Liga Kulturverein: Brotherhood's arm in Austria
The Brotherhood has been penetrating
Austrian society for years by establishing influential networks that manage the
financial and intellectual operations of the group in European countries, with the
aim of supporting the group's activities in the Middle East.
The Austrian Liga Kulturverein
(League of Culture) was the last entity to be exposed to the Brotherhood; The
Documentation Center for Political Islam in Austria announced that the league
had adopted the sayings of Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna and published it
on their social media pages.
A recent study by the center
indicated that the Liga Kulturverein, which operates in Vienna and Graz, has
ideological, structural and personal ties with the Brotherhood, and that senior
representatives of the league were in close contact with people from the
Brotherhood environment between 2005 and 2017 and publicly acknowledged their
relationship with the group, such as founding member Jamal Morad and his
brother Aiman Morad.
The center stressed that the league
is strongly influenced by the ideas of Brotherhood spiritual leader Yusuf
al-Qaradawi, which contradict freedom of opinion and belief in pluralistic
liberal democracies.
In a first reaction to the
publication of the study, Dominik Nepp, head of the Freedom Party of Austria in
Vienna, called on Interior Minister Karl Nehammer to act immediately to close
any associations and mosques affiliated with the Liga Kulturverein.
Brotherhood
presence in Austria
Brotherhood networks were
established in Austria in the 1960s by a number of Egyptian immigrants, most
notably Youssef Nada and Ahmed al-Qadi, who played a crucial role in the
Brotherhood’s presence in the United States.
Nada worked to establish a Brotherhood
financial empire between the Middle East and Europe, before taking the position
of head of foreign relations in the organization from Austria.
He played a crucial role in managing
Brotherhood financial cells in the West in general, and Austria in particular,
before developing its financial branches to other countries such as Britain and
Germany, with the help of Hassan al-Banna's son-in-law and secretary, Said
Ramadan.
The Brotherhood initially relied on
building mosques in order to obtain generous financial donations from Austria,
before this work was extended to the rest of Europe under the supervision of
well-known active Brotherhood members, most notably Ahmed Mahmoud Ibiary, who
moved from Austria to London to manage a number of officially registered
British Brotherhood companies, including Nile Valley and Media Service.
Then the Brotherhood established
various affiliated organizations and institutions in Austria, which took many
forms, some commercial and some charitable, working to collect funds for the
benefit of the Brotherhood in the Middle East.
It was noted that some of these
organizations are apparently independent, but they are actually affiliated with
the Brotherhood, either through their association with prominent Brotherhood
leaders or Brotherhood institutions that are officially registered.