Robert Spencer

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Pamela Geller

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Bat Ye'or

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Brigitte Gabriel

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Daniel Pipes

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Debbie Schlussel

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Walid Shoebat

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Joe Kaufman

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Wafa Sultan

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Geert Wilders

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The Nuclear Card

The Jewish Week: The Passions (And Perils) of Pamela Geller

Posted on 02 September 2010 by Garibaldi

The Passions (And Perils) Of Pamela Geller

Doug Chandler

Pamela Geller had had enough.

The right-wing blogger, whose vehement opposition to the planned Islamic community center near Ground Zero (a “mega-mosque” in her parlance) has earned Geller national headlines, rose from her seat at a Midtown diner last week and, fed up with the line of questioning, stormed out of a Jewish Week interview.

“Shame on you,” she shouted, “shame on you. Stop slamming the good guys.”

A journalist’s offense? Asking questions about her accuracy and her red-meat rhetoric.

The sense of drama seems, in part, to define Geller, who can be seen on the Internet frolicking in a bikini and posing in a skin-tight Superwoman outfit. Her blog “Atlas Shrugs” has referred to Democrats as “National Socialists,” has sided with Slobodan Milosevic, the late Serbian president charged with war crimes, and has claimed that Elena Kagan, the country’s newest Supreme Court justice and a Jew, admired “an architect” of Nazism. She has also likened President Barack Obama’s opposition to settlement growth on the West Bank to preparations for the Holocaust and has provided space to one writer’s view that Obama is Malcolm X’s love child.

Geller’s politics and tone have drawn a growing number of visitors to her blog, which she uses to promote other projects, including a provocatively named group, Stop Islamization of America, and her recently published book, “The Post-American Presidency: The Obama Administration’s War on America.”

But it’s her opposition to the proposed Islamic center — an effort she helped fuel and now helps to lead — that has arguably won Geller the most attention. Recent articles in the Washington Post and on Salon.com have noted that Geller was among the handful of people calling attention to the project nine months ago, before it hit the national radar and when the host of a Fox News show could still interview Daisy Khan, wife of the center’s leader, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, and wish her well.

Since then, Geller’s right-wing fans have hailed her as prophetic, especially for warning of the dangers posed by Muslims in this country, while progressives, moderates and at least some embarrassed conservatives see her as something entirely different: a radical activist who comes across as shrill, crude and offensive and who fails to distinguish between Islamic fanatics and the religion itself.

Those emotions are bound to escalate in the next week, as Geller plans a Sept. 11 rally in Lower Manhattan to protest the Islamic center, known as Park51.

But few people are likely to guess that the woman who has stirred so much passion is also a Jewish day school mom raised by a Yiddishkeit family in the Five Towns enclave of Hewlett, L.I.

For her part, Geller dismisses any suggestion that she put the whole story in motion as “nonsensical” and as “condescending to the American people, as if they don’t know their own minds. It’s an issue of common decency,” she said while sitting in the back of a Midtown diner. “And you can see that in the [polling] numbers,” which show 70 percent of Americans opposed to the project.

The one thing Geller does acknowledge is that “no one else was talking” about the center as she began addressing the issue on Atlas Shrugs. But no one should assume that Geller’s blog posts made the story the one it is today. Instead, as she sees it, awareness of the matter simply grew and, with it, opposition to the center.

But Geller has done more than simply write about the project. She has also organized much of the opposition, showing up at the May 25 community board meeting that heard public debate over the issue, convening the first rally against the center, in early June, and now, of course, planning next week’s rally. Geller attended the community board meeting with Robert Spencer, an author and fellow blogger with whom she often partners, where they and others often shouted down speakers in favor of the center, creating an atmosphere that reminded one board member, the son of a German Jewish refugee, of the Brown Shirt movement.

She has also debated the issue on Fox News, “The Joy Behar Show” and other TV programs, where she often raises her voice and talks over the other guests.

In person, though, the 51-year-old blogger comes across as charming, demure and even subdued, as long as she isn’t questioned or challenged too vigorously.

Like many New Yorkers, Geller appears to divide her life between “Before 9/11” and “After 9/11.” Before the terror attacks, she worked on the business side of the newspaper industry, spending the 1980s at the Daily News before moving to the New York Observer. She was mostly apolitical, although, if anything, she said, she leaned left, seeing everything “through the prism of abortion.”

All that changed after 9/11, Geller recalled, saying she “felt guilty that I didn’t know who attacked my country.” She began reading all the material she could about Islam, Geller said, citing such authors as Martin Gilbert, the British historian; Bat Ye’or, an Egyptian-born scholar whose politics are decidedly right wing; and Ibn Warraq, a former Muslim from Pakistan.

“I spent years studying the matter before I started blogging,” Geller said, adding that the more she read, the more she realized that journalists and historians were “whitewashing Islam.”

Today, Geller describes herself as a keen believer in individual rights — “the well from which all things spring” — and says the name of her blog, launched in 2004, reflects that. The name refers to the title of Ayn Rand’s most famous book, which is an inspiration for Geller. She also calls herself an ardent Zionist.

Much of her blog’s focus, though, springs from Geller’s view of Islam, which, is portrayed as a monolithic religion that can only be interpreted in a single way — the one most scholars associate with radical, Wahhabi Muslims.

“It’s not like Judaism, where you have these different levels of observance,” Geller said. “Islam is Islam. … There’s no way you can be a devout Muslim and not support jihad.”

The only moderate Muslims are those who are secular, Geller said. And she dismisses any Muslim who claims otherwise by insisting that he’s a liar — a follower of taqiyya, the Islamic principle that allows Muslims to mislead their enemies, according to Geller.

Comments such as those, by Geller and others, leave at least one local Muslim in disbelief.

“They talk about Islam as if it’s monolithic,” said Qanta Ahmed, a British-born physician who often writes about religion for the Huffington Post and other sites. “We’re 1.5 billion individuals from 57 countries and countless cultures.”

“‘Devout’ means devotion to one’s faith, and you can be very devout without being radical,” said Ahmed, whose articles have concerned such topics as the friendship and inspiration she has drawn from a number of Jews, including a rabbi; the admiration she often feels for Israel; and the hatred toward Jews conveyed in Palestinian textbooks and TV shows.

Discussing jihad, a word that means “struggle,” Ahmed said it’s not even mentioned in the five pillars of Islam, “the absolute basis of being a Muslim,” and there are three kinds of jihad to which Muslims refer. The most important, known as the “greater jihad,” is the internal struggle within each individual to be good, while the “lesser jihad” concerns the religious permission Muslims need to defend themselves against military attack.

“There is no such thing as a holy war in Islam,”Ahmed continued. “There are only just and unjust wars, and Islam is very clear about that.”

On the matter of faith, Geller herself is not especially observant, calling her children far more religious than she is. She sends two of her children to Jewish day school, although she prefers that any further information about her kids remain private — a consequence, she added, of the death threats she says she has received.

She grew up in a Conservative Jewish home — “more Yiddishkeit than by the book,” she said — and has visited Israel twice: once during college and, again, in 2006, when she blogged about Israel’s war with Hezbollah. But her views about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are just as right-wing as her views on American politics.

In Geller’s eyes, Judea and Samaria [the West Bank] are Jewish land; there are no settlers, only Jews living in the Jewish homeland; and the area’s Muslims should return the Temple Mount to Jewish hands.

Geller has also taken aim at Jewish leaders in the United States, comparing mainstream organizations to Jews before the Holocaust who ignored all the danger signs. She has also called J Street and the National Jewish Democratic Council “kapos,” a reference to the Jews in Europe who aided the Nazis.

Geller’s fans include Lori Lowenthal Marcus, founder of the right-wing, pro-Israel Z Street, who said “she’s definitely serving a need. She’s an indefatigable fighter and very brazen, which is necessary to raise the profile of the issues.”

Another view comes from Todd Gitlin, a progressive scholar who teaches journalism and sociology at Columbia University, who considers Geller part of “a long history” of firebrands devoted to “this sort of agitation. … These are people who have a fixation on some paranoid scenario,” he said, and they often become a focal point for wider passions.

While not discussing Geller specifically, Daniel Pipes, director of the Middle East Forum, a neoconservative think tank, said the tenor of the conversation regarding Islam in recent months has distressed him. The “good part” is that Americans are now pushing back against Islamacists, or radical Muslims, but the “bad part” is that many are now doing so “in a crude way,” calling Mohammed a pedophile and referring to all Muslims as terrorists.

Many of today’s bloggers, Pipes said, “came of age on 9/11” and haven’t done the serious study of Islam that he and others have. As a result, he added, much of what they write is based on ignorance.

For her part, Geller defends the tone of her blog, calling Atlas Shrugs “my living room and kitchen” — a place where she can kick back and yell, like some people shout at their TV. Her book and opinion pieces “are more studied and more measured.”

“There’s no gray area with me,” Geller said. “I know why I think what I think.”

  • hoxha

    i think she is a devel. Not a femail. not Jewish. Nothing… I know many jewish people who cant stand her and for what she stands for. She is ambarasing her religion. Shame on you… Pamella. You sucssed in getting the ignorant stupit people to listen to you . Which makes you look even worst.

  • Openminded

    I love how she breaks the laws of physics by saying that the Cordoba house will be looking down on a grave site of 9/11. Actually it’s a construction site that’s already last I checked 26 stories tall, 9 stories taller than the Preposed Islamic centre that would make Cordoba house looking up to not down. With Cordobas height and location I don’t think that you will even be able to see the building from the city skyline. Actually the One World Trade Centre, a symbol of capitalism will be looking down on a 15 story Islamic Community Centre.
    Victorious symbol of Islam, I doubt it, run of the mill Islamic Community Centre, most likely. A place to preach suicide bombing, a little bit of a public building to push those messages plus older Muslim women would have a cow if you subjected them to sermons like that.

  • Joe T.

    Pamela Geller is a great heroine whose heart is full of the love of liberty and the greatness that is America. She does not hate, but she does have contempt for the haters of personal autonomy who represent worldwide Islam and American progressivism. Hatred and fear (‘islamophobia’) are emotions of defective self-control and have no role in contempt, which is to have a morality-based low opinion of the ideas, motives and/or behaviors of identified persons for identified reasons. She is a true heroine to express that contempt even in the face of media derision and documented death threats against her. That she is hated by the slanderers on the fascist left who operate this website is something of which she can be proud. Even a casual observer of this website will observe that reasoned disagreement with critics of Islam is not its strong point. Of course it is hard to blame you, because the primitive ideology of Islam is not rationally defensible.

  • http://www.talk2action.org Talk to Action Rox

    another update, Richard silverstein, Phil Weiss, and Juan Cole have written excellent pieces on this Joyce Chernick, who is funding Geller, Spencer, and the current Park 51 controversy,

    Seems like David Horowitz of frongpagemag.com isn’t the only person funding these fucked up extremists,

    Loonwatch please follow up and do an an expose on Chernick

    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/tikun_olam/2010/09/06/chernick-funds-horowitz-spencer-attacks-on-park51-mosque/
    Chernick Funds Horowitz-Spencer Attacks on Park51 Mosque

    Meet the Chernicks
    by Philip Weiss on September
    mondoweiss.net/2010/09/meet-the-chernicks.html

  • Dave Heaney

    I promise one thing, she is eating away at her heart with all this hate. Slowly chipping away. She will destroy herself.

  • http://www.inspiredbymuhammad.com Inspired By Muhammad

    The Jerusalem Post had this very interesting article exposing the major funder behind Geller’s organisation and Spencer’s Jihad Watch. It’s an LA woman called Joyce
    http://www.jpost.com/jewishworld/jewishnews/article.aspx?id=187113&newsletter=100905&utm_source=Pulseem&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=JPost%20Newsletter%2005/09

    I think Loon Watch should add this Joyce Chernick to the loon list, or at least dig up all there is on her

    ———–

    Major pro-Israel giver funds ‘Jihad Watch’
    By JTA
    09/05/2010 09:36

    WASHINGTON – A woman who with her husband has contributed large sums to pro-Israel and Jewish groups is the principal funder of the group that has taken the lead in opposing an Islamic center in lower Manhattan.

    Jihad Watch, the group that is organizing a rally against the planned Islamic center timed for the ninth anniversary of the Sept. 11 2001 attacks – the center is planned for within three blocks of the site of the attacks – is funded by Freedom Center, a conservative group based in Los Angeles.

    An investigative report appearing on the online version of Politico on Saturday says that it has confirmed that the “lion’s share” of the $920,000 funneled through Freedom Center to Jihad Watch over the last three years originated with Joyce Chernick.

    Aubrey and Joyce Chernick, Politico reported, have over the years contributed to, among other groups, the Jewish Federation Council of Greater Los Angeles; the Anti-Defamation League; the Zionist Organization of America; MEMRI, a group that distributes translations of inflammatory Arabic language material; the Investigative Project on Terrorism, a group that tracks what it depicts as the threat of radical Islam; the American Jewish Congress; CAMERA, a group that tracks what it says is anti-Israel bias in the media; the Central Fund for Israel, a clearinghouse for moneys directed to pro-settler groups; and a number of conservative think tanks.

    Aubrey Chernick, additionally, was at one time a trustee of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

    A number of these groups, including the Investigative Project, the ADL and the ZOA, have positioned themselves as opposed to the Islamic center. Other Jewish groups, led by the Reform movement, have been outspoken in supporting the center.

    Jihad Watch, founded by Robert Spencer, has in recent months taken on board Pamela Geller, the New York-based blogger who launched efforts to stop the center’s building.

    Jihad Watch leads those groups that contend that the Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, who founded the Cordoba Initiative — the organization behind the planned center — is not, as he and a number of Jewish backers claim, a moderate attempting to bridge divides, but is instead a radical.

    Group opposing Ground Zero mosque is organizing rally on the 9th anniversary of the September 11 terror attacks.

  • Zaxim

    phatima,
    500 Muslims did not die on 9/11, I’ve been doing research on this, and we can say around 30 probably did. As far as Jews not dying on 9/11, that is also untrue, and that actually 5 Israelis were killed that day as well. Who knows how many Jews were killed. Also, remember that Islam teaches that any murder is a tragedy!

    Hopefully Loonwatch will publish my list of Muslim 9/11 victims, so we can set the record straight.

  • phatima

    Why doesnt these people pay attention to the fact that 20% [ 500] people who were killed in 9/11 attacks were muslims. why would we kill our own brothers. and you know…. 0% JEWS DIED IN 9/11 ATTACKS!!! THEY SHOULD RATHER BE AFTER ZIONS THAN AFTER MUSLIMS……

  • http://www.facebook.com/britpak Mohammed Abbasi

    @mindy1, I agree but we also need to be wary of fanatics like pamela geller taking advantage of the deaths of innocents and making a name for herself

  • mindy1

    I think 9/11 should be for two things-remembering the dead and praying for peace.

  • julian riotoni

    And now Geller just dissed the families of 9/11 who lost their loved ones. What a bitch.
    http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2010/09/hes-not-even-a-911-family-member.html

    And then hypocritically claims that the leader of the opposition to her rally is not even a “911 family member”, and she isn’t either!!!!

    She’s totally lost the plot.

    Read the hate towards those parents, sons, daughters who lost their loved ones, she’s pissing all over their graves with this 9/11 demonstration.

    Surely out of respect for “hallowed ground” why would they hold a hate rally on that day?

    Why after 9 years has this anti-Islam suddenly accelerated and exploded in our culture. It wasn’t even this bad after 9/11.

    The timing and rhetoric is aimed towards the left wing Democrats taking governance and Obama’s presidency, I can see no other logical reason.

  • julian riotoni

    Pam’s latest rant on her hate rally on 9/11

    “Thousands of patriots praying with flags, weeping, at Ground Zero on September 11, instead of a gang of 9/11 Truthers and thugs. They’re not coming to agitate. They’re coming to pay their respects. Given the declarations of Daisy Khan about September 11, 2011 and the carnival atmosphere of every September 11 in the past few years, we cannot and will not move the date. It is necessary for Americans to reclaim that date.”

    Who is she “reclaiming” 9/11 from? She’s a paranoid schizophrenic hater, she’s needs to be committed into a mental asylum for her and the publics safety. Or failing that, she needs deporting back to Israel.

  • nat

    lol. Check out her reading list that informed her view: “scholars” like Bat Yeor and Ibn Warraq!

    No wonder. You can read all you like, but if you don’t have the intellect to filter what you’re reading and recognise BS – you’ll be a dummy forever.

  • Les

    @NassirH

    What’s in their hearts is much uglier.

  • Mengen

    Pamela Geller is enjoying her 15 min of fame. It won’t last. They may entertain for a while, kind of like dancing monkeys, but America will tire of these pea brained loud mouths after the entertainment value wears out.

  • http://loonwatch NassirH

    I’ll never get used to that picture.
    Pamela, Robert, Gabriel . . . Islamophobes aren’t exactly a good looking bunch.

  • Mossizle

    She sees everything “through the prism of abortion.”

    If only her mother saw life that way.

  • julian riotoni

    “In Geller’s eyes, Judea and Samaria [the West Bank] are Jewish land; there are no settlers, only Jews living in the Jewish homeland; and the area’s Muslims should return the Temple Mount to Jewish hands.”

    She’s a far right Zionist. Zionism has no place in
    America, it is undermining our Constitution. Go home Geller, back to Israel.

  • Nur Alia

    Personally…the more they talk, the more they expose themselves as people gaining notoriaty on fear.

    Remember Ergun Caner?…Who?

  • Mohammed Sameel

    Well what can I say, Can only hope she will realise sooner what she is doing is nothing but a crime against humanity….

    They aim to extinguish God’s light with their utterances: 9 but God has willed to spread His light in all its fullness, however hateful this may be to all who deny the truth – Quran – 61:8

  • Amazing

    Geller’s blog is the cesspool where the most extreme neoconservatives dwell and reproduce.

  • julian riitoni

    “Today, Geller describes herself as a keen believer in individual rights”, but apparently not if you are an American Muslim.

    Geller’s no Libertarian.

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