Now where on earth could the British have gotten that crazy idea?
This CNN story about Sheikh Abdullah El-Faisal centers on his trying to shake CNN down for a large sum of money in exchange for a formal interview; I’ve left that part out of what’s below. What is noteworthy is how he has been captured on tape speaking forthrightly about jihad and killing infidels, but when asked about such statements now he claims they were “misinterpreted,” and outright lies about what he actually said. It is a good example of the duplicity we often see from Islamic supremacist spokesmen in the West.
“Shakedown by Jamaica’s radical sheik,” by Drew Griffin and Todd Schwarzschild for CNN, September 1:
(CNN) — He has influenced convicted terrorists such as Richard Reid, the so-called shoe-bomber. His sermons were found in the apartment of suicide bombers who struck London, England, in 2005. Even one of the 9/11 plotters is said to have been a follower of Sheik Abdullah El-Faisal.
Now in Jamaica, El-Faisal is less than a two-hour flight from the United States. No airline will allow him on board; he is widely thought to be on U.S. and UK no-fly lists. But history suggests El-Faisal might not need to travel to be influential among jihadists bent on violence against the U.S. and other Western nations.
The authorities on the Caribbean island keep tabs on him. Jamaica’s Muslim leadership has banned him from preaching in established mosques, just in case his radical rhetoric stirs a Jamaican jihad. That’s why we came here, at El-Faisal’s invitation, to find out his plans. […]
Sheik Abdullah El-Faisal grew up in Jamaica as a Christian, but he converted to Islam at 16, he says, after visiting the South American nation of Guyana.
He then went on to study Islam in Saudi Arabia before moving to London. That’s where his career as a firebrand preacher took off among English-speaking, radical Islamists. In the 1990s, his sermons at the Brixton Mosque in south London, a hotbed of radical preaching, were often taped and shared among converts to Islam. Zacarias Moussaoui, convicted for his role in the September 11 attacks, and Richard Reid attended the mosque at the time.
El-Faisal’s message included calls for killing Americans, Jews, Hindus and nonbelievers (anyone who doesn’t believe in Mohammed and Islam). British counterterrorism officials began to take note of the preacher known as “The Jamaican.”
They uncovered tape recordings in which El-Faisal encouraged Muslims to take up jihad, with titles including “No Peace with the Jews,” “Declaration of War” and “Them v. Us.”
British authorities say they found one of El-Faisal’s taped sermons in the apartment of Germaine Lindsay, a fellow Jamaican and one of the suicide bombers who attacked London’s subway system in 2005. Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian student charged with trying to blow up an airliner as it was approaching Detroit, Michigan, on Christmas Day, mentioned El-Faisal in a blog he wrote while in London.
British prosecutors decided El-Faisal’s sermons went beyond rhetoric.
In 2003, he was charged with soliciting murder and was sentenced to seven years in prison. But four years later, he was released and deported to Jamaica. He didn’t stay there long, making several visits to Africa to preach and lecture.
Kenya deported him in January after he addressed Somali immigrants, fearing he would incite terrorism. His arrest led to riots in which five people were killed. But the Kenyan government had to spend a reported $550,000 to get rid of him; no commercial carrier would take him back to Jamaica. So Kenya had to hire a private jet to fly him home. […]
El-Faisal says he is no longer the radical cleric jailed in Britain.
“That was the old sheik,” he tells me. “I have reformed since then. I have become wiser. I no longer say things that offend people.”
El-Faisal says he really never meant to offend anyone. “The British misinterpreted my teachings,” he said. “I spoke of jihad, and the British thought that meant killing.”
I pointed out that “killing” is exactly what he did say in Britain, and on the tapes listened to by radical followers across the world.
I pointed out his exact quotes: that Muslims should fight and kill Jews, Christians, Americans, Hindus and other nonbelievers.
“The way forward can never be the ballot. The way forward is the bullet.” That’s a quote from one of his speeches recorded by British authorities.
And in the United States, a group called Revolution Muslim looks up to El-Faisal as its spiritual leader.
Last year, one of the group’s leaders told me “Allah used the word to terrorize, so we terrorize the Kaffirs (non-Muslims).” It turns out that quote actually came from El-Faisal himself.
El-Faisal casually dismissed the Revolution Muslim group. He says he does not encourage people to kill, never has and never will.
When I told him that a blog on RevolutionMuslim.com had praised alleged Fort Hood, Texas, shooter Major Nidal Hasan, he told me he “would not congratulate” the attacker.
I asked whether he felt any guilt that one of the July 7, 2005, London subway bombers, a fellow Jamaican who followed his teachings, had committed suicide while also killing dozens of innocent civilians. He said it made him sad that “the brother killed himself.”
When I pressed whether he felt any personal responsibility for influencing the suicide attack, the sheik became agitated.
“How can they prove I influenced them to try and commit terrorism?” he asked. “I did not direct anyone to try and blow up a plane; I did not tell the London bombers to do what they did.”
“It makes me sad they committed suicide and that they killed innocent people, 52 of them.” El-Faisal says all the so-called terrorists who have listened to his preaching have most likely listened to other preachers, too. He feels he is being singled out and is now confined to his native Jamaica without any direct means of support….