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Obama Fights False Links to Islam

JIM KUHNHENN   02/27/08 11:07 PM ET   AP

Obama

WASHINGTON — For Barack Obama, it is an ember that he has doused time and again, only to see it flicker anew: links to Islam fanned by false rumors, innuendo and association. Obama and his campaign reacted strongly this week when a photo of him in Kenyan tribal garb began spreading on the Internet.

And the praise he received Sunday from Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan prompted pointed questions _ during Tuesday night's presidential debate and also in a private meeting over the weekend with Jewish leaders in Cleveland.

During the debate, Obama repeated his denunciation of Farrakhan's views, which have included numerous anti-Semitic comments. And, after being pressed, he rejected Farrakhan's support in the presidential race.

The Democratic candidate says repeatedly that he's a Christian who took the oath of office on a family Bible. Yet on the Internet and on talk radio _ and in a campaign introduction for John McCain this week _ he is often depicted, falsely, as a Muslim with shadowy ties and his middle name, Hussein, is emphasized as a reminder of Iraq's former leader.

"If anyone is still puzzled about the facts, in fact I have never been a Muslim," he told the Jewish leaders in Cleveland, according to a transcript of the private session.

The photo of Obama wearing Kenyan tribal raiments _ taken by an Associated Press photographer during his visit in 2006 to the country where his father was born _ resurfaced on the Internet amid unsubstantiated claims that it was being circulated by members of Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaign. Clinton and her aides said they had nothing to do with it. The Obama campaign accused them of "shameful, offensive fear-mongering."

On Tuesday Republican candidate McCain denounced the introduction he got in Cincinnati that criticized Obama in vivid terms. Talk show host Bill Cunningham referred to Obama three times as "Barack Hussein Obama" and called him a "hack, Chicago-style" politician during the introduction of McCain.

The Obama campaign is closely attuned to the rumors and insinuations. Information on Obama's Christian faith is prominently available on the "Know the facts" page of his Web site. The campaign has distributed flyers to churches in states with presidential contests. And it encourages supporters to flag any attack that may make its way into cyberspace.

"Our campaign is vigilant in quickly responding to any information about Senator Obama that surfaces, be it on the Internet, in the media or from our opponents," spokesman Bill Burton said Wednesday.

If there is confusion _ and opportunity for political mischief _ it derives at least in part from Obama's rich cultural background. His mother was a white woman from Kansas, his father was Kenyan and he spent part of his childhood in Indonesia, a largely Muslim country.

"My grandfather, who was Kenyan, converted to Christianity, then converted to Islam," Obama said Sunday. "My father never practiced; he was basically agnostic. So, other than my name and the fact that I lived in a populous Muslim country for four years when I was a child, I have very little connection to the Islamic religion."

Obama has become careful in denouncing the links, lately noting that some rumors about him also have been insulting to Muslims. Jim Zogby, founder and president of the Arab American Institute, said many Arab Americans are drawn to Obama because of his cultural background.

"It is clear he wants to have a broader relationship with the Muslim world," Zogby said. "He has a biography that connects him to the Muslim world."

Obama, though in the presidential limelight now for more than a year, is still introducing himself to voters. An AP-Yahoo poll in January asked people to volunteer the first few words that came to mind about each of the candidates, and 4 percent of the respondents, unprompted, mentioned the word Muslim when describing Obama.

Some of the rumors and allegations about Obama are clearly not true, yet still spread, often anonymously:

_ A debunked chain e-mail circulating widely on the Internet suggests he is hiding his Islamic roots. It says he was sworn into the Senate on the Quran and turns his back on the flag during the Pledge of Allegiance.

He took his Senate oath with his hand on a family Bible, and he says, "Whenever I'm in the United States Senate, I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America." In fact, no candidate could survive if he publicly spurned the pledge.

_ Another false report says he attended a Muslim madrassa school as a child in Jakarta. Obama was born in Hawaii and moved to Indonesia when he was 6 to live with his mother and stepfather. He returned to Hawaii when he was 10 to live with his maternal grandparents. Interviews last year by The Associated Press at the elementary school in Jakarta found that it is a public and secular institution and has been open to students of all faiths since before Obama attended in the late 1960s. Said vice principal Akmad Solichin: "Yes, most of our students are Muslim, but there are Christians as well. Everyone's welcome here."

_ Obama also has faced questions about his pastor at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, where he has been a member for 20 years. Trinity calls itself "Unashamedly Black and Unapologetically Christian." But it accepts non-black congregants. The United Church of Christ's president and general minister, the Rev. John H. Thomas, was quoted in a church publication as pointing out that the Rev. Jane Fisler-Hoffman, Illinois Conference Minister, who is white, "has been a member of the congregation for years."

_ Obama has been asked about Farrakhan's words of praise and Farrakhan's receipt of an award from "Trumpet Newsmagazine," a Trinity church publication last month. Obama told Jewish leaders Sunday: "An award was given to Farrakhan for his work on behalf of ex-offenders completely unrelated to his controversial statements. And I believe that was a mistake and showed a lack of sensitivity to the Jewish community and I said so."

Farrakhan did not endorse Obama but said Sunday: "This young man is the hope of the entire world that America will change and be made better." Asked Tuesday night whether he would accept support from Farrakhan, Obama said: "I live in Chicago. He lives in Chicago. I've been very clear, in terms of me believing that what he has said is reprehensible and inappropriate. And I have consistently distanced myself from him."

Following an exchange with Clinton, he then added: "There's no formal offer of help from Minister Farrakhan that would involve me rejecting it. But if the word 'reject' Senator Clinton feels is stronger than the word 'denounce,' then I'm happy to concede the point, and I would reject and denounce."

(This version CORRECTS to show that elementary school in Jakarta was not Catholic.))

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WASHINGTON — For Barack Obama, it is an ember that he has doused time and again, only to see it flicker anew: links to Islam fanned by false rumors, innuendo and association. Obama and his campa...
WASHINGTON — For Barack Obama, it is an ember that he has doused time and again, only to see it flicker anew: links to Islam fanned by false rumors, innuendo and association. Obama and his campa...
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04:17 PM on 02/28/2008
. The world must think we are odd to obsess so much over a name. When Jon Stewart referred to it at the Oscars, he was calling out everyone who thought it might matter. How could it possibly be important? In grade school names can really matter, but what about the grown ups? Humpty Loser Dumpty should be able to be President Dumpty if he wins the most votes!
02:01 PM on 02/28/2008
New system makes it hard for me to post...I wonder why??? Freedom of speech on HuffPo is not guaranteed.
01:26 PM on 02/28/2008
Type your comment here.
12:58 PM on 02/28/2008
I know it is said every election cycle that this is the most important of our lifetime, but I firmly believe it to be true this time.

Are we ready? Are the young people ready to step up? Are we really still a bunch of racist underneath it all? Are we ready to tell the 'man' his time is over? Are we ready to let people like Hannity and Limbaugh and O'Reilly they are irrelevant?

I hope and pray we are.
10:52 AM on 02/28/2008
The 4 percent of the respondents in the Zogby poll who mentioned the word Muslim when describing Obama probably still think Saddam Hussein was behind 9/11, that Iraq had WMDs, and that every person with dark skin is an Islamofacist. Part of me thinks uninformed voters shouldn't be allowed to vote.
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DavidMG
OWS Senior Citizen
10:43 AM on 02/28/2008
Eveybody should start calling him "Barack Hussein Obama". This will totally diffuse the issue.
12:44 PM on 02/28/2008
Barack Hussein Obama, Jr. Let's do it right.
10:30 AM on 02/28/2008
Get over it, he will face this for the rest of his political career.
09:36 AM on 02/28/2008
This despicable email came directly from Hillary Clinton's campaign and I have yet to see her denounce or reject it. Her campaign is beneath contempt and I do not understand how her supporters can be proud of a candidate who has not only tolerated racial and religious attacks against Obama but has literally mocked the millions of intelligent people who have rallied to him. She plays in the gutter and is unworthy of the nomination.
11:30 AM on 02/28/2008
The picture may have had certain negative intention, but I didn't find it offensive at all. I would grade it as less "ethnic immersion" than Bush and his buds in S.A.
09:24 AM on 02/28/2008
The clintonistas fail to grasp two very important things:

1) hillary will not win the nomination
2) hillary is damaging the Democratic nominee with this bullshit

It is abundantly clear that hillary wants McCain to win if she is not the nominee so that she can run again in four years.
10:32 AM on 02/28/2008
The sky is falling, it is Hillary's fault. And I thougght the right-Wing had some crazy things to say. Some of you Obama folks are not much better.
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10:47 AM on 02/28/2008
These Obama-kool-aid drinkers are doing the job of the wingnuts for them...and they say Hillary is destroying the party...
11:27 AM on 02/28/2008
Give her credit for trying so hard. It'll take time for all these 20th century gilded statues to melt. Come the convention, it might take a lot of openness and team spirit, not to mention some slick basketball slides, to win the contest.
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Gabrielle
Progressive Liberal
09:16 AM on 02/28/2008
So sad that some American People have been fooled for so long that they hate anything that is not like them, with beliefs that should better be left in the middle ages....
The neocons have succeded in "dumbing" the nation with extreme superstitious religion, garbage TV...etc...
The only HOPE left is the YOUNG PEOPLE and the INTELLECTUALS (who obviously use their brains...dah!)
THEY ARE THE ONES WHO VOTE FOR OBAMA.
Let the rest of the Country WAKE UP and do the right thing before it's TOO LATE...

IT IS A VERY EVIL BUNCH WHO RUN THIS COUNTRY...
BEWARE!
09:31 AM on 02/28/2008
I agree that there are many people here with distorted views, but as Obama's campaign has proven, there are more people who seek the change, who see the world in real terms and who genuinely want America to be viewed better in the world than thos who not. Soon, Carl Rove, Dick Cheney and the far right will be history. We are the change we have been watiting for!
11:34 AM on 02/28/2008
You don't have to shout to win an argument. The evil in the powerful, through money or societal standing, comes from the natural tendency of people to abuse the power. (That includes you and me, if we ever get rich or powerful) This is one of the reasons I worry about a return of the former first family. This is why the 22nd amendment is out there. She will be ready on day one to resume the misdeeds (abuse of power) of practiced powerful people.
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09:03 AM on 02/28/2008
A large portion of the young voters are Independant, and a large part of those are Republican who took advantage of open primaries...
and large parts of those are from red states who will overwhelmingly vote Republican anyway.
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08:54 AM on 02/28/2008
"If there is confusion and opportunity for political mischief it derives at least in part from Obama's rich cultural background. His mother was a white woman from Kansas, his father was Kenyan and he spent part of his childhood in Indonesia, a largely Muslim country."

To be fair, you left out the word "Muslim" in describing his father..if you are going to state a fact, do it correctly..this is a major problem with todays media.
09:23 AM on 02/28/2008
Hmm, I don't recall anyone pointing out the religion of any other candidates parents. Why not, I mean just in the interest of "fairness", right?
08:33 AM on 02/28/2008
Obama missed his chance to distance himself from this issue when only he implied that he rejects Farrakhan though arm-twisting during the debate. His half hearted response only fuels the impression that he is happy with Farrakhan’s and the Nation of Islam’s support.

A clear concise response was all that was needed. He now has this burden to bear, support from a militant group. It is amazing how once Obamas mostly clean record enjoyed that he could attack Clinton without repercussions largely due to the fact he is new, is rapidly getting filled in with not so nice issues.

The irresponsibility of the Obama campaign off the podium has unfairly damaged Clinton within the party and has exposed Barack to serious issues regarding his electability.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SShaw490
08:46 AM on 02/28/2008
His clear, concise response to Farrakhan was that he both rejects and denounces him and his positions, and in the past he created a rift between himself and the pastor of his church over Farrakhan. He couldn't have been more consistent or forceful on this issue. When people say otherwise, they're projecting what they WISH Obama had said, rather than what he actually said.
09:25 AM on 02/29/2008
Agree that Obama finally said more specific words, but only after Hillary saved him on the subject, by calling him out. Obama knew that he could not leave the statement as is, but the response really didnt answer the original question.
Some are ok with this others may not be.
09:36 AM on 02/28/2008
I disagree, I think Obama has handled most subjects with grace, including this one. He has said he has denounced Farrakhan, he hasn't seeked nor wanted his support and is not associated with him in any way. That's plenty, in my opinion. As ususal, this is one of those topics that get out there and everyone has to comment. Barack is and has been the most electable candidate for the Democratyic party in a long time.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SShaw490
08:16 AM on 02/28/2008
I think the Bill Cunningham incident is the kind of emprical evidence that the extremist right - particularly the talk radio people like Limbaugh, Cunningham and Savage - is trying to incite some mentally unstable person with a patriot complex to assasinate Obama. Seriously. The kind of language they use, their constant reference to the lie that he's a Muslim, he's a closet terrorist, he has all these plans to destroy America; all of that is the kind of language that could make some delusional person to kill Obama and think he's doing his patriotic duty in doing it. People like Limbaugh make a handsome living using words - nobody can believe they are not aware of the impact of those words.

The right wing is literally trying to kill this man by inciting delusional murder. If you don't think that can happen, remember the people that Obama most reminds us of - John F. Kennedy; Bobby Kennedy; Martin Luther King, Jr...
04:00 PM on 02/28/2008
Ok, so he shouldn't be elected because he is an influential leader that might piss off some racist lunatic into assassinating him? These kind of illogical thoughts are just like the issues pertaining to his middle name, Farrakhan, the Somali clothing picture, etc. They push voters' thoughts away from the positions that will affect them the most.
07:39 AM on 02/28/2008
This election will be pretty straight forward. On one side, a coalition of greedy corporate whores and racist morons...on the other, people with a brain. Gee, I wonder which there are more of in America? I'm not optimistic.
08:11 AM on 02/28/2008
Cheer up! :-)

There are 10% to 15% in the middle that fell for the lies of the Republican war machine. That's why they voted for Bush.

These folks are going to vote Democratic this time.
08:38 AM on 02/28/2008
You would think, but like I said, I'm not optimistic. I'm pretty sure most Americans prefer a nearly dead corporate whoring white man to any black guy or a woman.
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Gabrielle
Progressive Liberal
08:55 AM on 02/28/2008
YOU THINK?