The Islamic Association of Collin County (IACC)—known locally as The Plano Masjid—has released a promotional video proudly broadcasting the Islamic Adhan, or call to prayer, from its sprawling 50,000-square-foot compound in Plano, Texas. To many non-Muslims, the Adhan may sound like a spiritual chant. But in Islamic theology and historical practice, it is anything but neutral. It is a declaration of religious, legal, and civilizational supremacy—a public assertion that Islam has arrived and claims dominion.
Let’s break it down:
“Allahu Akbar” (Allah is the Greatest)
This is repeated four times at the start. Westerners often translate this as “God is great.” But in Arabic, “Akbar” is a comparative superlative, meaning greater than all others. “Allah is greater than your god, your system, your laws. Allah is supreme.”
“Ash-hadu an-la ilaha illa Allah” (I bear witness there is no deity but Allah)
This is not interfaith-friendly monotheism. It is a total rejection of all other belief systems, especially Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, and secularism. “Your gods are false. Only ours is real.”
“Ash-hadu anna Muhammadan-Rasulullah” (I bear witness that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah)
Islamic doctrine holds that Muhammad is the final prophet, sent to override all previous revelations. “All prior faiths are obsolete. Only Islam remains.” This is a legal oath in Islamic law, not just a personal belief. It is how one enters Islam—and formally exits all other religions.
“Hayya ‘ala s-salah” (Come to prayer) & “Hayya ‘ala ‘l-falah” (Come to success)
These lines tie success, in this life and the next, exclusively to Islamic prayer. In Islamic belief, only Muslims can achieve true success. “If you’re not submitting to Allah, you are failing—spiritually and socially.”
“Allahu Akbar” (repeated again)
To reaffirm Allah’s total supremacy over all laws, gods, ideologies, and nations.
“La ilaha illa-Allah” (There is no deity but Allah)
This is the closing seal—a non-negotiable truth claim in Islam. “All other gods are false. Islam is the only truth.”
TEXAS, PAY ATTENTION!
Plano Mosque Broadcasts Adhan: Not a Call to Prayer—A Declaration of Supremacy
The Islamic Association of Collin County (IACC)—known locally as The Plano Masjid—released a promotional video from its sprawling 50,000-square-foot compound in Plano, Texas,… pic.twitter.com/VkVFrWgxzj
— Amy Mek (@AmyMek) April 19, 2025
Why This Matters
In an exclusive interview with RAIR Foundation USA, Dr. Andrew Bostom—a leading scholar of Islam, epidemiologist, and author of The Legacy of Islamic Antisemitism—explained that the supremacist messaging of the Adhan extends directly into the Islamic prayers it summons. At the core of these prayers is Surat Al-Fatiha, Islam’s opening chapter, which devout Muslims recite 17 times a day. Its final verse, Quran 1:7, has been understood for over a thousand years as condemning Jews and Christians.
“Those who earned Allah’s wrath” are the Jews, and “those who went astray” are the Christians—a view affirmed not only by classical commentators like al-Tabari, but also by modern authorities like Grand Imam Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi of Al-Azhar University, the highest seat of Sunni learning.
As Dr. Bostom emphasized, “This is not a fringe interpretation—it is the dominant one across time.”
When the Plano Mosque broadcasts the Adhan, it is not merely inviting Muslims to pray—it is summoning them into a worldview where Jews are cursed, Christians are misguided, and Islam alone holds truth, power, and divine favor.
To outsiders, it may sound like tradition. But to those familiar with Islamic theology and history, the Adhan is not just a call to worship—it is a territorial and ideological marker. It declares:
- Islam is the only valid religion
- All others—Christian, Jewish, Hindu, secular—are invalid
- Allah is the only true God
- Muhammad replaces all prophets and revelations
- True success exists only in submission to Islam
This is why, in many Islamic countries, churches, synagogues, and temples are banned or restricted. Their very existence contradicts the Adhan’s claim to theological supremacy.
And what follows the Adhan is no less ideological. The Adhan summons Muslims to the five daily prayers—each one anchored in the recitation of Surat Al-Fatiha, the Quran’s opening chapter. According to Islamic tradition and scholarship, the final verse of this chapter (Quran 1:7) refers explicitly to Jews as “those who earned Allah’s anger” and Christians as “those who went astray.”
These identifications are not marginal or debated—they stem directly from Muhammad himself, as recorded in canonical Islamic sources. The Islamic historian and commentator al-Tabari, writing in the 10th century, affirmed this interpretation, which was echoed centuries later by Grand Imam Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi of Al-Azhar University. Across both classical and modern Islamic scholarship, this verse is universally understood as a theological indictment of Jews and Christians—and it is recited by Muslims 17 times a day.
And Here’s What Most Texans Don’t Know
The word “Allah” does not mean “God” in a neutral, interfaith sense. In Islamic doctrine, Allah is not the God of the Bible. Islam explicitly rejects the Trinity, denies the divinity of Jesus, and teaches that Christianity is a corruption that must be replaced.
So when the Plano Mosque says, “Allah is the Greatest,” they’re not affirming a shared belief in God.
They are proclaiming: “Our god is greater. Your god is false.”
This ideological messaging is reinforced in every act of worship. As Islamic expert Dr. Andrew Bostom explains, even small Muslim children are taught to recite the full Fatiha—including the seventh verse condemning Jews and Christians—multiple times daily.
This isn’t obscure scripture buried deep in the Quran; it’s the centerpiece of daily Islamic devotion. The indoctrination begins early and persists for life, embedding a worldview that separates Muslims from everyone else, not just theologically, but morally and civilizationally. It is not simply faith—it is identity, and it is supremacy.
And disturbingly, this supremacist doctrine is increasingly seeping into public life. As Bostom warns, Surat Al-Fatiha—including the verse vilifying non-Muslims—is now being recited at military funerals, congressional invocations, and public government meetings under the guise of “interfaith inclusion.”
Yet no one pauses to consider what’s actually being said: that Jews and Christians are cursed and astray, while Muslims alone walk the righteous path.
The prayer may sound melodic, but its message is exclusionary, and its repetition in civic spaces is a direct affront to the pluralistic foundations of the United States.
Final Thought
In any other context, a public broadcast declaring “Your god is false, ours is supreme” would spark national outrage. But when delivered in Arabic—and cloaked in religious tolerance—it’s allowed to blanket American cities in supremacy rhetoric five times a day.
In truth, this isn’t just a call to prayer.
It is a civilizational claim—a daily reminder that Islam has arrived, and it does not share space.
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Author: Amy Mek
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