Holding
Muslims at
Arm’s Length
By
Derrick Z.
Jackson
28/06/08 "Boston
Globe"
-- - I
wish Barack
Obama were a
Muslim.
Better that
than having
supercilious
staffers
whisk women
in Islamic
head scarves
out of
photo-ops.
Better that
than telling
Representative
Keith
Ellison of
Minnesota,
the nation’s
first Muslim
congressman,
not to come
help Obama
in Iowa and
North
Carolina.
Better that
than wooing
red states
by wobbling
before the
modern
equivalent
of the Red
Scare. In
his
year-and-a-half-long
run for
president,
Obama has
visited
churches and
synagogues,
but no
mosque. This
has the
musty feel
of
light-skinned
African-Americans
passing for
white,
paranoid
over
daylight
visits from
dark-skinned
relatives.
Obama’s
campaign has
been far
more
inclusive
than John
McCain’s.
Yet as of
late,
Obama’s
handlers are
so bent on
passing
their
biracial,
binationally-raised
man as a
pure-blooded
American - a
new
commercial
plays up his
“values
straight
from the
Kansas
heartland” -
that they
are
reinforcing
the
perception
that Muslim
Americans
are impure.
Asked what
he would say
to Obama if
he had the
chance,
Bilal Kaleem,
executive
director of
the Boston
chapter of
the Muslim
American
Society,
said, “It’s
a tough
question,
and it’s sad
that it’s a
tough
question. .
. . I would
suggest that
he might
have to do
the same
thing [on
Islam] that
he did on
race. He
addressed it
head-on in a
landmark
speech. He
gave his
speech in a
mature way.
If he could
speak in the
same way to
that, it
could be
inspiring
for our
country and
the world.”
It is
understandable
why Barack
Hussein
Obama and
his handlers
suffer from
PTSD -
post-traumatic
smear
disorder.
Political
woodpeckers
hammer
falsehoods
from the
right.
Fellow
Democrat
Hillary
Clinton,
when asked
whether
Obama is a
Muslim,
tackily
peeped,
“there is
nothing to
base that
on, as far
as I know.”
Despite
nearly
hitting the
third rail
over his
former
Christian
pastor, the
Rev.
Jeremiah
Wright, only
58 percent
of Americans
think Obama
is a
Christian,
according to
a Newsweek
poll in May.
It has been
so
outrageous
that Mayor
Michael
Bloomberg of
New York, an
independent
and a Jewish
American,
said the
“whisper
campaign”
was “wedge
politics at
its worst.”
Kaleem said
of Obama,
“We feel
sympathy for
him because
it’s not
just him who
should be
called out;
it is also
the people
in the media
and politics
who made a
cottage
industry out
of him being
a wolf in
sheep’s
clothing and
that all
Muslims are
subversive.”
But the
sympathy may
be
short-lived
as Obama’s
“Fight the
Smears” part
of his
website has
some Muslims
feeling
betrayed by
an
over-the-top
effort to
denounce
every Obama-is-a-Muslim
claim as a
“lie” and
saying,
“Senator
Obama has
never been a
Muslim, was
not raised a
Muslim, and
is a
committed
Christian.”
How about
something
like,
“Senator
Obama is a
Christian
who, having
lived in the
world’s
largest
Muslim
country
[Indonesia],
having
traveled in
Pakistan and
having many
Muslim
friends,
appreciates
American
pluralism
like no
other
candidate in
US history”?
A more
positive
approach by
Obama of
affirming
Muslims
while
affirming
his
Christianity
actually
fits the
nation’s
values. A
new Pew
Research
survey finds
Americans
more open
than ever to
a range of
religious
viewpoints.
Muslim
Americans
themselves,
according to
a 2007 Pew
survey, are
“largely
assimilated,
happy with
their
lives,” and
“decidedly
American in
their
outlook,
values, and
attitudes.”
This
obviously
all came
together for
Ellison’s
election, as
the
Minneapolis
Star-Tribune
has noted
that his
district has
more
Lutherans
than
Muslims.
Ellison this
week told
The New York
Times about
Obama, “A
lot of us
are waiting
for him to
say that
there’s
nothing
wrong with
being a
Muslim, by
the way.”
A lot of
Muslims are
waiting
because,
seven years
after the
Sept. 11
terrorist
attacks, an
undercurrent
of suspicion
remains. In
the 2007 Pew
survey, a
third of
Muslim
Americans
said that
within the
last year,
they had
either been
treated with
suspicion,
called
offensive
names,
profiled by
police, or
even
attacked.
Kaleem, a
graduate of
MIT, said he
sometimes is
asked during
grant
proposals
how radical
his group
is.
“In a way,”
Kaleem said,
“it is good
that these
missteps
have come
out in
public so we
can start
talking
about the
undercurrent,
which is the
real issue.”
Obama
himself has
said
“Christians
and people
of other
faiths lived
very
comfortably”
with each
other when
he lived in
Indonesia.
It is time
for him to
live
comfortably
with Muslims
in his
campaign.
In a 2006
trip to
Chad, Obama
issued the
Muslim
greeting for
peace. A
wise Obama
would say
“assalamu
alaikum” at
home, too.
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2008 The New
York Times
Company
