In a testy two-hour town hall meeting, U.S. Rep. Sue Myrick argued Thursday night that the threat of homegrown Islamist terrorism is real and defended herself against charges by local Muslims that she was spreading fear about their religion.
Using charts, maps, handouts and even a video slamming a Charlotte TV station, the Charlotte Republican told the crowd of about 175 people, most of them Muslims, that she has never condemned Islam or linked moderate Muslims with terrorism.
“I’m talking about the sympathizers and supporters of a radical agenda,” she said. “It’s not that all Muslims are bad or all Muslims are trying to do this.”
Hoping to repair her relations with a Muslim community that has taken her comments over the years as inflaming hatred, Myrick said she agreed to the town hall meeting to “build bridges” with her Muslim constituents. She invited them to join her in opposing those who she said were “trying to hijack” Islam.
Several Muslim speakers at the Government Center in uptown Charlotte commended Myrick for sponsoring the beginning of a dialogue, and invited her to follow-up sessions at mosques around town.
Still, many of the questions and comments from Muslims showed an anger that has simmered for years over often-provocative comments by Myrick, a member of the House Intelligence Committee.
In 2003, for instance, she seemed to suggest that convenience stores run by Muslims might be havens for homegrown terrorists.
Najeeb Karimi criticized the eight-term congresswoman for writing the foreword to a book – “Muslim Mafia” – whose researcher called Islam a disease. Karimi also asked Myrick why she has not been as devoted to wiping out and labeling other forms of homegrown terrorists, such as the Texas man who recently flew his plane into a federal building in Austin to protest the IRS.
“Is this terrorism?” he asked Myrick. "(Oklahoma City bomber) Timothy McVeigh? Is that Christian terrorism? . . . Islam stands for peace.”
Businessman Izzat Saymeh told Myrick that he and other Muslims “feel threatened by inflammatory rhetoric” from right-wing groups – some of whom have praised Myrick’s stands.
“It would go a long way if you would speak out against the anti-Islamic hate that’s going on in our district and elsewhere,” he said.
Myrick took the opportunity Thursday to explain her 2003 comment casting suspicion on convenience store operators. She said it came after a high-profile case in Charlotte that tied cigarette-smuggling and money-laundering to Hezbollah, a Lebanese military organization that the United States has labeled a terrorist group.
“So I wasn’t off the wall,” she said. “It may have come across that way, but you have to put it in context.”
Myrick also charged that the news media has distorted some of her other comments, to make them sound as if she was attacking Islam as a religion.
To try to prove her point, she had her staff show the audience a video of a WBTV news report that ran after the shootings at Fort Hood, Texas. Myrick has said the shooting bolsters her belief that some radical Muslims are infiltrating the U.S. military and government.
On the screen was a running tally of how many times Myrick used the words “Muslim,” “Islam” or “Islamic.” Final score: Myrick never used those terms to explain what happened at Fort Hood. Others – including the reporter and anchors – used them 15 times. Each time the number grew, there was an audible ring.
At one point, Myrick had to break up a shouting match between an ex-Muslim Iranian-American who was giving a speech at the microphone and some Muslims in the crowd who objected to his linking the religion with the Taliban in Afghanistan and the “fanatical Muslims” putting down dissent in Iran.
“This is what’s wrong,” Myrick told those shouting from the gallery. “Instead of trying to have a dialogue, we start yelling.”
Most of the speakers were courteous, congratulating Myrick for appearing before them even as they criticized her views.
“No one has ever said to me ‘Blow something up.’ And if they had, I would be the first to deal with it,’” said Khalil Akbar, the imam at Masjid Ash Shaheed, a mosque. “I think you have a little bit of misinformation.”
Myrick repeatedly urged those in the audience to contact her or her office if they had grievances, including long airport waits because their common names might show up on a watch list.
After cutting off the questions with seven people still in line, Myrick turned the microphone over to Zuhdi Jasser, a Muslim physician who heads the Islamic Forum for Democracy and is a conservative political ally of Myrick’s.
He accused many moderate Muslims, including those in the audience, of being in denial about the “cancer” of radical Islam.
That was too much for Rose Hamid, former head of Muslim Women of the Carolinas.
Based on Jasser’s comments, Hamid said after the meeting: "(Myrick’s) goal was not necessarily to listen to the Muslims, but to deliver her message to the Muslims.”
Jibril Hough of the Islamic Center of Charlotte, who had suggested the town hall meeting to Myrick months ago, also criticized Jasser’s comments, but said Myrick had taken a good first step in opening dialogue with local Muslims.
Myrick agreed, calling it “a very good discussion.”
“If we don’t talk, and we don’t put things on the table,” she said, “we’ll never come to an agreement.”