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The California chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations recently put up a poster reading, "Build a wall of resistance. Don't talk to the FBI." The national group, CAIR, often has made itself the public face of the Muslim community when talking about fighting terrorism and has an extremely strained relationship with law enforcement. The Justice Department has linked CAIR to a terror financing case and the FBI will not work directly with its members. The American Muslim community is diverse and widespread. No single organization speaks for everyone, and the religion itself does not have a leader, as Catholics have the pope. When young men have embraced a radical, violent view of Islam in the United States, they sometimes have done so in secret, without the support of knowledge of local religious leaders or their families. Melvin Bledsoe, whose son, Carlos, is charged with killing an Army private at a recruiting station in Little Rock, Ark., testified about his son's conversion to Islam and isolation from his family. Bledsoe said he didn't fully understand what was happening as his son became increasingly distant, stopped coming home for holidays and changed his name. He said the United States is not being aggressive enough about rooting out radical elements in the Islamic community. Asked at the hearing what he wanted to gain by testifying, Bledsoe responded to the panel: "Call a terrorist what it is." "I think we should forget about our political affiliations and conditions," he said. Zuhdi Jasser, president of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy, said he hopes Congress develops the political will to deal with extremism. That means "a patient and understanding and thoughtful communications process that doesn't label anyone that discusses this as being Islamophobic or hateful," Jasser said. "As a Muslim I am telling you: It is not offensive."
[Associated
Press;
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