Arab News

Hezbollah in the US: How and why?

- DIANA MOUKALLED | SPECIAL TO ARAB NEWS

Shiite religious beliefs were Hezbollah’s tool of finding a way into many of the community’s hearts and minds.

THE FBI arrested two Americans of Lebanese origin for providing financial aid to Hezbollah and participat­ing in preparatio­ns for terrorist attacks. This is not the first time Lebanese individual­s involved in financial or combat support for Hezbollah have been arrested. Throughout the past two decades similar arrests have occurred, but the latest happened at the height of the most recent escalation by the US administra­tion against Iran and Hezbollah.

The latest arrests shed light on fears among the Lebanese-American community in Michigan, particular­ly Shiites, who comprise the largest segment of Arab immigrants in that state and in the US generally. This group suffers an unspoken division between bias toward Hezbollah on the one hand, and fear that their security will be threatened or that they will be stigmatize­d due to this support on the other.

It is no secret that despite Hezbollah being on the US terror list, Lebanese Americans sympathize with the party, particular­ly Shiites who mostly live in Dearborn, Michigan. A majority of this community perceives Hezbollah as a resistance movement.

Shiite religious beliefs were Hezbollah’s tool of finding a way into many of the community’s hearts and minds. Some might refrain from declaring their support in public, fearing legal consequenc­es as it is a banned party in the US, yet they boast that support in private. That is why some community members fear arrest and more surveillan­ce as a result of such support.

Hezbollah is an organizati­on with many currents, not all of which are related to terrorism. This allows it to inject itself into the LebaneseAm­erican community via religion and religious lectures by religious figures.

Why is the focus on the idea of linking religion to Hezbollah? A conference held a few weeks ago in Detroit featured the highest religious figures in the city. The conference stressed the need to address the “danger of some parties’ attempts to separate society from religious authoritie­s.”

There is an undeniable effort — felt by any Michigan visitor, especially in Dearborn — to intensify the presence of religion and religious discourse among the Shiite community. This was how Iran managed to infiltrate Lebanon and increase its popularity. This is what Hezbollah is trying to do in Lebanese communitie­s in the US.

It is obviously unfair to accuse the community, and it is illogical to believe that religiosit­y inevitably leads to violent choices under jihadist slogans. But linking an armed organizati­on that has internatio­nal political goals, such as Hezbollah, with a system of faith and doctrine is slowly and indirectly happening. This is the danger of directly linking the political objectives of one party with believers among the Lebanese Shiite community in the US.

QDiana Moukalled is a veteran journalist with extensive experience in both traditiona­l and new media. She is also a columnist and freelance documentar­y producer. She can be reached on Twitter @dianamouka­lled.

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