The lead editorial of NJ's largest
newspaper preceding the court's
decision in early September)
Monday, August 18, 2008
It would be difficult to find an immigrant
who has done more for his community and for state and
federal authorities than Imam Mohammad Qatanani, the leader
of the Islamic Center of Passaic County.
Qatanani has been known for steadfastly
preaching tolerance and understanding between all faiths
ever since his arrival in 1996. In the dark days after 9/11,
Qatanani reached out to members of other faiths and to the
FBI and other agencies. His work was vital in helping
Muslims, law enforcement and the larger community confront
the tensions that surfaced.
Now the federal government wants to deport
him. Immigration Judge Alberto Riefkohl should ask why
officials are so determined to deport a man whose integrity
seems beyond reproach.
It cannot be because of the laughably weak
evidence they have introduced in his Newark trial for
allegedly failing to disclose a supposed 1993 arrest by
Israeli authorities on his green card application years ago.
There is no question the imam was held by
the Israelis for three months back then. But the government
has utterly failed to show he was "arrested," as opposed to
being detained, like thousands of other Palestinians at the
time.
The difference isn't just a semantical
quibble, as it would be in the United States. Any
resemblance between these detentions and what the average
American might consider an arrest and due process was purely
coincidental.
Israeli detainees often weren't told why
they were being held, weren't given formal charges and were
sometimes convicted without the bother of being present for
the proceedings. That is precisely what Qatanani says must
have happened with him because he was never told he had been
convicted.
This is entirely believable, given that
Qatanani's Israeli military court "conviction" papers are so
full of discrepancies and holes that Riefkohl refused to
admit them into evidence.
The government hasn't even been able to
produce a confession that prosecutors claim Qatanani gave --
under head-bagging and other interrogation conditions later
outlawed by the Israeli Supreme Court.
Given evidence that is flimsier than what
is typically offered in Newark parking court, federal
prosecutors have re sorted to trying to convict Qatanani on
the basis of guilt by association. They claim Qatanani must
be a terrorist sympathizer because he has a brother-in-law
who is a Hamas military leader.
By this logic, federal prosecutors should
have made sure William Bulger spent his years sitting in
jail as a mobster rather than rising to become president of
the Massachusetts Senate as well as of the University of
Massachusetts. After all, Bulger's brother, "Whitey," was a
notorious organized crime figure who to this day remains on
the FBI's 10 most wanted list.
If Qatanani is a terrorist wolf in
cleric's clothing, he must be Rasputin-like in his powers of
persuasion. How else to explain that the sheriffs of Bergen
and Passaic counties both took the stand as character
witnesses for him?
So did a respected assistant U.S. attorney
and one of North Jersey's most prominent rabbis. Passaic
Sheriff Jerry Speziale, a man not noted for being warm and
fuzzy, told Riefkohl's court that Qatanani "radiates peace."
Riefkohl is expected to rule on Qatanani's
case in early September. He should reject the government's
charges. The imam should stay in the United States.