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Keith Ellison Tears Up At Hearing On Muslim-American 'Radicalization' (VIDEO)

Keith Ellison Muslim Hearings

First Posted: 03/10/11 11:26 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

WASHINGTON -- Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), the first Muslim-American elected to Congress, broke into tears Thursday during a hearing investigating possible radicalization of Muslim-Americans, telling the House Homeland Security Committee the inquiry was “the very heart of scapegoating.”

“We’ve seen the consequences of anti-Muslim hate,” Ellison testified. “The best defense against extreme ideologies is social inclusion and civic engagement. … I fear these hearings may undermine our efforts in this direction.”

Ellison became emotional while recounting the story of Mohammed Salman Hamdani, a 23-year-old Muslim-American firefighter who died while saving others during the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Hamdani, whose mother was in the audience, was castigated for his religion after his death, with some wondering whether he had been allied with the attackers, Ellison said.

“He should not be remembered as a Muslim, but as an American who gave everything for his country,” Ellison said.


The hearings, led by committee Chairman Peter King (R-N.Y.), have already yielded a storm of controversy, with critics questioning whether Congress should single out a particular minority group as a possible threat to national security.

King defended the hearings in his opening remarks Thursday, saying they fall in line with the Obama administration’s stated concerns over the radicalization of Muslim-Americans by extremists abroad.

“I remained convinced that these hearings must go forward, and they will,” he said. “To back down would be a craven surrender to political correctness and an abdication of what I believe to be the main responsibility of this community: to protect America from a terrorist attack.”

King said to focus on extremism in general would “dilute” the hearings, listing a number of statements by Obama administration officials on attempts by foreign terrorist groups to radicalize American Muslims.

“There is no equivalency between al Qaeda and neo-Nazis, environmental extremists or other isolated madmen,” he said. “Only al Qaeda and its Islamists affiliates in this country are part of an international threat to our nation."

But a number of rights groups and Democratic members of Congress have spoken out against the focus of the hearings, arguing that non-Muslims have perpetrated a number of terrorist crimes in the United States.

Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.) told the committee he thinks the hearing could promote hate and violence against Muslim-Americans. He said he hung a picture of Joe McCarthy, who led infamous hearings in the 1950s to root out Communists, in his office to remind himself of what the hearing should avoid.

One controversial element of the hearing was King’s selection of witnesses, which bypassed moderate Muslim groups in favor of a Muslim activist who warns of creeping extremism and family members of radicalized youth.

M. Zuhdi Jasser, a doctor from Arizona who regularly appears on Fox News and has been called “Glenn Beck’s favorite Muslim,” testified that the Muslim community had focused too much on victimization rather than discouraging radical members. He said the Muslim community had allowed some individuals, such as Fort Hood shooter Nidal Malik Hasan, to become radicalized.

“Pathology creeps up over time and just like alcoholism, there are enablers, and the enablers in our community are what is making the problem get worse,” Jasser said.

Melvin Bledsoe, whose son, Carlos Bledsoe, converted to Islam at the age of 19, testified that his son became radicalized by Muslims before moving to Yemen. When he returned to the United States, Carlos Bledsoe shot two U.S. Army privates outside a recruiting center, killing one. He is now in prison.

Melvin Bledsoe said the same could happen to other U.S. youth if radical Islam continues unchecked.

“It seems to me that Americans are sitting around doing nothing about Muslim extremists. It is a big elephant in the room,” he said. “Mr. King called it political correctness, you could call it political fear, but it is stepping down for a population ... even if some segment of that population wants to violate everything we stand for.”

During the hearing's question-and-answer portion, Democrats criticized King for even holding it, with a few members denouncing statements that there are “too many mosques” in the United States.

There was an awkward moment when Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.) defended the committee, claiming that no one had said there were too many mosques in the country. He was interrupted by King, who acknowledged that he had made such a statement.

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas) lashed out at King during her question period, calling the hearing itself “an outrage.”

“Muslims are here cooperating,” Lee said. “They are here doing what this hearing is saying they do not do. I just question, where are the uncooperative Muslims?”

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WASHINGTON -- Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), the first Muslim-American elected to Congress, broke into tears Thursday during a hearing investigating possible radicalization of Muslim-Americans, telling...
WASHINGTON -- Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), the first Muslim-American elected to Congress, broke into tears Thursday during a hearing investigating possible radicalization of Muslim-Americans, telling...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pgobrien
09:56 PM on 04/21/2011
The big bad Muslims are coming to get us. So we don't have to be concerned with those Wall Street types who are shoveling our economy down the toilet and running off with all the money. It's not them we have to fear, it's the Big Bad Muslims.

Deflection. Divide and conquer. George Orwell, you knew your stuff, fella.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
j main
Reality is just a collective hunch, anyways.
08:31 PM on 04/21/2011
Ellison's assertion that laying blame on an entire community of Muslims for the acts of extremists is correct. His follow up comment that the Muslim community should not have to respond is disengenuous as the extremists end up speaking for the community by default. I find Ellison to be a very slippery guy and that his leadership skills should be called into question. He just strikes me as a cantankerous politician.
11:32 AM on 03/17/2011
The majority of voters don’t believe their fellow citizens are unfair to Muslim Americans. They also think Muslims in this country should be louder in their criticism of potential domestic terrorist attacks.
01:49 PM on 03/14/2011
Anybody else find it sad that King was an outspoken supporter of the IRA but now is spearheading the campaign against Islamic extremism? Apparently blowing up civilians is only okay if white Catholics are doing it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linda Nicola
11:35 AM on 03/13/2011
Oh yes, the Fort Hood shooter is the spearhead of a massive Islamic conspiracy, but the Tuscon shooter is a lone madman.

More hypocrisy.

There is no proof of massive radicalization of Muslims. However, more actions like this will do it. The GOP is cutting its own throat. Moslems in this country vote conservative. I guess the GOP don't want their 6 million votes.

Christians have committed more acts of terrorism in the US than any other group. Is King going to have hearings on the radicalization of Christians and their bombings of clinics and shootings of elected officials?
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10:00 AM on 03/13/2011
More from an American Sufi on the King hearing:

"As hearings in the U.S. Congress on radical Islam and homegrown terrorism began in Washington, the effort of organized Muslim opposition to discredit them also gathered steam.

It is nearly a decade since 9/11 and there is too much accumulated evidence at hand to put to rest the self-serving insistence of most Muslims — but especially those in the West — that while Islam is peaceful, it has been hijacked by immoderate Muslims.

The reality is the malignancy of the Arab-Muslim world — as it sinks deeper into the morass of its own making, a broken civilization dotted with failed and rogue states and, perhaps, beyond repair — threatens the peace of others.

Inside the Arab-Muslim world, immoderate Islam is the norm. If this was not true, then immoderate Muslims, goaded by immoderate religious and political leaders, would not control the public square in most member states of the Organization of Islamic Conference, and in the name of Islam intimidate and kill their opponents."

http://www.islamicpluralism.org/1743/muslim-radicals
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Julepandme
01:40 PM on 03/14/2011
You're quoting a kook, I hope you know. He also thinks global warming/climate change is just a bunch of hooey made up by the evil libralz.

It helps if you actually stick to facts rather than look for truth from crazies.
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02:07 PM on 03/14/2011
Mr. Schwartz is difficult to talk to, contentious to argue with and unbelievably cranky and touchy--but he is the farthest thing from a kook: "one whose ideas or actions are eccentric, fantastic, or insane : screwball".

Many people, including me, consider Mr. Schwartz to be America's leading authority on the Wahhabist penetration of the American Muslim community.

His opinion on global warming could not matter less to me, or to the subject of this article we are discussing.
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11:39 AM on 03/15/2011
Sorry, but Mansur is notorious for his extreme right wing views.
===========

Other than global warming, expain why his views are extreme. Compared to what?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hershobr
08:56 AM on 03/13/2011
I wonder how embarrassed he is now that it came out his story was all made up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
10:44 PM on 03/13/2011
King?

He seems to be in denial, still.

Ellison's story is 100% true; I was familiar with the details prior to his testimony. It's his conservative detractors who need to be embarrassed; they went for the insta-smear, based on one article-author's shoddy research and guesswork.

For instance, he missed this - an overview from fallen hero Salman Hamdani's mother - who lived through all of it:

http://salmanslegacy.spaces.live.com/
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08:40 AM on 03/13/2011
An American Sufi on the King hearings:

"Few readers will be surprised to learn that Rep. King was subjected to an extended broadside of personal attacks intended to make him appear an anti-Muslim bigot.

Finally, the campaign against King centered on one item: he had repeated the charge made in public by a Lebanese Sufi, Hisham Kabbani, in 1999, and repeated by me in 2001 and afterward, that 80 percent of American mosques are controlled by fundamentalists.

This did not and does not mean that 80 percent of American Muslims are radicals. But many mosques, if not the majority of big mosques in America, were built with Saudi-Wahhabi and Pakistani-jihadi money and are administered by adherents of these deadly ideologies and their allies in the Muslim Brotherhood."


http://www.islamicpluralism.org/1742/voice-of-moderates-in-islam
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FACTISFACT
A war veteran. Finally retired
05:58 AM on 03/13/2011
Kieth Ellison got too emotional possibly with the idea as to why people do not read the book to know what is written in it before using slang and insulting a faith of the millions without any reason. To choose to insult the religion is but intentional with motive to infuriate the people sentiment to achieve ulterior aims and objectives as bush did by using one word "Crusade" against Islam".

If some people are doing wrong genuinely then haul them up and punish them but why insult a religion. what type of civility is this. May be he could not express it out of emotion that he broke down to tears or could be because any other reason best would be to ask him to clarify..
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04:12 PM on 03/13/2011
No religion is above criticism. Athiesm is not above criticism.

While I agree that insults are not acceptable, criticism most definitely is acceptable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FACTISFACT
A war veteran. Finally retired
05:06 AM on 03/14/2011
Hi! My Friend altoplano thank you for your comment on FACTISFACT'S comment.

FACTISFACT has gone through your comment and said that he appreciates your opinion and thanked you for relaying the correct message. He however said these days criticism exceeds all limits and it enters the jurisdiction of vilification resulting in egoistic fight for nothing. Yeah, simple criticism is OK, he however added that is why he kept the word Criticism safe at a distance from using it in his comment.

However,thank you once again. Take care.
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Kittenesque
04:59 AM on 03/13/2011
I always see one rabid person hating against "teachings of Islam" or Muslims as a whole in every article that has to do with Muslim-anything. Funny that after a few months on this site, these people are starting to look familiar. Well, there are always a few of those in every society I guess.
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Kittenesque
04:48 AM on 03/13/2011
In short, THEY are U.S.!
03:39 AM on 03/13/2011
for those who continue to insist that the tea party movement is not kkk inspired:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSgirNjyiRo
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10:28 PM on 03/12/2011
I can't believe you all are falling for his crocodile tears, I can make myself cry like that too.
04:50 AM on 03/13/2011
Ellison doesn't actually cry. His voice cracks, he scrunches up his eyes-but no actual tears. I've seen better acting in pron.
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Richbruin
We'll walk this world together through the storm
08:27 PM on 03/13/2011
Wow. I thought the acting was superb and thought he should have been up for an Oscar.
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Kittenesque
04:53 AM on 03/13/2011
Crocodile tears or not. Hamdani was a hero and that is the point you missed. He is speaking against radical Islamophobia and being a speaker for a threatened group is not so easy. You would cry too if you were in his shoes.
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hershobr
08:58 AM on 03/13/2011
Yeah, Hamdani is a hero, and has been treated as one since 9/11. Ellison was making up the fact that he was "widely accused of being a terrorist". That's not true at all. In fact, so not true that Congress specifically named Hamdani as an example of a Muslim U.S. patriot in October of 2001 who selflessly went into the WTC to try and help.

Ellison is only going for political points. He should be ashamed.
06:21 PM on 03/12/2011
King consistently misrepresents the facts. As Middle Eas t specialistMohamed Khodrinstructs us, between 1980 and 2005, according to FBI statistics less than six percent of terrorist incidents during this fifteen year period were committed by Muslims, while 94% were committed by non-Muslims. Moreover, 23 of the 24 recorded terrorist incidents (2002-2005) were carried out by domestic terrorists The FBI claims that of the 83 terrorist attacks in the United States between 9/11 and the end of 2009, only three were clearly connected with the jihadist cause. (3.6% of total)

http://www.opinion-maker.org/2011/03/congressman-peter-kings-great-muslim-scare/
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07:24 PM on 03/12/2011
From the linked article:

"At a time when the U.S. needs the goodwill of domestic Muslim communities to safeguard homeland security, King is reinforcing fear and lack of trust and while potentially weakening mutual respect among Americans."

Every time I see this inversion of reality, I realize the author is running scared from Islamic terrorism and hopes moderate Muslims will protect him.

The author is a coward.
07:37 PM on 03/12/2011
huh?
what does what you just said even mean?
lol
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
07:39 PM on 03/12/2011
Strong statement, Jan .... and quite inaccurate, I feel.

We have no knowledge of any courage or cowardice the author may have, based on his/her statements ...... why not take the author's statement at face value, and simply disagree, if you do .... rather than stooping to baseless name-calling?

I hold the same exact opinion as the author; am I a coward?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Donald Pruitt
06:19 PM on 03/12/2011
I spoke with Christian doctors who went to Indonesia after the 2004 tsunami and they said that Muslim clerics shadowed them constantly and tried to make the Indonesian not go to the Christian doctors. Do you suppose that Keith Tears Ellison was crying about that? The doctors said it was like being in a room with the devil. They were afraid for the Muslims to see a Bible.
06:50 PM on 03/12/2011
probably they know the history of christian missioneries who come ostensibly to "help" and tend to cause the destruction of families and societies where ever they go

the missioneries were primary conduits in the african slave trade (many of them preached that slavery was good for the african who were muslims and pagans because it would help save them from their "heathen" religion) ...

and they were also employed in an effort to 'civilize" the native americans from canada to brazil, (as their lands and traditions were taken from them) so this history becomes a problem for people all over the world who have experienced such "kindnesses" in the past
06:52 PM on 03/12/2011
see, if you study the history of colonization you will note that the missionaeries were always sent in first; then came the occupiers and slavers (or opium pushers in the case of china) ...