http://www.democracyunderattack.org/news/article.php?id=5782

 

Why Does Obama Keep Apologizing? 

Moshe Dann - Aug 30, 2010 
History News Network 

 

President Obama's defense of the right of Muslims to build a mosque and
Islamic center in New York City turned the issue into one of religious
freedom.  That was wrong.

Obama's first priority-like that of every national leader-is to speak for
his country and on their behalf.  Obama's refusal to do so, his insinuation
that questions raised about a proposed Islamic mega-center near the site of
the 9/11 attacks are un-American, unconstitutional, and prejudiced have
shamed every American, and the good name of America.

Obama could have defended America; instead, he apologized for it.

He could have said that 4,400 Americans have died in Iraq, 1,200 have died
in Afghanistan, and over a hundred thousand Americans have been wounded to
help those Muslim countries attain freedom (and, of course, hundreds of
billions of dollars towards that effort).

But he didn't.

Obama might have said that Islam is the fastest growing religion in the
U.S.; hundreds of thousands of Muslims have found a home in America since
and despite 9/11.  He could have said America has and continues to stand for
freedom and democracy.

But he didn't.

He is probably the first American president to malign his own country while
in office.   

Obama could have explained that American law and values do not support
discrimination, certainly not against Muslims; our history proves that.

There are about 2,000 mosques in the United States, serving about 8 million
Muslims; New York City alone has a dozen mosques.

And Muslims are doing well in America: 67 percent have degrees; their
average income is over $42,000; 26 percent earn over $100,000; 67 percent
buy a new car every three years.

President Obama could have noted that most American Muslims don't attend
prayer services; mosques are often political and social centers, some of
which are problematic.

According to FBI estimates, 10 percent of the mosques in the United States
are associated with radical jihadist ideology.  Others estimate that 80
percent of mosques are dominated by the extremist Wahhabi ideology promoted
by Saudi Arabia.  And Wahhabists are allowed to practice their faith, under
American principles of freedom of religion. 

Unlike houses of worship in America which are built and supported by the
local population, most mosques receive funding from foreign countries,
especially Saudi Arabia. Stephen Schwartz in the National Review gives an
example:

In a particularly disturbing case, the Islamic Development Bank also granted
$295,000 to the Masjid Bilal Islamic Center, for the construction of the
Bilal Islamic Primary and Secondary School in California, in 1999.  Hassan
Akbar, an American Muslim presently charged with a fatal attack on his
fellow soldiers in Kuwait during the Iraq intervention, was affiliated with
this institution.

In addition, the previously mentioned official website of the Saudi
government reported a donation in 1995 of $4 million for the construction of
a mosque complex in Los Angeles, named for Ibn Taymiyyah, a historic Islamic
figure considered the forerunner of Wahhabism.

President Obama might have noted that the Muslim Brotherhood, an
organization once linked to Nazi Germany that is banned in Egypt, is
associated with some American mosques. One website notes:

A study by Freedom House concluded that "American mosques are filled with
Saudi publications that promote hate ideology.  All of the books and
publications were found to have some connection to Saudi Arabia.  According
to the study, these publications advanced a "dualistic worldview in which
there exist two antagonistic realms or abodes that can never be reconciled,
Dar Al-Islam and Dar Al-Har, or Abode of War and that when Muslims are in
the latter, they must behave as if on a mission behind enemy lines."

The study also concluded that these publications "pose a grave threat to
non-Muslims and to the Muslim community itself."  The study further found
that the "spread of Islamic extremism, such as Wahhabism, is the most
serious ideological challenge of our times" and that "[t]he Saudis'
totalitarian doctrine of religious hatred now planted in many America
mosques is inimical to our tolerant culture, and undermines the war on
terrorism by providing the intellectual foundation for a new generation of
Islamic extremists."

President Obama could have explained that this is obviously not an issue of
religious freedom.  He could have championed America, its reputation,
institutions and values.  Instead, he reinforced the view that America is
bigoted. 

For that, President Obama owes every American an apology. 

The author, a former assistant professor of history at CUNY, is a writer and
journalist living in Jerusalem.

 

 



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