Hasbara Files: “Islam in Africa”

A new website, "Islam in Africa," claims to be a scholarly. On closer inspection, it turns out to be run of the mill Zionist propaganda.

Israel's Wall. Bethlehem, Gaza (Montecruz Foto, via Flickr CC).

H-Africa is an academic listserv that encourages discussion about “Africa’s history, culture, and African studies generally.” It is widely used and respected in the scholarly community. Naturally, I signed up. It is run from Michigan State University.

Recently, members of the listserv was alerted to a new post from someone named Moshe Terdman announcing the launch of a new blog called “Islam in Africa Watch.”  Terdman claimed that “the knowledge about Islam in Africa is lacking” and his blog would “shed light on this important issue.”  He also announced that content for the site would be sourced from “Jihadi forums” and from “websites of Shiite, Sufi, and radical Muslim organizations throughout Africa.”  He ended by promising that “this blog will include also articles and analysis pieces.”

This came as news to the scholars subscribed to the list. First Ibra Sene (assistant professor of history and international affairs at Wooster College) and Douglas Thomas (assistant professor of history at Southern Arkansas University) noted that it was news to them that “knowledge on Islam in Africa is lacking.” Brett O’Bannon, an associate professor of political science at DePauw University, who had just traveled back from Senegal, wondered if Terdmann would also announce a “Christian Missionary Watch,” or a “China Investment Watch” ? O’Bannon also contrasted the proposed blog’s language with the open and informed debates about various issues he encountered among Muslims in Senegal.

But it was another subscriber Thomas L. Miles who was more direct in his response:

I was rather surprised to see an advertisement here for the “Orient Research Group”‘s “Islam in Africa Watch” website.  Just to be clear, the constellation of organizations listed on this website are a series of right-wing Zionist groups tightly tied to elements of the neo-conservative movement in the United States.  Prominent on this website’s credits are the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center & The Project for the Research of Islamist Movements (PRISM), both run by prominent Canadian right-wing Zionist campaigner Barry Rubin.

‘They are based, as is the author of the [proposed Islam in Africa] blog, at The Interdisciplinary Center (IDC), a privately owned organization with strong ties to the Israeli government and military, which also hosts right-wing pro-[Israeli] settlement campaigns such as “Stand With Us” and HelpUsWin.org.

‘[Terdman] is a career member of the IDC/GLORIA family, and a frequent co-author with Reuven Paz, the former director of Israel’s counterintelligence agency, the Shin Bet.  Terdman (variously Mr. and Dr.) has written such news articles as “The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND): Al-Qaeda’s Unlikely Ally in Nigeria,” and “Caribbean Memories of Slavery and the Myths of Othman dan Fodio’s Sokoto Caliphate” (the key word is “myths.” The author wishes to portray Shehu Usman dan Fodio as a sort of Al Qaeda ante litteram).  With Paz he has written “Africa: The Gold Mine of Al Qaeda and Global Jihad” and “Islam’s Inroads.” I’m struggling to see how this is appropriate to an academic mailing list.”

Terdman has not responded since.

Further Reading

And do not hinder them

We hardly think of children as agents of change. At the height of 1980s apartheid repression in South Africa, a group of activists did and gave them the tool of print.

The new antisemitism?

Stripped of its veneer of nuance, Noah Feldman’s essay in ‘Time’ is another attempt to silence opponents of the Israeli state by smearing them as anti-Jewish racists.