Brief Background of the Case
Statement to Supporters
Click Here>>Singing for Liberty
USA vs Al-Arian
National Liberty Fund (NLF)

DONATE NOW!

You Can Donate to Dr. Al-Arian’s Legal Defense Online Through PayPal or Credit Card.

(Note: Donations not tax-deductible ) If you don't have a PayPal account Click Sign Up

Frontpage Slideshow (version 2.0.0) - Copyright © 2006-2008 by JoomlaWorks

Al-Arian continues deteriorating (3/22)

USF Oracle, 3/22/07
Link: Click here
By David Guidi, Asst. News Editor
Sami Al-Arian slumped forward in his wheelchair Saturday, reached
forward and grasped a black chess piece to make his next move, as
his wife, Nahla, looked on. His hand trembled, one of the many tolls
exacted by a hunger strike approaching 60 days.

Nahla said he looked at his 16-year-old son, Ali, across the table
of the crowded visiting room of the Butler, N.C., federal medical
detention facility. Ali and the five other members of the Al-Arian
family - two older sisters, an older brother, a younger sister and
his mother - looked back at a father and husband 53 pounds lighter
than when they last saw him in December.

The piece fell from his hand. A few minutes later he dropped another
one. The weakness of taking only water for nourishment for 57 days
made it difficult for Al-Arian, 49, to control delicate hand
movements, like holding a chess piece. Then it happened again. And
again.

"We were all shocked and upset," Nahla said. "He wanted to show the
youngest ones that he was OK. But they were worried. We are all very
worried."

Al-Arian's hunger strike - begun Jan. 22 in protest of his continued
incarceration - has left him a physical shell of the man his family
knew, Nahla said. He can no longer walk and trembles constantly, and
while he still laughs and jokes, his voice is a soft rustle compared
to what it one was.

"He is so weak. We couldn't believe it was him," she said Wednesday,
following family visits on Saturday, Sunday and Monday. "When I saw
him, I thought that this is not the man I knew before, but then he
began to talk and I could still recognize his voice."

The toll on Al-Arian's family may lack the stark quality of the
former USF professor's physical deterioration, but it was there, in
the tears and worried looks of five children and a wife who cried
when they first saw Al-Arian wheeled into the visiting room. Today,
the former professor of computer science, who collapsed in a
Virginia prison 37 days ago, carries his hunger strike into its 60th
day, a point at which many hunger strikers die - if they live that
long.

His family has found it hard to bear, said Nahla. She plans to
return to the medical center today to persuade Al-Arian - who told
the family Monday that he still plans to continue his strike - that
he must stop. Federal Bureau of Prisons policy mandates the forcible
feeding of inmates when their lives or health are threatened. BOP
spokeswoman Traci Billingsley has said they will not let Al-Arian
die.

"It is becoming very dangerous now," Nahla said. "I must convince
him to stop."

Youngest feel it most Nahla said her youngest children - Lama, 13,
and Ali, 16 - have had the hardest time coping with their father's
hunger strike. Ali told his mother he feared what his father might
look like after two months of a water-only diet, she said.

"He asked me how will we see him like that," Nahla said. "He will
look scary."

Ali and Lama have spent their school holidays going to see their
father in prison since his arrest in 2003 on
53-count indictment that charged Al-Arian with financing and
executing a leadership position in the Palestinian Islamic Jihad
(PIJ). They were very worried when they first saw their father,
Nahla said.

"But little by little he began laughing, and joking and playing
chess with them," Nahla said. "And they began to feel better."

During their five-hour visits with Al-Arian on Saturday, Sunday and
Monday, the family only drank water to make it easier on Al-Arian,
Nahla said.

Ali and Lama will join their mother as she visits Al-Arian again
today. Her eldest daughters returned to their lives in Chicago and
New York. Laila, 21, is a journalism student at Columbia University.
Nahla and her two children stayed with the oldest of the Al-Arian
children, Abdullah, on Wednesday and Thursday, non-visiting days at
the federal facility in Butner.

"(Ali and Lama) told me that we have to do our best to stop him,"
Nahla said.

Al-Arian has been held in an isolation cell and is bedridden. He has
continued to receive breakfast, lunch and dinner, and a nurse checks
on him twice a day, said officials from the Bureau of Prisons. Nahla
said Al-Arian has not seen a doctor in two weeks and that she has
requested she be allowed to send in outside doctors to check on her
husband. Virginia White, executive assistant of the Butler facility,
said she could not comment on the specifics of prisoners' care.

"I hope that they will do something if they have to," Nahla said.

Is it worth it?

Nahla, who calls Sami a political prisoner of the American
government, has supported him throughout the hunger strike. When he
called her to tell her he planned to begin the strike in January and
even when he collapsed 23 days later in a Virginia prison, she
supported him. But now, she says, it is time for her husband to stop.

Since his hunger strike began, Al-Arian and his family have appeared
on Democracy Now!, and other national news outlets have provided
coverage, such as the Associated Press, the Washington Post, and the
New York Times.

Muslim and human rights advocacy groups have called for popular
support of Al-Arian during the strike. The National Council of
Churches initiated a letter-writing campaign through
FaithfulAmerica.org, urging those concerned to voice their opinions
directly to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. In late February, a
coalition of Muslim groups called for a worldwide fast in support of
Al-Arian.

"But it comes at a cost," said Nahla. "(Al-Arian) has to pay with
his health, and we have to pay with our worry."

Nahla, who said her husband began the hunger strike in part because
he felt the media had ignored his current situation, said it was too
soon to tell whether the difficulties endured by her family thus far
outweighed the potential benefits of the increased attention to her
husband.

At the time of his arrest in 2003, when he was the epicenter of a
storm of controversy, Al-Arian was a cause celebre among civil and
human rights advocacy groups and received extensive media attention.
The frenzy continued during his trial, when a jury found him not
guilty of eight of the 17 terrorism-related charges brought against
him, but deadlocked on the other nine. After the trial, Al-Arian
signed a plea agreement with federal prosecutors, who planned to
retry him on the remaining nine charges, and pled guilty to
providing service for nonviolent terrorist activities to the PIJ.

After the plea agreement, much of the coverage of Al-Arian's case
dwindled, said Ahmad Bedier, director of the Tampa chapter of the
Council of American Islamic Relations (CAIR).

"Since his hunger strike began, people have sent us letters that
they are surprised that he is still in prison," Bedier said. "They
thought he was deported after the after the plea agreement. He has
been successful because now you've got people all over the country
who are discussing his situation."

John Arnaldi, a USF employee who befriended Al-Arian after they met
at a interfaith prayer service following the Sept. 11 attacks, said
he supported Al-Arian at first, but now feels ambivalent.

"There are ways to work within the system," said Arnaldi, who is a
member of a local association of Quakers that have supported Al-
Arian since his arrest. "We believe that in the end, the courts will
decide things in his favor. We just hope he lives that long."

This is not Al-Arian's first hunger strike. In 2003, he began a
strike shortly after his arrest by federal prosecutors and according
to supporters, the strike lasted 140 days. But during that strike he
took nutrients in liquids, and his situation never grew as grim as
it is now, Nahla said.

Nahla said her husband called on Jan. 22 to tell her that he planned
the hunger strike following a judge's decision to hold him in
contempt of court for a second time. He has twice refused to testify
before a Virginia grand jury investigating a group of Islamic
charities in northern Virginia. The contempt of court decision
carries with it an 18-month prison sentence. It was handed down by a
Virginia judge late last year when Al-Arian refused to testify for
the first time. The sentence came 174 days before he finished the
remainder of a sentence provided for in his plea bargain.

Documents & Releases

Statement of Chairs of American Muslim Task-Force on Civil Rights and Elections  (AMT) and  Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

Howard Zinn Statement on Professor Al-Arian

SITE SEARCH

SPOTLIGHT

March 2000

December 2005alarian.jpg

January 2009

To be patriotic is to be able to question government policy in times of crisis.
To be patriotic is to stand up for the Bill of Rights and the Constitution in times of uncertainty and insecurity.
To be patriotic is to  speak up against the powerful in defense of the weak and the voiceless.
To be patriotic is to be willing to pay the price to preserve our freedoms, dignity, and rights.
To be patriotic is to
challenge the abuses of the PATRIOT Act.
From a speech by Dr. Al-Arian
9/1/2002

Biography---

UFF Summary: Al-Arian and USF

Poetry

Announcement of Book: The Al-Arian Reader

A new compilation of all relevant articles to be released soon by the National Liberty Fund

Selected Poems
by Sami Al-Arian

We Shall Rise

To Maya Angelou
Like the dream of the slave
You rise
And with the scream of the brave
I shall rise
In honoring the memory of your ancestors
You rise
With my stateless brothers and sisters
I shall rise
Like dust in the sunlight
You rise
And as ashes in a fiery night
I shall rise
You offend
Because of your existence
And I
For my resistance
You upset them
Recalling their past
And I
By holding steadfast
They may trod you in dirt
May cause me all the hurt
Inflict upon you excruciating pain
While they shut me up and detain
By they won't see you broken
Neither would my faith be forsaken
As you've never bowed your head
And never lowered your eyes
I'll continue to raise my fist
And hide my mother's cries
They may shoot you with their words
Cut me up with their swords
They may insult you with their eyes
Denigrate me with their lies
Trying to kill you with their hate
Bury me alive to seal my fate
But they'd certainly
Be shamed and fail
As the free chant and sing
On their march to prevail
So keep your head held high
As I follow you and try
And keep your beautiful smile
As I walk my first mile
They'll pressure and blame
Throw us in prison to control and tame
They'll exile and defame
Lynch us all or shoot and maim
Burn crosses with no shame
Target our children in a dirty game
By why is that a surprise?
Despite their evil and terror
Their falsehood and lies
You shall rise
And I shall rise
You're the black ocean
Leaping and wide
I'm the Mediterranean
With a stormy tide
Staying together
Side by side
It's no surprise
We shall rise
Surely shall rise
We together shall rise
No Longer Afraid
For us to feel "secure"
What price is being paid?
If living in freedom
Why are we afraid?
Fear is everywhere
All around
Perhaps irrational
But without any bound
You can see it on our faces
Sense it in our eyes
You can hear it in our whispers
Feel it in our cries
More>>No Longer Afraid
The Bird and The Vulture
The bird was chirping
In a house on a tree
But the vulture was angry
Because it was free
When the bird is singing
The vulture ain't safe
More>>The Bird and The Vulture
The Smile of Freedom
He looked like
A body-builder
Tall, tough, and full
All muscles and no fat
His mind was simple
Suited to follow orders
No questions asked
Acting mean and mechanical
Like any bureaucrat
More>>The Smile ...
In the Name of Freedom
In the name of freedom
We shall rule the world
To spread democracy
And set you free
In the name of freedom
We’ll descend on you
To make you civilized
Modern and orderly
More>>In the Name ...
The Accused: Franz Kafka Meets George Orwell in 21st Century America
Act I: The Mother of all Evidence
Act II- Weapons of Mass Deception
Act III: Silencing of the Lambs
Act IV: Attacks of the Wolves
Act V: Occupied Territory
Act VI: Police State
Act VII: Official Obituary
Act VIII: A Close Encounter of the Scariest Kind
Act IX: The Inquisition
Act X- Conspiracy Theory
Act XI- Secret Trials
Act XII- Silent Pain and Teary Eyes
Act XIII- True Patriot Acts
Do Not Sign
Rights are not for sale
History is not kind
On those who sell their people out,
Betray their cause,
Surrender their land
To tow the line
Do not sign
More>>Do Not Sign
Rachel Corrie: Daughter of Palestine
The most gentle
Amongst all honorable
Women
Had a spirit
As dazzling as
The garden of
Eden
More>>Daughter of Palestine
Ole Jerusalem
O Ole Jerusalem
I feel your pain
I hear your cries
The light thunder
In the darkness
And the heavy rain
I see the steady bleeding
Of your wound
With its mark and stain
More>>Ole Jerusalem
Patrick Henry
A revolutionary
At heart
A patriot
From the start
Loved by his country
To the core
Defended freedom
Even more
Hated arrogance
In shape and tone
Fought tyranny
With every bone
He was the conscience
Of his people
Striking fear in the enemy
And made it feeble
More>> Patrick Henry
Injustice
An overwhelming feeling
Of bitterness
Emptiness
Hopelessness
Helplessness
Sadness
Madness
Of hatred and rage
Trapped in a cage
Disappointment and anger
Continuing to linger
Wounding of dignity
Violating your virginity
More>> Injustice
Political Riddles
He sees the world as black and white
His solution to every quandary is fight with might
The economy will not stimulate
Because he can’t articulate
While jobs are gone
He says, “bring ‘em on.”
Who is he?
He likes to be called the General
The head of an agency that’s federal
If you spit on the sidewalk
He’ll send the Incredible Hulk
He hates to cite truth or fact
Because he’s busy promoting his unpatriotic act
He frequents TV cameras with a smash
The first part of his last name sounds like trash
Who is he?
He is the ideal dutiful poodle they say
From an empire where the sun did not set one day
He adores his cowboy friend and considers him a fan
And insists: I’m nobody’s yes-man
When the cowboy says no, I say no
Who is he?
More>>Political Riddles