Editor’s note: The Brooklyn Ink first broke the story of Revolution Muslim, the organization that has issued a threat against the creators of “South Park” for their depiction of the Prophet Muhummad. The story profiled the group’s founder, Yousef Al-Khattab who grew up as Joseph Cohen in Brooklyn. Al-Khattab, in a reader comment, said he left Revolution Muslim in December of 2009. The story appears below, as does a follow up on the shutting down of Revolution Muslim’s website.
“I don’t know if this is my jihad,” says Yousef Al-Khattab. “It’s my obligation to command the good and forbid the evil.” His American based website, Revolution Muslim, has become the scourge of Jewish bloggers and cyber vigilantes across the country, an odd achievement for a person born into Judaism and educated in Jewish schools, who has lived in Hassidic communities in Williamsburg and Jewish settlements in Gaza.
Born Joseph Cohen, Khattab says he converted to Islam after coming across a Muslim from the United Arab Emirates in a Jewish chat-room while in Netivot, Israel in 1998. Their to and fro on religion lasted two years, and for Khattab, the exchange confirmed previous doubts about Judaism and eventually prompted him to embrace Islam after reading an English translation of the Quran. The exchanges, he says, reaffirmed his belief that rabbis use deception to keep Jews subservient to them.
His wife and four kids, the oldest of whom was eight at the time, followed soon after.
Today, at 40, a cab driver from Queens, Khattab spends his days denouncing capitalism, Judaism and Israel’s occupation of Palestine through his website and namesake organization. Head shaved, mustache trimmed and sporting a bushy beard, Khattab addresses his audience in fluent English and Arabic and employs his sarcastic wit in video updates that appear irregularly on his website.
Gory images of blood, bombs and the bodies of Palestinian children appear in several slideshows and videos on the site. In one video post, Khattab urges his viewers to find out who are the leaders of Jewish organizations like the United Jewish Federation and Chabad Lubavitch and “deal with them directly at their homes,” but in a civil and peaceful way he adds.
In other posts Khattab tries to persuade people to boycott Starbucks for its alleged relationship with the Israeli army and encourages people to hold leaders of large Jewish organizations accountable for supporting what he terms as a genocide against Palestinians.
Khattab says the American government has no problem with his website since he is just expressing his freedom of speech. But those who are being held accountable do, he says. These would include Lubavitch and Yeshiva University, which he claims are sending soldiers to Israel to fight the Palestinians, and anybody that supports Israel.
“It’s not in our constitution that we have to love the Jews and love Judaism,” he says. He says he generally tries to stay away from Jews but contends that it’s not the Jews that he dislikes, but Judaism, or what he refers to as Rabbanical Judaism and the religious Jews. Khattab lays out his reasons for disliking what he terms as Orthodox, frum, Jews. These include a claim that Jews run an underground economy, and that, in his mind, Jews are the reason the U.S. separated church and state in its Constitution.
He recalls an incident in which a Lebanese born immigrant named Rashid Baz shot at a bus filled with Lubavitcher Hasidim near the Brooklyn Bridge and killed a 16-year-old in March 1994; “Baz took it to the next level,” he says. “He understood Lubavitch probably better than we did. “
Despite his hatred for Judaism there are some Jews whose opinions he respects, like Noam Chomsky and Norman Finkelstein, an outspoken critic of Israel’s foreign policy and human rights record who presented the notion that many Jews are capitalizing on the Holocaust.
Although he differs with Chomsky’s anarchist theories, he says he respects him for critiquing the “neo-feudalist” culture in the U.S. and for exposing America for what it is. The only Jews he speaks to are secular Jews of the “Noam Chomsky persuasion,” whom he contends hate religious Jews as much as he does. And if an Orthodox Jew hails his cab, he believes it’s his obligation towards fairness to give him a ride.
Bill Warner, a Private investigator and cyber vigilante, who says he has helped shut down several jihadist websites across America by reporting them to their Internet service providers and the authorities, says people like Khattab incite others to commit violent acts, rather than doing them on their own. “Whatever problems there are in the Middle East, he brings them to Queens, New York,” he says. “He tries to get people to do things.”
Private Investigator Bill Warner says this image from one of the posts on Revolution Muslim poses a threat to Chabad Lubavitch, Yousef Al-Khattab says that claim is absurd. You decide.
Private Investigator Bill Warner says this image from one of the posts on Revolution Muslim poses a threat to Chabad Lubavitch, Yousef Al-Khattab says that claim is absurd. You decide.
He points to a recent post on Revolution Muslim that had an image of the Chabad Lubavitch headquarters in Crown Heights, Brooklyn with captions pointing out where the main temple is, and noting that it is always full at prayer times; the post also identified a Jewish talis bag as a great place to store “Islamic info.” Warner says this post presented a credible threat and it caused the NYPD to come in full force to protect the synagogue.
The idea that any of his posts presents a threat to the Lubavitch is absurd says Khattab. “I don’t even know where they got that idea from,” he says. “There was no threat on the Jews. They can all bite me.”
Chabad Lubavitch declined to comment on their reaction to Khattab’s post, and they do not comment on security procedures, but in a written statement to The Brooklyn Ink, Rabbi Motti Seligson of Chabad.org said, “Although not all threats are serious, we work closely with law enforcement to ensure that all threats are handled properly as safety is of paramount concern.”
Khattab is cognizant of his First Amendment rights and seems well versed in how far he can go legally with his message. The Constitution, he says, affords him the right to freedom of speech, expression and religion; “I mean hell, we have the right to bear arms and form militias if we want,” he says.
Bill Warner has a different take. “The man’s a lunatic. That’s not freedom of speech. Not when you incite terrorism, that’s not freedom of speech,” he says. He says that the FBI and the NYPD have been to Khattab’s house two or three times and that it is only a matter of time that the website will be shut down and that Khattab will be arrested.
Khattab acknowledges that he is under surveillance and that the police have visited him on a few occasions, but Khattab is not afraid of being arrested. He says he loves to pray and exercise, both of which he can continue to do in prison, and that as long as his brain works he will continue to speak his mind. “They better give me a frontal lobotomy to take me out,” he says.
Despite repeated requests, the NYPD and FBI did not comment on whether Khattab is under surveillance.
People like Warner can work day and night to put down his website says Khattab, but they won’t be successful, and even if they are, he can always put it up somewhere else. He says that he has a good web host that understands that Revolution Muslim is not racist and is not a hate group. A quick query on whoishostingthis.com shows that the site is hosted on Go Daddy, a popular American web host. Warner says that American web hosting companies are popular with sites such as Revolution Muslim, because they offer easier access to a higher resolution and bandwidth needed to run a multimedia rich site.
“There have always been hate groups that targeted sympathetic people through the mail, but now their messages are accessible to so many more people,” says Joel Levy, New York Regional Director of the Anti-Defamation League. The Anti-Defamation League is aware of Revolution Muslim and is concerned about the existence of this site and the message it presents he says.
Levy says that the site doesn’t make specific, articulate threats against anybody, which could be the basis of a police investigation. “They are using some frightening, intimidating language, there’s no question about it,” says Levy, but “They seem to be very, very cautious and understand what the limits are of free speech, and just go to the edge and try to not step over that boundary. “
Revolution Muslim has 548 registered members and, according to Alexa.com, has viewers from all across the world. The top three countries by viewers are the U.S., Singapore and Israel; approximately 58 percent of viewers are from the U.S.
The site’s mission, according to its mission statement, is to spread the word of Islam and to support Sheikh Abdullah Al-Faisal, who was jailed in 2003 in the United Kingdom for seeking the murder of Jews and Hindus in sermons and was deported from the United Kingdom to Jamaica in 2007, according to the BBC.
Khattab envisions a world in which Islamic law, or Shariah, is established across the globe. He doesn’t expect this to happen in his lifetime, or to start in America (Somalia and Sudan are more viable options). But it will happen one day he says, “In the end Prophet Isa (Jesus) is going to come and he’s going to snap the crosses and kill the pigs and the only choice will be Shariah.”
(Read a Brooklyn Ink follow up to this story here: http://thebrooklynink.com/2009/10/15/4308-cabbies-anti-semitic-website-shutdown/

Nice find, Andie!
Tetouan Morocco, also known as Chefchaouen, is in the hub of the "Kif" (marijuana + hash) trade in the area. I've been there.
No doubt it held some special draw for this guy. If he was living there "for a few years" he was probably dealing. Morocco does not have any viable employment for foreigners, except that and maybe the Peace Corps.
I met some Brits in Tetouan who kept bugging me to go with them and their Moroccan friend to a party being thrown by some woman from Indiana - she was seemingly famous in that town at the time. I tried to get rid of them and while I was talking to them, I asked one for a cig. He got one from outside (a Marlboro) and I smoked it. They had spiked it with something like hash oil - I don't know. I got very dizzy and started collapsing at the knees but luckily got away. I spent the entire night trying to get down from this drug induced haze.
The next day I went to the cops. They did nothing. All the detective said to me was "Es un avventura" - It's an adventure.
There's lots of foreigners dealing hash in that area. Cohen, no doubt, was among them.
You must be pretty hot, Andie -- first we learn that Mickey Cohen tried to seduce you, and now British backpackers are hassling you to party with them. : )
I've heard two similar stories from friends of mine recently. A mate who recently got back from Thailand was drugged by a Thai woman who convinced him to take her back to his hotel room when he was drunk. He was on his way home from a bar in Phuket, and she approached him on the street and insisted that he drink a bottle of beer she'd bought for him. He fell asleep shortly after getting back to his room, and when he woke up his wallet was gone. She'd insisted on payment for sex up front (which isn't how it's done in Thailand apparently, and they didn't have sex) so the secret hiding spot for his wallet was blown. Fortunately he spotted her on the street the next day and dragged her to a friend of his, another female Thai local, who managed to convince the other woman that she knew some dangerous people and that she'd better get his money back. The chick called her boyfriend and he rocked up with my friend's money, in full with no questions asked. Can't remember if he got the actual wallet back.
The other incident happened about 4 months ago when a young Swiss mate of mine went out drinking with his friends to the Aberdeen Hotel, which is a popular hangout for backpackers here in Perth. I saw him the day after, and his whole body was covered in scratches and bruises, like he'd fallen all over the road or been dragged across it. All his money was gone and he couldn't remember getting home, even though he'd only had two drinks. His friends told him that they'd thought he'd left without saying goodbye, so it wasn't them that got him home. Maybe the person or people that drugged him had the courtesy of putting him in a taxi after robbing him. Naturally I gave him plenty of shit with questions of faux concern about the comfort of his arse, and whether or not he'd found a used condom in his underwear, etc.
The Brits probably weren't trying to get you into bed, Andie - cannabis in any form isn't that kind of drug - but spiking people's drinks (or cigarettes in your case) without their consent is a horrible thing to do. I'd be furious if someone did it to me.
1. I'm not
2. It was some associate of Cohen. I was 16 at the time.
3. They were probably trying to get me to come to this "function" for the purposes of robbery. That's standard in Morocco. At the time, I was not young enough or blonde enough to be recruited into the sex slave trade.
4. In Thailand, you never accept food or drinks from strangers. A lot of people have been robbed or killed that way.
Fair enough. I wasn't having a go at you or suggesting that you've lied, if that's how it came across.
No offense taken. We're cool.
Baha, I'm amazed that you view Yousef Al-Khattab as a genuine convert. Al-Khattab is clearly a poisoner, designed to make all followers of Islam look like a bunch of crazies.
Anyone of whatever race or previous religion can become Muslim. How hard is it for people to say ASHKENAZI instead of Jewish when they are debating the racial origins of someone? Let me make it simple for you (most of who are of European heritage [P.S. I live in Europe and hear the same thing here about me, i.e. "You look Muslim!"]):
RELIGIONS USED AS ADJECTIVES: Jewish, Christian, Muslim
RACES: Ashkenazi (Turko-Mongolian-Slavic Gypsies), European, Iranian
Andie, Tetwan is not chefchawen, they are two different cities.
Yes i realized after i wrote that - i got it mixed up - I thought Tetouan had an alternate spelling that began with a "c" - i got it mixed up with the nearby town. They are both, no doubt, centers of the hash trade in any case.
it is wrong of you to jump to convince readers that this man Yousef Al-Khattab is a drug dealer
It is speculation, but probably a good guess. The unemployment rate in that country is very high. A foreigner does not have a lot of options for work in a small town like Tetouan - so unless this guy was involved in some crafts or carpet export business, I can hazard a guess he was getting by on drug dealing. Do you have any idea what he was doing there? Did he ever mention what he did there for so long?
I met a Peace Corps worker who was also trying to get me (after several attempts) to go with him and his Moroccan friend around Fez. The Moroccan friend was the one I first met when I took a train to Fez. He gave me some bs story about how his American friend was lonely to meet another American. Tney were both very insistent that I go with them.
When I finally met the American Peace Corps guy, he seemed devious - I declined to deal with them. I reported him to the Corps in Rabat - they eventually kicked him out because they told me they'd had trouble with him before and also stated he had no busines pairing up with a Moroccan "guide" to hassle tourists. That happened the day after I met the very insistent Brits.
Foreigners in Morocco are likely to engage in some sort of scam to rob tourists or else are involved in the drug trade. That's the main money makers for them. I talked to a Moroccan guy married to a Corps worker - he said that he knew a lot of foreigners who were "shady". Cohen is probably another.
Whatever they say about his site being taken down doesn't wash, because it is fully operative and updated as of today:
http://www.revolutionmuslim.com/