http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/vidino200602060735.asp

February 06, 2006, 7:35 a.m.
Creating Outrage
Meet the imam behind the cartoon overreaction.

By Lorenzo Vidino 

Confused by the wave of protests, threats, boycotts, and attacks
against diplomatic facilities that have shaken their idyllic
tranquility after the publication of cartoons depicting the Prophet
Mohammed on Jyllands-Posten, the Danes are asking themselves
questions. They wonder if an attack will take place in their country,
as threatened by various jihadi groups, and if freedom of speech is in
jeopardy. But a more immediate question is puzzling some: Why has the
outrage of the Muslim world exploded only now, in February, when the
cartoons were published last September? At the time of the initial
publication, international media had reported news of the blasphemous
caricatures, not only in Danish, but also in English. 

Yet nothing happened, aside from timid protests from the Muslim
community of the tiny Scandinavian kingdom. So what is different about
the situation now? More than the question, it is the answer that is
keeping a good chunk of Denmark's political and cultural elite awake
at night. The recent anti-Danish emotional wave coming from the Muslim
world, in fact, is far from a spontaneous reaction, but it has been
cunningly orchestrated by a knowledgeable insider, a real snake in the
grass who has been creeping in Denmark for the last 15 years.

Ahmed Abdel Rahman Abu Laban, a 60-year-old Palestinian imam who has
been residing in Copenhagen since 1993, has become over the last few
years the face of Islam in Denmark, creating his own persona of a
moderate cleric who seeks dialogue but who is victimized by the
widespread "racism" of the Danes. Despite his poor command of the
Danish language, Abu Laban is a frequent guest on Danish television
and in meetings with government officials, where he claims to
represent the voice of the local Muslim community. Even though part of
the establishment has always looked at him with suspicion (Prime
Minister Rasmussen has always refused to meet with him), Danish
intelligentsia has made him a celebrity — so much of one that even the
Washington Post recently profiled him as "one of Denmark's most
prominent imams." 
But Abu Laban's real face has now been revealed. 

In September, the imam immediately condemned Jyllands-Posten's
cartoons and led protests at the local level. Danish politicians and
media, busy with local elections, ignored him. But Abu Laban is not
the kind of person who gives up easily. After having contacted
ambassadors from Muslim countries in Copenhagen, he put together a
delegation with the goal of touring the Middle East to
"internationalize this issue so that the Danish government would
realize that the cartoons were not only insulting to Muslims in
Denmark but also to Muslims worldwide," as he explained in an
interview with "Islam Online". The delegation met with, among others,
Arab League Secretary Amr Moussa, Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Sheikh
Mohammad Sayyed Tantawi, and Sunni Islam's most influential scholar,
Yusuf al Qaradawi. 

The delegation showed each of these leaders the 12 cartoons published
by Jyllands-Posten, along with others that had never been published by
any Danish publication. The new cartoons were every more offensive, as
showing the Prophet Mohammed with a pig face or having sexual
intercourse with a dog. While the delegation claimed that the
differentiation was pointed out to their interlocutors, there is no
other evidence, and rumors about the more blasphemous images began to
circulate in the Middle East. Moreover, the booklet that was presented
by the delegation contained several other lies about the "oppression"
of Muslims in Denmark, claiming Muslims do not have the legal right to
build mosques and are subjected to pervasive racism. 

With emotions about the cartoons mounting, Qaradawi, the real brains
of the Muslim Brotherhood's international network and a key opinion
maker in the Middle East thanks to his weekly show on al Jazeera,
attacked Denmark directly, warning that an apology would not be
sufficient, and that "a firm stance" should have be taken by the
Danish government. As Prime Minister Rasmussen refused to intervene,
referring to the cherished tradition of freedom of the press in his
country, Qaradawi and his ilk unleashed their propagandistic war
against Denmark. Abu Laban, from his mosque in the Copenhagen suburb
of Nørrebro, is now happily reaping the fruits of his hard work. 

But, in a quintessential exercise in taqiya (double-speak), Abu Laban
has tried to hide his satisfaction to the Danes. Speaking on Danish
television, Abu Laban has wept crocodile tears, condemning the boycott
of Danish goods and the other consequences of his actions. Yet,
interviewed by al Jazeera, the imam has said just the opposite,
praising the outrage of the Muslim world at his adoptive country.

So just who is Abu Laban? The Danes are slowly getting a fuller
portrait. Friday night, Danish state television DR broadcasted a long
report on him and Danes have begun to understand more about the
self-proclaimed voice of Islam in Denmark. According to DR,
Intelligence documents reveal that Abu Laban has been in close contact
for years with members of various terrorist organizations, and in
particular with leaders of the Egyptian Gamaa Islamiya. 

In the beginning of the 1990s, in fact, several leaders of the Gamaa
escaped the long arm of the Egyptian mukhabarat and relocated to
Europe. Copenhagen became the new hometown of two of the group's
leaders, Ayman al Zawahiri, currently serving as Osama bin Laden's
right-hand man, and Talaat Fouad Qassimy. From the quiet of the
Scandinavian capital, the men published Al Murabitoun, the Gamaa's
official publication. Abu Laban worked as a translator and distributor
of the publication, which glorified the killing of Western tourists in
Egypt and urged the annihilation of Jews in Palestine. Then Abu Laban
worked closely with Said Mansour, a Moroccan man currently charged in
Denmark for running a publishing house that distributed jihadi material. 

All of this is not news to Danish security officials, but now Danes
are slowly becoming aware of the facts. And Abu Laban's celebrated
celeb status is about history in Denmark. Danes have no more patience
for those who preach love in one language and war in another, those
who publicly play the role of the victim, demand tolerance and then
secretly incite hatred. While much of Europe has been asleep at the
wheel, oblivious to the monumental threat radical Islam poses to its
future, at least one country is increasing awake. 

Denmark's first battle is domestic, unmasking the enemy's fifth column
inside its borders. As embassies burn, the rest might want to catch
on, too. 
— Lorenzo Vidino is a senior terrorism analyst at the Investigative
Project and author of the book Al Qaeda in Europe: The New
Battleground of International Jihad







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