This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/2898
May 13, 2007
MIM: A conflict of interests is relative. WIth dhimmitude and political correctness trumping survival and national security being spokesman for the Al Aqsa mosque and defending the three Duka brothers is all in a days work for State Civil Service chairman Marwan Kreidie. According to this state employee -whose outside associations include the Saudi funded Arab American Anti Discrimination Committee (ADC) and the Arab American Community Development Corporation (AAADC) the Al Aqsa mosque is an oasis of peace in a radical Islamist world and the three Duka brothers arrested for planning to kill "as many Americans as possible" at Fort Dix were just repairing the roof and "very rarely" prayed there.
A radical shift in reputation for 6 men
The Fort Dix suspects were "just regular boys," working and friendly, to friends and neighbors who knew them.
Whether the Duka brothers were devout Muslims before they came to the United States or whether that devotion blossomed during their alleged radicalization is impossible to determine. The Duka and Shnewer families attended the Al-Aqsa Islamic Society Mosque on Germantown Avenue in North Philadelphia and the Islamic Center of South Jersey on Garfield Avenue in Palmyra. Last week, representatives of both mosques decried violence and radicalism. Marwan Kreidie of Al-Aqsa said the Duka brothers had been working on the roof of the mosque before they were arrested. They were providing the work free of charge, Kreidie said. But he said they had attended prayer services there "very rarely.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
MIM:The Al Aqsa mosque in Philly is hub of Islamic radicalism which makes the "Terror Shock" headlines appear to be an attempt at a joke. Interfaith is the key word here and means the following:
We radical Islamists have discovered that interfaith exempts all individuals and institutions from any suspicion of terrorism. We make it a point to reach out to useful idiots from other religions to bolster our facade of tolerance and diversity. This has proven very useful in attracting converts and if people are arrested for planning terrorist attacks the media will focus on our interfaith activities as proof that we aren't the radical Islamists we appear to be.
18/2006
http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20070511_TERROR_SHOCK.html
TERROR SHOCK
Of all the mosques in the Philadelphia area, Al Aqsa Islamic Center was the last place one would expect to find "homegrown terrorists." Long before 9/11, the mosque and Islamic school, on Germantown Avenue at Jefferson Street, had been in the forefront of interfaith efforts to stop hate crimes. Its leaders regularly work with city police, the FBI and other law-enforcement agencies. In fact, Marwan Kreidie, 47, acting spokesman for Al Aqsa, thinks nothing of calling the FBI to advise them of something suspicious, or of helping a Muslim having a problem with a federal agency. In other words, Al Aqsa is not a radical, Islamic fundamentalist hate-spewing mosque breeding terrorists. Yet, four of the six defendants arrested Monday for conspiring to kill soldiers at Fort Dix, briefly prayed at the North Philadelphia mosque and the three Duka brothers - Eljvir, Shain and Dritan - even began to repair its roof at no cost. About two months ago, Ibrahim Shnewer, 53, the father of the fourth defendant, Mohammed Ibrahim Shnewer, 22, was worried about a delay with his citizenship papers and asked if Al Aqsa could intervene with the feds. "That told me . . . he didn't have a clue," what his son allegedly was planning , said Kreidie. The elder Shnewer prayed regularly at the mosque, his son less frequently and the Duka brothers once or twice, according to Al Aqsa. This week, the 1,000-member Al Aqsa community was in such shock that Imam Mohammed Shehata issued a statement: "We have constantly urged our community members to report, either to us, or to law enforcement, any suspicious incidents. Had we noticed anything about these individuals that would have aroused suspicions, I can assure you, it would have been reported." The FBI and Philadelphia Police confirmed they have worked with Kreidie, who is also executive director of the Arab American Development Corp.
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/1937
The FBI Loses Its Way [with Marwan Kreidie]
by Daniel Pipes
New York Sun
July 6, 2004
It's time to worry when the Federal Bureau of Investigation, America's national police agency, consistently cannot figure out who's friend and who's foe in the war on terror.
The bureau's record of honoring the wrong American Muslims captures this problem.
![]() Marwan Kreidie, FBI favorite. | |
First, Kreidie has repeatedly damned counterterrorist measures and to my knowledge has never approved a single one. He
More broadly, Kreidie rejects law-enforcement counterterrorist efforts as "massive intrusions on civil liberties" that "enraged" Arab and Muslim Americans. He even characterized anti-terrorism efforts as "unconstitutional."
Second, Kreidie viciously attacks the Bush administration. He condemned what he called the "assaults on human rights mounted by President Bush and his Attorney General, John Ashcroft." He accused President George W. Bush of "a litany of anti-Arab and Muslim actions." He on one occasion referred to the attorney general (who, among his other jobs, oversees the FBI) as "that lunatic Ashcroft."
Third, Kreidie denies American Muslims have anything to do with terrorism. "Nobody in my community supports Osama," he has announced, thereby in advance exonerating Muslims of connections to Al-Qaeda and making one wonder how much help he can provide the FBI. After the U.S. president personally signed the papers to close down the Holy Land Foundation, an Islamic "charity," and the treasury secretary described it as an organization that "exists to raise money in the United States to promote terror," Kreidie insisted on the foundation being a legitimate charitable organization. When the Pennsylvania state treasurer, Barbara Hafer, suspected that $210,000 stolen by individuals with Arabic names could be connected to terrorism, Kreidie jumped on her statement as baseless and inflammatory.
Summing up his whole outlook, Kreidie has said that for American Arabs and Muslims, working with the FBI is "a waste of time."
How, then, did this anti-counterterrorism, anti-Bush, anti-Ashcroft, anti-FBI figure exactly help in "identifying, preventing and disrupting acts of terrorism"? Presented with this record of Kreidie's remarks, the Philadelphia FBI office declined to comment.
When a leading law enforcement agency like the FBI is so politically exposed that it rewards those who attack it, winning the war on terror appears increasingly remote. The police need to do their work and not hobble themselves by honoring their opponents.
_________
Oct. 6, 2004 update: For breaking news on Marwan Kreidie, see "Another FBI Award for Marwan Kreidie?"
http://www.scsc.state.pa.us/scsc/cwp/view.asp?a=394&q=128691
Chairman Marwan Kreidie | |
Marwan Kreidie was appointed to the State Civil Service Commission by Governor Edward G. Rendell and confirmed by the Pennsylvania State Senate on June 28, 2004. He was appointed to the position of Chairman of the State Civil Service Commission by Governor Rendell on May 2, 2005. | ![]() |
Prior to his appointment to the Commission, Chairman Kreidie served as a Civil Service Commissioner for the City of Philadelphia. He has served in numerous other appointed as well as professional positions in local government including Transportation Planner, Assistant to a Township Manager and helping to create a recycling program for the City of Philadelphia. Chairman Kreidie also served as a research analyst for "Solutions for Progress." In this role, he was responsible for preparing policy papers on a variety of topics including urban policy/affairs, solid waste management and the Middle East peace process. Chairman Kreidie is founder and executive director of the Philadelphia Arab-American Community Development Corporation (AACDC). The AACDC provides services to the Arab-American community including health care, access to social services, English as a second language and citizenship classes. Chairman Kreidie is an active member of the National Leadership Conference of the Arab-American Institute in Washington, D.C. -------------------------------------------- http://www.state.pa.us/papower/cwp/view.asp?A=11&Q=442641 GOVERNOR RENDELL APPOINTS KREIDIE AS CHAIRMAN OF STATE CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION 8/18/2006 http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20070511_TERROR_SHOCK.html TERROR SHOCK By KITTY CAPARELLA & GLORIA CAMPISI[email protected] 215-854-5880Associated Press
Of all the mosques in the Philadelphia area, Al Aqsa Islamic Center was the last place one would expect to find "homegrown terrorists." Long before 9/11, the mosque and Islamic school, on Germantown Avenue at Jefferson Street, had been in the forefront of interfaith efforts to stop hate crimes. Its leaders regularly work with city police, the FBI and other law-enforcement agencies. In fact, Marwan Kreidie, 47, acting spokesman for Al Aqsa, thinks nothing of calling the FBI to advise them of something suspicious, or of helping a Muslim having a problem with a federal agency. In other words, Al Aqsa is not a radical, Islamic fundamentalist hate-spewing mosque breeding terrorists. Yet, four of the six defendants arrested Monday for conspiring to kill soldiers at Fort Dix, briefly prayed at the North Philadelphia mosque and the three Duka brothers - Eljvir, Shain and Dritan - even began to repair its roof at no cost. About two months ago, Ibrahim Shnewer, 53, the father of the fourth defendant, Mohammed Ibrahim Shnewer, 22, was worried about a delay with his citizenship papers and asked if Al Aqsa could intervene with the feds. "That told me . . . he didn't have a clue," what his son allegedly was planning , said Kreidie. The elder Shnewer prayed regularly at the mosque, his son less frequently and the Duka brothers once or twice, according to Al Aqsa. This week, the 1,000-member Al Aqsa community was in such shock that Imam Mohammed Shehata issued a statement: "We have constantly urged our community members to report, either to us, or to law enforcement, any suspicious incidents. Had we noticed anything about these individuals that would have aroused suspicions, I can assure you, it would have been reported." The FBI and Philadelphia Police confirmed they have worked with Kreidie, who is also executive director of the Arab American Development Corp. After praying at the mosque yesterday, Mohammed Elsheikh, 31, a taxi driver by day and Widener University math student by night, said the defendants "are just going to make us [Muslims] look worse." "They need to learn Islam," he added. "You have to start with yourself. You learn to be truthful. "Only ignorance lets you do this," he added. The colorfully painted Islamic Center, rehabbed from a furniture warehouse in the early 1990s, features Sunni sermons in Arabic with translation services. Its K-12 school has an enrollment of 200 students. And it houses a mortuary; a food store specializing in halal foods, which are ritually fit according to Islamic law; and an Arabic library. Members of Mishkan Shalom, a reconstructionist synagogue in Manayunk, have worked closely with the mosque for years. For the past three years, the Interfaith Walk for Peace and Reconciliation started at Al Aqsa before stopping at a Catholic church and then a synagogue in Center City. The upcoming June 3 walk will be in Germantown. Meanwhile, in Staten Island, Ferid Bedrolli, an imam at the Albanian Islamic Cultural Center, said the Duka family had attended that mosque before moving to South Jersey. Bedrolli said Dritan and his brothers belonged to an extended clan of 40 to 50 families, ethnic Albanians born in Debar, a remote town on Macedonia's rugged border with Serbia's Kosovo province. Many had moved to the New York area, but some, like the Dukas, later relocated to Cherry Hill. The Duka brothers are illegal immigrants. Dritan's wife, Jennifer Duka, 28, reportedly denied that her husband, a roofer, or his brothers, were involved in terrorist activities. "He prays. He never did anything violent. He gives money to charity," she told the New York Post. Jennifer Duka couldn't be reached yesterday. "Everybody knows them," Bedrolli said of the Dukas. "They lived in Brooklyn." But since moving to New Jersey, he said, he had seen them only infrequently. "They are hard-working family," Bedrolli said. None of them ever gave any evidence that they were involved with Islamic radicals, he said. "Even back home [in Albania and Macedonia]. I listen to the news [from overseas]. Every single person" is in disbelief, Bedrolli said. "The U.S. is one of our best friends, the only country who really support us," during the ethnic-cleansing campaign of the Serbians during the 1990s. "Fort Dix was a second home for the Kosovars." Many families from Kosovo were brought to Fort Dix by the U.S. Agron Abdullahu, one of the six arrested in the terrorism plot, was among the Fort Dix refugees. "We all have been supporters of America. We were always thankful to America for its support during the wars in Kosovo and Macedonia," a cousin, Elez Duka, 29, told the Associated Press in Debar. "These are simple, ordinary people, and they've got nothing to do with terrorism." Ismail Badat, president of the Islamic Center in Palmyra, Burlington County, which the Duka brothers attended, said everyone there was dumbfounded. "These were religious kids. They were hardworking boys. They were very friendly, well-behaved, well-mannered. There was nothing to indicate they were going off the path," he said. "We don't talk about hatred at our mosque. We come to pray. Islam denounces terrorism." * ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/2898