Harris County, Texas, government officials are continuing to embrace the Islamic Society of Greater Houston (ISGH) mosques and its radical imams despite their ties to New Orleans terrorist Shamsud Din Jabbar. One of the Houston-area mosque network’s imams, Furqan Sayed, is set to offer an opening prayer at an upcoming Commissioners Court meeting on January 9—the governing body for Harris County, located in Houston, where Din Jabbar lived.
Sayed, an imam at the ISGH—Masjid Abubakr, hosted radical Pakistani activist Nida Abubaker this past August. She is the daughter of Shukri AbuBaker—a convicted terrorist. Even more troubling, the ISGH mosque network in Houston and Harris County is accused of being involved with Pakistani Islamist and Kashmiri jihadist groups both in the United States and abroad.
The National Pulse reported last week that the imam at ISGH–Masjid Bilal, where Din Jabbar allegedly attended, has a long track record of making antisemitic remarks. Imam Eiad Saudan has alleged Jews take over economies wherever they go and claimed that was the reason Adolf Hitler killed them. He added that Europeans only supported Israel because they did not want Jews to come back to Europe.
In another sermon from August of last year, another imam, Mohammed ElFarooqui, gave an antisemitic sermon at Masjid Bilal, claiming the Islamic god Allah had turned Jews into monkeys, pigs, and rats for disobeying him. He added that Jews think God only watched them at the Temple in Jerusalem, saying, “So they went out everywhere on the face of this earth, started creating havoc everywhere.”
Early New Year’s Day, Din Jabbar murdered 15 people in New Orleans by driving a truck through crowds gathered on Bourbon Street. The Houston resident and army veteran pledged his allegiance to the ISIS terrorist group before his attack.