If the Word Doesn't Fill the Vacuum,
Islam Will
Future
'radicalized' Islamists trained in U.S. prisons
Colson says study
confirms penal institutions are breeding grounds for terrorists
Posted: October 11, 2006 1:00
a.m. Eastern © 2006 WorldNetDaily.com
Many
"radicalized" Islamists capable of committing terrorist attacks in
the future are acquiring their jihad beliefs and training right now,
within America's state and federal prison systems, at the expense of
U.S. taxpayers, a leading prison expert is warning.
"If, God forbid,
an attack by home-grown Islamist radicals occurs on American soil,
many, if not most, of the perpetrators will have converted to Islam
while in prison," said Chuck Colson, head of the Prison Fellowship
ministry as well as author of BreakPoint commentaries.
He said in a recent commentary over
his years of serving the needs of inmates that he's seen, like
others in the prison system, many instances of "the spread of an
especially virulent form of Islam within American prisons."
But, he said,
thanks to a new report, ignoring that factor "is no longer an
option."
He cited a study
called "Out of the Shadows" by researchers at George Washington
University and the University of Virginia that concluded
"radicalized prisoners" in U.S. prisons "are a potential pool of
recruits by terrorist groups."
Which means that
if and when there is another terror attack within the United States,
the perpetrators may not have learned their skills and hatred in
Iran or Saudi Arabia, but in Colorado or California.
The study notes
that the circumstances for many inmates can produce bitterness and
resentment already. Into that atmosphere comes material distributed
by extreme Islamic groups that advocate murder and mayhem on
nonbelievers.
The study notes
there is virtually no monitoring by "authoritative Islamic
chaplains" who should be responsible to see that materials calling
for violence are not permitted.
The information
that now appears calls on Muslim prisoners "to wage war against
non-Muslims who have not submitted to Islamic rule," the study said.
"As a former
employee of a radical Islamist group who is now a Christian told a
Senate committee, 'I know of only a few instances in which prisons
rejected the literature we attempted to distribute – and it was
never because of the literature's radicalism,'" Colson wrote.
"Senator Susan
Collins (R-Maine) was correct when she called the situation 'an
emerging threat to our national security,'" Colson said.
Colson said the
study suggests a new federal commission to investigate and produce
an "objective risk assessment," and he believes we should "get on
with this."
"I've been
telling 'BreakPoint' listeners and readers and Prison Fellowship
supporters about this for years. Now we have more than anecdotal
evidence. We have a study from two prestigious universities on our
side," Colson said.
He said he can't
help but note the irony. His work with
InnerChange Freedom Initiative prison rehabilitation programs
has proven to be very successful at teaching inmates the skills and
attitudes to participate in society.
The program,
which now has chapters in 88 different nations, produced a 50
percent drop in recidivism in a study at one Texas location where it
was operating.
However, because
the voluntary program involves Christian principles, courts have
ordered it out, mostly recently in a case in Iowa.
"The largely
unimpeded spread of radical Islam throughout prisons coincides with
increased opposition to the one really successful antidote – that
is, the presence of Christianity," Colson wrote.
"Programs like
ours are working. We have studies to prove it. And they are the best
solution to the alienation and rage that fuels conversions to
radical Islam, as well as gangs and other hate groups inside the
prisons. Making it harder for organizations like Prison Fellowship
to operate within prison walls leaves jihadists and other radical
groups as the only game in town," he said.
He said that
will, in all likelihood, allow for the development of more folks
like Richard Reid, the shoe bomber, who converted to Islam in prison
and tried to kill a jetliner loaded with people.
Colson's
BreakPoint, heard on about 1,000 radio stations, has addressed this
issue several times, including one case in 2005 when authorities in
Los Angeles were able to break up a terrorist plot. Native-born
Americans of non-Middle Eastern descent, from within Folsom Prison,
had organized a "holy war" against America and were planning to form
various terrorist cells upon release.
He said what he
wrote about first in 1991 is gaining attention now from other groups
as well. He noted the "Weekly Standard" has called for an
understanding of the "extremist indoctrination"' going on in
prisons.
Colson said one
group, the al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, was shut down after it
spread hate literature throughout the prison systems, but that
probably was "only the tip of the iceberg of what has reached and
may still be reaching U.S. prisons."
At the time the
Los Angeles case was uncovered, Robert Mueller was FBI director. He
told the Senate Intelligence Committee that prisons are fertile
grounds for extremists who exploit inmates.
Also about that
time there was a distribution from the al-Haramain Foundation of
"The Noble Quran" into prisons holding about 10,000 inmates. It's a
special publication of the book that calls for jihad as an
"obligatory duty on every Muslim."
"Many editions
of this translation that reached the prisons contained an appendix
entitled 'The Call to Jihad,'" said a
blog contributor. "That essay is,
quite simply, an exhortation to violence."
"The
Atlantic" noted that the leadership of Islam in American prisons
is being provided by inmates, with many urging the outright
overthrow of the U.S. government and praising extreme violence.
"Wahhabi
influence is inculcating them with the same kind of militant ideas
that drove the 9/11 hijackers to kill thousands of Americans," Sen.
Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., told
The
Associated Press.
Even the Islamic
chaplain in the New York City Department of Corrections admits to
the influence, and is proud of it. He was suspended, but not
dismissed, from his job after he said the "greatest terrorist in the
world occupy the White House" and "Zionists of the media" should not
be dictating what Islam is.
The Prison
Fellowship founder was known by politicians as the "hatchet man" for
President Richard Nixon before his resignation from office. Colson
converted to Christianity in 1973 and the Boston Globe later said,
"If Mr. Colson can repent of his sins, there just has to be hope for
everybody."
He served a
brief time in prison starting in 1974 for Watergate-related charges
and two years later founded Prison Fellowship Ministries, now the
world's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-cons and crime victims and
families.
Colson also has written more than a dozen books, and
in 1993 earned the prestigious Templeton Prize for Progress in
Religion, donating the $1 million prize to Prison Fellowship.