By Timothy Furnish
On August 7, in a chapel converted to a mosque on Lackland Air Force Base near San Antonio, Texas, the U.S. government
officially became a sponsor of the Mahdi. No, not Barack Hussein Obama, but a much more serious and overt candidate: Adnan
Oktar, a.k.a. "Harun Yahya," the Turkish Creationist whose followers consider him the "rightly-guided one"
of Islamic tradition, expected to come before the end of time to make the entire world Muslim.
Mahdism was my
original area of academic specialization within Islamic history (about which I wrote my doctoral dissertation, first book
and numerous articles, and which I track via this website).
I
interviewed Oktar in Istanbul a few years ago; and, finally, I spent time in the military, both enlisted and commissioned,
the latter training to be a chaplain. So I have some familiarity with all aspects of this troubling story, which came to my
attention early on 14 August via photos posted to my Facebook page by contacts within Oktar's organization.
I contacted the Public Affairs Officer (PAO) at Lackland and, in summary, was told
that such "religious education classes are provided every weekend from ‘other' faith perspectives (Latter Day Saints,
Buddhists, Pentecostals) besides the main ones (Protestant, Roman Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, Eastern Orthodox); that these
are entirely voluntary; that the program chaplain ...was aware of and approved of the speaker."
The speaker
in question was from Oktar's organization, an Islamic Creationist one, which is very inimical to Darwinian evolution as well
as a strong proponent of Islamic Mahdist da`wah ("propaganda" or "evangelism"). From Istanbul Oktar presides
over a publishing and Internet franchise dealing in a double-sided coin of Islamic anti-Darwinism and belief in the imminent
arrival, if not presence already, of the Islamic deliverer-most likely in the guise of Oktar himself.
The Harun Yahya movement resembles that of fellow Turk Fethullah Gülen, insofar
as both spring from a neo-Ottoman Sufism with Mahdist overtones. But the latter, with his global chain of Islamic charter
schools, is taken more seriously and viewed by many in the U.S. as an ideological threat.
The fact that Gülen lives in exile in the U.S. has so far provided him a higher profile here. But Oktar and
his people, while heretofore playing Avis to Gülen's Hertz, are definitely trying harder-and succeeding even where Gülen's
people have so far feared to tread: onto the U.S. Air Force's only basic training installation.
According to both
my sources--Oktar's organization and the Public Affairs Office (PAO) at Lackland-on the first Sunday in August a representative
of Harun Yahya was allowed, following an invitation from the Muslim chaplain at Lackland, Captain Sharior Rahman, to present
two classes: a morning one on "The Collapse of Darwinism and the Fact of Creation" and an evening one covering "Miracles
in the Qur'an." It would appear that the morning class was attended solely by basic trainees, [with a photo and writing
as the backdrop which says "The Collapse of Evolution and the Fact of Creation").
The Turkish Muslim
group further claims about the evening class that "attendants were high rank officials: sergeants, master sergeants and
captains. The talks were very well received and appreciated and the attendants were gifted the Quran. The captain presented
a special medal as the token of appreciation to Adnan Oktar (Harun Yahya). The captain would be, presumably, Chaplain Rahman-which
brings up its own troubling issues, as I shall examine below.
[A dozen female trainees were sitting separately
from the males-whether out of military, or Islamic, mandate is unclear]
As I said, I've interviewed Oktar and
some of his supporters, read his writings and corresponded with members of his organization for several years. I think they
are sincere, well-meaning and peaceful Muslims, whose view of the Mahdi as a pacific figure runs counter to that of him among
the Sunni jihadists, as well as the ruling clerical clique in Iran-both of which see the Mahdi as a global warlord who will
come to earth not to bring peace, but a bloody sword.
But the
degree to which Oktar and his people hold moderate Muslim positions is NOT the issue. Rather, the issues are as follows:
The whole question of something being "voluntary" in basic training is debatable. As one online basic training
survival site says, "In the military, there will ALWAYS be someone telling you what to do, when to do it, and how to
do it -- and you've got to do it.... Military boot camp is like nothing you've ever experienced.
However, the rigid routine and absolute control over every aspect of your life is several times worse than normal
military duty -- on purpose. It's the job of the Training Instructors (T.I.'s) and Drill Instructors (D.I.'s) to...adjust
your attitude to a military way of thinking (self-discipline, sacrifice, loyalty, obedience)...." All it would take for
these "voluntary" Sunday morning classes to become rather more compulsory would be for a T.I. to suggest that anyone
not attending Christian chapel services find something productive to do-or spend extra time shining brass or doing KP (kitchen
patrol) duty while their mates are at church. Given such a choice, agnostic trainees might very well opt for the Islam classes.
2) And these were not simply general classes on Islam provided by a mainstream Sunni group; rather, they were
sect- or cult-specific classes on highly charged topics. Oktar's book "Miracles of the Qur'an," no doubt used as
the basis for that lecture, is a long proselytizing work purporting to explain how the Qur'an is the word of God. His works
"The Collapse of Evolution" and "The Fact of Creation" are stridently anti-Darwinian evolution. But both
these salients are simply gateways, for Harun Yahya, no doubt leavened with references to the group's most important teaching:
the centrality of the Mahdi to human history.
Mahdism is a
controversial topic within Islam, and many Muslims consider Oktar to be a charismatic cult leader-even heretic. Even allowing
such a contentious Islamic group to teach other Muslims on a US military installation would be problematic, analogous to bringing
followers of a heterodox Christian like Perry Stone, or a very controversial one like John Hagee, to lecture on to Christian
trainees. Permitting them to teach non-Muslims-in effect, to proselytize-is simply beyond the pale.
3) This is
the crux of the issue: According to the Lackland PAO, not only are such classes as this important to upholding First Amendment
rights of military personnel, they are necessary: "if we did not allow trainees to attend the services or religious classes
of their choice," their religious rights would be violated.
This
is absurd. When I attended Army chaplain's school at Ft. Jackson, we were taught that providing First Amendment rights for
troops meant that, for example, if you had three Buddhist soldiers and no Buddhist chaplain, you could scour the local village
for a Buddhist priest and ask him to come minister to them weekly-it did NOT mean that a Buddhist monk could be invited onto
base and allowed to, in effect, recruit among non-Buddhist personnel.
The Air Force, at least at Lackland, is thus allowing Islamic proselytizing among non-Muslim Air Force trainees (and
possibly higher ranking permanent party).
4) The Lackland basic training command seems to have deferred to the
Muslim Chaplain, Rahman, on this issue-and the PAO told me as much. I have no desire to cast aspersions on Chaplain Rahman,
for I have never met him and know little about him
But if a
non-mainstream group like Oktar's can gain entrée so easily to a major US military installation simply on the Muslim
chaplain's advice, what's to prevent another Muslim military chaplain in this, or another, branch of service from signing
off on Hizb al-Tahrir's preaching their plans for peacefully resurrecting the caliphate or Tablighi Jama'at from inculcating
trainees with ideal Islamic piety and the need for shari`ah?
Both
HT and TJ are non-jihadist and operate (at least in this country) via Islamic da`wah ("missionary work"), not terrorism.
But should the U.S. military really have such a coarse vetting net-based on this episode-that it could very readily allow
these, or similar, groups to slip through and disseminate their ideas to some of the most impressionable members of our military?
5) Where is the inimitable Mikey Weinstein on this issue? The anti-Christian fulminations of him and his group,
the Orwellian-named "Military Religious Freedom Foundation," just recently intimidated the command at Vandenberg
Air Force base into dropping just war classes for officers because they dared include the Bible. One would think this case
would set him salivating. But Mr. Weinstein seems to view Christianity as the only First Amendment threat to our military,
alas. What would be his response if a Christian group were to give out Bibles to non-Christians, as Oktar's Muslim representative
gave Qur'ans to non-Muslims? Mikey would be calling for the unit commander and probably the entire chain-of-command to be
crucified.
I first learned Arabic in the mid-1980s at the Defense Language Institute, and I have been studying
Middle Eastern and African Islamic history for two decades. I have no problems with Muslims attempting to spread their faith
peacefully in this country, nor even with our military service members learning about Islam as an important adjunct to the
global struggle in which we are engaged. What I DO have a problem with-as an American, a veteran, a Christian and an Islamic
expert-is Islamic groups being given access to young, impressionable basic trainees under the spurious guise of the First
Amendment.
As it is, Lackland Air Force base is in the business of promoting Islam in general, and the Mahdi in
particular, over the faith of the vast majority of military personnel (73% of Air Force enlisted are Christian; 0.2% are Muslim).
And that should be unacceptable to all Americans.
[Family Security Matters Contributing Editor Timothy R. Furnish
is a conservative Christian with a PhD in Islamic history, a US Army veteran, and a published author of one book and numerous
articles in venues such as The Weekly Standard, The Washington Times, The Lutheran Witness and History News Network (HNN).
His website is www.mahdiwatch.org and he also blogs on HNN as Occidental Jihadist.]
Some comments:
/This is absurd. I took basic training and air police training at Lackland in 1964-65.
There was no provision then for "religious" rights. We were there (and it wasn't a co-ed enterprise, either) to
learn how to take orders. When one joins the military, it's not the Rotarians or the Elks Club one is going into. When one
joins the military, one surrenders some of his civil rights and recognizes that one's civilian rights are temporarily suspended.
The military is not a social club. It exists to wield force against our enemies. Period. Now it's a propaganda venue?
posted by: Edward Cline
/What a disgrace! Islam is not even
a religion - it's the way of life Obama et al, want to impose on us and he is making great strides.
I thought this was
the land of the free and the home of the BRAVE! There's no one who will stand up to him - not even in the military. God help
us.
posted by: Smogdew
/This is the length the Political
Elites in Washington will go to appease their partners in controlling Middle East oil fields. Islam is just another way to
control the masses while the Elites worship at the feet of Mammon.
posted by: River Rat 2U
/They have even co-opted the military. This just goes to show how deeply infiltrated our country is by Islamists.
From the top on down. Does anyone remember Hasham Islam and Gordon England - asst Sec of Def?
posted by: Jack F.
/It is possible to be a moderate Muslim and serve this nation, especially if one
belongs to a truly moderate sect like the Isma'ilis or the Ahmadis. On the other hand, this 0.2% of the Air Force (or 0.3%
of the Army) that is Muslim should not be privileged over the 70+% that is Christian, as the brass seem to be doing too often.
posted by: Tim Furnish
/I can't believe that this promotion
of a particular brand of Islam on a military basic training base for the Air Force. It's time to pass a law making it clear
that Islam is not a religion, therefore we should not have Muslim chaplain. Our military should not be promoting Islam.
posted by: Albert Bryson