Omar Abdel Rahman (born May 3, 1938, Al-Jamāliyyah, Egypt—died February 18, 2017, Butner, North Carolina, U.S.) was an Egyptian-born cleric who served as the spiritual leader of al-Jamāʿah al-Islāmiyyah (Arabic: “the Islamic Group”), one of Egypt’s largest and most active militant organizations in the late 20th century. In 1996 he was sentenced to life in prison in the United States for conspiring to bomb a series of prominent targets in New York City.
Abdel Rahman was blind since childhood. He studied theology and Sharīʿah (Islamic law) at Cairo’s al-Azhar University. After graduating, he distinguished himself as a vocal critic of the secular regime of Egyptian Pres. Anwar el-Sādāt. In the 1970s Abdel Rahman and others founded al-Jamāʿah al-Islāmiyyah to advocate and support militant action against the Sādāt regime. As the organization grew, Abdel Rahman himself became widely known for his opposition to the Egyptian secular authorities and his promotion of a pan-Islamic state. He was imprisoned numerous times, and when Egypt severely cracked down on militant groups in 1990, Abdel Rahman fled to the United States and settled in the Brooklyn, New York, area. According to U.S. officials, Abdel Rahman’s U.S. terrorist cell planned to attack civilians, government officials, and landmarks. In 1990 El Sayyid Nosair, an Egyptian man linked to Abdel Rahman, was arrested and tried for the murder of Jewish political extremist Rabbi Meir Kahane in New York. Nosair was acquitted of the murder but convicted of lesser related charges. When federal agents raided Nosair’s New Jersey residence after his arrest, they found many incriminating items, including a sermon by Abdel Rahman that urged followers to attack “the edifices of capitalism.”
One interpretation of this phrase became immediately clear after the February 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center in New York City. The blast killed six people, injured a thousand more, and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage. A number of those accused of having carried out the bombing worshipped at Abdel Rahman’s mosque in Jersey City, New Jersey. Although there was insufficient evidence to link Abdel Rahman directly to the World Trade Center bombing, in January 1996 he was convicted of preparing what prosecutors called a “war of urban terrorism” in New York City. Under a rarely used Civil War-era seditious conspiracy law, prosecutors proved that the cleric had conspired to “overthrow or put down or destroy by force the Government of the United States.” Abdel Rahman was found guilty of plotting to blow up the George Washington Bridge, the Lincoln and Holland tunnels, the United Nations building, and other Manhattan landmarks. He was also linked to the Kahane murder and convicted of trying to orchestrate the assassination of Egyptian Pres. Ḥosnī Mubārak. Abdel Rahman was sentenced to life in prison. To limit his ability to direct operations from behind bars, officials restricted his communication with the outside world. In April 2002 Abdel Rahman’s attorney, Lynne Stewart, was arrested and charged with helping the cleric pass messages to his followers. Stewart was convicted in February 2005 and ultimately sentenced to 10 years in prison.