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Ramadan 12, 1426/October 16, 2005 #77
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October 15, 2005: New Trend Exclusive.
Minister Farrakhan Calls for Autonomous People's Ministries. 
Addresses Historic "Millions More Movement." 
All Day Rally Condemns War, Racism
It was a great day in the history of Black America. It was 
a miracle of organization and the human spirit as masses 
of people from across America gathered on the national 
Mall in Washington, DC. Some Observers say, this was the 
most important gathering of African Americans in U.S. 
history. Ten years after the 1995 Million Man March, 
countless women, Native Americans and thousands of Muslims 
joined huge crowds of African-American men, many of them very young.
Speaker after speak lambasted the policies of George W. Bush. 
The suffering inflicted by hurricane Katrina on the people 
of New Orleans owing to institutional racism energized 
the people. Christians and Muslims, nationalists and 
Pan-Africanists united as never before.
Minister Farrakhan obtained the consent of the masses to 
set up peoples' ministries for Relief activity akin to that 
for Katrina disaster, for Information, for Defense, and 
other activities. The details are not clear but he seemed 
to be calling for a Government or Mass Organization of 
the people, independent of both the Democratic and the 
Republican parties. He accused the Bush administration 
of criminal neglect in the aftermath of Katrina and 
threatened a Class Action suit against 
Homeland Security and FEMA.
Among the numerous statements and testimony against 
the war, the most effective came from Wyclef Jean and 
Elaine Johnson. Wyclef sang reggae and touched the 
souls of the crowd, firing the people up against 
the war. He used Islamic terminology. The word 
"jihad" is proudly used by grassroots people in America.
Elaine is the mother of a soldier killed in Iraq. 
Like Cindy Sheehan, she was passionate in her 
condemnation of Bush's war.
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New Trend Exclusive.
Moblization in Support of Imam Jamil Abdullah al-Amin.
Imam Musa Urges Muslims to Seek Allah's Help.
On October 14, 2005 Juma' prayers were held on the National 
Mall in Washington, DC to mobilize support for Imam Jamil 
al-Amin who is being held in solitary confinement in a little 
Georgia town after being sentenced to life in prison.
The event was well organized by Masjid al-Islam in 
Washington, DC. The masjid's security force was 
impressive around the dais. The biggest expression 
of support for Imam Jamil till now, the gathering 
was attended by numerous distinguished Muslims who 
are troubled by the railroading of Imam Jamil. Among 
them were Imam Asim from Philadelphia, Imam Talib 
from New York, Br. Hodari Abdul Ali 
[organizer of an international committee to safeguard 
the rights of Imam Jamil], Br. Bilal Sunni Ali 
[activist radio producer from Atlanta], Dr. Abdul Alim Shabazz 
[famous intellectual from Lincoln University] and many others.
The Adhan was given by Shaikh Tijani, from Ghana, Africa. 
His adhan is said to be one of the best in the world. He 
also livened up the speeches after Juma' by leading the 
congregation in chants of "Allahu Akbar."
Imam Musa's khutba was supported by verses from the 
Qur'an urging Muslims to stand firm and seek Allah's 
help against the forces of oppression, however powerful 
they might be. Imam Musa condemned George W. Bush's war 
against Muslim countries. He pointed out that this war 
is undoubtedly against Islam and is facing defeat. He 
said that America went into Iraq with "Shock and Awe" 
but is now facing the steady return of American troops in body bags.
Imam Musa recounted his own experiences with the racist 
power structure in America. Before accepting Islam, he 
said, he saw "up close and personal" the ravages of the 
drug culture being spread across the Black communities.
During a wide ranging critique of George W. Bush's war, 
Imam Musa said that the more Bush tries to destroy Islam, 
the more Islam flourishes. In fact, he said, Islam is 
spreading in America faster than ever before. He ridiculed 
Bush's attempts to hunt down and crush Muslims, particularly 
the deportation of Muslims to their home countries. He said, 
Bush is now facing African-American Muslims who cannot be 
deported anywhere. Are you going to deport me back to 
California, he asked the Bush administration?
Imam Musa urged Muslims to study the case of Imam Jamil. 
It is a clear cut case of railroading, he said, in 
which weak and tainted evidence was used to 
rush through a conviction.
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Stand Up for the Rights of Imam Jamil: We Must Mobilize 
Nationally and Internationally for the Freedom of the Imam.
Dr. Kaukab Siddique [Ameer, Jamaat al-Muslimeen] was invited 
by the International Committee supporting Imam Jamil's cause 
to speak following the Juma Khutba by Imam Musa and prayers 
led by Imam Talib. Here are the main points Dr. Siddique made:
- 
Imam Jamil is a worthy successor to the line of Malcolm X 
[Al-Hajj Malik Shabazz]. He is truthful and uncompromising.
 - 
The case against Imam Jamil is bogus.
 - 
Imam Jamil, Dr. Omar 'Abdel Rahman [the blind Shaikh] and 
all other political prisoners belong to the family of Islam 
in America. We must never forget them or ignore them.
 - 
Imam Jamil is a living example of the Sunnah of the 
Prophet Muhammad [pbuh]. When the oppressors accuse him 
and torment him, he answers with verses from the 
Qur'an and Hadith from the Prophet, pbuh.
 - 
Till now we have not done enough to focus attention on 
Imam Jamil and other political prisoners. As a result, 
the government became so bold that it started working 
within Muslim communities to get Muslims to spy on each 
other, and some Muslims became 'snitches.'
 - 
Muslims must rise up nationally and internationally to 
free Imam Jamil. Muslims overseas should realize that here 
is a worthy son of Islam, a truly great Muslim leader 
being imprisoned unjustly, mistreated and 
humiliated by the oppressors.
 - 
Allah is re-shaping the world. Katrina and the 
gigantic Pakistan earthquake have uncovered the 
degradation of the people by Bush and by General Musharraf. 
We must change ourselves, otherwise Allah will destroy us.
 
[Following the gathering, Br. Hodari Ali and other organizers 
working to defend Imam Jamil urged the congregation to pick 
up and distribute fact sheets about the case of the Imam so 
that they may know the legalities of the case.]
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Jamaat al-Muslimeen News [2 items]
P.O. Box 10881
Baltimore, MD 21234
AMERICANS SHOULD FAST TOGETHER, MUSLIM CLERIC URGES
GREENSBORO, NC - Islamic leader Badi Ali of Greensboro has 
issued a call for physically well Americans of all 
religious beliefs to observe a single day of fasting on 
Friday, October 21, in the interest of universal 
justice and our struggling and suffering humanity.
Sheikh Badi Ali pointed out that the date is one 
of Ramadan's 29 holy days of annual focus on God/Allah, 
meditation, special sacrifice, adoration and 
fasting by Muslims throughout the world.
"It is a good time for Christians, Jews, Muslims, and 
people of other faiths to renew their spiritual commitments 
to God/Allah and to each other as believers in His mercy, 
love, forgiveness, goodness, wisdom and justness."
In other words, this is a special time for human solidarity 
as workers for peace, truth, generosity, charity and 
compassion, the Islamic leader stressed.
"The enormous tragedies of Pakistan's earthquake, 
Persian Gulf war, Sri Lankan/Indonesian tsunami, 
Gulf of Mexico hurricanes should remind us all of our duty to 
God/Allah and each other in this respect. By fasting on that Friday, 
(October 21), I mean total abstinence from food, tobacco, drink and 
intimacy from dawn to dusk. By observing this single contemplative 
day during Ramadan, I believe people of all faiths can, together, 
help to make real God/Allah's holy plan for His creation."
"In the Divine spirit of God/Allah and the secular spirit of the 
late Martin Luther King, Jr., we should figuratively sing 
'We shall overcome' and think of ourselves as overcomers" 
the 44-year old Palestine-born North Carolinian 
urged.
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Guantanamo Bay, Abu Ghraib, Falluja Stir Humanity.
Meet Lynne Stewart, Ramsey Clark, George Galloway, 
Brian Becker, the "Raging Grannies" and 
Masses of America Opposed to the War.
Behind the Scenes on September 24
By Nadrat Siddique
Having spent years as an activist in the Washington, DC area, I’ve been 
fortunate enough to participate in dozens of protests in my time. I 
decided it was time to experience the protest from a new angle: that of 
volunteer. And so, I volunteered to help out for 12 hours at the anti-war 
demonstration in Washington, DC, on September 24.
I was one of the lazy ones. Other volunteers had been up for 72 hours 
straight, setting up for the protest. Some volunteers had traveled from as 
far away as Alaska; others came from little known towns with 
bizarre-sounding names I’d never encountered.
I arrived for my volunteer duties at what seemed to me, a hideously early 
hour. At Freedom Plaza, buses were unloading protestors from many cities. 
The Plaza was already teaming with people. 
From here, the White House and the Washington Monument grounds-the focal 
points of the protest--were only a stone’s throw away.
As I walked from Freedom Plaza to the Ellipse, I was pleased to see the 
creative side of the anti-war movement in full swing: four activists were 
dressed in orange prison jumpsuits with Bush, Cheney, Rice, and Rumsfeld 
masks donned; two more activists posed as "Billionaires for Bush" (a man 
wearing a tuxedo and a woman wearing an evening gown and carrying a 
Saks-Jandel shopping bag); several people wearing Halliburton uniforms, 
and carrying a sign saying "Enough war, little man," (no theatrics here, I 
think they actually worked for Halliburton, but were fed up with the 
lies); and a wise guy carrying a graphic placard juxtaposing "Good 
Bush/Bad Bush" (use your imagination).
Finally, I was at the volunteer booth for the ANSWER Coalition (one of two 
major coalitions organizing the march). There I was outfitted with a 
yellow security jacket, a badge identifying me as an official march 
volunteer, and a bright red bucket to carry through the crowd, collecting 
funds to defray the costs of the march.
I traversed the crowd, red bucket in tow, making mental notes to myself. 
The place was packed; the march was clearly a success. A young black 
sister, wearing head wrap, her fist in the air, responding to a speaker. A 
tall black brother, moving closer to the stage to hear Lynne Stewart when 
she spoke. A contingent of brothers dressed in striking African garb, 
walking proudly as a contingent toward the stage. A small group of young 
men in kaffiyas, having themselves photographed near the stage, while 
chanting "Allah hu-Akhbar" just quietly enough not to disturb the speaker 
on the stage. Americans wearing tee-shirts that say "We are all 
Palestinian;" one of ANSWER’s young black woman leaders on stage in 
another unique tee (my favorite): "Palestine will be free" (in English and 
Spanish).
All this in a sea of middle class white Americans.
As a person of color, I could not help but be struck by 
how few Black people and how few Muslims were at the march.
Cindy Sheehan was one of the first speakers to address the rally. She 
spoke in a voice permanently marked with longing for a son who would never 
return home to her. But, she seemed very relaxed, perhaps sensing the 
support of the people. She even made a few jokes.
Cindy’s immense sacrifice and courage had made their mark, and at least 
some of the turnout at the protest might be attributed to her. Cindy had 
single-handedly made it okay for the average, middle class white American 
to be anti-war. The tide had turned against Bush. But was this another 
anti-war movement disturbed only when it was American boys coming home in 
body bags, I thought to myself. Where were they when the Lancet reported 
that 100,000 Iraqi civilians had been kileld in the war? Or when the 
horrors of Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo surfaced? Or when an 
entire Iraqi town, Falluja, was destroyed?
Eldridge Cleaver did not lie when he said "Racism is as American as apple 
pie." An anti-war movement which doesn’t work hard to disassociate itself 
from racism, will inevitably be afflicted with it. (The same may be said 
of many Muslim communities and organizations in the U.S./U.K.) That racism 
is present in the anti-war movement was evident in the negotiations 
between ANSWER and United for Peace and Justice--the two major coalitions 
organizing the September 24 protest.
ANSWER—which stands for "Act Now to Stop War and End Racism"--views the 
issues of war and racism as inextricably linked. In the days leading up to 
the protest, ANSWER had to fight to keep the issue of racism as one of the 
major demands of the demonstration.
http://www.internationalanswer.org
http://www.unitedforpeace.org
ANSWER-which stands for "Act Now to Stop War and 
End Racism"--views the
issues of war and racism as inextricably linked. 
In the days leading up to
the protest, ANSWER had to fight to keep the 
issue of racism as one of the
major demands of the demonstration.
ANSWER’S Brian Becker speaks softly but firmly. He does not back down from 
an issue he views as just. The war, he said, is a racist war in the 
following ways: 1) It is racist against the Arabs; 2) It is racist in 
terms of how Iraqis are presented; and 3) It is racist in terms of who is 
fighting. ANSWER was very consistent in its stance against racism, whether 
in New Orleans or in Iraq.
United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) wanted to focus strictly on the war 
itself, and wanted to eliminate "racism" from the march agenda altogether. 
Becker and ANSWER, to their credit, stood firm in their demand that racism 
be included in the agenda, and eventually UFPJ capitulated.
I walked by multiple rows of crosses, symbolizing graves of fallen 
servicemen, and realized that I have stumbled upon Camp Casey. It has been 
transplanted from Texas to the Washington Monument grounds. A group of 
women were busily preparing a long line of picket signs they would carry, 
each bearing the black-and-white photograph of a young fallen soldier.
There was an element of race, even the success of Camp Casey. What if a 
black woman had been camped out in close proximity to Bush’s ranch? How 
long would she have been allowed to stay there before being tasered into 
submission? Or shot outright, like Sr. Assata? Because that is the 
treatment reserved for Afrikans in this country.
My thoughts were interrupted by the thunderous voice of British MP George 
Galloway. With his delightful accent, he blasted Bush’s illegal war. 
Exhibiting none of the preoccupations of American politicians, Galloway 
openly expressed support for the Palestinians.
Galloway was followed by former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark. In his 
characteristic incisive and yet non-rhetorical manner, Ramsey Clark 
reminded the audience about the Iraqi dead, and the war crimes of the Bush 
administration. He repeated his call for impeachment.
Then Lynne Stewart took the dais to talk about attacks on civil liberties. 
She cited her own case as evidence of the clamp down on the rights of the 
accused, as well as on lawyers who chose to defend unpopular clients. I 
walked over to the stage area and met Lynne after her speech. I hugged 
her, marveling that she had not changed in appearance or manner, despite 
years of government prosecution and harassment. Always concerned about 
others before herself, she mentioned not a word of her own personal 
suffering, instead asking me about Sami Al-Arian’s case.
MAS Freedom Foundation’s Mahdi Bray spoke. Oddly, Bray started his speech 
by informing the audience that he had no interest in being invited to the 
White House. "How dare they speak of bringing democracy to places like 
Iraq while clamping down on our democratic rights here at home," he 
thundered. He did not mention that his MAS Freedom Foundation had 
volunteered in a press conference (See NT dated July 27, 2005) to help DHS 
clamp down on those rights by turning in Muslims "extremists". He did not 
mention the case of Lynne Stewart, who sat a few feet away from him, nor 
that of her co-defendant U.S. political prisoner 
'Ahmed AbdelSattar.
Other speakers of note were Brian Becker, ANSWER’s National Coordinator; 
Etan Thomas, Washington Wizards Basketball player; and Jessica Lange, 
actress.
Then it was time to march.
ANSWER had prepared signs to give to march participants who hadn’t brought 
their own. One of the volunteers handing out signs told me that people 
were vying for the "Impeach Bush.org" sign over the others 
on offer.
For the first time in my life, I was at a major, national protest-and not 
marching. My fundraising duties complete, I was busy taking down banners, 
boxing up materials, picking up components of the security fence and 
covers from the outdoor audio system. In my spare moments, I distributed 
"Boycott Major Supporters of Zionism" fliers. The fliers were 
well received.
http://newtrendmag.org/boycott.html
I found I had done well to stay at the ANSWER volunteer booth (instead of 
marching), as the streets were flooded with so many people that the march 
was immobilized for two and a half hours. Some people became impatient and 
jumped in front of other protestors who were already lined up to march. 
Brian Becker, said that the front of the march, where he and other ANSWER 
leaders were located, was left behind. The "front of the march" soon 
became "the middle of the march"--a first for him, he said with a smile.
The march under way, the Raging Grannies started singing, "Georgy Porgy,
You’re all wrong..."
http://www.raginggrannies.com
Meanwhile, I attained proficiency at hand truck operation, loading boxes, and crates 
of fliers and brochures onto the truck.
The march was-miraculously--permitted to pass right by the White 
House-something which had not been allowed since 9-11. The wrath of the 
protestors at the Bush regime was particularly evident as they passed this 
point.
The volunteers were under orders from Park Police to finish removing all 
the equipment by 10:00 pm. Around 8:00 pm, we were down to removing the 
last of the equipment from around the stage area, but everyone was 
starting to feel the long hours. We finished just before 9:00 pm. For me, 
it was an extraordinary and inspiring day, working alongside activists-
many of them very young-dedicated to the cause of justice. 
It also made me realize the enormous amount of work involved in 
organizing a protest of this magnitude.
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