Catching Up with Enaam Arnaout of
Benevolence International Foundation
03 December 2012
By Karin Friedemann
There are many sad stories about Muslims who were
sent to prison. Not all of them were misguided
romantics framed by the FBI. Some earlier victims of
the "War on Terror" were sincere followers of Islam,
who went out of their way to serve the poor and hungry
in war torn areas around the globe. Many of these
people like Iraqi Dr. Rafil Dhafir, of Help the Needy
and Palestinian Shukri Abu Baker of Holy Land
Foundation, will likely die in prison due to their
long sentences, for no crime besides raising money to
feed Muslims living under US and Israeli military
occupation.
Dr. Aafia Siddique, a child development researcher who
became passionately obsessed with helping the
Bosnians, started a collection of used boots while
studying at at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT). She made a purchase in a military
surplus outlet, possibly steel toed boots, sparking
FBI interest. Dr. Siddique and her three children were
kidnapped while awaiting a train in Pakistan in 2003.
She and at least one son spent years being tortured in
Bagram prison in Afghanistan until news of her
existence was spread by prisoners who were released as
a result of a bombing by the Taliban. Siddique was
released to the US after inquiries from the UK as to
her whereabouts following these reports. She remains
imprisoned in a mental hospital in New York State
despite repeated requests from the Pakistani
government to have her repatriated.
Therefore, it is on a bright note that TMO reports
that our dear Syrian brother Enaam Arnaout was
released in July 2010. He is alive in Chicago and
doing reasonably well after serving nine years in a
CMU prison in Terre Haute, largely for his involvement
in supplying the Bosnian army with steel toed boots in
an effort to help prevent injuries from land mines.
Prosecutors accused him of defrauding donors to
Benevolence International Foundation, which was
collecting money for humanitarian relief, in providing
"military equipment." However, this author clearly
remembers that BIF fundraisers focused on the need for
protective footwear. There was no fraud involved.
The whole case made very little sense to the public,
since we thought the US was supposedly on Bosnia's
side in the war. Court documents imply that the
charity was targeted by neocons in the Bush
administration because international money exchanges
made by Islamic charity organizations often use
mechanisms outside of the western banking system.
Muslims sponsoring orphans in foreign lands were not
considered the threat, per se, but the ability of
Muslim organizations to move money around in order to
perhaps influence the outcome of world events –
keeping people alive to fight another day – was seen
as a threat to the world order.
Arnaout's drama unfolded in 2002, when he was taken
away from us, shortly after his charity office in
Palos Hills, IL was raided by the FBI. Bush closed all
the orphanages and clinics that American Muslims
sponsored in Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Bosnia,
Chechnya, Azerbaijan and China; upon which thousands
of children, including polio victims, were depending
on for their survival.
The Chicago Tribune reports: "About a year after the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Bush administration
highlighted the charges against Arnaout, saying he had
provided material support to al-Qaida. But on the day
of his trial in 2003, the Syrian native pleaded guilty
to diverting charity money to pay for boots, uniforms
and other equipment for Islamic fighters in Bosnia and
Chechnya. The government dropped charges that he aided
a terrorist group.
"According to his lawyers, Arnaout was released in
July 2010 from federal prison to a halfway house, then
placed on home detention so he could work as a
used-car salesman. By February 2011, he began his
three-year supervised release."
That he received so light a sentence (nine years) is
remarkable, especially after the publicizing of his
old photos from LIFE magazine in the 80's showing him
walking next to Osama bin Laden, testifying to Arab
News on Soviet napalm bombing, and US news reports
that he had driven bin Laden's wife to the airport.
While he was working on his masters degree in
Pakistan, he met many public figures including
Abdullah Azzam. Arnaout fought in the Battle of Jaji
in 1987 against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan and is
regarded by many as a war hero.
Now 50 years old, Arnaout lives alone in Chicago and
works long hours at a used car lot in order to support
his six children, who live abroad. He has not seen
them, nor their mothers, since his release from prison
due to fears that he might be subject to arrest if he
travels to those countries because of his history.
Arnaout communicates by Skype with his family
regularly.
Arnaout gained permission from a judge to travel to
Saudi Arabia twice during his probation period in
order to see his elderly mother, brother, and other
family members. He was greeted with rose petals and
great festivities, as he kissed his mother's feet. His
travel was delayed due to harassment by Turkish and
Jordanian authorities at airports, despite being
cleared for travel by US authorities. His probation
period will end in February 2014.
Arnaout is the eighth of ten children, three of whom
were murdered in their home in Hamah by a special
force of the Syrian army in 1980, due to his brother
Bassam Arnaout, a famous leader of an Islamic
Brotherhood splinter group of front fighters in
militant opposition to Hafez al Assad's government.