US President Barack Obama visited a Maryland
mosque on Wednesday to deliver a simple message at a complex time. “We are one
American family,” President Obama told the gathered crowd at the Islamic
Society of Baltimore. “We will rise and fall together.”
Obama sought to reassure Muslim Americans that the
country
considers their community essential to the makeup of society, condemn
the claim that all Muslims are terrorists, call on the Muslim community to also
condemn terrorism, affirm religious freedom, and explain to the whole of
America what Islam is and isn’t.
And with the rise of ISIS and in the wake of the
attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, the president had a lot of ground to cover
in the 45 minutes he had to speak.
“We have to reaffirm that most fundamental of
truths—we are all God’s children, all born equal with inherent dignity,” Obama
said.
He started by telling the story of Islam in the
U.S. from a historical perspective, bringing the audience back to the nation’s
founding. “Islam,” Obama said, “has always been a part of America.” Muslim
slaves ripped from Africa and brought to the U.S., Obama said, did not leave
their religion at the shore. He added that religious liberty guaranteed in the
Constitution didn’t come with an asterisk, quoting Thomas Jefferson’s
declaration that “the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and Mahometan [or
Muslim]” were all to be protected.
Looking out across the room, he marked the
contributions of Muslims within American society. He asked the service-members
in the audience to stand and thanked them for their service. He cheered Ibtihaj
Muhammad, the champion fencer who will become the first U.S. athlete to compete
while wearing a hijab during the 2016 Summer Olympics.
“Muslim Americans are some of the most resilient
and patriotic Americans you’ll ever meet, he said.
And through the personal letters he gets from
Muslims of all ages across the country, he noted the fear many feel just being
themselves.
President Obama spoke of a mother whose “heart cries every night” thinking
about how her child could face taunts and bullying at school.
He mentioned a 13-year-old girl from Ohio who
simply wrote, “I’m scared.” Before the speech, the president got a sense of how
Muslims are feeling first hand. He sat down with about a dozen people from
across the country for open dialogue about the state of their community.
Obama slammed “inexcusable” anti-Muslim rhetoric.
“An attack on one faith is an attack on all our faiths,” he said. “We can’t be
bystanders to bigotry. Together, we have to show that America truly protects
all faiths.”
The president’s historic first visit to a mosque
while in office had been long awaited by many, but for some—like Sabah Muktar,
the young woman who introduced the President on Wednesday, it came just in
time.
“This visit by our president is an affirmation to
all Muslims we are just as American as any other,” she said.
Source: Time Magazine




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