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ISLAMIC CIRCLE OF NORTH AMERICA (ICNA) Printer Friendly Page

Major Introductory Resources:

Helping Hand to Hamas
By Joe Kaufman
May 15, 2007

ICNA's Overseas Ties and Lies
By Joe Kaufman
July 18, 2007

Fanatic Muslim Family Day
By Joe Kaufman
September 28, 2007

From Pakistan with Terror
By Joe Kaufman
November 7, 2007

ICNA Welcomes New Muslims to Radicalize
By Joe Kaufman
November 5, 2008

An Anniversary with Terror
By Joe Kaufman
July 14, 2008

ICNA's Islamist Southern Strategy
By Joe Kaufman
November 27, 2008

Islamic Extremist Convention 2007
By Joe Kaufman
December 13, 2007


Additional Resources:

Muslim Organisations Attempt to Whitewash Ft. Hood Jihad with Boilerplate Statements
By Militant Islam Monitor
November 9, 2009

Islamist Groups Threaten Free Speech Ruling
By Jamie Glazov
August 27, 2009

Exporting Pakistan's Anti-America Movement
By Joe Kaufman
July 15, 2009

Young Muslims' Moderator Hater
By Joe Kaufman
June 18, 2009

Who Is Teaching about Islam?
By Jonathan Schanzer
June 2, 2009

E-mails from an Enemy
By Joe Kaufman
March 24, 2009

Radical Islamic Networks in America
By Jamie Glazov
January 13, 2009

The Hate Bus
By Joe Kaufman
December 8, 2008

Islamist Child Abuse
By Joe Kaufman
June 10, 2008

U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Continue to Legitimize Terror Friendly Groups in Muslim Dialogue Hoax
By William Mayer and Beila Rabinowitz
June 2, 2008

Radical Muslims for Obama
By Joe Kaufman
February 5, 2008

Islamist in the Army
By Joe Kaufman
December 18, 2007

The Mullahs and the Islamic Circle of North America
By Joe Kaufman
November 15, 2007

ICNA Dollars for Hamas and Wildfires
By Joe Kaufman
November 5, 2007

Americans Against Hate Stages Protest against ICNA Terror Ties at Six Flags Over Texas
By Militant Islam Monitor
October 15, 2007

Through a Window, Darkly
By R. John Matthies
September 5, 2007

AAH Rallies against Islamic Circle of North America
By Militant Islam Monitor
July 10, 2007

Young Muslims, Young Hamas
By Joe Kaufman
June 19, 2007

AAH to Protest at Muslim American Society/ICNA
By Militant Islam Monitor
June 15, 2007

Interfaith Da'wa: Bishops Meet with ICNA to Compile Document on "Principles of Catholic and Sunni Muslims Marriage Traditions"
By Militant Islam Monitor
June 5, 2007

Americans Against Hate Calls upon U.S. Government to Shut Down Islamic Circle of North America
By Militant Islam Monitor
May 25, 2007

Halal Jugend - ICNA to Hold "Islamic Games" at NJ Brunswick Public School
By Militant Islam Monitor
May 24, 2007

Fifth Column Imam Flyers
By Joe Kaufman and Gary Gross
April 20, 2007

Muslim Charities: Moderate Non-Profits or Elaborate Deceptions? (pdf)
By Judicial Watch
2007

Learning About Islam With Imam Ellison
By Don Feder
December 29, 2006

1st Muslim Congressman Thrills Crowd in Dearborn
By Niraj Warikoo
December 26, 2006

9/11 Imam
By Joe Kaufman
September 11, 2006

Why Jihad U?
By Joe Kaufman
August 30, 2006

Al Qaeda Linked Cleric among Speakers at Muslim Youth Camp
Militant Islam Monitor
July 6, 2006

ICNA Canada: Muslims Who Were Arrested in Bomb Plot Not Be Accused of Terrorism
Militant Islam Monitor
July 2, 2006

Muslim Youth Conference in CT Hosts Al Qaeda Linked Cleric Mazen Mokhtar
Militant Islam Monitor
June 18, 2006

Muslims in America Set the Groundwork for a United States of Allah
Militant Islam Monitor
March 27, 2006

Reports of Muslim Cartoon Protests Ignores Threats by Islamic Circle of North America that "The Inquirer Could Be Attacked"
Militant Islam Monitor
February 28, 2006

Philadelphia Imam Abdulmateen Calls on Editors Staff of Inquirer to "Convert to Islam" After Publishing Mohammed Cartoon
Militant Islam Monitor
February 14, 2006

Saudi America
By Haviv Rettig
December 12, 2005

A Surprising Number of Muslims Are Asking Whether Israel Was behind the Attacks
By Deborah Caldwell
October 29, 2001

Israel's American Detractors-Back Again
By Michael Lewis
December 1997

An Explanatory Memorandum on the General Strategic Goal for the Group in North America (pdf)
By The Investigative Project
(Arabic with English Translation)
May 22, 1991

166-26 89th Avenue
Jamaica, NY
11432

Phone :718-658-1199
URL: Website
Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA)'s Visual Map


  • New York-based Islamic organization which has been probed by the FBI for ties to terrorism
  • Works closely with radical Islamic organizations and invites radical speakers to its conferences



The Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA) was founded in 1971 as a "non-ethnic, non-sectarian, open-to-all, independent" grassroots organization. Its goal is "to seek the pleasure of Allah … through the … establishment of the Islamic system of life as spelled out in the Qur'an and the Sunnah of Prophet Muhammad." Toward this end, ICNA endeavors to: "invite mankind to submit to the Creator by using all means of communications"; "motivate Muslims to perform their duty of being witnesses unto mankind by their words and deeds"; "organize those who agree to work for this cause in the discipline of ICNA"; offer educational and training opportunities to increase Islamic knowledge, to enhance character, and to develop skills for all those who are associated with ICNA"; "oppose immorality and oppression in all forms, and support efforts for civil liberties and socio-economic justice in the society"; "strengthen the bond of humanity by serving all those in need anywhere in the world, with special focus on our neighborhood across North America"; and "cooperate with other organizations for the implementation of this program and unity in the ummah [Muslim community]."

Based in Queens, New York, ICNA's activities include training camps, study circles, speakers' forums, night vigils, seminars, and retreats.

ICNA has established a reputation for bringing anti-American radicals to speak at its annual conferences. Moreover, experts have long documented the organization's ties to Islamic terrorist groups. Yehudit Barsky, a terrorism expert at the American Jewish Committee, has said that ICNA "is composed of members of Jamaat e-Islami, a Pakistani Islamic radical organization similar to the Muslim Brotherhood that helped to establish the Taliban." (Pakistani newspapers have reported that Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, a leading architect of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, was offered refuge in the home of Jamaat e-Islami's leader, Ahmed Quddoos.) On September 27, 1997, another Pakistani Islamist leader, Maulana Shafayat Mohamed, played host to an ICNA conference at his Florida-based fundamentalist madrassa (religious school), which served as a recruitment center for Taliban fighters.

In 2000, CNSNews.com made public a press release, originally posted on a Middle Eastern website, from a July 2000 ICNA meeting, which read: "Jamaat e-Islami's supporters have an organization in America known as ICNA …" The press release also recounted some of the views expressed at the aforementioned ICNA meeting. These included an exhortation that "Islam must be translated into political dominance"; pleas for support for "jihad" in "Chechnya, Kashmir, Palestine, Iraq [against U.S. forces], southern Sudan, and … in Bosnia/Kosova [sic]"; an appeal for unity among Pakistani Muslims against "Hindu Brahmins and Zionist Jews"; and an endorsement of Muslim women's inclusion in carrying out jihad. One Islamic leader present at the ICNA event complained about "human rights violations" being carried out by the U.S. government against the terrorist mastermind Omar Abdel Rahman, spiritual leader of Egypt's Islamic Group.

In part because of such revelations, ICNA is now under investigation by U.S. authorities for possible connections to terrorist groups. In December 2003, the U.S. Senate Finance Committee requested that the Internal Revenue Service provide detailed information on 25 U.S. Muslim organizations, including ICNA.

In March 1996, U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell stated, "One of the groups with Hamas ties is the Dallas-based Islamic Association for Palestine in North America, which, in turn, apparently is allied with the Islamic Circle of North America in New York." The New York Daily News reports that ICNA has been "probed by FBI counter-terrorism agents" for "terror ties."

Terrorism analyst Steven Emerson claims that ICNA has close ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, the ideological forebear of all radical Islamic movements -- including Hamas and al-Qaeda. Documents show that Hamas officials have participated in previous ICNA events. "The ICNA's hatred of the Jews is so fierce," writes Emerson, "that it taunted them with a repetition of what Hitler did to them." In his book American Jihad, Emerson expounds: "The ICNA openly supports militant Islamic fundamentalist organizations, praises terror attacks, issues incendiary attacks on western values and policies, and supports the imposition of Sharia [Islamic law]."

ICNA was named in a May 1991 Muslim Brotherhood memorandum as one of the Brotherhood's likeminded "organizations of our friends" who shared the common goal of destroying America and turning it into a Muslim nation. These "friends" -- which included also the Islamic Society of North America, Muslim Youth of North America, the Muslim Students Association, the Muslim Arab Youth Association, the Islamic Association for Palestine, the United Association for Studies and Research, and the International Institute of Islamic Thought -- were identified by the Brotherhood as groups that could help teach Muslims "that their work in America is a kind of grand Jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from within and 'sabotaging' its miserable house by their hands ... so that ... God's religion [Islam] is made victorious over all other religions."

ICNA works closely with the Muslim American Society (MAS). Speaking at a December 2002 conference sponsored by ICNA and MAS, Muslim cleric Shaker Elsayed complained in Arabic "about the subject unfairly named suicide bomber, homicide bomber, murderers, or killers. Our answer to this issue is simple … The Islamic scholars said whenever there is an attack on an Islamic state or occupation, or the honor of the Muslims has been violated, the Jihad is a must for everyone, a child, a lady and a man. They have to make Jihad with every tool that they can get in their hand … and if they don't have anything in their hand then they can fight with their hand without weapons."

A cognate view was expressed at an Islamic conference in Orlando, Florida, co-sponsored by ICNA. The keynote speaker at this event expressed support for suicide bombers, dismissed the notion that Muslims had any involvement with the 9/11 terrorist attacks, asserted that the U.S.-led war on terror was a Zionist plot intended to wipe out Muslims and Islam, and argued that attacks on affirmative action programs were attributable to "the rise of the Jewish cracker."

In 2000, ICNA held its 25th national convention in Baltimore. One of the featured speakers was Tayyib Yunus, head of ICNA's youth section, who used the occasion to appeal to American Muslims to send their children to Chechnya in order to wage jihad. Said Yunus: "We all want to see our youth to succeed to become doctors, to become engineers; but how many of you can actually say that you want to send your sons to jihad, to Chechnya? How many of you can actually say that you want to send your youth to fight in jihad?"

In the post-9/11 era, ICNA has taken a strong stand against the U.S. war on terror, the American military incursions in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the Patriot Act (characterizing it as an assault on the civil liberties of Americans, particularly Muslims). A member organization of the United for Peace and Justice anti-war coalition, ICNA in 2001 received a $100,000 grant from the Rockefeller Foundation.

ICNA chose not to endorse or participate in the May 14, 2005 "Free Muslims March Against Terror," an event whose stated purpose was to "send a message to the terrorists and extremists that their days are numbered . . . [and to send] a message to the people of the Middle East, the Muslim world and all people who seek freedom, democracy and peaceful coexistence that we support them."

ICNA reports that its "representatives visit public schools sharing knowledge of Islam as an attempt to correct the misrepresentations often found in secular reading materials." In pursuit of this objective, ICNA has formed an affiliation with the website DawaNet, which advocates turning public schools into forums for Islamic proselytizing. Among the suggestions offered to Islamic activists on that website is the following: "It is highly recommended that all Muslim students carry Dawa flyers in their schoolbags and purses to pass them on to their friends at school. To obtain free Islam brochures for distribution, contact the Islamic Circle of North America."

On numerous occasions, ICNA has explicitly excluded non-Muslims from its public gatherings. In September 2004, for example, ICNA sparked widespread controversy when, in cooperation with the management of the Great Adventure Theme Park in New Jersey, it organized a "Great Muslim Adventure Day" that barred non-Muslims from the park on that day. This annual tradition is still observed.

ICNA is listed as an endorser of C. Clark Kissinger's revolutionary communist movement World Can't Wait, and as a signatory of the latter's mission statement, entitled "Call to Drive out the Bush Regime." This statement alleges that the U.S. government "is waging a murderous and utterly illegitimate war in Iraq, with other countries in their sights"; "is openly torturing people, and justifying it"; "puts people in jail on the merest suspicion"; and "is moving each day closer to a theocracy, where a narrow and hateful brand of Christian fundamentalism will rule."

ICNA has many subdivisions throughout the United States. One of these is ICNA South East Region, currently based in Atlanta but originally founded as a Florida enterprise. Its current website is devoted to announcements of the organization's various events and projects. But the old website, which was abandoned as a result of public criticism, featured links to the official websites of Hezbollah and Hamas. Also appearing on the old website (from March 1, 2000 through September 27, 2001) was the following message: "Remember Your Fellow Chechnyan Muslims. ICNA requests all Muslims around the world to include Chechnyan Muslims in their daily and Qunut prayers. We must show our spiritual and material support for our brothers and sisters being oppressed by the brutal Russian forces."  Directly under the message was a link to the website, www.Qoqaz.net (a.k.a. "Jihad in Chechnya"), which was a project of Azzam Publications, an organization named for Osama bin Laden's mentor, Abdullah Azzam. Qoqaz.net was created specifically to raise finances and recruit fighters for al Qaeda-related groups and the Taliban.

In 1993, ICNA strongly condemned the Oslo accord which sought to establish peace between the Palestinians and Israel. In a joint statement with the Islamic Association for Palestine, the Islamic Committee for Palestine, the Islamic Society of North America, the Muslim Arab Youth Association, the Muslim Public Affairs Council, and the Muslim Students' Association, ICNA charged that Israel's creation in 1948 "had involved the unjust and illegal usurpation of Muslim and Christian lands and rights," and declared that "to recognize the legitimacy of that crime is a crime in itself and any agreement which involves such recognition is unjust and untenable."

 




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