Israel's daily newsmagazine
   Israel's daily newsmagazine
| home |   security |   politics |   diplomacy |   anti-semitism |   culture |   travel |   views | today's weblog  
 
Briefs > Anti-Semitism

   


Fifth member of Illinois hate crimes panel resigns

Israel to offer Romania help with fighting terrorism, minister says

Church of England panel urges against financial break with Caterpillar

Dozens hurt in high-rise fire near Tel Aviv

Israel's Labor Party leader says he'd remove 105 settlement outposts within a year


view all today





 
03.9.06
  most recent  
 
 
 
Father of slain French Jewish man describes negotiations with son's kidnappers
French interior minister urges probe into latest attacks on Jewish youths
Alleged gang leader extradited to France from Ivory Coast
Judge puts London mayor's suspension for Nazi comment on hold pending appeal
Iran continues to provoke Jews with Holocaust "seminar"
 
Fifth member of Illinois hate crimes panel resigns
By: Associated Press   
Published: March 9, 2006   
 
A fifth member of the state's hate crimes commission resigned Wednesday in a controversy over another panel member who is a high-ranking official in the Nation of Islam.

All five departing members of the Governor's Commission on Discrimination and Hate Crimes are Jewish.

Alan Spellberg, a supervisor in the Cook County State's Attorney's office, said in his resignation letter that the commission has been "damaged beyond repair" by recent events and that he can "no longer participate in good conscience."

He would not comment beyond what was in the letter.

The four others who resigned said they were leaving rather than serve alongside Sister Claudette Marie Muhammad, minister of protocol for the Nation of Islam.

Criticism of her has mounted since she invited other commissioners to attend a speech last month by Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan in which he referred to "Hollywood Jews" promoting homosexuality and "other filth."

Some former commissioners have said Muhammad should not be on the commission unless she repudiates Farrakhan's criticism of Jews, gays and other groups.

Muhammad has not done that, but issued a statement last week saying she supports the commission's goals of eradicating hate and discrimination.

Muhammad told a radio audience on Tuesday that she "respects" her minister.

"For those who try to condemn me because of the honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan's remarks ... which were perceived by some as anti-Semitic, it's ridiculous, absolutely ridiculous," Muhammad said during an appearance on WVON-AM in Chicago.

She was appointed to the commission in August by Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who has said he did not realize he had appointed a Nation of Islam official until learning about it from news reports.
 
 
 

Click on the blue headline to read a Talkback comment and respond to it. Click on the icon to send a private email to the talkback writer. The icon appears only if the writer has decided to be contacted. If no popup window appears, please make sure your popup blocker allows israelinsider.com.

 
 
 
  | about |   partners |   sponsor |   donate |   news |   subscribe |   contact |