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Dead Muslim Cleric's Preaching On Islamic History More Popular Than Kong Hee!!

JohnTan

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Generous Asset
An Islamic preacher preaching on a dry topic like history can attract more followers than Kong Hee's prosperity sermons. Looks like Kong Hee's prowess as a motivational speaker or pastor has been grossly overrated.

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Enrique Marquez was first exposed to the ideas of Anwar al-Awlaki in 2007 by Syed Rizwan Farook, his next-door neighbor in San Bernardino, Calif. The new convert to Islam spent hours at Farook’s home listening to Awlaki’s lectures and reading Inspire magazine, the al-Qaida publication in English that Awlaki founded.

By 2011, Marquez was plotting to attack a local community college with Farook, according to the criminal complaint in the case. Earlier this month, Farook and his wife, Tashfeen Malik, attacked Farook’s workplace, killing 14 people — using assault rifles Marquez bought for them.

Marquez and Farook are just the latest in a long line of U.S. terror plotters who were influenced by the ideas and teachings of Awlaki, an American Muslim cleric who left the U.S. in 2002 and subsequently rose to the top ranks of al-Qaida. Awlaki was killed in a CIA-led drone strike five years ago in Yemen, but his teachings continue to proliferate online. The Boston Marathon bombing, the attack on military personnel in Chattanooga, Tenn., the attempted shooting at a “Draw Muhammad” cartoon contest in Garland, Texas, and several other plots all featured young men who watched and identified with Awlaki online, after his death. (Dzhokhar Tsarnaev tweeted before the marathon attack a link to Awlaki’s lectures. “You will gain an unbelievable amount of knowledge,” he wrote.) Awlaki has also influenced attackers abroad, including at least one of the terrorists behind the Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris.

Why have so many fallen under the sway of Awlaki? It is in part because he was a well-respected and popular scholar of Islam long before he turned radical and joined al-Qaida. He was the imam at a prominent mosque in Falls Church, Va., for years. His boxed CD lectures on the history of Islam and its prophets were a hit among devout English-speaking Muslims.


“He became popular when he was a legitimate preacher of mainstream Islam and a scholar of sorts, a popularizer,” said Scott Shane, a New York Times reporter who wrote a book about Awlaki called “Objective Troy.” “His status as a respectable voice was well-established, and then he gradually evolved into a spokesman for al-Qaida.”

Once Awlaki’s lectures turned to jihad, he kept the cool, reasonable-sounding tone he used in the past to talk about what makes a good marriage or the history of the prophets of Islam. His past lent legitimacy to his radical teachings that it was every Muslim’s duty to wage jihad. Most of Awlaki’s videos are also in English, which makes him seem more familiar to Western listeners. His charismatic Internet sermons, idiomatic English and intuitive grasp of American culture made him a uniquely seductive figure for those susceptible to radicalization.

“Not only could he speak English, but he’s American and he understands American culture,” Steve Stalinsky, the executive director of the Middle East Media Research Institute think tank, said. “He was easily relatable.”

Interestingly, Awlaki’s legacy has not diminished with the rise of ISIS and the somewhat quieter profile of al-Qaida. In many U.S. ISIS cases, the dead cleric is “lurking in the background,” according to Shane. One of the Garland, Texas, attackers, Elton Simpson, was in touch with an ISIS recruiter online, but his Twitter avatar photo was of Awlaki. The other, Nadir Hamid Soofi, had given his mother a boxed set of Awlaki CDs before the attempted May 2015 attack.

https://www.yahoo.com/politics/san-bernardino-attacks-latest-example-1327003987255350.html
 

Devil Within

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Donald Trump: Surprising Support by Muslim American Shafie Ayar

[video=youtube;F33n_rAXBHA]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F33n_rAXBHA[/video]
 
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