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Tablighi
Jamaat:
Jihad's
Stealthy
Legions
by
Alex
Alexiev
Every
fall,
over
a
million
almost
identically
dressed,
bearded
Muslim
men
from
around
the
world
descend
on
the
small
Pakistani
town
of
Raiwind
for
a
three-day
celebration
of
faith.
Similar
gatherings
take
place
annually
outside
of
Dhaka,
Bangladesh,
and
Bhopal,
India.
These
pilgrims
are
no
ordinary
Muslims,
though;
they
belong
to
a
movement
called
Tablighi
Jamaat
("Proselytizing
Group").
They
are
trained
missionaries
who
have
dedicated
much
of
their
lives
to
spreading
Islam
across
the
globe.
The
largest
group
of
religious
proselytizers
of
any
faith,
they
are
part
of
the
reason
for
the
explosive
growth
of
Islamic
religious
fervor
and
conversion.
Despite
its
size,
worldwide
presence,
and
tremendous
importance,
Tablighi
Jamaat
remains
largely
unknown
outside
the
Muslim
community,
even
to
many
scholars
of
Islam.
This
is
no
coincidence.
Tablighi
Jamaat
officials
work
to
remain
outside
of
both
media
and
governmental
notice.
Tablighi
Jamaat
neither
has
formal
organizational
structure
nor
does
it
publish
details
about
the
scope
of
its
activities,
its
membership,
or
its
finances.
By
eschewing
open
discussion
of
politics
and
portraying
itself
only
as
a
pietistic
movement,
Tablighi
Jamaat
works
to
project
a
non-threatening
image.
Because
of
the
movement's
secrecy,
scholars
often
have
no
choice
but
to
rely
on
explanations
from
Tablighi
Jamaat
acolytes.
As
a
result,
academics
tend
to
describe
the
group
as
an
apolitical
devotional
movement
stressing
individual
faith,
introspection,
and
spiritual
development.
The
austere
and
egalitarian
lifestyle
of
Tablighi
missionaries
and
their
principled
stands
against
social
ills
leads
many
outside
observers
to
assume
that
the
group
has
a
positive
influence
on
society.
Graham
Fuller,
a
former
CIA
official
and
expert
on
Islam,
for
example,
characterized
Tablighi
Jamaat
as
a
"peaceful
and
apolitical
preaching-to-the-people
movement."[1]
Barbara
Metcalf,
a
University
of
California
scholar
of
South
Asian
Islam,
called
Tablighi
Jamaat
"an
apolitical,
quietist
movement
of
internal
grassroots
missionary
renewal"
and
compares
its
activities
to
the
efforts
to
reshape
individual
lives
by
Alcoholics
Anonymous.[2]
Olivier
Roy,
a
prominent
authority
on
Islam
at
Paris's
prestigious
Centre
National
de
la
Recherche
Scientifique,
described
Tablighi
Jamaat
as
"completely
apolitical
and
law
abiding."[3]
Governments
normally
intolerant
of
independent
movements
often
make
an
exception
for
Tablighi
Jamaat.
The
Bangladeshi
prime
minister
and
top
political
leadership,
many
of
whom
are
Islamists,
regularly
attend
their
rallies,
and
Pakistani
military
officers,
many
of
whom
are
sympathetic
to
militant
Islam,
even
allow
Tablighi
missionaries
to
preach
in
the
barracks.
Yet,
the
Pakistani
experience
strips
the
patina
from
Tablighi
Jamaat's
façade.
Pakistani
prime
minister
Nawaz
Sharif
(1990-93;
1997-99),
whose
father
was
a
prominent
Tablighi
member
and
financier,
helped
Tablighi
members
take
prominent
positions.[4]
For
example,
in
1998,
Muhammad
Rafique
Tarar
took
the
ceremonial
presidency
while,
in
1990,
Javed
Nasir
assumed
the
powerful
director-generalship
of
the
Inter-Services
Intelligence,
Pakistan's
chief
intelligence
agency.
When
Benazir
Bhutto,
less
sympathetic
to
Islamist
causes,
returned
to
the
premiership
in
1993,
Tablighis
conspired
to
overthrow
her
government.
In
1995,
the
Pakistani
army
thwarted
a
coup
attempt
by
several
dozen
high-ranking
military
officers
and
civilians,
all
of
whom
were
members
of
the
Tablighi
Jamaat
and
some
of
whom
also
held
membership
in
Harakat
ul-Mujahideen,
a
U.S.
State
Department-defined
terrorist
organization.[5]
Some
of
the
confusion
over
Tablighi
Jamaat's
apolitical
characterization
derives
from
the
fact
that
the
movement
does
not
consider
individual
states
to
be
legitimate.
They
may
not
become
actively
involved
in
internal
politics
or
disputes
over
local
issues,
but,
from
a
philosophical
and
transnational
perspective,
the
Tablighi
Jamaat's
millenarian
philosophy
is
very
political
indeed.
According
to
the
French
Tablighi
expert
Marc
Gaborieau,
its
ultimate
objective
is
nothing
short
of
a
"planned
conquest
of
the
world"
in
the
spirit
of
jihad.[6]
Origins
and
Ideology
The
prominent
Deobandi
cleric
and
scholar
Maulana
Muhammad
Ilyas
Kandhalawi
(1885-1944)
launched
Tablighi
Jamaat
in
1927
in
Mewat,
India,
not
far
from
Delhi.
From
its
inception,
the
extremist
attitudes
that
characterize
Deobandism
permeated
Tablighi
philosophy.
Ilyas's
followers
were
intolerant
of
other
Muslims
and
especially
Shi‘ites,
let
alone
adherents
of
other
faiths.
Indeed,
part
of
Ilyas's
impetus
for
founding
Tablighi
Jamaat
was
to
counter
the
inroads
being
made
by
Hindu
missionaries.
They
rejected
modernity
as
antithetical
to
Islam,
excluded
women,
and
preached
that
Islam
must
subsume
all
other
religions.[7]
The
creed
grew
in
importance
after
Pakistani
military
dictator
Zia
ul-Haq
encouraged
Deobandis
to
Islamize
Pakistan.
The
Tablighi
Jamaat
canon
is
bare-boned.
Apart
from
the
Qu'ran,
the
only
literature
Tablighis
are
required
to
read
are
the
Tablighi
Nisab,
seven
essays
penned
by
a
companion
of
Ilyas
in
the
1920s.
Tablighi
Jamaat
is
not
a
monolith:
one
subsection
believes
they
should
pursue
jihad
through
conscience
(jihad
bin
nafs)
while
a
more
radical
wing
advocates
jihad
through
the
sword
(jihad
bin
saif).[8]
But,
in
practice,
all
Tablighis
preach
a
creed
that
is
hardly
distinguishable
from
the
radical
Wahhabi-Salafi
jihadist
ideology
that
so
many
terrorists
share.
Part
of
the
reason
why
the
Tablighi
Jamaat
leadership
can
maintain
such
strict
secrecy
is
its
dynastic
flavor.
All
Tablighi
Jamaat
leaders
since
Ilyas
have
been
related
to
him
by
either
blood
or
marriage.
Upon
Ilyas'
1944
death,
his
son,
Maulana
Muhammad
Yusuf
(1917-65),
assumed
leadership
of
the
movement,
dramatically
expanding
its
reach
and
influence.
Following
the
partition
of
India,
Tablighi
Jamaat
spread
rapidly
in
the
new
Muslim
nation
of
Pakistan.
Yusuf
and
his
successor,
Inamul
Hassan
(1965-95),
transformed
Tablighi
Jamaat
into
a
truly
transnational
movement
with
a
renewed
emphasis
targeting
conversion
of
non-Muslims,
a
mission
the
movement
continues
to
the
present
day.
While
few
details
are
known
about
the
group's
structure,
at
the
top
sits
the
emir
who,
according
to
some
observers,
presides
over
a shura
(council),
which
plays
an
advisory
role.
Further
down
are
individual
country
organizations.
By
the
late
1960s,
Tablighi
Jamaat
had
not
only
established
itself
in
Western
Europe
and
North
America
but
even
claimed
adherents
in
countries
like
Japan,
which
has
no
significant
Muslim
population.
The
movement's
rapid
penetration
into
non-Muslim
regions
began
in
the
1970s
and
coincides
with
the
establishment
of
a
synergistic
relationship
between
Saudi
Wahhabis
and
South
Asian
Deobandis.
While
Wahhabis
are
dismissive
of
other
Islamic
schools,
they
single
out
Tablighi
Jamaat
for
praise,
even
if
they
disagree
with
some
of
its
practices,
such
as
willingness
to
pray
in
mosques
housing
graves.
The
late
Sheikh
‘Abd
al
‘Aziz
ibn
Baz,
perhaps
the
most
influential
Wahhabi
cleric
in
the
late
twentieth
century,
recognized
the
Tablighis
good
work
and
encouraged
his
Wahhabi
brethren
to
go
on
missions
with
them
so
that
they
can
"guide
and
advise
them."[9]
A
practical
result
of
this
cooperation
has
been
large-scale
Saudi
financing
of
Tablighi
Jamaat.
While
Tablighi
Jamaat
in
theory
requires
its
missionaries
to
cover
their
own
expenses
during
their
trips,
in
practice,
Saudi
money
subsidizes
transportation
costs
for
thousands
of
poor
missionaries.
While
Tablighi
Jamaat's
financial
activities
are
shrouded
in
secrecy,
there
is
no
doubt
that
some
of
the
vast
sums
spent
by
Saudi
organizations
such
as
the
World
Muslim
League
on
proselytism
benefit
Tablighi
Jamaat.
As
early
as
1978,
the
World
Muslim
League
subsidized
the
building
of
the
Tablighi
mosque
in
Dewsbury,
England,
which
has
since
become
the
headquarters
of
Tablighi
Jamaat
in
all
of
Europe.[10]
Wahhabi
sources
have
paid
Tablighi
missionaries
in
Africa
salaries
higher
than
the
European
Union
pays
teachers
in
Zanzibar.[11]
In
both
Western
Europe
and
the
United
States,
Tablighis
operate
interchangeably
out
of
Deobandi
and
Wahhabi
controlled
mosques
and
Islamic
centers.
Wolf
in
Sheep's
Clothing
The
West's
misreading
of
Tablighi
Jamaat
actions
and
motives
has
serious
implications
for
the
war
on
terrorism.
Tablighi
Jamaat
has
always
adopted
an
extreme
interpretation
of
Sunni
Islam,
but
in
the
past
two
decades,
it
has
radicalized
to
the
point
where
it
is
now
a
driving
force
of
Islamic
extremism
and
a
major
recruiting
agency
for
terrorist
causes
worldwide.
For
a
majority
of
young
Muslim
extremists,
joining
Tablighi
Jamaat
is
the
first
step
on
the
road
to
extremism.
Perhaps
80
percent
of
the
Islamist
extremists
in
France
come
from
Tablighi
ranks,
prompting
French
intelligence
officers
to
call
Tablighi
Jamaat
the
"antechamber
of
fundamentalism."[12]
U.S.
counterterrorism
officials
are
increasingly
adopting
the
same
attitude.
"We
have
a
significant
presence
of
Tablighi
Jamaat
in
the
United
States,"
the
deputy
chief
of
the
FBI's
international
terrorism
section
said
in
2003,
"and
we
have
found
that
Al-Qaeda
used
them
for
recruiting
now
and
in
the
past."[13]
Recruitment
methods
for
young
jihadists
are
almost
identical.
After
joining
Tablighi
Jamaat
groups
at
a
local
mosque
or
Islamic
center
and
doing
a
few
local
dawa
(proselytism)
missions,
Tablighi
officials
invite
star
recruits
to
the
Tablighi
center
in
Raiwind,
Pakistan,
for
four
months
of
additional
missionary
training.
Representatives
of
terrorist
organizations
approach
the
students
at
the
Raiwind
center
and
invite
them
to
undertake
military
training.[14]
Most
agree
to
do
so.
Tablighi
Jamaat
has
long
been
directly
involved
in
the
sponsorship
of
terrorist
groups.
Pakistani
and
Indian
observers
believe,
for
instance,
that
Tablighi
Jamaat
was
instrumental
in
founding
Harakat
ul-Mujahideen.
Founded
at
Raiwind
in
1980,
almost
all
of
the
Harakat
ul-Mujahideen's
original
members
were
Tablighis.
Famous
for
the
December
1998
hijacking
of
an
Air
India
passenger
jet
and
the
May
8,
2002
murder
of
a
busload
of
French
engineers
in
Karachi,
Harakat
members
make
no
secret
of
their
ties.
"The
two
organizations
together
make
up
a
truly
international
network
of
genuine
jihadi
Muslims,"
one
senior
Harakat
ul-Mujahideen
official
said.[15]
More
than
6,000
Tablighis
have
trained
in
Harakat
ul-Mujahideen
camps.
Many
fought
in
Afghanistan
in
the
1980s
and
readily
joined
Al-Qaeda
after
the
Taliban
defeated
Afghanistan's
anti-Soviet
mujahideen.[16]
Another
violent
Tablighi
Jamaat
spin-off
is
the
Harakat
ul-Jihad-i
Islami.[17]
Founded
in
the
aftermath
of
the
Soviet
invasion
of
Afghanistan,
this
group
has
been
active
not
only
in
the
disputed
Indian
provinces
of
Jammu
and
Kashmir
but
also
in
the
state
of
Gujarat,
where
Tablighi
Jamaat
extremists
have
taken
over
perhaps
80
percent
of
the
mosques
previously
run
by
the
moderate
Barelvi
Muslims.[18]
The
Tablighi
movement
is
also
very
active
in
northern
Africa
where
it
became
one
of
the
four
groups
that
founded
the
Islamic
Salvation
Front
in
Algeria.
Moroccan
authorities
are
currently
prosecuting
sixty
members
of
the
Moroccan
Tablighi
offshoot
Dawa
wa
Tabligh
in
connection
with
the
May
16,
2003
terrorist
attack
on
a
Casablanca
synagogue.[19]
Dutch
police
are
investigating
links
between
the
Moroccan
cells
and
the
November
2,
2004
murder
of
Dutch
filmmaker
Theo
van
Gogh.[20]
There
are
many
other
cases
of
individual
Tablighis
committing
acts
of
terrorism.
French
Tablighi
members,
for
example,
have
helped
organize
and
execute
attacks
not
only
in
Paris
but
also
at
the
Hotel
Asni
in
Marrakech
in
1994.[21]
Kazakh
authorities
expelled
a
number
of
Tablighi
missionaries
because
they
had
been
organizing
networks
advancing
"extremist
propaganda
and
recruitment."[22]
Indian
investigators
suspect
influential
Tablighi
leader,
Maulana
Umarji,
and
a
group
of
his
followers
in
the
February
27,
2002
fire
bombing
of
a
train
carrying
Hindu
nationalists
in
Gujarat,
India.
The
incident
sparked
a
wave
of
pogroms
victimizing
both
Muslims
and
Hindus.[23]
More
recently,
Moroccan
authorities
sentenced
Yusef
Fikri,
a
Tablighi
member
and
leader
of
the
Moroccan
terrorist
organization
At-Takfir
wal-Hijrah,
to
death
for
his
role
in
masterminding
the
May
2003
Casablanca
terrorist
bombings
that
claimed
more
than
forty
lives.[24]
Tablighi
Jamaat
has
also
facilitated
other
terrorists'
missions.
The
group
has
provided
logistical
support
and
helped
procure
travel
documents.
Many
take
advantage
of
Tablighi
Jamaat's
benign
reputation.
Moroccan
authorities
say
that
leaflets
circulated
by
the
terrorist
group
Al-Salafiyah
al-Jihadiyah
urged
their
members
to
join
Islamic
organizations
that
operate
openly,
such
as
Tablighi
Jamaat,
in
order
"to
hide
their
identity
on
the
one
hand
and
influence
these
groups
and
their
policies
on
the
other."[25]
In
a
similar
vein,
a
Pakistani
jihadi
website
commented
that
Tablighi
Jamaat
organizational
structures
can
be
easily
adopted
to
jihad
activities.[26]
The
Philippine
government
has
accused
Tablighi
Jamaat,
which
has
an
11,000-member
presence
in
the
country,
of
serving
both
as
a
conduit
of
Saudi
money
to
the
Islamic
terrorists
in
the
south
and
as
a
cover
for
Pakistani
jihad
volunteers.[27]
There
is
also
evidence
that
Tablighi
Jamaat
directly
recruits
for
terrorist
organizations.
As
early
as
the
1980s,
the
movement
sponsored
military
training
for
900
recruits
annually
in
Pakistan
and
Algeria
while,
in
1999,
Uzbek
authorities
accused
Tablighi
Jamaat
of
sending
400
Uzbeks
to
terrorist
training
camps.[28]
The
West
is
not
immune.
British
counterterrorism
authorities
estimate
that
at
least
2,000
British
nationals
had
gone
to
Pakistan
for
jihad
training
by
1998,
and
the
French
secret
services
report
that
between
80
and
100
French
nationals
fought
for
Al-Qaeda.[29]
A
Trojan
Horse
for
Terror
in
America?
Within
the
United
States,
the
cases
of
American
Taliban
John
Lindh,
the
"Lackawanna
Six,"
and
the
Oregon
cell
that
conspired
to
bomb
a
synagogue
and
sought
to
link
up
with
Al-Qaeda,[30]
all
involve
Tablighi
missionaries.[31]
Other
indicted
terrorists,
such
as
"shoe
bomber"
Richard
Reid,
"dirty
bomber"
Jose
Padilla,
and
Lyman
Harris,
who
sought
to
bomb
the
Brooklyn
Bridge,
were
all
members
of
Tablighi
Jamaat
at
one
time
or
another.[32]
According
to
Robert
Blitzer,
head
of
the
FBI's
first
Islamic
counterterrorism
unit,
between
1,000
and
2,000
Americans
left
to
join
the
jihad
in
the
1990s
alone.[33]
Pakistani
intelligence
sources
report
that
400
American
Tablighi
recruits
received
training
in
Pakistani
or
Afghan
terrorist
camps
since
1989.[34]
The
Tablighi
Jamaat
has
made
inroads
among
two
very
different
segments
of
the
American
Muslim
population.
Because
many
American
Muslims
are
immigrants,
and
a
large
subsection
of
these
are
from
South
Asia,
Deobandi
influences
have
been
able
to
penetrate
deeply.
Many
Tablighi
Jamaat
missionaries
speak
Urdu
as
a
first
language
and
so
can
communicate
easily
with
American
Muslims
of
South
Asian
origin.
The
Tablighi
headquarters
in
the
United
States
for
the
past
decade
appears
to
be
in
the
Al-Falah
mosque
in
Queens,
New
York.
Its
missionaries—predominantly
from
South
Asia—regularly
visit
Sunni
mosques
and
Islamic
centers
across
the
country.[35]
The
willingness
of
Saudi-controlled
front
organizations
and
charities,
such
as
the
World
Muslim
League,
the
World
Assembly
of
Muslim
Youth
(WAMY),
the
Haramain
Foundation,
the
International
Islamic
Relief
Organization
(IIRO)
and
others,
to
spend
large
amounts
of
money
to
co-opt
the
religious
establishment
has
helped
catalyze
recruitment.
As
a
result
Wahhabi
and
Deobandi
influence
dominate
American
Islam.[36]
This
trend
is
apparent
in
the
activities
of
Tanzeem-e
Islami.
Founded
by
long-term
Tablighi
member
and
passionate
Taliban
supporter,
Israr
Ahmed,
Tanzeem-e
Islami
flooded
American
Muslim
organizations
with
communications
accusing
Israel
of
complicity
in
the
9/11
terror
attacks.[37]
A
frequent
featured
speaker
at
Islamic
conferences
and
events
in
the
United
States,
Ahmed
engages
in
incendiary
rhetoric
urging
his
audiences
to
prepare
for
"the
final
showdown
between
the
Muslim
world
and
the
non-Muslim
world,
which
has
been
captured
by
the
Jews."[38]
Unfortunately,
his
conspiracy
theories
have
begun
to
take
hold
among
growing
segments
of
the
American
Muslim
community.
For
example,
Siraj
Wahhaj,
among
the
best
known
African-American
Muslim
converts
and
the
first
Muslim
cleric
to
lead
prayers
in
the
U.S.
Congress,
is
also
on
record
accusing
the
FBI
and
the
CIA
of
being
the
"real
terrorists."
He
has
expressed
his
support
for
the
convicted
mastermind
of
the
1993
World
Trade
Center
bombing,
Sheik
Omar
Abdel
Rahman,
and
advocating
the
demise
of
American
democracy.[39]
Tablighi
Jamaat
has
appealed
to
African
American
Muslims
for
other
reasons.
Founded
by
Elijah
Mohammed
in
the
early
1930s,
the
Nation
of
Islam
was
essentially
a
charismatic
African
American
separatist
organization
which
had
little
to
do
with
normative
Islam.
Many
Nation
of
Islam
members
found
attractive
both
the
Tablighi
Jamaat's
anti-state
separatist
message
and
its
description
of
American
society
as
racist,
decadent,
and
oppressive.
Seeing
such
fertile
ground,
Tablighi
and
Wahhabi
missionaries
targeted
the
African
American
community
with
great
success.
One
Tablighi
sympathizer
explained,
The
umma
[Muslim
community]
must
remember
that
winning
over
the
black
Muslims
is
not
only
a
religious
obligation
but
also
a
selfish
necessity.
The
votes
of
the
black
Muslims
can
give
the
immigrant
Muslims
the
political
clout
they
need
at
every
stage
to
protect
their
vital
interests.
Likewise,
outside
Muslim
states
like
Saudi
Arabia,
Malaysia,
and
Pakistan
need
to
mobilize
their
effort,
money,
and
missionary
skills
to
expand
and
consolidate
the
black
Muslim
community
in
the
USA,
not
only
for
religious
reasons,
but
also
as
a
farsighted
investment
in
the
black
Muslims'
immense
potential
as
a
credible
lobby
for
Muslim
causes,
such
as
Palestine,
Bosnia,
or
Kashmir—offsetting,
at
least
partially,
the
venal
influence
of
the
powerful
India-Israel
lobby.[40]
Not
only
foreign
Tablighis
but
also
the
movement's
sympathizers
within
the
United
States
enunciate
this
goal.
The
president
of
the
Islamic
Research
Foundation
in
Louisville,
Kentucky,
a
strong
advocate
of
Tablighi
missionary
work,
for
instance,
insists
that
"if
all
the
Afro-American
brothers
and
sisters
become
Muslims,
we
can
change
the
political
landscape
of
America"
and
"make
U.S.
foreign
policy
pro-Islamic
and
Muslim
friendly."[41]
As
a
result
of
Tablighi
and
Wahhabi
proselytizing,
African
Americans
comprise
between
30
and
40
percent
of
the
American
Muslim
community,
and
perhaps
85
percent
of
all
American
Muslim
converts.
Much
of
this
success
is
due
to
a
successful
proselytizing
drive
in
the
penitentiary
system.
Prison
officials
say
that
by
the
mid-1990s,
between
10
and
20
percent
of
the
nation's
1.5
million
inmates
identified
themselves
as
Muslims.
Some
30,000
African
Americans
convert
to
Islam
in
prison
every
year.[42]
The
American
political
system
tolerates
all
views
so
long
as
they
adhere
to
the
rule
of
law.
Unfortunately,
Tablighi
Jamaat
missionaries
may
be
encouraging
African
American
recruits
to
break
the
law.
Harkat
ul-Mujahideen
has
boasted
of
training
dozens
of
African
American
jihadists
in
its
military
camps.
There
is
evidence
that
African
American
jihadists
have
died
in
both
Afghanistan
and
Kashmir.[43]
Tablighi
Jamaat:
The
Future
of
American
Islam?
Tablighi
Jamaat
has
made
unprecedented
strides
in
recent
decades.
It
increasingly
relies
on
local
missionaries
rather
than
South
Asian
Tablighis
to
recruit
in
Western
countries
and
often
sets
up
groups
which
apparently
model
themselves
after
Tablighi
Jamaat
but
do
not
acknowledge
links
to
it.[44]
In
the
United
States,
such
a
role
is
apparently
played
by
the
Islamic
Circle
of
North
America
(ICNA).
Founded
in
1968
as
an
offshoot
of
the
fiercely
Islamist
Muslim
Student
Association,[45]
ICNA
is
the
only
major
American
Muslim
organization
that
has
paid
open
homage
to
Tablighi
founder
Ilyas.
The
monthly
ICNA
publication,
The
Message,
has
praised
Ilyas
as
one
of
the
four
greatest
Islamic
leaders
of
the
last
100
years.[46]
While
the
relationship
between
ICNA
and
Tablighi
Jamaat
is
not
clear,
the
two
organizations
share
a
number
of
similarities.
They
both
embrace
the
extreme
Deobandi
and
Wahhabi
interpretations
of
Islam.
ICNA
demonstrates
disdain
for
Western
democratic
values
and
opposes
virtually
all
counterterrorism
legislation,
such
as
the
Patriot
Act,
while
providing
moral
and
financial
support
to
all
Muslims
implicated
in
terrorist
activities.
An
editorial
in
the
ICNA
organ,
The
Message
International,
in
September
1989
bemoaned
the
"uncounted
number
of
Muslims
lost
to
Western
values"
which
was
a
"major
cause
for
concern."[47]
In
2003
and
2004,
ICNA
has
collected
money
to
assist
detainees
suspected
of
terrorist
activities,
participated
in
pro-terrorist
rallies,
and
mounted
campaigns
on
behalf
of
indicted
Hamas
functionary
Sami
al-Arian.[48]
Like
Tablighi
Jamaat,
ICNA
initially
drew
its
membership
disproportionately
from
South
Asians.
As
with
Tablighi
Jamaat,
ICNA
demands
total
dedication
to
missionary
work
from
its
members.
Because
many
ICNA
members
spend
at
least
thirty
hours
per
week
on
their
mission,[49]
their
ability
to
independently
support
themselves
is
unclear.
Many
cannot
hold
full-time
jobs.
ICNA's
recruitment
efforts
have
borne
fruit,
though.
All
ICNA
members
are
organized
in
small
study
groups
of
no
more
than
eight
people,
called
NeighborNets.
As
in
a
cult,
these
cells
provide
support
and
reinforcement
for
new
recruits,
who
may
have
sought
to
fill
a
void
in
their
lives.
Its
yearly
convocations,
patterned
on
the
annual
Tablighi
Jamaat
meetings
in
South
Asia,
now
attract
some
15,000
people.[50]
Conclusion
The
estimated
15,000
Tablighi
missionaries
reportedly
active
in
the
United
States
present
a
serious
national
security
problem.[51]
At
best,
they
and
their
proxy
groups
form
a
powerful
proselytizing
movement
that
preaches
extremism
and
disdain
for
religious
tolerance,
democracy,
and
separation
of
church
and
state.
At
worst,
they
represent
an
Islamist
fifth
column
that
aids
and
abets
terrorism.
Contrary
to
their
benign
treatment
by
scholars
and
academics,
Tablighi
Jamaat
has
more
to
do
with
political
sedition
than
with
religion.
U.S.
officials
should
focus
on
reality
rather
than
rhetoric.
Pakistani
and
Saudi
support
for
Tablighi
Jamaat
is
incompatible
with
their
claims
to
be
key
allies
in
the
war
on
terror.
While
law
enforcement
focuses
attention
on
Osama
bin
Laden,
the
war
on
terrorism
cannot
be
won
unless
al-Qaeda
terrorists
are
understood
to
be
the
products
of
Islamist
ideology
preached
by
groups
like
Tablighi
Jamaat.
If
the
West
chooses
to
turn
a
blind
eye
to
the
problem,
Tablighi
involvement
in
future
terrorist
activities
at
home
and
abroad
is
not
a
matter
of
conjecture;
it
is
a
certainty.
Alex
Alexiev
is
vice
president
for
research
at
the
Center
for
Security
Policy
in
Washington,
D.C.
[1]
Graham
Fuller,
"The
Future
of
Political
Islam,"
Foreign
Affairs,
Mar.-Apr.,
2002,
p.
49.
[2]
Barbara
Metcalf,
"Traditionalist
Islamic
Activism:
Deoband,
Tablighis
and
Talibs,"
Social
Service
Research
Council,
Nov.
1,
2004.
[3]
Le
Monde
Diplomatique
(Paris),
May
15,
2002.
[4]
B.
Raman,
"Nawaz
in
a
Whirlpool,"
South
Asia
Analysis
Group,
Oct.
10,
1999.
[5]
The
News
(Lahore),
Feb.
13,
1995.
[6]
Marc
Gaborieau,
"Transnational
Islamic
Movements:
Tablighi
Jamaat
in
Politics,"
ISIM
Newsletter
(International
Institute
for
the
Study
of
Islam
in
the
Modern
World),
July
1999,
p.
21.
[7]
Dietrich
Reetz,
"Keeping
Busy
on
the
Path
of
Allah:
The
Self-Organization
(intizam)
of
Tablighi
Jamaat,"
in
Daniela
Bredi,
ed.,
Islam
in
Contemporary
South
Asia
(Rome:
Oriente
Moderno,
2004),
pp.
295-305.
[8]
B.
Raman,
"Dagestan:
Focus
on
Pakistan's
Tablighi
Jamaat,"
South
Asia
Analysis
Group,
Sept.
15,
1999.
[9]
"Fatwa
of
Shaykh
'Abdul-'Azeez
ibn
Baaz
regarding
the
Jamaa'ah
at-Tableegh,"
fatwa-online.com,
Safar
11,
1414
(July
31,
1993).
[10]
Financial
Times,
Apr.
12,
1982.
[11]
Associated
Press,
Feb.
22,
2004.
[12]
Le
Monde
(Paris),
Jan.
25,
2002.
[13]
The
New
York
Times,
July
14,
2003.
[14]
U.S.
News
and
World
Report,
June
10,
2002.
[15]
Raman,
"Dagestan:
Focus
on
Pakistan's
Tablighi
Jamaat."
[16]
Ibid.
[17]
The
News,
Feb.
13,
1995,
cited
in
ibid.
[18]
Frontline,
Public
Broadcasting
Service,
Mar.
16-29,
2003.
[19]
Financial
Times,
Aug.
6,
2003.
[20]
The
New
York
Times,
Nov.
25,
2004.
[21]
Le
Monde,
Sept.
26,
2001.
[22]
Kazakhstan
Today
News
Service,
June
13,
2003.
[23]
India
Today
(New
Delhi),
Feb.
24,
2003.
[24]
BBC
News,
July
12,
2003.
[25]
Asharq
al-Awsat
(London),
May
25,
2003.
[26]
Mufti
Khubaib
Sahib,
"Advantageous
Structure
for
the
Jihaad
Organisations,"
2600
News,
Nov.
16,
2004.
[27]
Manila
Times,
Oct.
12,
2001.
[28]
Surya
Gangadharan,
"Exploring
Jihad:
The
Case
of
Algeria,"
Strategic
Affairs
(New
Delhi),
Feb.
1,
2001.
[29]
Ori
Golan,
"On
the
Day
the
Black
Flag
of
Islam
will
be
Flying
over
Downing
Street,"
The
Jerusalem
Post,
June
26,
2003;
Le
Parisien,
Dec.
26,
2001.
[30]
The
Oregonian
(Portland),
Oct.
11,
2002.
[31]
The
New
York
Times,
July
14,
2003.
[32]
Jessica
Stern,
"The
Protean
Enemy,"
Foreign
Affairs,
July/Aug.
2003.
[33]
U.S.
News
and
World
Report,
June
10,
2002.
[34]
Ibid.
[35]
The
New
York
Times,
July
14,
2003.
[36]
Daniel
Pipes,
Militant
Islam
Reaches
America
(New
York:
W.W.
Norton
&
Co.,
2003),
[37]
The
Independent,
Oct.
1,
2001.
[38]
Sept.
11,
1995
ISNA
convention,
cited
in
Raman,
"Dagestan:
Focus
on
Pakistan's
Tablighi
Jamaat."
[39]
The
Wall
Street
Journal,
Oct.
24,
2003.
[40]
Dawn
(Karachi),
Jan.
12,
1996.
[41]
Ibrahim
B.
Syed,
"Juneteenth,"
Islamic
Research
Foundation
International,
Inc.,
Louisville,
Ky.,
n.d.
[42]
Religion
News
Service,
Jan.
23,
1996.
[43]
U.S.
News
and
World
Report,
June
10,
2002.
[44]
Ibid.
[45]
Jonathan
Dowd-Gailey,
"Islamism's
Campus
Club:
The
Muslim
Students
Association,"
Middle
East
Quarterly,
Spring
2004,
pp.
63-72.
[46]
"Great
Leaders
of
Last
100
Years,"
The
Message
International
Online
(Jamaica,
N.Y.),
Dec.
22,
2004.
[47]
The
Message
International,
Sept.
1989,
p.
6.
[48]
The
Washington
Post,
May
29,
2003.
[49]
"About
ICNA,"
Islamic
Circle
of
North
America,
Dec.
22,
2004.
[50]
Ibid.
[51]
Aminah
Mohammad-Arif,
"Ilyas
et
Mawdudi
au
Pays
des
Yankees:
La
Tablighi
Jamaat
et
la
Jamaat
Islami
aux
Etats-Unis,"
Archive
des
Sciences
Sociales
des
Religions,
Jan.-Mar.
2002.
LINK
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