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Mosque is Fort Hood suspect's link to 9/11

WASHINGTON - The Army officer accused in the massacre at Fort Hood apparently attended the same Virginia mosque as two 9/11 hijackers at a time when a radical imam preached there.

Whether the Fort Hood shooter had associated with the hijackers is something the FBI probably will look into, according to a law-enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing.

The family of Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, the Army psychiatrist who killed 13 and wounded 29 at the Texas military base, held his mother's funeral at the Dar al Hijrah Islamic Center in Falls Church, Va., on May 31, 2001, according to her obituary in the Roanoke Times newspaper.

At the time, Anwar Aulaqi was an imam, or spiritual leader, at the Washington-area mosque. Aulaqi told the FBI in 2001 that, before he moved to Virginia in early 2001, he met with 9/11 hijacker Nawaf al-Hazmi several times in San Diego.

Al-Hazmi was at the time living with Khalid al-Mihdhar, another hijacker. Al-Hazmi and another hijacker, Hani Hanjour, attended the Dar al Hijrah mosque in Virginia in early April 2001.

In his FBI interview, Aulaqi denied ever meeting with al-Hazmi and Hanjour while in Virginia.

Aulaqi, a native-born U.S. citizen, left the United States in 2002, eventually traveling to Yemen. He was investigated by the FBI in 1999 and 2000, after it was learned that he may have been contacted by a possible procurement agent for Osama bin Laden. During this investigation, the FBI learned that Aulaqi knew people involved in raising money for Hamas, a Palestinian group on the U.S. State Department's terrorist list.

Shaker el Sayed, the current imam at Dar Al Hijrah, declined to comment when reached yesterday by the Associated Press.

Faizul Khan, former imam of the Muslim Community Center in Silver Spring, Md., where Hasan also worshipped, said he was not aware that Hasan had attended services at Dar al Hijrah but said it would not be unusual for Hasan to attend more than one mosque concurrently.

Khan said he did not recall Hasan mentioning having been taught or preached to by Aulaqi.

The London Telegraph first reported the potential link between Hasan and the mosque.

Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey said yesterday that it's important for the country not to get caught up in speculation about Hasan's Muslim faith and that he has instructed his commanders to be on the lookout for anti-Muslim reaction to the killings at the Texas post.

He says that focusing on the Islamic roots of the suspected shooter could "heighten the backlash" against all Muslims in the military. Casey says diversity in the military "gives us strength."

Casey declined to answer questions about the investigation into the shooting, but said evidence to this point shows that Hasan acted alone.

Comments   
Posted 11:58 AM, 11/09/2009
contir
This guy (Hasan) was obviously nuts. The real issue here is not Islam but mental health. How could a mental health professional get so crazy? Somebody should have noticed. He's subject to peer review, isn't he? Why didn't someone see how crazy he was getting? I think this says far more about the stresses of Army mental health professionals than about any imagined threats from radical Islam. Are there other Army mental health professionals who are nearly ready to go off like he did?
Posted 12:15 PM, 11/09/2009
CleanupPhilly
Why are so many Philly based, American born Muslims involved in crime, in anti-social activity like drugs, organized theft, fraud? You can't keep ignoring troubling aspects of issues of prevalence of criminality in people who are professing to be actively religious. America has a home-grown domestic Islamic fundamentalism and extremism that it would be wise to address rather than wait for the bloody invitation.
Posted 12:17 PM, 11/09/2009
BDUBB
wow peacemaker!!! you are really about peace!!!!
Posted 12:20 PM, 11/09/2009
CleanupPhilly
Even moderate Muslims profess that the edict to be modest doesn't include covering women completely, yet one sees this often in Philly. Can anyone really speak to how extreme these American born Muslims really are, not just in dress? I don't get the impression that anyone really knows, until someone goes off, what, exactly, of hatred and intolerance is being preached in the majids.
Posted 12:24 PM, 11/09/2009
CleanupPhilly
My neighbor, who raised her kids to be holy warriors, is an American born Muslim who feels she is not a citizen of the United States. She believes the non-Muslim world is ending soon. All of her male children are in prison doing hard time of at least 15 years. One got out, went right back to selling drugs, and I had to call his parole officer. He's serving the rest of his sentence. How much can we excuse this anger, this anti-social behavior that masks itself, admittedly hijacking, a world religion? Islam appears to be suffering greatly from the onslaught of those who would take its edicts literally.
Posted 12:50 PM, 11/09/2009
CleanupPhilly
What is also suffering is the Ink and DN's ability to go after the story. One of the NY plotters arrested in May was headed to a meeting in Philly of Philly Muslims. Did that ever make the paper here? I had to read that on the BBC about the coverage of James Comitie. Why do I have to read on WPVI that, "the personal Web site for a radical American imam living in Yemen who had contact with two 9/11 hijackers praised Hasan as a hero. The posting Monday on the Web site for Anwar al Awlaki, who was a spiritual leader at two mosques where three 9/11 hijackers worshipped, said American Muslims who condemned the Fort Hood attack are hypocrites who have committed treason against their religion." It is an outrage that the papers locally are not able to cover what is going on, not able to get the story, out of an undue political correctness that is more expedience than journalism.
Posted 12:53 PM, 11/09/2009
CleanupPhilly
If a Philly Muslim was arrested, would the papers even report his religion? Would there be a way to gauge an uptick in Islamic extremism given the self-censorship that calls itself liberalism?
Posted 12:58 PM, 11/09/2009
Ilmare
Because no other group has even been associate with wrong doings? We completely imagined the crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, the Holocaust, the KKK, the Mafia, the Yakuza, etc. Those people were all secretly Muslim the entire time, right?
Comment removed.
Posted 10:04 AM, 11/10/2009
krakatoa
For once, just once I'd like to see or hear some Muslims come out and condemn the violence their bretheren commit in the name of "religion". How come I never hear that?? Some "religion"?!?!? Kill everyone who doesn't believe as you do! They've taken over Africa, the Near East, Indonesia, Pakistan, Afghanistan former Russian provinces. What's next? Mexico?? And everybody screams "Stop The War!" They will never stop until all women are wearing bhurkas and the we're all sitting on the ground eating falafel! Gutter religion! At least Scientology isn't out there blowing Christians up!!
Posted 10:20 AM, 11/10/2009
krakatoa
Hey llmare, that's great reasoning!! Because there were crusades 1000 years ago, the Spanish inquisition 500 years ago, the holocaust, KKK Mafia and Yakuza??, it's perfectly OK to slaughter innocent people today! I don't understand that thinking unless Muslims are undeniably anti-Judeo/Christian, anti-white, anti-women, anti-freedom, anti-God! And they have found fertile ground in this country of LIBERAL, love-everybody, take away your guns and do away with the death penalty morons. Outlaw Islam!!
11 comments
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