Islamic Association of Palestine

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Islamic Association of Palestine (IAP, also known as Islamic Association for Palestine, and alternately as the American Muslim Society (AMS) and American Middle Eastern League for Palestine (AMEL)) was an American not-for profit organization.<ref name="LINK">Daniel Pipes and Sharon Chadha, CAIR: Islamists Fooling the Establishment, Middle East Forum Quarterly, Spring 2006.</ref> Established in 1981, the IAP described itself as "a not-for-profit, public-awareness, educational, political, social, and civic, national grassroots organization dedicated to advancing a just, comprehensive, and eternal solution to the cause of Palestine and suffrages of the Palestinians."<ref name="fut">Template:Cite news</ref> IAP founders included later Hamas politburo leader Mousa Abu Marzook.<ref name="Epstein2003">Template:Cite web</ref>

The Islamic Association of Palestine had strong ties to the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development and to several organizations established in the U.S. that were alleged to serve as fronts for Hamas.<ref>"Indictment," United States of America vs. Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development (U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas Dallas Division), filed 26 July 2004.</ref><ref>Memorandum to R. Richard Newcomb, Director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control, U.S. Department of the Treasury, by Dale L. Watson, Assistant Director for Counterterrorism, FBI.</ref> In 2004, a US Federal Court found the IAP liable (alongside the Holy Land Foundation and Quranic Literacy Institute) for the 1996 murder of American citizen David Boim by Hamas operatives.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> As of 2004, the organization is defunct.

Establishment and goals

The organization "was originally formed in 1981 by Dr. Aly Mishal at the personal direction of Khaled Meshal (who was then a senior Muslim Brotherhood activist and would later become secretary general of Hamas)."<ref name="levitt">Levitt, Matthew. (2006). Hamas: Politics, Charity, and Terrorism in the Service of Jihad. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. Chapter 6.</ref> When the Muslim Brotherhood leader in Gaza formally established Hamas in 1987, "the IAP became the group's mouthpiece in North America."<ref name="levitt" />

In prosecuting Holy Land Foundation leadership, the U.S. Government presented evidence alleging the IAP was one of three organizations "created by the United States branch of the Muslim Brotherhood as part of [its] Palestine Committee with the stated mission of providing support to Hamas...[the] HLF, which raised money; the United Association for Studies and Research - UASR, which established policy; and the Islamic Association of Palestine - IAP, which disseminated information/propaganda."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Matthew Levitt, a fellow at pro-Israeli think tank Washington Institute, alleged that Hamas invested considerable resources to give "the Palestinian cause an Islamic flavor."<ref name="levitt" />

Affiliation with Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood

In a May 1991, a memo by an alleged Muslim Brotherhood member argued that IAP and numerous other organizations should unite around the goal of turning America into a Muslim country and promoting the Western civilization.<ref name="bridge.georgetown.edu">Template:Cite web</ref> According to The Bridge Initiative at Georgetown University, the memo's "language is wishful, and does not reflect the Muslim Brotherhood's agenda as outlined in documents obtained by the FBI."<ref name="bridge.georgetown.edu"/>

IAP founders included Mousa Abu Marzook, funder and 1989 member of IAP Board of Directors. Abu Marzook served as the chairman of the advisory committee and allegedly donated startup funds to IAP, while providing seed money to the Holy Land Foundation "and operational funds for Mohammed Salah [a self-confessed Hamas member and military commander based in Chicago] to deliver to Hamas operatives in the West Bank."<ref name="levitt" /><ref name="history">Template:Cite web</ref> Allegedly, seven checks, for a total amount of $125,000, were deposited into IAP bank account between 1990 and 1991.<ref name="levitt" /><ref>Jaber Deposition, 04/09/03, pp.12-17; Ahmad Deposition, pp.38-39. </ref><ref>Israeli intelligence report pp/0609-0614 of evidentiary material brought in Stanley Boim et al. v. Quranic Literacy Institute et al.(00 C 2905, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, 2 June 2002.) </ref>

File:"The 1993 Philadelphia Meeting" searchable.pdf

Among IAP officers and founding members were several Hamas senior leaders who participated in a 1993 Philadelphia meeting attended by Hamas officers.<ref name=levitt /> Former Islamic Association of Palestine staffers and members were founding members of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).<ref name="LINK" /> This is the case of Nihad Awad, CAIR's executive director who was affiliated to the Islamic Association of Palestine, and who was also a "self-identified supporter of the Hamas movement."<ref name=levitt /> In a March 1994 speech at Barry University, future CAIR Executive Director Awad said in response to an audience question about the various humanitarian efforts in the Palestinian Occupied Territories, "I am in support of the Hamas movement more than the PLO... there are some [Hamas] radicals, we are not interested in those people."<ref>Statement by Nihad Awad at a panel discussion, "The Road to Peace: the Challenge of the Middle East," Barry University, 22 March 1994.Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=fut/> The statement was made before Hamas carried out its first suicide bombing and was designated a terrorist organization by the United States government.

Since the establishment of Hamas, IAP served as Hamas's public voice in the United States.<ref name=levitt /> The Islamic Association of Palestine published a magazine, Tareeq Filistine (Road to Palestine), Ila Filastin (To Palestine) and the newspapers Al-Zaytuna (The Olive) and Muslim World Monitor.Template:Citation needed In general, most of its publications consisted of flyers and communiqués encouraging jihad and endorsing Hamas's mission. Oliver Revell, former chief of the FBI's counter-terrorism department, called IAP "a front organization for Hamas that engages in propaganda for Islamic militants."<ref>Arab Lobby in the United States Handbook. 2015. Washington DC: International Business Publications, P.111.</ref>

In a 2007 court filing, United States Federal Prosecutors asserted the IAP "was the first organization to publish an English version of the Hamas charter."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The organization further distributed the Hamas publication Filisteen al-Muslima in the U.S., "which [paid] glowing tributes to Hamas suicide bombers, justifies their attacks, and suggests they be models for future suicide bombers."<ref name=levitt />

The IAP held conventions and workshop to rally support for Hamas.<ref name=levitt /><ref name=history /> Allegedly, the organization often declared its support for Hamas' role in the Palestinian Intifada against Israel.<ref name=levitt /><ref name=history /> A December 1989 communiqué published by IAP read: "the only way to liberate Palestine, all of Palestine, is the path of Jihad," and "Hamas is the conscience of the Palestinian Mujahid people."

Hamas fundraiser

IAP publicly called for donations to be directed to the Holy Land Foundation and assisted the foundation in its efforts to fundraise on behalf of Hamas.<ref name=levitt /><ref name=history /> For instance, the December 1989 communiqué invited readers to "perform jihad for the sake of God with your money and donate as much as you can to support the Intifada in Palestine," and [directed] the funds to the Holy Land Foundation.<ref name=levitt /> Generally, solicitations for the Holy Land Foundation were included in almost all of IAP publications.

Furthermore, the Islamic Association of Palestine "negotiated fundraising contracts by which the [HLF] paid the IAP $40,000 for the IAP fundraising services."<ref name=levitt />

IAP fundraising efforts on behalf of Hamas were confirmed by Hamas officers. In February 1996 a Hamas activist affiliated with IAP told an FBI source that IAP devolved $3 million per year to the Palestinian cause, funds that were sent to the Holy Land Foundation in Palestine and ultimately received by Hamas.<ref name=levitt /><ref>Memorandum to R. Richard Newcomb, Director of the Office for Foreign Assets Control, U.S. Department of the Treasury, by Dale L. Watson, Assistant Director for Counterterrorism, FBI. </ref>

In December 2004, a federal judge in Chicago ruled that the IAP (along with the Holy Land Foundation) was liable for a $156 million lawsuit for aiding and abetting the terror group Hamas in the death of 17-year-old David Boim, an American citizen.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In December 2007, the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit overturned the judge's ruling, holding that plaintiffs failed to prove that financial contributions to Hamas played a direct role in Boim's slaying.<ref>Darryl Fears, Ruling Against Muslim Group Is Overturned; Former Charity, Others Not Liable in Teen's Death, Washington Post, 29 December 2007, A02.</ref> In 2008, the Seventh Circuit reheard the case en banc, and ruled in favor of the Boims.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In a 2017 lawsuit, the Boim family filed a lawsuit against American Muslims for Palestine, alleging the organization to be "a mere continuation of the Islamic Association under a new name" and seeking to collect unpaid damages from the 2004 judgment.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

References

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