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Charlie
09-22-2004, 01:09 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/09/22/plane.diverted.stevens/index.html

U.S. diverts plane because Cat Stevens on board
From Homeland Security Correspondent Jeanne Meserve

Wednesday, September 22, 2004 Posted: 5:29 AM EDT (0929 GMT)

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Singer Yusuf Islam, formerly known as Cat Stevens, was taken off a diverted United Air Lines flight from London to Washington after his Muslim name turned up on a "watch list" designed to keep terrorists from boarding flights, a Transportation Security Administration spokesman has said.

The 56-year-old Islam took that name when he became a Muslim in the 1970s.

An FBI spokeswoman told CNN the singer's name was only matched to the watch list after the plane had departed.

Islam, a British citizen, was being held in Bangor, Maine after Flight 919 was ordered to land there Tuesday afternoon.

He will be deported back to London on Wednesday, according to the TSA.

A government official said Islam was on the watch list because of "known associations and financial support to organizations believed to be aiding terrorism."

According to U.S. officials, he is an active supporter of Muslim charities.

One administration official said the singer had been in the United States as recently as May, and was a recent addition to the list.

The rest of the passengers were screened and continued on to Washington's Dulles International Airport after Islam was taken off the flight.

"They said, Get ready to land,' and then they said 'Welcome to Bangor.' And we though they were joking," one woman passenger said.

"We had no idea we'd been diverted."

The Boeing 747 had about 280 passengers and crew on board when it took off from London's Heathrow Airport, United Air Lines spokesman Jeff Green said.

The plane was met by federal agents on arrival in Bangor, where it was on the ground for about four hours before being allowed to depart, Green said.

It landed at Dulles nearly six hours behind schedule.

According to a TSA spokesman, Islam made it through pre-screening by United Air Lines and was given a boarding pass.

But after the flight took off, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency discovered his name was on a watch list.

The TSA was notified and requested that the plane be diverted to the nearest airport.

As Cat Stevens, Islam had a string of folk-rock hits in the 1960s and early 1970s, including "Peace Train," "Morning has Broken" and "Wild World."

He dropped out of the music business for more than a decade after converting to Islam, but returned to the recording studio periodically during the 1990s.

Halfglass
09-22-2004, 01:40 AM
I wonder if his idea of peace trains these days are the kind blowing up in Spain. I hate religion.

Charlie
09-22-2004, 02:17 AM
Halfglass:

I am not a big fan of religion, either, but this is a peaceful man. He condemned the 9/11 attacks, and denies he ever condemned Salman Rushie, as well. You can read that here, if you're interested: http://catstevens.com/articles/00236/index.html

It's just more paranoia by Ashcroft and crew...

Rob P
09-22-2004, 03:33 AM
thanks charlie for putting it on the board...
i am so amazed and not surprised that the idiots
running the asylum think that cat stevens
is a 'threat to america'...
seeya rob

[ September 22, 2004, 03:59 AM: Message edited by: Rob P ]

Rob P
09-22-2004, 03:59 AM
One of the most successful singer/songwriters of the first half of the Seventies, Cat Stevens converted to Islam in the latter part of the decade after a near-drowning and changed his name to Yusef Islam.

In this 2000 interview, he discusses his reasons for doing so and the controversy that followed.


"In the late '70s, I didn't know what to smile about. I was confused. I don't know where my humor came from, but it arrived one day. That was one of the shocks that I experienced when I read the Koran. Up until that point, I'd felt like, well, nothing is as perfect as I am.

You know, Greek ego. But when I started reading those words, I realized that... hey, there is something perfect and that's God. And he knows how weak we are, and we just have to submit. That's when I began to realize that I could look back and laugh at myself.

A lot of people felt when I became Muslim that I'd turned my back. But what I was trying to do was live up to the moral objectives which I'd set for myself, which a lot of my songs were about. You can't keep on singing. At some point you've got to do it. My big mistake was not being able to communicate clearly my reasons and my rationale. I was floating on a cloud and didn't know how to get people to float on the cloud with me.

I went through various attitudes toward my music. The first was almost nonchalance; I'd found something much more precious. Then, later, I was being advised that some things which I'd done in the past were to be forgotten and sort of buried. But after studying the issue, I found there's no explicit statement in the Koran which tells you one way or the other about music. It does talk about the condition of a man's life, so you have to measure what music does to a person.

Recently I heard of someone who was on the point of suicide, and they started playing my music and became optimistic again. If you take a song like "Moonshadow," there's a strong message that says, no matter what condition you're in, there's a bright side to it. Many of the old songs, in a way, are mini-predictions of my ultimate path. Looking back at my words, I saw I was actually a Muslim even before I embraced Islam -- I just had to be uncovered.

But I'm not saying all my songs are like that. There's a song called "Boy With the Moon & Star on His Head," about a guy who's just about to get married, has an affair on the way, and then finds a baby left on his doorstep. I can't whitewash them all.

A psychologist could look at the separation of my mother and father in the '60s and say, 'Well, his mother and father were apart, therefore he needed safeguard in his life.' For sure, I was looking for parents. And spiritual parents are not that easy to find.

My 1967 album Mona Bone Jakon had a more acoustic, organic setting -- and that's when I started growing my beard. Because only organic people grew beards, you know. Tea For the Tillerman represented a simplistic, minimalist era, which I admit is very attractive. But as a musician, you tend to give more credence to those things you spend more time on, and I spent a lot of time on those last albums. I did "Father and Son" in two takes, but this one took me a year.

The Koran makes it clear, if someone defames the Prophet, then he must die. The backlash over reports that I'd supposedly endorsed the death sentence that Islamic fundamentalists had levied against Salmon Rushdie for the alleged blasphemy of The Satanic Verses hurt quite a lot because that whole episode was taken out of context. But it was merely a reiteration of scriptural principle, not a literal call to action. And there are elements within the press who really have no loyalty to anybody except a good headline. If you were to ask somebody, 'What does the Bible say about adultery?' they would have to quote chapter and verse -- that's the honest thing to do. And you'd find bits in the Bible that say you should stone the person. Now, that means the President of the United States is eligible for stoning. That doesn't mean anybody's gonna do that!

Things which are very important are not discussed, and other things are sensationalized. Let's face it, we believe in angels. We're serious! And that, I would say, is more important than anything to do with those sensational headlines. But how many people are interested to talk about angels? I'm willing to if you are, but not many are.

In "Wild World," I once sang "It's hard to get by just upon a smile," but I've changed my opinion about smiles. I think smiles are very important.

daniel
09-22-2004, 04:21 AM
I would like to talk about angels with Cat Stevens.

gone
09-22-2004, 09:21 AM
My current Islamic flower who springs from beneath the fallen buildings:

"Al-Khidr, The Green Man

Khidr literally means 'The Green One', representing freshness of spirit and eternal liveliness, green symbolizing the freshness of knowledge “drawn out of the living sources of life.” Whatever the source for this green may be, it has come to symbolize the benign presence of the divine wisdom as imparted by the Divine Himself to Khidr and to Prophet Muhammad.

Qur'ânic commentators say that al-Khidr ('The Green Man' of pre-Islamic lore) is one of the prophets; others refer to him simply as an angel who functions as a guide to those who seek God. And there are yet others who argue for his being a perfect wali meaning the one whom God has taken as a friend.

Khidr is associated with the Water of Life. Since he drank the water of immortality he is described as the one who has found the source of life, 'the Eternal Youth.' He is the mysterious guide and immortal saint in popular Islamic lore and the hidden initiator of those who walk the mystical path.

In the Muslim tradition Khidr is alive and well and continues to guide the perplexed and those who invoke his name."

http://khidr.org/
http://www.luckymojo.com/esoteric/religion/islam/sufism/ref.khidrgreenman

[ September 22, 2004, 10:16 AM: Message edited by: gelfer ]

daniel
09-22-2004, 09:55 AM
hey gelfer,

that is beautiful - thanks!

gone
09-22-2004, 02:18 PM
There are lots of beautiful things in Islam (not even including Rumi!). Considering how many good folk follow Islam around the world it’s astonishing we non-Muslims know so little about it. My discovery of Al-Khidr came as a real treat and you want to know why He’s not more widely known of; I only came across Him last year after years of looking into Islam. Inshallah, I guess.

forteanajones
09-23-2004, 06:05 AM
The Green Man! I remember reading about him some time back, had no idea he was linked to Persian lore. What a great post. I seem to also recall a green man from alchemical readings.