CAIR: a positive image of Islam?

Lately the Washington Times has had a series of breaking news events posted at their web site in the late afternoons. Today is no different.

Membership in the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has declined more than 90 percent since the 2001 terrorist attacks, Audrey Hudson will report in Tuesday’s editions of The Washington Times.

According to tax documents obtained by The Times, the number of reported members spiraled down from more than 29,000 in 2000 to less than 1,700 in 2006, a loss of membership that caused the Muslim rights group’s annual income from dues to drop from $732,765 in 2000, when yearly dues cost $25, to $58,750 last year, when the group charged $35.

Wow. What does this mean?

The organization instead is relying on about two dozen individual donors a year to contribute the majority of the money for CAIR’s budget, which reached nearly $3 million last year.

Asked about the decline, Parvez Ahmed, CAIR board chairman, pointed to the number of individual donors to the organization.
“We are proud that our grass-roots support in the American Muslim community has allowed CAIR to grow from having eight chapters and offices in 2001 to having 33 today,” Mr. Ahmed said.

Does anyone wonder WHO these 2 dozen individual donors are? I sure do.

The self-described civil liberties organization for Muslims seeks to portray “a positive image of Islam” through public relations and the media, but has instead alienated some by defending questionable accusations of discrimination.

Critics of the organization say they are not surprised membership is sagging, and that a recent decision by the Justice Department to name CAIR as “unindicted co-conspirators” in a federal case against another foundation charged with providing funds to a terrorist group could discourage new members.

M. Zuhdi Jasser, director of the American-Islamic Forum for Democracy, says the sharp decline in membership calls into question whether the organization speaks for 7 million American Muslims, as the group has claimed.

“This is the untold story in the myth that CAIR represents the American Muslim population. They only represent their membership and donors,” Mr. Jasser said.

CAIR has done nothing to promote a positive image for Muslims. Nothing. CAIR has been associated with terrorism fund raising; CAIR has been linked to terrorist groups. Since most of the world’s terror attacks have been brought to us in living color by Muslims, it doesn’t shock me at all to hear this news. But I am curious about where CAIR is getting it’s money.

2 Comments »

2 Responses to “CAIR: a positive image of Islam?”

  1. Michael on 14 Jun 2007 at Thu 14 June 2007 23:31:13 #

    I am courious why the departed have not spoken out at all? they speak out against America!

  2. Raven on 15 Jun 2007 at Fri 15 June 2007 03:36:38 #

    I don’t think CAIR ever had huge membership. Ever.
    And maybe those who have left don’t dare speak out in fear of being sued or worse.