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Muslim American Society (MAS) News :..
#3

Magistrate changes little

Complaints from defense lawyers and Tampa-area residents and friends

of Al-Arian led U.S. Magistrate Thomas B. McCoun III to travel the 70

miles north from Tampa to inspect the U.S. Prison at Coleman.

He denied almost all defense motions challenging Al-Arian's treatment

but did order guards to cut back on strip searches. He found "no real

justification" for such searches before and after all "non-contact"

visits.

The magistrate found Al-Arian's little cell far from intolerable:

"While in their cells, defendants are permitted radios as well as

reading material, including discovery material. The cells include bunk

beds, a sink, toilet, shower, and small metal desk."

Amnesty International contends that placing two men 23 hours a day in

a 70-square-foot cell does not meet American Correctional Association

guidelines of "at least 80 square feet of total floor space per

occupant" when confinement exceeds 10 hours a day.

But McCoun's May ruling concluded that the cell, "while not spacious,

is more than adequate to meet constitutional minimums."

The judge was impressed with the prison's cleanliness but not the

recreation available to Al-Arian and Hammoudeh.

He noted that they are allowed to exercise "in a cage adjacent to the

cellblock five times a week... the exercise cages are enclosed by a

high wall and covered by an opaque weather deflector. While there is

open air space above the walls, for all practical purposes the

Defendants remain indoors. No equipment is provided and the

circumstances of their recreation inside these fairly small cages when

compared to that available to convicted inmates on the nearby open-air

recreation yards stands in stark contrast."

Even so, the judge declined to order a change in the recreation

regimen.

Unless Al-Arian finds a friendlier judge, his best hope of better

living conditions may be when he comes to trial. But that's a long

wait. His trial is scheduled sometime in 2005.

Visits highly restrictive

Al-Arian has tried to portray himself as an innocent victim of

anti-Arab, anti-Muslim hysteria in the wake of Sept. 11. After a July

25 hearing, he was allowed to dismiss his court-appointed lawyers and

represent himself. But his family and the National Liberty Foundation,

a Muslim civil rights group in Virginia, are trying to raise enough

money to hire a Washington attorney. Until then, Tampa's Linda Moreno,

who is appealing his denial of bail, is the only attorney visiting him

at Coleman.

When they meet, he arrives shackled and chained, bent over with his

papers loaded on his back "like a mule," she says. "It's completely

disgraceful."

He is unshackled and allowed to sit at a table across from Moreno, who

cannot bring a briefcase, laptop or tape recorder to the meeting. She

is restricted to a legal pad, pen and documents that can't exceed a

half-inch in height, she says. "That makes it quite difficult to

confer with Dr. Al-Arian since the indictment itself is 2.5 inches."

Moreno, who worked for several years as a criminal public defender,

often representing murderers and thugs, says, "In 23 years of

practicing, I've never seen anything like it."

"We're not asking much, just human rights," says Al-Arian's wife,

Nahla. On Tuesday, she and her eldest son, Abdullah, 23, and daughter,

Laila, 21, gathered at an Ybor City coffee shop with Moreno.

The family is allowed to visit the prison for two to three hours, on

Monday, Friday and every other weekend. Nahla is not allowed to carry

anything into the prison other than her car keys and change for the

vending machines. The usual wait for clearance to go in and meet her

husband is two hours.

During a recent visit, she says, she was taking notes for a to-do list

from her husband when guards "swooped down on me. They were watching

on a camera."

The guards took her pen and pad and says she isn't allowed to write

during visits. Ignore the rule, she was warned, and her husband would

lose family visits for a year.

For a June phone call home -- Al-Arian gets one monitored 15-minute

call per month -- Nahla arranged a three-way conversation to include

Abdullah, who at the time was studying at the London School of

Economics. Because the prison hadn't approved the three-way call,

Al-Arian has lost phone-home privileges for six months.

Top D.C. lawyer sought

Al-Arian wants to hire attorney William Moffitt, a Washington-based

former president of the National Association of Criminal Defense

Lawyers. Moffitt has visited Al-Arian at Coleman.

"There's an agreement between us, and if they can complete the

agreement, I will be in the case," Moffitt says.

That agreement comes down to cash, the amount of which, Moffitt says,

is "nobody's business but theirs and mine."

Moreno says that "the magnitude of this case is startling. When you've

got renowned attorneys from around the country offering services at

discount fees, that's a sign there's something important going on."

Al-Arian was impressed by Moffitt after a Washington speech by the

attorney about the Patriot Act and secret evidence.

Moffitt is no stranger to big trials. He represented former United Way

President William Aramony, accused of defrauding the charity of more

than $1 million in 1995.

But Nahla is finding it hard to raise money to pay Moffitt.

"It is very difficult now," says Nahla, who has a degree in

comparative religion and was working on a master's when her husband

was arrested. "That's why I want them to find jobs and start helping,"

she says of her adult children.

"It's now time to give back," agrees Laila, a Georgetown graduate and

former USA Today intern who's looking for a job as a newspaper

reporter.

Duke graduate Abdullah is just back from the London School of

Economics and needs to complete a thesis for a master's degree. He is

seeking a job with a law firm.

Middle child Leena is a sophomore at the University of South Florida,

the school that fired her father. Ali, 12, is ready to attend school

in Egypt. The family's youngest, Lama, 10, starts fifth grade at the

Islamic Academy in Tampa, a private school co-founded by her father.

The school recently had its state voucher money pulled because of past

ties to her father.

Nahla hopes fellow Muslims will help her to hire Moffitt.

"There are two kinds of people in the Muslim community," she says,

"the open and courageous and others that are scared and intimidated by

the government. Little by little, the Muslim community is regaining

their conscience. Anybody can be targeted. The only way to stop this

is by mobilizing."

With all of the problems, Abdullah says, visits with his father at

Coleman aren't all doom and gloom.

"We talk basketball. I went to Duke. He likes North Carolina State

because he went there. He follows the (NFL Tampa Bay) Bucs and

soccer," Abdullah says.

Claim of death threats

Amnesty International's letter mentioned "several 'death threats' from

other prisoners."

Nahla knows about only one written threat, a couple of lines

handwritten on a scrap of paper, pushed under her husband's cell door.

It could have come from an inmate or a guard, she says.

Inmates have been good to her husband, she adds, giving him soap and,

on one occasion, ice. When a guard brought apple juice, Al-Arian

declined and asked for a cup of ice. A diabetic, he doesn't drink

apple juice. The guard refused to bring ice. "After a mini-riot,

inmates gave him ice," Nahla recounts.

"The inmates are very nice," she says. "They a have a heart and are

compassionate. Sami respects them. He doesn't fear for his life with

them."

Al-Arian can't have hardcover books but can receive paperbacks if

mailed directly from the publisher. He also has a subscription to the

Tampa Tribune plus subscriptions to Foreign Policy and Washington

Report.

During a recent prison visit, Al-Arian showed he hasn't stopped being

a dad. He wanted to make sure his youngest, Lama, had a birthday

party.

"He told me what books to buy her," Laila says. "The Mouse and the

Motorcycle and Ramona and Her Father. And Mom took her to the movies."

Nahla laughs, rolling her eyes. The inside family joke is that she's

not exactly a multiplex regular.

"Pirates of the Caribbean," she says, adding with a smile, "they made

the guy against the establishment the hero."

==========

THE MEDIA AND MUSLIMS: A MINEFIELD

Stasia DeMarco, www.TomPaine.com

Note: Audio version available at:

www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/8484

Historically, Arab and Muslim culture has not been a major focus of

the U.S. news media. Violence and war brought it into the headlines.

When the events of 9/11 put the entire Islamic world into sharper

focus, many in the American Muslim and American Arab communities did

not like what they saw. Stasia DeMarco reports on their efforts to

present what they consider a more accurate picture.

America's Arab and Muslim communities have had a crash course in

public relations over the past two years, as they tried to counter

what seemed to be a near-constant stream of negative images from the

"war on terror." Community leaders and activists made a concerted

effort to reveal themselves, talking about their religion, their

traditions and their ways of living to their neighbors and to

reporters.

But Sobia Ahmab [sic] doesn't think it's working. The 22-year-old

Muslim American, who majored in media studies in college, no longer

watches TV news or reads the paper because she is so frustrated by the

coverage. She says she believes the reporters and editors purposely

try to make Muslim Americans look bad.

"I mean, there are so many cases, at first I wouldn't believe them,

but I have seen it with my own eyes." Ahmab said. "They will be

interviewing a person and they will cut off half of the thing. They

will be saying something positive and it will end up looking totally

like something negative. I mean over and over again, it's like the

media wants to just brainwash people that as soon as you see a Muslim

person, that's what should come to your mind and it just gets really

frustrating."

The portrayal of Arabs and Muslims by American news outlets and in

films is also frustrating for Jack Shaheen. The Arab-American media

critic and retired college professor is the author of several books on

the issue. He says he is saddened by what he sees as a dangerous

stereotype presented by the U.S. news media and by politicians.

"Not only have we said that 1.2 billion Muslims equal the lunatic

fringe, are the same as the 19 terrorists that attacked our country on

9/11." Shaheen said. "We are equating the acts of those 19 people with

1.2 billion people overseas. We are also attributing those acts,

unfairly so, to six million American Muslims and three million

American Arabs and there is a problem there."

There's a problem, he says, not just with the idea that all Muslims

and Arabs are alike, but with the words and phrases used to describe

the image -- words like jihad.

"Traditionally, jihad has always been misused by every network and

many reporters throughout the country, not every but many." Shaheen

said. "Jihad is the struggle within oneself. Everyone knows that.

Everyone with a modicum of intelligence knows that. It is the struggle

within oneself to be the best person that you can be. Now these

extremist groups use it, they misuse it and then we misuse it thinking

that it means something totally different."

Dismayed by what they regard as a misrepresentation of their religion,

many Muslim academics, journalists, politicians and historians began

working to craft a more accurate picture.

"September 11th was a watershed for us in that we realized many people

in this country don't know about our faith and they are scared and

that includes journalists," said Raeed Tayeh. He says it is the

responsibility of American Muslims to make sure the news media get the

true information about Islam. As public affairs director for the

Muslim American Society, he leads workshops to educate journalists.

"If I tell a journalist, if I explain to them the tenets of Islam from

A to Z and I explain these terms then, now the burden is on that

journalist," Tayeh asserted. "The journalist can either heed the

guidance that I sort of gave them, in terms of these semantical

footnotes, or they can continue to use the terms that they are

comfortable or used to."

On this topic, as perhaps no other, words are a minefield. Jeffrey

Dvorkin knows that well. As ombudsman for National Public Radio in

Washington, D.C., it's his job to respond to criticism about his

network's news coverage. And it's been hard to separate reporting

about the war on terror from news coming out of the Middle East.

Mr. Dvorkin says NPR has offended both sides. In 2000, it was

lambasted for being pro-Israeli and now there is intense pressure from

groups that feel NPR's coverage is pro-Palestinian.

"This is an enormously complicated story that requires a lot of

context and a lot of subtlety," Dvorkin said. "The problem is that

when it comes to the Middle East, language has not only been

politicized, but weaponized. That means that you can't use certain

terms; if you use certain terms you end up appearing to be on one side

or the other. The idea of a neutral description of events is almost

impossible."

Jeffrey Dvorkin says the only way Americans can begin to understand

these complex issues is to go beyond journalism. He says learning at

least the basics of Middle East history is the best way to develop a

context for the news.

"I think people have to realize that a full service news operation is

not the same as the Department of History at the University of

Pennsylvania." Dvorkin said. "And so they confuse what their

expectations are from an all-news radio, from CNN and even from NPR.

We are going to be able to provide a lot of information. Are we going

to be definitive in every case? No. And I think that people have an

obligation and a personal responsibility that if they want more

information, they are going to have to find it in other places. That

there is actually a limit to what journalism can or should be expected

to do."

For his part, Raeed Tayeh is hopeful that Americans -- Muslims and

non-Muslims -- will find ways to communicate more clearly with one

another, and that this better understanding will be reflected in the

media coverage of Arab and Muslim communities.

"Well, you know, I think journalists, responsible journalists are

patient people," Tayeh said. "You seek out the information, and that

fosters understanding. And when you understand people and you

understand an issue, then you are more informed."

While all sides continue a passionate debate over the way American

Muslims and Arabs are portrayed, everyone involved in that debate

agrees that the public must be wary of stereotypes in the news.

--Stasia DeMarco is a public radio news anchor and producer in

Philadelphia. She teaches communications and broadcast at La Salle

University.

==========

FALL INTERNS NEEDED IN WASHINGTON, DC AND ELSEWHERE

The MAS Freedom Foundation is seeking interns for the fall semester in

our Washington, DC headquarters, as well in any of our offices in

Maryland, Virginia, Boston, Chicago, San Diego, Los Angeles, Raleigh,

Detroit, and New York.

Deadline is September 1st

Interns will work on issues such as political participation, coalition

building, and community outreach. No experience necessary. All

internships are unpaid.

Interested college students and recent graduates should send a resume

and cover letter to Raeed@masnet.org. References from local Muslim

leaders is a plus. The length and nature of the internship will be

tailored to the schedule of the interns and the needs of MAS Freedom.

Non-Muslims are welcome to apply.

END

_______________________

MAS Freedom Foundation

1050 17th Street NW

Washington, DC 20036

202-496-1288 or 703-998-6525

Freedom@masnet.org

www.masnet.org

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Messages In This Thread
Muslim American Society (MAS) News :.. - by Muslimah - 08-07-2003, 10:12 AM
Muslim American Society (MAS) News :.. - by Ali - 08-07-2003, 07:04 PM
Muslim American Society (MAS) News :.. - by Ali - 08-09-2003, 11:19 PM
Muslim American Society (MAS) News :.. - by Ali - 08-09-2003, 11:24 PM
Muslim American Society (MAS) News :.. - by Ali - 08-10-2003, 08:19 PM
Muslim American Society (MAS) News :.. - by Ali - 08-10-2003, 08:23 PM

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