Skip to comments.
Bronx Rent Dispute Leads To Raid Of Imam's Upstate House
NY1 News ^
| January 07, 2006
Posted on 01/07/2006 7:50:13 PM PST by seastay
What started as an apparent rent dispute in the Bronx, has led to a police raid on the Upstate home of a controversial Imam.
The case against Warith Deen Umar began December 30th when the NYPD arrested the Imam at his home on Union Avenue in Longwood in the Bronx. Umar allegedly pulled a gun on a tenant and police say they found a shotgun and a rifle at the home. He is charged with menacing and weapons possession.
Then on Friday, a team of NYPD, FBI and local police searched another home belonging to the Imam in Bethlehem, a suburb of Albany. The police have not said what they were looking for, but Umar says they took computers belonging to his wife and college-age children.
Umar says he is innocent of all charges and the authorities are harassing him for no reason.
"They don't frighten me, said Umar. They don't frighten me. They make me angry. They make me hate them more. So, this evil that they are perpetrating is not something that creates a lot of intimidation. What it does is it creates ill will."
Umar, a longtime Imam for the Department of Correction, was fired in 2003 when quotes attributed to him praised the September 11th hijackers and predicted more attacks. Umar claims to have never made those remarks and maintains he's not un-American.
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 911; americahaters; blackmuslims; jihadinamerica; sept11; traitors; trop
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21 next last
Warith Deen Umar

Muslim cleric Former Islamic chaplain of New York's prison system In 1971 was a member of the Harlem Five, and was tried on conspiracy-to-murder charges
"Even Muslims who say they are against terrorism secretly admire and applaud [the 9/11 hijackers]. . . . This is the sort of teaching they don't want in prison. But this is what I'm doing."
Warith Deen Umar is a Muslim cleric who, prior to his retirement in 2000, spent some twenty years helping to run New York's growing Islamic prison program, recruiting and training dozens of chaplains, and ministering to thousands of inmates himself. With help from the Saudi government, he traveled to Saudi Arabia and brought that country's harsh form of Islam to New York's expanding ranks of Muslim prisoners. He continues to visit New York state prisons as a volunteer chaplain.
He believes that the September 11 hijackers should be honored as martyrs, and that the U.S. risks further terrorism attacks because it oppresses Muslims around the world. "Without justice, there will be warfare, and it can come to this country, too," he says. In his view, the natural candidates to help press such an attack are African-Americans who embrace Islam in prison. While Imam Umar says the focus of his preaching usually "is on work, family and getting an education," he also says that prison "is the perfect recruitment and training grounds for radicalism and the Islamic religion." Umar adds, "There is more happening in this country than most people know about," he says regarding the Muslim anger that is quietly building behind bars and on the outside. "Prisons are a powder keg. The question is the ignition."
"Even Muslims who say they are against terrorism secretly admire and applaud" the hijackers, Umar wrote in an unpublished memoir. The Koran, he said, does not condemn terrorism against oppressors of Muslims, even if innocent people die. "This is the sort of teaching they don't want in prison," he said. "But this is what I'm doing."
A prison chaplain since 1975, Umar has seen Islam grow among inmates, mirroring the vast increase in the incarceration of African-Americans, some of whom adopt the religion as inmates. As the most influential Muslim prison chaplain in New York, which has the fourth-largest state system in the nation, he and some of his trainees adopted the fundamentalist offshoot of Sunni Islam known as Wahhabism. Rooted in Saudi Arabia, it stresses a literal reading of the Koran and intolerance for people and sects that do not follow its absolutist teaching. The chaplains have operated with little supervision from state prison officials, who say the constitutional protection of religious freedom prevents them from closely monitoring religious services.
Imam Umar -- born Wallace Gene Marks and later known as Wallace 10X -- twice has traveled to Saudi Arabia for worship and study at the expense of the Saudi government and its affiliated charities, part of an extensive program aimed at spreading Islam in U.S. prisons. He and other prison chaplains also have studied and attended conferences at an Islamic school in Virginia that U.S. officials raided in 2002 in a probe of organizations suspected of helping move Saudi money to Middle Eastern terrorists.
Umar and some of his colleagues have brought Wahhabism's harshest prejudices to their captive flock. On Sept. 11, 2001, the chaplain at the men's prison in remote Cape Vincent, N.Y., preached that God had inflicted his punishment on the wicked and the victims deserved what they got, according to a labor arbitrator's subsequent ruling upholding his firing. Shocked officials at the prison didn't intervene for fear of sparking a riot. About six weeks later, the chaplain at the Albion Correctional Facility for women told inmates that Osama bin Laden "is a soldier of Allah, a hero of Allah," prison officials say.
New York also has seen a rash of complaints from inmates who adhere to the minority Shiite sect of Islam. The tension reflects a centuries-old split between Shiites and the Sunni majority. Imam Umar and other chaplains have imported into New York prisons Sunni absolutist perspectives, some inmates say, including a bias against Shiites. Nearly all the chaplains he helped hire are Sunni.
Imam Umar helped pioneer government-paid Muslim prison ministry in the 1970s, but his earliest experiences behind bars were as a teenage criminal. He says he spent his 15th and 16th birthdays in Illinois jails for purse snatchings and drug crimes. "I went to jail too many times to count," he says.
Wallace Gene Marks, as he was then known, moved to New York in the late 1960s and befriended a group of fledgling militants in Harlem. He and his friends talked "about taking off pigs [police officers] and spreading guns and weapons to people," he says. They were overheard by two undercover police officers.
He and four others, dubbed the Harlem Five, were tried on conspiracy-to-murder charges in 1971. "We only had my 9mm handgun, another defendant's 30-30 rifle and some crude hand-made bombs, fashioned with gun powder and nails," he says. The Harlem Five argued that their talk had been just bravado and beat the conspiracy charges. Wallace Marks, however, was sent to prison for possessing weapons. "If it happened today, I would have been called a terrorist," he says.
Before beginning his two-year prison term, he visited Nation of Islam kingpin Louis Farrakhan, who promised that Allah would protect him. Mr. Marks became a Nation of Islam leader in prison and later changed his name to Wallace 10X. In 1975, shortly after he was released, New York put the 30-year-old parolee on its payroll as one of the state's first two Muslim chaplains. Some of the other early Muslim chaplains also were ex-convicts. Eventually he moved to the more orthodox Sunni school of Islam and changed his name to Warith Deen Umar.
This profile was adapted from the article "Criminal Fifth Column," written by Paul Barrett and published by FrontPageMagazine.com on February 5, 2003. http://www.discoverthenetwork.org/individualProfile.asp?indid=1238
1
posted on
01/07/2006 7:50:14 PM PST
by
seastay
To: seastay
Imams who live in glass houses shouldn't pull guns.
2
posted on
01/07/2006 7:57:00 PM PST
by
sono
(Every purple finger is a bullet in the chest of terrorism.)
To: seastay
"Even Muslims who say they are against terrorism secretly admire and applaud" the hijackers, Umar wrote in an unpublished memoir. The Koran, he said, does not condemn terrorism against oppressors of Muslims, even if innocent people die. "This is the sort of teaching they don't want in prison," he said. "But this is what I'm doing." And these types of people who believe this are in our country why????
3
posted on
01/07/2006 7:58:16 PM PST
by
Brad’s Gramma
(Yo! Everyone! Read Coop's tagline!!! :))
To: sono
this cat is stupid enough to tell it like it really is.....for that, I'm grateful!
maybe he "ministered" to Padilla?
To: Brad's Gramma
Well I too would like to find out why, but of course we shouldn't ever do so by monitoring their electronic communications/sarcasm off
To: seastay
To: Frank_2001
Every terrorist must be hunted down.
7
posted on
01/07/2006 8:14:56 PM PST
by
CAWats
(And I will make no distinction between the terrorists and the democrats.)
To: seastay
They make me hate them moreMore than what? He says he is not unAmerican but he hates who? Us? I think so. Send him out on the next Liki Tiki.
8
posted on
01/07/2006 8:19:31 PM PST
by
taxesareforever
(Government is running amuck)
To: taxesareforever
He's nothing but a damned former criminal who hopped on the Islam bandwagon.
The name Wallace 10X says it all. What's with these "X"es anyway?
9
posted on
01/07/2006 8:46:57 PM PST
by
Mears
(The Killer Queen:caviar and cigarettes)
To: taxesareforever
He's nothing but a damned former criminal who hopped on the Islam bandwagon.
The name Wallace 10X says it all. What's with these "X"es anyway?
10
posted on
01/07/2006 8:47:19 PM PST
by
Mears
(The Killer Queen:caviar and cigarettes)
To: Frank_2001
:)
11
posted on
01/07/2006 9:08:42 PM PST
by
Brad’s Gramma
(Yo! Everyone! Read Coop's tagline!!! :))
To: seastay
"We only had my 9mm handgun, another defendant's 30-30 rifle and some crude hand-made bombs, fashioned with gun powder and nails," he says....
"If it happened today, I would have been called a terrorist," he says. ONLY? He ONLY had some bombs strangely reminiscent of the palestinian weapon of choice: crude, hand-made, filled with nails. And yes - he would be called a terrorist today. He was then, as well.
12
posted on
01/07/2006 9:24:57 PM PST
by
cgk
(I don't see myself as a conservative. I see myself as a religious, right-wing, wacko extremist.)
To: Cacique
13
posted on
01/07/2006 9:26:05 PM PST
by
nutmeg
("We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good." - Hillary Clinton 6/28/04)
To: seastay
"Even Muslims who say they are against terrorism secretly admire and applaud" the hijackers, Umar wrote in an unpublished memoir. The Koran, he said, does not condemn terrorism against oppressors of Muslims, even if innocent people die. "This is the sort of teaching they don't want in prison," he said. "But this is what I'm doing." People didn't believe what Hitler wrote in Mien Kamp until it was too late, either.
14
posted on
01/07/2006 11:11:35 PM PST
by
ApplegateRanch
(Islam: a Satanically Transmitted Disease, spread by unprotected intimate contact with the Koranus.)
To: seastay
Insane is as insane does. What a blithering donkey.
15
posted on
01/07/2006 11:14:33 PM PST
by
DoNotDivide
(Were the American Revolutionaries rebelling against Constituted Authority and thereby God? I say no.)
To: Mears
Could it be due to this?
While Malcolm was in prison, he converted to the Muslim religious sect, the Nation of Islam. When he was released in 1952, he changed his last name to X because he considered the name Little to have been a slave name. The Nation of Islams leader, Elijah Muhammad, made Malcolm a minister and sent him around the country on speaking engagements. Malcolm spoke about black pride and separatism, and rejected the civil rights movement call for integration and equality.
16
posted on
01/07/2006 11:42:28 PM PST
by
taxesareforever
(Government is running amuck)
To: seastay
Well now this idiot can return to prison, not as a "Chaplin" but as the criminal he is. Illegal possession of firearms, assault with a deadly weapon etc.
Why this sunni @$$%# is still running free after being caught red handed with nail bombs is a question our Judicial system should be called on. Why he then was given privileged access to the prison system is beyond reason. Are there no adults left in control?
17
posted on
01/08/2006 2:17:33 AM PST
by
American in Israel
(A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
To: seastay
A homegrown Muslim Imam psycho, we didn't have to import him to subvert our way of life. A black Muslim nutter
18
posted on
01/08/2006 2:22:32 AM PST
by
dennisw
("What one man can do another can do" - The Edge)
To: American in Israel
|

WARITH DEEN UMAR
- Muslim cleric
- Former Islamic chaplain of New York's prison system
- In 1971 was a member of the Harlem Five, and was tried on conspiracy-to-murder charges
- "Even Muslims who say they are against terrorism secretly admire and applaud [the 9/11 hijackers]. . . . This is the sort of teaching they don't want in prison. But this is what I'm doing."
Warith Deen Umar is a Muslim cleric who, prior to his retirement in 2000, spent some twenty years helping to run New York's growing Islamic prison program, recruiting and training dozens of chaplains, and ministering to thousands of inmates himself. With help from the Saudi government, he traveled to Saudi Arabia and brought that country's harsh form of Islam to New York's expanding ranks of Muslim prisoners. He continues to visit New York state prisons as a volunteer chaplain. He believes that the September 11 hijackers should be honored as martyrs, and that the U.S. risks further terrorism attacks because it oppresses Muslims around the world. "Without justice, there will be warfare, and it can come to this country, too," he says. In his view, the natural candidates to help press such an attack are African-Americans who embrace Islam in prison. While Imam Umar says the focus of his preaching usually "is on work, family and getting an education," he also says that prison "is the perfect recruitment and training grounds for radicalism and the Islamic religion." Umar adds, "There is more happening in this country than most people know about," he says regarding the Muslim anger that is quietly building behind bars and on the outside. "Prisons are a powder keg. The question is the ignition." "Even Muslims who say they are against terrorism secretly admire and applaud" the hijackers, Umar wrote in an unpublished memoir. The Koran, he said, does not condemn terrorism against oppressors of Muslims, even if innocent people die. "This is the sort of teaching they don't want in prison," he said. "But this is what I'm doing." A prison chaplain since 1975, Umar has seen Islam grow among inmates, mirroring the vast increase in the incarceration of African-Americans, some of whom adopt the religion as inmates. As the most influential Muslim prison chaplain in New York, which has the fourth-largest state system in the nation, he and some of his trainees adopted the fundamentalist offshoot of Sunni Islam known as Wahhabism. Rooted in Saudi Arabia, it stresses a literal reading of the Koran and intolerance for people and sects that do not follow its absolutist teaching. The chaplains have operated with little supervision from state prison officials, who say the constitutional protection of religious freedom prevents them from closely monitoring religious services. Imam Umar -- born Wallace Gene Marks and later known as Wallace 10X -- twice has traveled to Saudi Arabia for worship and study at the expense of the Saudi government and its affiliated charities, part of an extensive program aimed at spreading Islam in U.S. prisons. He and other prison chaplains also have studied and attended conferences at an Islamic school in Virginia that U.S. officials raided in 2002 in a probe of organizations suspected of helping move Saudi money to Middle Eastern terrorists. Umar and some of his colleagues have brought Wahhabism's harshest prejudices to their captive flock. On Sept. 11, 2001, the chaplain at the men's prison in remote Cape Vincent, N.Y., preached that God had inflicted his punishment on the wicked and the victims deserved what they got, according to a labor arbitrator's subsequent ruling upholding his firing. Shocked officials at the prison didn't intervene for fear of sparking a riot. About six weeks later, the chaplain at the Albion Correctional Facility for women told inmates that Osama bin Laden "is a soldier of Allah, a hero of Allah," prison officials say. New York also has seen a rash of complaints from inmates who adhere to the minority Shiite sect of Islam. The tension reflects a centuries-old split between Shiites and the Sunni majority. Imam Umar and other chaplains have imported into New York prisons Sunni absolutist perspectives, some inmates say, including a bias against Shiites. Nearly all the chaplains he helped hire are Sunni. Imam Umar helped pioneer government-paid Muslim prison ministry in the 1970s, but his earliest experiences behind bars were as a teenage criminal. He says he spent his 15th and 16th birthdays in Illinois jails for purse snatchings and drug crimes. "I went to jail too many times to count," he says. Wallace Gene Marks, as he was then known, moved to New York in the late 1960s and befriended a group of fledgling militants in Harlem. He and his friends talked "about taking off pigs [police officers] and spreading guns and weapons to people," he says. They were overheard by two undercover police officers. He and four others, dubbed the Harlem Five, were tried on conspiracy-to-murder charges in 1971. "We only had my 9mm handgun, another defendant's 30-30 rifle and some crude hand-made bombs, fashioned with gun powder and nails," he says. The Harlem Five argued that their talk had been just bravado and beat the conspiracy charges. Wallace Marks, however, was sent to prison for possessing weapons. "If it happened today, I would have been called a terrorist," he says. Before beginning his two-year prison term, he visited Nation of Islam kingpin Louis Farrakhan, who promised that Allah would protect him. Mr. Marks became a Nation of Islam leader in prison and later changed his name to Wallace 10X. In 1975, shortly after he was released, New York put the 30-year-old parolee on its payroll as one of the state's first two Muslim chaplains. Some of the other early Muslim chaplains also were ex-convicts. Eventually he moved to the more orthodox Sunni school of Islam and changed his name to Warith Deen Umar.
This profile was adapted from the article "Criminal Fifth Column," written by Paul Barrett and published by FrontPageMagazine.com on February 5, 2003. |
|
|
|
|
|
19
posted on
01/08/2006 2:31:13 AM PST
by
dennisw
("What one man can do another can do" - The Edge)
To: seastay
"Then on Friday, a team of NYPD, FBI and local police searched another home belonging to the Imam in Bethlehem, a suburb of Albany. The police have not said what they were looking for, but Umar says they took computers belonging to his wife and college-age children."
This is a little too close to my kids and grandkids.
20
posted on
01/08/2006 5:35:03 AM PST
by
sageb1
(This is the Final Crusade. There are only 2 sides. Pick one.)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson