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"This is
not the
end, but
rather
it is a
beginning
for
continuing
to build
bridges
and
building
our
community,"
Dr.
Qatanani
told
IOL.
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PATTERSON, New
Jersey –
American Muslims
and interfaith
leaders are
celebrating a
hard-won legal
battle against
the government
in favor of Imam
Dr. Mohammad
Qatanani in what
has for many
been a cause
rather than a
case.
"My case was
unlike any other
case. It
was a case of
unity and
dignity and it
also represented
our future in
this country," a
jubilant Dr.
Qatanani told
IslamOnline.net
in an exclusive
interview.
Newark Federal
Immigration
Judge Alberto J.
Riefkohl has
ruled that Imam
Dr. Qatanani and
his family
should be
granted
permanent
residency in the
US.
The federal
authorities had
sought to link
Qatanani, a
Palestinian who
emigrated from
Jordan to the US
in 1996, to
Hamas, which the
US classifies as
a terrorist
organization.
US immigration
authorities
argued that
Qatanani had
failed to
disclose on his
green card
application that
he had been
arrested and
convicted in
Israel on
charges of
having links to
Hamas.
In his 71-page
ruling, Judge
Riefkohl
dismissed the
government’s
case as
"patently
incomplete" and
two federal
agents’
conflicting
testimonies as
"not credible."
The 44-year-old
Palestinian
religious and
spiritual leader
of the Islamic
Center of
Passaic County
(ICPC) has been
serving the
local Muslim
community since
1996.
The special
agent in charge
of the FBI’s
Newark office,
county
prosecutors,
sheriffs and the
Director of the
New Jersey
Office of
Homeland
Security were
among the
government and
law enforcement
officials who
praised Qatanani
for his role in
building bridges
between his
community and
law enforcement
agencies prior
to and
especially after
9/11.
He also had
reached out to
several Jewish
and Christian
leaders and made
interfaith
dialogue a top
priority for his
mosque.
Community
Success
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"If this
case
were
decided
against
the imam
staying
in the
country,
it would
really
have
been a
travesty
of
justice,"
Rabbi
Senter
(L) told
IOL. |
Qatanani, who
has a PhD in
Islamic
Jurisprudence,
paid tribute to
the local Muslim
community for
their unwavering
support.
"Thanks to Allah
SWT, He is the
only one who
really deserves
to be thanked
but I need to
also thank my
family, the big
family, the
great family, my
community
because it is a
great
community," a
moved Qatanani
told IOL.
"They are great
people and they
worked together
for a very
important cause,
mainly for our
human rights and
our civil rights
in this
country."
His attorney,
Mrs. Claudia
Slavinsky,
attributed their
legal victory to
the community's
efforts.
"You cannot win
a case like this
without such
support from the
community
because it is so
critical," she
told IOL.
"What we did in
the courtroom
was only half."
Slavinsky
recalls having
had to turn
volunteer
witnesses away
because there
were too many to
put on the
stand.
"A large number
of people
approached us
wanting to
testify on the
imam’s behalf,
which was very
unusual."
Aref Assef, the
Chair for the
American’s for
Qatanani
organizing
committee, is
happy about the
community's
campaigning
efforts.
"We have been
able to show
that the
community can be
organized
effectively to
produce the
kinds of results
that we see and
that we are
celebrating
today," he told
IOL.
"We need our
rights to be
respected and
recognized. We
want to be
treated as equal
citizens and we
demand nothing
but equal
treatment before
the law.
"The legal
system works for
those who are
vigilante about
asking for their
rights."
Salaheddin
Mustafa, one of
the key
individuals
advocating Dr.
Qatanani’s case,
insisted it was
not hard to ask
people to help
when it came to
the imam
"because he has
touched so many
people."
Interfaith
Support
The case has
also won strong
support from
interfaith
leaders.
Rabbi David
Senter, a
religious leader
from Beth Shalom
in Pompton
Lakes, NJ, who
refers to Dr.
Qatanani as a
friend, praised
the court
ruling.
"If this case
were decided
against the imam
staying in the
country, it
would really
have been a
travesty of
justice," he
told IOL.
"I believe that
this decision
is, therefore,
an affirmation
of the reality
that our justice
system works.
It's an
affirmation of
the values that
we all hold
dear.
"It shows that
justice can and
should be blind
to some of the
innuendo and
stereotypes that
were woven into
this case."
Rabbi Senter
insists that
Qatanani's was
much more than
an individual
case.
"Had there been
any other
decision, it
really would
have been
frightening to
me as an
American because
even though the
case was made
against the
imam, if you
take out his
name and Islam
and you fill in
any other
religious leader
and any other
religious
tradition, it
could have been
made against any
of us," he
contends.
"It was personal
on a very
different level
because if this
would have God
forbid gone any
other way, who’s
next?"
Slavinsky,
Qatanani's
lawyer, agrees.
"The decision is
clearly a rebuke
to the
government and a
statement that
their strategies
and tactics are
not grounded in
reality or
facts."
Rabbi Senter
contends that
the case has
broken every
single
stereotype.
"You are talking
about a man who
has gone out on
a limb for the
four years that
I know him to
say that Jews
and Muslims can
peacefully
coexist.
"How many Jews
or Muslims or
Christians would
have perceived
the possibility
of a rabbi and a
priest standing
up for an imam
in an
immigration
court?"
He also cited
support from two
county sheriffs,
an attorney from
the Justice
Department, the
governor and
Congressman Bill
Pascrell.
"The imam is an
individual who
has allowed
people to see
past their
perceptions to
look at what
could be."
Dr. Qatanani is
vowing to pursue
his message.
"This is the not
the end, but
rather it is a
beginning for
continuing to
build bridges
and building our
community to be
very strong,
very moderate
and to
understand Islam
in the best way
according to the
teachings of
Allah," he told
IOL.
"We want to
unite the
community and we
have to have a
very clear
vision for our
families and the
next
generation."
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