By: Abdirahman Aynte
Minneapolis
Wearing a black skullcap, a T-shirt and sandals, the short but muscled Yee recounts his early life and his evocative ordeal in the Army as a Muslim chaplain. He’s a soft-spoken, humble-looking man with sprinkled goatee.
He gave HOL an exclusive interview.
Yee was born in
A curious exploration turned into fascination for Captain Yee, who was a devout Christian. He bought a book about Islam “and discovered enormous similarities between Christianity and Islam,” he said. “That Jesus was born of the Virgin Mary, that he will return to earth, and that Abraham and Moses were respected biblical prophets.”
But what rang a bell for Yee, who’s now called Yusuf, is Islam’s sole divinity. In Islam, Jesus is an important prophet who preceded Mohamed, but not a divine.
“Islam’s no God but Allah resonated very well with me, but I yearned to learn more about it,” he said.
At that point, Yee converted to Islam, already the fastest growing religion in
Cognizant that the Army had no Muslim chaplains at the time, Yee began an earnest pursuit to become the first one. At the end of his deployment to the Gulf, his quest to grasp the depth of Islam landed him in
In January of 2001, he achieved his goal to become a Muslim chaplain in the Army. His role was to “talk” and “teach” Islam to fellow soldiers. His superiors commended him for what he was doing.
And then, September 11 terrorist attacks occurred. Capt. Yee’s experience was soon in demand. Unbeknown to him, his career would take him to an odyssey with unfavorable upshot.
In November of 2002, as Muslim chaplain, Yee was deployed to
Days into his new assignment, Yee says he was confounded by the prevalence of abuses against detainees. Everything from harsh interrogation techniques to outright abuses, Yee says a new chapter of his life foisted around him.
“Koran, [Islam’s holy book] was being desecrated, ripped off, stepped on, all in the name of cell-search and security,” he recalls “some female guards would unclothe in front of the prisoners and even use sexually explicit tactics.”
Children as young as 12 were being held in Gitmo, according to Yee.
That, he says, is un-American.
As part of his duties, Yee would escort media personnel visiting the camp. He writes in his book that he had never reflected any emotions while doing his job, even though he profoundly disapproved some of the acts employed in the camp.
Convinced that fellow soldiers were engaged in a complicit activity that run amok, Yee sought to express his concerns to his superiors only to be turned down.
From detainee chaplain to a detainee
After his initial six months in Gitmo was extended to a year, Yee sought to take a two-week break in September 2003 with his family in
“They said I was spying for the detainees and
He was soon transferred to a maximum security facility in
“That’s the same sensory deprivation used against Gitmo prisoners when airlifted to the camp,” said Yee as he expounds his ordeal. His voice audibly shakes and his body jitters. “At that point, I realized I was seriously detained.”
His wife and then three-year-old daughter were baffled when Yee didn’t show up at
Yee says the Army leaked to the media that a “terrorist spy” was detained. “The entire world believed I was a spy,” he said.
In the prison, Yee says he was threatened with the death penalty, guards routinely strip searched him and disallowed him to hear prayer calls and arrows pointing to
“Even Gitmo detainees, who are not
His family hired a civilian attorney with robust military law experience. After 30 days, the lawyer was able to secure him a medium security status.
Meanwhile, his wife in
Using the tactics he learned in the Army to harness stress, Yee sat in a solitary confinement for total of 76 days. He said he mostly grappled with the fact that he earnestly served his country and got a treatment worst than non-U.S. citizens. Two days before his release, his attorney wrote a letter to the president Bush appealing for his immediate release. Now permitted to read papers, Yee learned that piece of information in the paper. Though the military refutes, Yee thinks that he was possibly released based on that letter.
Finally, on Eid Al-Fitr day, Islam’s second holiest day marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan, he was released out of prison. The guards, he said, disallowed him to attend that morning’s important prayer with other Muslim prisoners, even though they told him that he will be free.
On that fateful day, the government’s accusations against him crippled. Charges were significantly reduced to mishandling classified documents. That, too, was later abruptly dropped. His military status was swiftly reinstated and his record was cleared.
Though much of the material surrounding his case remains classified, Yee says the plane ticket to
Yee was honorably discharged on Jan. 7, 2005 after he resigned from the Army. He received the Army Commendation Medal for “exceptional meritorious.”
But Yee remains haunted that he never received an apology from the government of the country he served to protect.
“Even though what happened to me was a gross miscarriage of justice, I’m prepared to forgive if I get an apology.” he said.
Four congressmen and two powerful senators, Kennedy of Massachusetts and Levin of Michigan have demanded an investigation to Yee’s ordeal.
An impending answer might offer a thing or two about Yee’s case, but that answer might never come to light.
These days, Yee is treated like a hero among fellow Muslims. He has recently published a new book chronicling his ordeal titled “For God and Country: Faith and Patriotism Under Fire.”
At the annual Muslim convention in
Yee, who knows enough Arabic to go by and to make preambles that sound more like a respected Imam in the Arab world, smiles to the faithful and signs the book with their name written in Arabic.
Yee had given speeches all over the country, in places like Harvard,
In fact, Yee’s career might have taken a steep jump upwards as speaker, writer and, yes, as a fierce political campaigner. With a masters degree in international relations under his belt, Yee is coming back to Minneapolis the third time in two weeks to help Keith Ellison, a fellow Muslim’s campaign for the U.S. Congress.
“I’d like to be part of what I hope to be a history made in
Abdirahman Aynte can be reached at Ceynte@hiiraan.com