Texarkana Gazette

Countercul­tures clash over Islam in Irving

- By Avi Selk

IRVING, Texas—The man who took a tactical shotgun to an Irving mosque doesn’t want his group confused with the self-styled Ku Klux Klan chapter planning to rally in the same city.

“It’s not like we’re racist, homophobic bigots,” said David Wright, spokesman for the well-armed Bureau on American Islamic Relations. “We just have a certain level of distrust for certain Islamic people.”

Meanwhile, the leader of the Texas Rebel Knights of the Ku Klux Klan said he wants nothing to do with Wright’s guns when his people don hoods in Irving.

“We want a peaceful event. No weapons,” said the Rebel Knights’ “Imperial Wizard,” calling from an anonymous phone line in East Texas.

Pacifist Klansmen and gay-tolerant anti-Islamists are hardly the only groups butting up in this Dallas suburb, which rarely saw public dissent beyond a split City Council vote until Wright’s protest made internatio­nal news last month.

Residents are having trouble keeping up with all the counter-protests and countertha­t have followed. With RSVPs from bikers, Methodists, peace activists, race separatist­s and Democratic Party organizers, Irving has been booked into next spring by clashing countercul­tures.

Residents are having trouble keeping track of which group is protesting in Irving next.

The Facebook forums of Irving, once devoted to issues like lost dogs and untidy lawns, have lately veered into discussion­s about national politics, nonstop protests and—in the last few days—the Ku Klux Klan’s plans to come to town.

In fact, Wright said, the Klan has already visited.

He said two members of the Texas Rebel Knights crashed his group’s protest outside the Islamic Center of Irving last month, when about a dozen from his group stood with guns to protest the “Islamizati­on of America.”

Wright complained that his group’s actions have been distorted in news reports, which quickly spread across the country and overseas.

They brought rifles to the mosque for protection, not intimidati­on, Wright said. And when he posted the names and addresses of local Muslims online after the protest, he was only trying to prove that Muslims had opposed a City Council vote against foreign laws—prompted by viral, unsupporte­d rumors that a Shariah court in Irving was usurping the Constituti­on.

The Klan misunderst­ood his message too, Wright said.

“They stood with us before letting us know who or what they were,” he said. Finally, a “big, husky” guy leaned over and confessed, ‘Let me tell you, we’re the Klan!’ ”

“What have I got myself into now?” Wright remembered thinking.

Wright said the Klansmen, out-of-towners like himself, wanted his members to join them at the mosque again this month—an idea he rejected, as his group includes blacks, Hispanics and gays.

The Dallas Morning News called the Texas Rebel Knights’ hotline in Quinlan, where the voice mail message advertises a Christmas toy drive. A man identifyin­g himself as the “Imperial Wizard” called back and said his members had come to Irving to scout for their rally, not to join forces with Wright.

“We picked that mosque and wanted to kind of look at the location,” he said. “We wasn’t going to wear the robes.”

In the end, the Rebel Knights decided that the sidewalk in front of the mosque would be too small for their rally in opposition to admitting Syrian refugees’ entry to the U.S. So they reschedule­d for May 30, near City Hall, and decided to wear robes and hoods after all.

“The rally’s going to be so big,” the Imperial Wizard said. But, he added, the Klan has come “a long way” from its bloody past, and he doesn’t want weapons anywhere close when they come to Irving.

“We do believe that races should stay together. I’m not talking about not mingling, but not sleeping together,” he said. “But we’re not going to harm anyone for doing it. All we can do is pray.”

In the meantime, hundreds are organizing.

Even before news of the Klan rally spread through town, more than 150 people lined up to support the mosque—one of the biggest street demonstrat­ions some residents could recall seeing in Irving—a week after Wright’s protest.

But events in the city have been intersecti­ng with national angst over Islam all year, starting when the City Council voted against foreign laws, continuing through the mayor’s speeches about Shariah courts, and exploding in September after police handcuffed 14-year-old Ahmed Mohamed for bringing a homemade digital clock to MacArthur High School.

Another peace rally set for Saturday at City Hall—between the city’s annual chili cook-off and its Christmas tree lighting— only attracted a few dozen RSVPs. But even more have signed up to oppose the organizers’ message.

A demonstrat­ion set for Dec. 12 is shaping up as the largest and most organized so far. More than 400 have answered the event’s call for “all AntiKKK, Anti-Nazism, AntiFascis­t, Anti-Racist and AntiHate Activists” to return to the mosque where the protests began.

 ?? Avi Selk/Dallas Morning News/TNS ?? An armed protest Nov. 21 outside the Islamic Center of Irving in Irving, Texas, kicked off a string of demonstrat­ions in the suburb, culminatin­g in a planned visit from a Ku Klux Klan group.
Avi Selk/Dallas Morning News/TNS An armed protest Nov. 21 outside the Islamic Center of Irving in Irving, Texas, kicked off a string of demonstrat­ions in the suburb, culminatin­g in a planned visit from a Ku Klux Klan group.

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