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Sunday, April 8, 2007

The Daily Times of Pakistan is on the case of our own local Immigration Imams, in this instance discussing local charity support for Imam Muhammad Masood (what happened to the other arrested, anyway...?). It sounds like the Daily Times is less reticent to use the testimony of anonymous local Muslims than is The Jewish Advocate. This blogger and Miss Kelly are mentioned in both articles.

Jewish and Christian clerics helping Hafiz Saeed’s brother

WASHINGTON: Jewish and Christian leaders are helping Muhammad Masood, brother of Hafiz Saeed, founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba and head of Jamaatud Dawa, ease the financial burden he is reportedly facing. The former Boston imam was arrested last year as part of an ongoing investigation into a vast visa fraud scheme.

Three weeks ago, some of them turned up to form a campaign to raise money for “humanitarian assistance” to the beleaguered imam, according to the Friday issue of the newspaper, The Jewish Advocate.

Imam Masood is the former “spiritual director” of the Islamic Centre of New England at Sharon, Massachusetts. He and his son were arrested in November 2006 along with 33 other individuals who were questioned about the immigration ploy, which allegedly helped large numbers of illegal aliens fraudulently obtain religious worker visas to enter or remain in the United States, according to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents.

Imam Masood is living in a house situated over an estate of 52 acres with free gas and electricity. Daily Times has learnt that on March 24, there was a fund-raiser for him at which he collected $40,000 in Burlington, Massachusetts, from the Muslim community. Quipped one disgruntled Boston Muslim, “How much in grocery supplies does the holy family need, unless he is feeding jinns? And how can one forget that a couple of adults in Masood’s family are earning members?”

Two of the clerics, Rabbi Barry Starr and Rev Deborah Cayer, will not say how much money they have raised for Masood. They have appealed to their congregations to make tax-deductible donations to the rabbi’s discretionary fund at Temple Israel. The two consider Masood a good man and they say they are concerned about him and his family, as well as his “spiritual community”...

There's more, and here is a link to a scan of The Jewish Advocate article.

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