeda as a political force which represents their interests.

My rhetorical questions in response to this development is,

Why are our intelligence forces trying to seemingly manufacture an American Al Qaeda? While this may be helpful to the Bush administration in the short-term, it would seem to have the likelihood of backfiring on them and our entire country down the road. I think that's something they probably haven't even considered. Does the Bush administration have an interest in turning our disaffected youth into Al Qaeda supporters?

If this type of seemingly manufactured phenomena begins to spread, how long will it be before the US military begins dropping laserguided smart bombs on these "bunkers" in Liberty City and other depressed neighborhoods. Is this how we are going to deal with the poor and disenfranchised in the new America?

I have little doubt that these young men will wind up going to prison, given the current climate. On the bright side, at least when they arrive at a Florida prison they won't be lonely, since hundreds of their friends and relatives from the Liberty City area are already there waiting to greet them.

This is assuming that these young men are not classified as illegal combatants, stripped of their rights, and shipped off to a detention facility in an undisclosed location.

Come to think of it, perhaps it was in their best interests to join Al Qaeda.

Sorry I've got to stop now I'm being overwhelmed by cynicism.

 
At 2:17 PM, Blogger kelley b. said...

We will doubtless encounter more episodes of entrapment like this as the '06 and '08 elections approach, and Rove seeks justification among his fellows for more electoral Diebolding.

With the current DHS director, one wonders if the Salvadorian option being practiced in Iraq by private contractors will begin to be utilized here as well to increase the hysteria of the media.

 

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