Fort Hood suspect gave farewells to neighbors
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A mourner pauses during the playing of Amazing Grace during a candle light vigil for soldiers and their families at Hood Stadium on the Fort Hood base, Friday evening. AP PHOTO / THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS

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Sgt. Fahad Kamal of Houston, center, prays during Friday prayer services at the Islamic Community of Greater Killeen on Friday. AP PHOTO / THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS

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Army Pfc. Michael Pearson's mother, Sheryll Pearson, is comforted by her son and Michael's brother Kristopher Craig at their home in Bolingbrook, Il. on Friday. Pearson was shot and killed at Fort Hood Army base in Texas on Thursday. AP PHOTO

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Soldiers hold a candle light vigil at Fort Hood, Texas, Friday. Authorities said Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan shot and killed 13 people at Fort Hood on Thursday. AP Photo / LM Otero

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This picture shows Nidal Malik Hasan when he began his Disaster and Military Psychiatry Fellowship in 2007. Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

AP Photo / LM Otero
Soldiers hold a candle light vigil at Fort Hood, Texas, Friday. Authorities said Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan shot and killed 13 people at Fort Hood on Thursday.
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Published: November 7, 2009
Updated: November 7, 2009
FORT HOOD, Texas -- As if going off to war, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan cleaned out his apartment, gave leftover frozen broccoli to one neighbor and called another to thank him for his friendship -- common courtesies and routines of the departing soldier. Instead, authorities say, he went on the killing rampage that left 13 people at Fort Hood, Texas, dead.
Investigators examined Hasan's computer, his home and his garbage yesterday to learn what motivated the suspect, who lay in a coma after he was shot four times.
Hospital officials said some of the wounded had extremely serious injuries and might not survive.
The 39-year-old Army psychiatrist emerged as a study in contradictions: a polite man who stewed with discontent, a counselor who needed to be counseled himself, a professional healer now suspected of cutting down the fellow soldiers he was sworn to help.
Relatives said he felt harassed because of his Muslim faith but did not embrace extremism. Others were not so sure. A recent classmate said Hasan once gave a jarring presentation to students in which he argued the war on terrorism was a war against Islam, and "made himself a lightning rod for things" when he felt his religious beliefs were challenged.
Investigators were trying to piece together how and why Hasan allegedly gunned down his comrades in the worst case of violence on a military base in the U.S. The rampage unfolded at a center where some 300 unarmed soldiers were lined up for vaccines and eye tests.
Soldiers reported that the gunman shouted "Allahu Akbar!" -- an Arabic phrase for "God is great!" -- before opening fire Thursday, said Lt. Gen. Robert Cone, the post commander. He said officials had not confirmed Hasan made the comment.
Hasan's family said in a statement yesterday that his alleged actions were deplorable and don't reflect how the family was reared.
"Our family is filled with grief for the victims and their families involved in yesterday's tragedy," said Nader Hasan, a cousin who lives in northern Virginia. "We are mortified with what has unfolded and there is no justification, whatsoever, for what happened. We are all asking why this happened, and the answer is that we simply do not know."
The 30 wounded were dispersed among hospitals in central Texas. W. Roy Smythe, chairman of surgery at Scott and White Memorial Hospital, said several patients were still at "significant risk" of losing their lives. Army briefers told lawmakers in Washington eight other people were treated at a hospital for stress and trauma.
Several hundred people gathered last night at a stadium at Fort Hood where the Army's chief chaplain offered prayers for families and victims.
"God Bless America" and "Amazing Grace" were sung as husbands wrapped their arms around their wives, babies cried and old men in wheelchairs bowed their heads.
Army Chief of Staff George Casey said he asked bases around the country to assess their security. He also said he was worried about a backlash against the thousands of Muslim soldiers serving dutifully in uniform.
Hasan was due to be deployed to Afghanistan to help soldiers with combat stress, a task he'd done stateside with returning soldiers, the Army said. Army spokeswoman Col. Cathy Abbott was uncertain when Hasan was to leave but he was in the preparation stage of deployment, which can take months.
According to a Killeen police report in August, an Army employee was charged with scratching Hasan's car, causing $1,000 in damage. Apartment manager John Thompson said the man charged was a soldier back from Iraq, who objected to Hasan's faith and ripped a bumper sticker off the major's car that said: "Allah is Love."
Kim Rosenthal, another neighbor, said Hasan didn't seem too upset by his scratched vehicle, even though it was damaged so badly that he got a new one. "He said it was Ramadan and that he had to forgive people," Rosenthal said. "He forgave him and moved on."
Hasan appeared less forgiving to Dr. Val Finnell when they were classmates in a 2007-08 master's public health program at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md.
He said that at a class presentation by public health students, at which topics like dry cleaning chemicals and house mold were discussed, Hasan talked about U.S. military actions as a war on Islam. Hasan made clear he was a "vociferous opponent" of U.S. wars in Muslim countries, Finnell said.
"He made himself a lightning rod for things," Finnell said. "No one picked on him because he was a Muslim."
Law-enforcement officials said they are trying to confirm if Hasan wrote Internet postings that include his name about suicide bombings and other threats, equating suicide bombers to soldiers who throw themselves on a grenade to save the life of fellow soldiers.
Hasan is the Arlington, Va.-born son of Palestinian parents who ran a restaurant and bar in Roanoke from 1987 to 1995 and owned a small grocery store in that city.
His relatives in the West Bank said they had heard from family members that Hasan felt mistreated in the Army as a Muslim.
"He told [them] that as a Muslim committed to his prayers he was discriminated against and not treated as is fitting for an officer and American," said Mohammed Malik Hasan, 24, a cousin. "He hired a lawyer to get him a discharge."
Reader Reactions
Posted by brightspotlight on November 09, 2009 at 7:49 pm
Here are other statements from Muslim organizations just in case the nutty right wants to say Muslims did not dennouce the attack.
CAIR:
http://www.cair.com/ArticleDetails.aspx?ArticleID=26126&&name;=n&&currPage;=1
MAS Freedom Foundation:
http://www.masnet.org/takeaction.asp?id=5446
http://www.vmcpa.org/
American Muslim Journal
http://americanmuslimjournal.typepad.com/an_american_muslim_journa/2009/11/american-muslims-condemn-ft-hood-shootings-grieve-with-survivors-and-families.html
When it’s all said and done we are going to find that the military leaders trying to be politically correct caused this by overlooking the obvious. Islam requires one to be far more committed to their religion than to their country. How many more examples do you need since 9/11? Heads should roll over this and sadly, you are going to have to purge some Muslims from the US military, even some who may not deserve it. Difficult times call for severe measures. I sometimes believe that Dick Cheney is the only one left who understands what national security is all about.
I don’t believe he was mistreated or discriminated against for being a Muslim. I believe he was treated fairly. If there was an issue, it’s most likely an issue that he started, because the Military is about the most tolerant culture there is in America today. I’ve seen it with my own eyes.
Lord help us from the people who manufacture injustice where there is none.
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