Order Daniel Greenfield’s new book, Domestic Enemies: The Founding Fathers’ Fight Against the Left: HERE.
The official mission of Catholic Community Services of Utah is to “practice gospel values of love, compassion and hope through service, support and collaboration”. Its actual mission is protesting ICE and bringing Muslims to America. CCS Utah is so committed to the mission of replacing Americans with Muslims that the man in charge of its refugee resettlement and speaking in its name on behalf of Islamist causes is the head of the local Islamic society.
One of the Catholic Community Services of Utah’s biggest success stories is Aden Batar, who was one of the first Somali Muslims resettled by Catholic Community Services in Utah.
Catholic Community Services then put Batar to work as a case manager to help bring in more Muslim refugees to Utah. The Catholic Legal Immigration Network (CLINIC) then helped him become an immigration lawyer and then the Somali headed up the head of Migration and Refugee Services for Catholic Community Services. Batar boasts that “through my leadership, the program become one of the strongest and most well-known refugee resettlement and immigration programs throughout the entire Catholic network in the U.S.”
Minus the Catholic part.
There are crucifixes on the wall, a window shaped like a cross and religious icons on the wall, but the leadership of the refugee resettlement program consists of Muslims bringing in Muslims.
Batar also serves as the president of the Islamic Society of Greater Salt Lake.
The proud accomplishment of a Catholic organization was importing enough Muslims to create a sizable community in Utah and to employ a leader for their community to keep on doing it.
Under Batar is Khalid Al Hachami, the case manager supervisor for refugee resettlement at Catholic Community Services. The senior leadership at what is supposed to be a Catholic organization following gospel teachings is headed by Muslims catering to Muslim migrants.
Batar rallied Catholic Community Services to prepare for the influx of invaders from Afghanistan, and denounced security restrictions on mass migration by the Trump administration. “Refugees are not the enemy. Muslims coming here are not the enemy,” he argued. “I think we know who the enemies are.” But where are all the Catholic refugees being resettled by CCS?
Oddly they seem to be absent.
Articles complaining about President Trump’s immigration restrictions have described Catholic Community Services sponsoring Syrian, Afghan and Somali Muslims. Even though Christians, and especially Catholics, are the only legitimate refugee group fleeing a region dominated by Islamic supremacism, Catholic Community Services seems to be short of Catholic refugees from the Middle East and the Muslim world.
Batar even defended the idea of bringing Muslims from Gaza to be resettled in America.
Aden Batar has participated in anti-Trump rallies for mass migration, penned anti-Trump editorials and denounced efforts by the Trump administration to secure our migration system.
Salt Lake City had already suffered a brutal toll due to Muslim mass migration when Sulejman Talovic, a Muslim Bosnian ‘refugee’, opened fire at a shopping mall, killing six Americans and wounding a number of others. The victims of the mosquegoer’s murderous rampage were of all ages and sexes. They included a woman meeting her husband to pick out a wedding ring. A 16-year-old boy and his father. A couple on a date. And a mother and her 15-year-old daughter.
The mother survived the Muslim killer’s rampage, her daughter did not, and she has never been the same. But Utah’s political leaders doubled down on bringing more Sulejmans to the state.
Some reported that the Muslim refugee had shouted “Allahu Akbar”, the authorities however denied it, blamed his personal problems and gun laws, and continued importing migrants.
And they did it with the support of the highest ranks of state and city officials.
The end result is not only that there are tens of thousands of Muslim ‘refugees’ in Utah, but that even Catholic Community Services of Utah, which helped replace Americans, is itself getting replaced, going from Catholic in name only, to transitioning into a Muslim organization.
The most revealing moment may have been a ‘hate crime’ that occurred outside the Noor Mosque in Salt Lake City. The Noor mosque had replaced a Christian church and members of the mosque complained that a man had been caught on video putting up an American and Israeli flag at the mosque. The mosque and Islamic leaders called it a “hate crime.”
Aden Batar, speaking on behalf of Catholic Community Services and another Muslim leader speaking on behalf of the Islamic Society of Greater Salt Lake, in an example of single faith interfaith messaging, claimed that the American flag was “clearly intended to provoke and intimidate our congregation” and “should be investigated under bias crime statutes” because the flags had “caused distress in our community —particularly among our congregation of international students, many of whom already live with a sense of vulnerability.”
After all the claims that mass Muslim migration to Utah was about becoming Americans, the mosque argued that putting up an American flag should be considered a hate crime. And a Catholic group had been hijacked by the leader of an Islamic group to condemn the display of the American flag as an act of hate.
In 2017, Batar had taken part in Georgetown’s Catholic Social Thought and Public Life Initiative panel to discuss the virtues of mass migration. While he was the only non-Catholic on the panel, his role was a symptom of the growing displacement of Catholics even within Catholic groups.
Mass migration from Muslim countries means terror and violence, but it also means replacement and it seems only fitting that refugee resettlers like Catholic Community Services of Utah should face their own replacement. When the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society moved over from helping Jewish immigrants to helping Muslim ones, it dropped the ‘Hebrew’ part and rebranded itself as HIAS because as “we expanded our mission to protect and assist refugees of all faiths and ethnicities, we realized our name no longer represented the organization.”
Eventually Catholic Community Services may drop the Catholic part and become CCS. Until it officially becomes an Islamic organization. Before that all the crucifixes will have to go.
















