Public-school imam: 'We could just kill you'
Witness affidavits say Muslim leader
tried to 'incite violence'
against critics
Posted: March 09, 2010
10:49 pm Eastern
© 2010 WorldNetDaily
A former administrative assistant for a publicly funded
school in Minnesota – located in the same building as a Muslim
mosque and run by a Muslim imam – stated in legal documents that
the school director told her, "We could just kill you, yeah tell
your husband we'll do his job for him."

The logo for the publicly funded Tarek ibn Ziyad school
in Minnesota
Tarek ibn Ziyad Academy, or TiZA, in Inver Grove Heights,
Minn., which also
shares space in a building with the Minnesota
chapter of the Muslim American Society, came under state
investigation after multiple reports by columnist Katherine
Kersten.
The charter school for kindergarten through eighth grade is
run by executive director Asad Zaman, a Muslim religious leader,
and shares space in a building with a mosque and MAS. In the
school, there are daily breaks for prayer, halal food is served
in its cafeteria and Arabic study is mandatory, Kersten said in
a 2008 report. School buses do not take students home until
after-school Muslim classes are completed.
A state investigation focused on the Friday prayer events, 30
minutes long and at that time led by adults in the school. The
state found the events violated the law and sought changes.
Now the academy is embroiled in a legal battle with the
American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota. Last year, the ACLU
filed a federal suit claiming the school impermissibly promotes
religion.
According to Kersten's most recent report in the Minneapolis
Star-Tribune, former administrative assistant Janeha Edwards
said in an affadvait that she saw "no real distinction" between
the operations of the school and the Muslim American Society.
For years, "I watched [school officials] lash out in order to
control those around them, and to retaliate against anyone who
spoke poorly of the school, or otherwise challenged their
authority," she said.
According to the affidavit, Zaman suggested "we could just
kill you" after becoming upset when Edwards "challeng[ed] his
authority."
Zaman claimed in an affidavit he has no recollection of
making such a statement.
Likewise, Khalid Elmasry, father of a former student at Tarek
ibn Ziyad Academy, claims in affidavits that after he criticized
the school, the executive director made a statement at a parent
meeting that appeared to be "an attempt to incite violence
against me and my family."
The ACLU sought a witness protective order in January,
telling the court the academy's intimidation was keeping
potential witnesses from testifying. Kersten reports that the
court barred witness harassment or intimidation by either party
Feb. 10.
Elmasry sought witness protection because he testified about
the school's
financial dealings with the Muslim American
Society of Minnesota at a Minnesota Senate subcommittee hearing
on charter school lease aid in January. Later, Elmasry said a
friend and parent of a student at the school told him the school
administration called a parent meeting and showed a video of
Elmasry's testimony. Elmasry's friend said Zaman accused Elmasry
of talking to the Minnesota Department of Education and
"selling" his "iman," or his Islamic faith.
In the affidavit, Elmasry explains he was frightened.
"It is well-known in Islam that a Muslim who rejects his or
her faith is committing an act punishable by death," he said.
"There are many
accounts of Muslims taking matters into their
own hands and killing people they believe have sold or rejected
their Islamic faith or Iman."
Kersten reports Elmasry said he was worried because "the
overwhelming majority of TiZA's enrollment is Somali, living in
a community that has been troubled with many acts of random
violence. I am concerned that Zaman could be exploiting this
fact in the hope that word will reach a radical or unstable
individual or group within the Twin Cities Muslim community that
a Muslim has sold his Iman and is trying to shut down a Muslim
school that serves Somalis."
According to court documents, the school denies having made
any threats.
"Even if the Court accepts the comment alleged by Elmasry,"
the school explains, "such remarks have significance only when
issued by a proper Islamic judge, of which Elmasry and Zaman are
not."
WND reported earlier when members of a TV news crew were
attacked while investigating the school's actions.
There also were reports when a substitute teacher at the
school said religion appeared to be a significant educational
focus. Amanda Getz said her duties included taking students to
the bathroom, four at a time, to perform "their ritual washing."
She said teachers also "led the kids into the gym, where a man
dressed in white with a white cap, who had been at the school
all day" led prayer.
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