News flash: Obama is not a Muslim

obama in a churchWhat is the point of reporting on Web rumors that are plainly false and contribute little to the political discussion? Unfortunately it becomes necessary when the rumors and false reports become too much of the story.

The Washington Post reported in a front-page article, “Foes Use Obama’s Muslim Ties to Fuel Rumors About Him.” From the start, the story rightly exposes rumors and false reports that Obama is a closet Muslim. In the second paragraph, the story explains why these rumors are silly and mentions the nugget of fact that gives these stories their spark:

Since declaring his candidacy for president in February, Obama, a member of a congregation of the United Church of Christ in Chicago, has had to address assertions that he is a Muslim or that he had received training in Islam in Indonesia, where he lived from ages 6 to 10. While his father was an atheist and his mother did not practice religion, Obama’s stepfather did occasionally attend services at a mosque there.

The story attempts to lump together two issues: the first is the false Web rumor about Obama being a closet Muslim. The second is that Obama sees his time overseas in the world’s largest Muslim country as an asset and a reason for people to vote for him. It shores up the international experience portion of his presidential resume:

“A lot of my knowledge about foreign affairs is not what I just studied in school. It’s actually having the knowledge of how ordinary people in these other countries live,” he said earlier this month in Clarion, Iowa.

“The day I’m inaugurated, I think this country looks at itself differently, but the world also looks at America differently,” he told another Iowa crowd. “Because I’ve got a grandmother who lives in a little village in Africa without running water or electricity; because I grew up for part of my formative years in Southeast Asia in the largest Muslim country on Earth.”

While considerable attention during the campaign has focused on the anti-Mormon feelings aroused by former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney (R), polls have also shown rising hostility toward Muslims in politics. It is not clear whether that negative sentiment will affect someone who has lived in a Muslim country but does not practice Islam.

That last sentence is a pretty poor piece of writing and reporting. First of all, you shouldn’t start sentences with an “it” in general. It (oops) makes it hard to know what the writer is referring to. Second, what isn’t clear about people’s sentiment toward a person who lived in a Muslim country for a few years but doesn’t practice the religion? No one is thinking about opposing a candidate because he lived overseas. They are thinking about opposing a candidate because they think he is a closet Muslim.

The two issues to an extent go hand-in-hand, and one has to wonder how many people out there really believe that Obama is a closet Muslim versus those who consider his time overseas and understanding of Muslim culture as an asset.

Buried at the end of the story, we get these fairly surprising poll numbers that may be out of date, given the coverage already devoted to Obama’s faith:

A CBS News poll in August showed that a huge number of voters said they did not know Obama’s faith, but among those who said they did, 7 percent thought he was a Muslim, while only 6 percent thought he was a Protestant Christian.

The last half of the story repeats the false accusations that Obama is a Muslim and cites the frequent references to it in magazines and Internet message boards. I guess this is necessary for a reporter to convey the message that there are people out there who like to spread false rumors, including talk radio hosts and chain e-mails, but it seems like overkill. Is it really news that there are many instances of people spreading false rumors about a politician?

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  • Asinus Gravis

    Is it only me, or is it genuinely puzzling that the author of this story repeats the “rumor” or “false report” about Obama’s alleged Muslim commitments ad infinitum?

    I am reminded of the claim that if you repeat a lie often enough a lot of people come to believe it is true. Can’t that also be true of a reporter who is allegedly “correcting” a lie?

    So, what good reason can be given for the frequent repetition, in the article, of the “rumor” or “false report?”

  • Jerry

    A CBS News poll in August showed that a huge number of voters said they did not know Obama’s faith

    This is a story in itself. Clearly many are not paying attention to politics and this lack of interest and attention provides fertile soil in which rumors spread like kudzu.

  • Barry

    UCCTRUTHS.com nails it:

    Obama and the United Church of Christ

    Thursday, November 29, 2007

    The Washington Post has a horrible article on the rumors circulating around the internet that Sen. Barack Obama is really a Muslim. Rather than dispelling it, the article in effect just recirculates old news that will do little to clarify that Obama is a member of the United Church of Christ. From the article, apparently voters don’t know that Obama is a member of the UCC:

    A CBS News poll in August showed that a huge number of voters said they did not know Obama’s faith, but among those who said they did, 7 percent thought he was a Muslim, while only 6 percent thought he was a Protestant Christian .

    Back in February when UCCtruths.com broke the story that there were negotiations to have Obama speak at the General Synod, part of the political strategy for Obama in giving the speech was to give him a platform to make it clear that he was a Protestant Christian. Even then, Obama was quoted by the Associated Press as saying “I think the majority of voters know that I’m a member of the United Church of Christ, and that I take my faith seriously.”

    According to the poll cited in the Washington Post article, voters don’t know his faith. From the CBS poll:

    Sometimes, voters misperceive a candidate’s religion. In August, CBS News asked registered voters what they thought Barack Obama’s religion was. Most of them – 84 percent – said they didn’t know. But the largest number of those who thought they did know – nearly half of those who guessed any religion at all – thought Obama was a Muslim.

    Clearly the publicity Obama received from his speech at General Synod did little to help him clarify what his faith is. Although I still believe Obama’s speech before the General Synod violated IRS rules prohibiting political campaign intervention, I don’t think any other Presidential candidate has done more to fuse faith and politics than he has… and, at this point, I don’t know what more he could do to clarify his faith.

  • nabalzbbfr

    It is clear that Obama purposefully wants to preserve ambiguity about his religious preferences. If he wanted to clearly indicate that he is a Christian, he would have adopted a *CHRISTIAN* name instead of the overtly *MUSLIM* “Barack Hussein”. There is a long biblically sanctioned tradition of heathens changing their names upon becoming followers of Christ (particularly if their original names are offensive), for example Simon->Peter, Saul->Paul. So there is a lot of legitimacy in questioning Obama’s religious proclivities.

  • Joe

    A CBS News poll in August showed that a huge number of voters said they did not know Obama’s faith

    Most Democrats, and many Republicans, do not wear their Christian religion on their sleeve, and aside from general platitudes about ‘God’ they keep it ambiguous and don’t discuss religion specifics in their public speeches… except when they’re campaigning in various churches on Sundays. I suspect that’s reason folks do not know Obama’s religious preferences.

    nabalzbbfr, I think you’re reading too much into the name. Obama’s name is product of his upbringing– his parents chose and he can’t do anything about that. Simon was with the apostles for 3 years with no offense taken before Jesus finally changed it to Peter. Saul became Paul when he became a disciple, but Saul/Paul are basically same name in different languages. That Obama is not muslim is non-story just like his name.

  • Stephen A.

    On the one hand, I suppose it’s a liability for Obama’s campaign that some people fear that he’s a Muslim, so it will have to be addressed.

    I guess I’m lucky in that as a GetReligion reader, I not only know that Obama’s denomination is United Church of Christ, but that he is not a Muslim.

    The bad news is that when he gets his wish, and everyone gets to learn about his faith, there will likely be serious questions about it, since he attends a UCC church in which the pastor preaches race-based nonsense. (Thanks again to GetReligion for posting that information, months ago.)

    See: “Where Obama Kneels” March 15, 2007 http://www.getreligion.org/?p=2284

    Now, you want a REAL conspiracy theory? Identify the speaker in this quote:

    “Our judgment of Islam has been grossly distorted by taking the extremes to the norm. . . . For example, people in this country frequently argue that the Sharia law of the Islamic world is cruel, barbaric and unjust. Our newspapers, above all, love to peddle those unthinking prejudices. The truth is, of course, different and always more complex. My own understanding is that extremes, like the cutting off of hands, are rarely practiced. The guiding principle and spirit of Islamic law, taken straight from the Qur’an, should be those of equity and compassion.”

    A sheik? A Muslim theologian? Nope. It’s none other than Prince Charles, whom some believe have converted secretly to Islam.
    http://tinyurl.com/3xfwel (links to Google search)

  • http://www.getreligion.org/?p=2677 dpulliam

    Thanks Stephen A. for the note on Prince Charles. As one who is fascinated with things related to royalty, this is interesting and compelling to think about.

    I think a more plausible view, at least based on this quote, is that Charles, as a member of the royalty pretty much hates the media and thinks anything printed in the media is nonsense. He’s also probably a sucker for things like this.

  • david s

    A CBS News poll in August showed that a huge number of voters said they did not know Obama’s faith, but among those who said they did, 7 percent thought he was a Muslim, while only 6 percent thought he was a Protestant Christian

    So 13 percent (7 + 6) percent of people who say they know Obama’s faith say Muslim or Protestant. What did the other 87 percent say–they said they ‘knew.’ Or am I missing something? Based on what I’ve read about Obama, I thought he was a Protestant, but also thought he may have been a Muslim at some point in the past, maybe in childhood.

  • Stephen A.

    Thought everyone would enjoy this, regarding the Obama/Muslim issue:

    Clinton Volunteer Quits Over Obama Email
    Dec 5, 5:29 PM (ET)
    By NEDRA PICKLER

    WASHINGTON (AP) – A volunteer Iowa county coordinator for Hillary Rodham Clinton’s presidential campaign has resigned after forwarding a chain e-mail that suggests Barack Obama is a Muslim who wants to destroy the United States by being elected to its highest office.

    Obama is a member of the United Church of Christ and has never been a Muslim.

    A hoax e-mail that has been widely circulated suggests Obama is some sort of Manchurian candidate for Muslims.

    Judy Rose, a Clinton coordinator and Democratic Party official in Jones County, Iowa, forwarded it without comment to eight people on Nov. 21. Rose referred requests for comment to one of the recipients, Grace Zimmerman, who serves with her on the Jones County Democratic Central Committee.

    Zimmerman said Wednesday that Rose sent it to the members of the committee to “show people how dirty politics is” and did not agree with the content of the e-mail.

    “Oh heavens no,” Zimmerman said in a telephone interview. “She just wanted the people who were concerned with the politics of Jones County to be aware of it.”

    Zimmerman said the Clinton campaign never talked to Rose about why she sent it but simply demanded her resignation after another one of the recipients decried the e-mail in a post on the liberal blog Daily Kos.

    “There is no place in our campaign, or any campaign, for this kind of politics,” Clinton campaign manager Patti Solis Doyle said in a statement Wednesday. “A volunteer county coordinator made the mistake of forwarding an outrageous and offensive chain e-mail. This was wholly unauthorized and we were totally unaware of it.”

    According to a release on the Clinton campaign Web site, Rose is from Anamosa, Iowa, and served on Clinton’s Women’s Leadership Council.

    The Obama campaign declined to comment on her resignation.

    The e-mail that Rose forwarded points out that Obama’s father and stepfather were Muslim and that Obama lived in Indonesia for part of his childhood. But other parts of the e-mail are false – Obama attended public and Catholic schools in Indonesia, not a radical Islamic school. It is also not true that Obama used the Quran instead of the Bible when sworn into office or that he ever “admitted” to being a Muslim.

    http://apnews.myway.com/article/20071205/D8TBIDE00.html

  • http://courageman.blogspot.com CourageMan

    David:

    Actually, the Washington Post got it wrong. Here is the CBS Poll and here is the nut graf from a later CBS report citing the poll:

    Sometimes, voters misperceive a candidate’s religion. In August, CBS News asked registered voters what they thought Barack Obama’s religion was. Most of them – 84 percent – said they didn’t know. But the largest number of those who thought they did know – nearly half of those who guessed any religion at all – thought Obama was a Muslim.