Ottawa mosque loses charity status for promoting 'hate and intolerance' - Action News
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Ottawa

Ottawa mosque loses charity status for promoting 'hate and intolerance'

The Canada Revenue Agency has revoked the charitable status of the Ottawa Islamic Centre and Assalam Mosque in the city's southeast over allegations it promoted 'hate and intolerance.'

Mosque says allegations are about guest speakers from before 2013

A building with a sign reading, 'The Ottawa Islamic Centre.'
The Ottawa Islamic Centre and Assalam Mosque on St. Laurent Boulevard south of Walkley Road. It lost its charitable status and is facing allegations from the Canada Revenue Agency that its resources were used to promote 'hate and intolerance.' (Philippe Turgeon/CBC)

UPDATE: The charitable status was reinstated for the Ottawa Islamic Centre andAssalam Mosque in June 2023, according to a notice posted in the Canada Gazette.


The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has revoked the charitable status of the Ottawa Islamic Centre andAssalam Mosque on St. Laurent Boulevardover allegations it promoted "hate and intolerance."

The CRA said the organization failed to devote all its resources to charity and "allowed its resources to be used for activities thatpromote hate and intolerance," causing it to fail theCRA's public benefit test.

The tax agency also identified problems with the organization's books and its failureto file an information return.

Within a year, the mosque must transfer all of its charity's remaining assets to an eligible donee or pay a revocation tax equal to 100 per centof the value of all remaining assets, once it has paid anydebts, the CRA said. The charity's name and the reason for its revocation are also published in the CRA's list of charities.

The mosque can file an objectionwithin 90 days, and if itdisagrees with the CRA appeals branch's futuredecision, it can appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal or the Tax Court of Canada.

Ali Abdulle, a mosque administrator, said the allegations come as a shock and date back to a previous administration. The current teamtook over in 2013.

"We have been devastated. It's like an earthquake," he said, adding that the mosque plans to fight the decision. "The mosque resources [have] never been used for any hate or any promoting hate."

Ottawa mosque loses charity status for promoting 'hate and intolerance'

6 years ago
Duration 0:45
Ali Abdulle is an administrator at the Assalam Mosque in Ottawa. He said the issues flagged by the CRA were from before the current administration took over in 2013.

4 speakers identified

A CRA letter obtainedbyCBCmentions four speakers who appeared on numerous occasions between 2009 and 2014:Abu Usamah At-Thahabi, Bilal Philips, SaeedRageah, and Abdullah Hakeem Quick.

The letter says that when asked to provide a list of speakers who had appeared at the mosque,Assalam provided an incomplete list. CRA officials learned about the additional events by examining the mosque's social media postings.

All four speakers are associated with the conservativeSalafistschool of Sunni Islam.

At-Thahabiis a New Jersey-born imam who previously headedthe Green LaneMasjidin Birmingham, England, one of the U.K.'s largest and a subject of frequent controversy.At-Thahabihas been a frequent visitor to Ottawa and has spoken at other venues in the city in addition toAssalam.

He was one of the subjects of a Channel 4 documentary called Undercover Mosque that included secret recordings of his sermons at Green Lane where he spoke in derogatory terms about non-Muslims, called women "deficient" in intelligence, and saidgay people should be thrown from mountains.

At-Thahabialso spokein 2016 and 2017 in Toronto and North Yorkat theSalaheddinIslamicCentre and the AbuHurairaCenter.

Members describe mosque as open, tolerant

6 years ago
Duration 0:49
People who attend the Assalam Mosque in Ottawa say they have never known the mosque or its members to promote hate, and were shocked to learn of the allegations.

Frequent visits

BilalPhilips is a Jamaican-born Canadiansalafistbased in Qatar with over six million Facebook followers. He also has visited Ottawa frequently. Philips has been banned or deported from a number of countries includingAustralia, Bangladesh, Denmark, Germany, Kenya and the U.K.

SaeedRageahis a Somali-born preacher raised in Saudi Arabia and based in Toronto, where he founded Toronto's Muslim Basketball Association. Rageah is founder and leader of the Journey of Faith Conference, which has invited controversial hardline speakers to Canada, at least one of whomMumbai imam Zakir Naik wasrefused entry to Canada for past statements such as, "Every Muslim should be a terrorist."

CRA also flagged Rageah'slinks to a U.S.-based institute that has distributed al-Qaedapropaganda material.

The fourth speaker mentioned by CRA isAbdullahHakkeem Quick, an American preacher who was cited for his references to the "filth" of yahud(Jews) and kafirun(unbelievers), and for saying that the Islamic answer to homosexuality is death.

CBCNews has asked for more information.

Speeches elsewhere

The hate and intolerance allegations relate toguest speakers invited to the mosque between2009 and 2013, who said what the CRA characterized ashateful things in other cities, according to Abdulle.

"They did not say it in our mosque, they said it somewhere else," he said. "We think it's unfair to us and it's unfair to the community to be revoking our charitable status over what somebody said."

He said the mosque community is vibrant,welcoming and promotes Canadian values.

The CRA said at least two speeches happened in 2014, after the previous administration left, and that throughout the period of review "the board of directors permitted individuals with extremist and biased views" to speak.

In its submissions to the CRA, centre officials said those talkswere organized by othermembers of the mosque community, and that they have since closed off most of the basement to stop people meeting there without approval and permission.

In the documents officials said they're also now vetting potential speakers more thoroughly.

The CRA had asked for transcripts or recordings of the speeches and the mosque didn't provide them, and thatthere wasn't enough evidence the organization did its due diligence, it said.

The nameof onespeaker the CRA said appears to have been radicalized and is willing to resort to violencewasblacked out in the letter provided to CBC News.

The CRA said the revocation is based on issues identified in the organization's two audits from before it registered as a charity, the agency's correspondence with the organization and issues identified in the audit leading up to the revocation.

The revocation of charitable status means the mosque can no longer provide tax receipts, doesn't qualify for an income tax exemption or the HST rebate.

Abdulle said the mosque will still be able to conduct its regular operations.

A portrait of a man.
Ihsaan Gardee said there are large gaps in how Statistics Canada hate crime data is captured. (Ashley Burke/CBC)

'There is such a thing as due process'

Ihsaan Gardee,executive director of the National Council of Canadian Muslims, said he's worried about the future of the mosque becauseit relies on being a charity to raise money.

"Mosques are not just simply places of worship, but they're places that provide other services as well including funeral services, blood drives, food banks, marital counselling, et cetera. So the people who are seeking those kinds of services could potentially be impacted and have to seek them somewhere else," he said.

"Of course hate speech is something we stand clearly against. I think the broader community and Canadians at large have the right to be concerned but it's important to remember there is such a thing as due process. The court of public opinion is not where these things should be decided."

With files from Evan Dyer, Ashley Burke and Kimberley Molina