Eli Saslow, the young Washington Post reporter best known for his giddy promotion of Obama’s "glistening pectorals," touted Obama as a "powerful new ally" against "Islamophobia" on the front of Wednesday’s Style section. The protagonist of Saslow’s story, Aida Mansoor of Hartford, Connecticut, tries to educate an apparently (and painfully) bigoted America about Islam. This is where Obama comes to the rescue:
Her attempts at cross-cultural connection can sometimes feel futile, Mansoor says, but her energy this year has been fortified by a powerful new ally: President Obama, a Christian who has promised unprecedented outreach to the Muslim world. More than 85 percent of Muslims in the United States approve of Obama's performance as president, according to a recent Gallup poll, which is his strongest endorsement from any religious group.
"What he says could go a long way toward dispelling the myths," Mansoor says. "For a long time, Muslims have been the bad guys in this country. There is so much hate and misunderstanding, and he might be able to help the world overcome some of it."
Before Obama hosts his global diversity seminar, Mansoor begins her local equivalent.
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The assumption behind the Post story is that America has a long way to go to be properly "educated" that Islam is a peaceful religion. The headline was "As the Myths Abound, So Does Islamic Outreach." Will knowledge defeat ignorance? The Post's headline inside isn't optimistic: "Explaining Islam to Americans: It's Not Any Easier These Days."
The Post doesn’t ask: is it possible that Muslims can exaggerate the harshness and everyday commonality of "Islamophobia" among Americans? Saslow brings his story right around to how the 2008 election displayed "the worst of Islamophobia" in the United States:
After Abdul-Karim [Mansoor’s imam] finishes his introductory lecture at the library, Mansoor plays a series of media clips compiled during the past year. The 2008 presidential election, Mansoor says, revealed the worst of Islamophobia in the United States. "Anytime you turned on the TV, they were saying, 'You know, maybe Obama is a Muslim,' " she tells the class. "Well, first of all, he's not a Muslim. But more important: So what if he was? What's wrong with that?"
Mansoor turns out the lights and starts the projector, which the class takes as a cue to relax.... One of the census employees closes his eyes as Mansoor plays the first sound bite, from a broadcast of Michael Savage's radio show:
"We have a right to know if [Obama's] a so-called friendly Muslim or one who aspires to more radical teachings," Savage says.
Then comes a clip of Sen. John McCain at one of his campaign rallies, responding to a woman who asked whether Obama was Arab: "No ma'am," McCain says. "He's a decent family man, citizen."
Eventually, Mansoor finishes with a video of an experiment conducted by a television station. The clerk at a bagel shop pretends to refuse service to a Muslim woman, and the camera focuses on other customers' responses. Three customers congratulate the clerk for taking a stand against "un-American terrorists." Several others leave the store in protest. One man, moved to tears, tells the clerk, "Every person deserves to be treated with respect, dignity."
Mansoor stops the tape and turns on the lights. She's crying. The attendees set down their pens and cellphones. They're watching now.
"This always brings tears to my eyes when I see it," Mansoor says. "This is what we face every day. Every day. Maybe it gives you a little bit of an idea what it must feel like. What are your reactions?"
Nobody speaks....
Finally, Lillian Ruiz, the human-relations director, raises her hand.
"I think we need to stand up like we did in the 1950s," Ruiz said. "You watch things like this and it makes you want to just fight back and do something, because it's so sad. Obviously, discrimination is still very alive."
"Yes," Mansoor says. "Yes. Thank you."
That's how the article ends. America's stuck in the 1950s, and Muslims are the new blacks.
Here’s where the whole story turns on fiction: Saslow is writing about a February 26, 2008 episode of ABC’s Primetime: What Would You Do? in which actors playing an obnoxiously bigoted clerk and an offended Muslim woman try to nudge unsuspecting members of the public into action. The "Islamophobia" is exaggerated for ratings and to make a liberal point against discriminatory attitudes. ABC’s John Quinones, the host of these "thought experiments," explained:
QUINONES: The young woman in our experiment is an actor. But for this woman, discrimination is all too real. Nohayia Javed [ph] helped us design our experiment. Although born in Chicago, she says she's constantly characterized by fellow Americans as the enemy.
JAVED: They always start off with, 'You're a terrorist. Osama-lover. Towel-head. Camel jockey." On and on.
Fellow Americans "always start" with terrorist accusations? They’re "constantly" attacking Muslims with harsh ridicule? At what point do ABC and The Washington Post acknowledge this kind of harassment might not be a constant occurrence?
In that 2008 segment, Quinones acknowledged "At the end of the day, 13 people stood up for the Muslim woman, while six sided with the clerk. But the majority of the bystanders, 22, did or said absolutely nothing." Because twice as many expressed offense, Quinones placed all the blame on the bystanders, so that the vast majority looked like they needed an Islamic training seminar.
PS: Here's what gets left out of the sympathetic story: does Islamic outreach always ring true? A newspaper account of another Aida Mansoor event in Connecticut features Muslim convert Ingrid Mattson uncorking this whopper:
The most common misconception about Islam is that it is oppressive to women. Muslim women, like women all over the world have often had to struggle to enjoy their natural rights, but Islam is most often seen by them as a source of strength in advocating for their rights.
—Tim Graham is Director of Media Analysis at the Media Research Center.




















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Frankly, I am sick to death
June 3, 2009 - 15:38 ET by motherbeltFrankly, I am sick to death of this President doing outreach!!!
How many sets of kneepads will he go through in his first year????
(no off-color implication intended)
I didn't think it was physically possible, but this both sucks and blows. -Bart Simpson
Right, MB. He always starts
June 3, 2009 - 16:22 ET by ThisnThatRight, MB. He always starts with "It's America's fault", and goes downhill from there.
And Islamophobia? Get real, Wapo. Islam is a violent "religion", and it's muslim practitioners are fanatic barbarians. Proof is everywhere. When is the last time anyone converted to Christianity and then went out and murdered someone, as that fool did in Texas after he converted to Islam? When facts are in your face, Wapo, why don't you simply report them, rather than distort them?
___________________________________
Liberals constantly demand that we accept a glaring falsehood as truth; Obama's elimination of the word "terror" will make terrorist acts less terrifying
After reading the above,
June 3, 2009 - 15:39 ET by R D HelmAfter reading the above, one thing is readily apparent: Eli Saslow knows next to nothing about the "peaceful religion" of Islam.
And if anyone is "stuck" in a previous era, it is Saslow's Muslim friends, who, after 1400 years have yet to get beyond 7th century barbarity.
-Dave
There are a lot of
June 3, 2009 - 16:14 ET by MidAmericaThere are a lot of haters in this country.
Ignorance is obviously a
June 3, 2009 - 16:22 ET by mattmIgnorance is obviously a qualification for a columnist job at the WP.
America was attacked by Muslims
June 3, 2009 - 16:24 ET by c5thenIn 1993, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001. While they have been referred to as "Islamic extremists" by the cowardly media, they supposedly moderate muslims in this country have never come out in solidarity with the US as a group and state that they are Americans too.
I still remember the images of the Palestinians in Gaza dancing for joy and singing praises to Allah on 9/11/2001 when they heard what had happened in NY.
Yes it's a shame that there is bigotry and prejudice in the world, but it exists everywhere and on all sides of any issue. Islam has brought this on themselves because they have NOT distanced themselves from the extremists and condemned their philosophy, actions and goals. They only occasionally condemn a specific event. I will guarantee you that the outcome would have been much worse if they had sent a young man wearing a yarmulke into a Muslim owned shop to try and buy something.
Hey, I got the wrong "CHANGE"!
www.loyaltoliberty.com
I wonder what Saslow had to
June 3, 2009 - 16:24 ET by R D HelmI wonder what Saslow had to say about this:
http://americanpower...
-Dave
Everyone who reads that
June 3, 2009 - 16:45 ET by motherbeltEveryone who reads that should follow the link there to the Mark Steyn article: Israel Today, the West Tomorrow
The ending is the money quote:]
The joke about
Mandatory Palestine was that it was the twice-promised land. But isn’t
that Europe, too? And perhaps Russia and maybe Canada, a little ways
down the line? Two cultures jostling within the same piece of real
estate. Not long ago, I found myself watching the video of another
“pro-Palestinian” protest in central London with the Metropolitan
Police retreating up St. James’s Street to Piccadilly in the face of a
mob hurling traffic cones and jeering, “Run, run, you cowards!” and “Allahu akbar!”
You would think the deluded multi-culti progressives would understand:
In the end, this isn’t about Gaza, this isn’t about the Middle East;
it’s about them. It may be some consolation to an ever-lonelier Israel
that, in one of history’s bleaker jests, in the coming Europe the
Europeans will be the new Jews. (emphasis mine)
I didn't think it was physically possible, but this both sucks and blows. -Bart Simpson
Barack Obama, "Muslim Community Activists"
June 3, 2009 - 16:28 ET by allanfFrom just "community activist" to "Muslim Community Activist". He would be called the second coming of the left wing wasn't so devoutly anti-Christian.
Muslim comedy...
June 3, 2009 - 16:34 ET by m4ster chief"The most common misconception about Islam is that it is oppressive to women. Muslim women, like women all over the world have often had to struggle to enjoy their natural rights, but Islam is most often seen by them as a source of strength in advocating for their rights."
Who said Muslims don't have a sense of humor? Actually, they could do a lot to change the negative perception of Muslims by:
-Not flying jets into buildings in New York;
-Not killing their peaceful neighbors just because they are Christians;
-Not stoning teenage Muslim girls to death for the offense of being a rape victim;
-Not skinning another Muslim alive because they don't like something he said;
-Not beheading American journalists and displaying the video on You Tube;
-Not buying Filipinas, etc. and flying them to Muslim countries to be used as sex slaves...
Could go on and on, but you get the idea.
Muslims persecuted and discriminated against in the U.S.?
June 3, 2009 - 16:46 ET by krendlerGee, didn't realize that. Would love to see a compilation of the data/incidents supporting that claim.
If there's a "myth" being propagated by the "ignorant", it would be the myth the American media broadcast to the world that "ignorant Americans" discriminate against Muslims.
My impression, and I believe this is supported by a study that came out last year, is that Muslims have integrated into our society much better than they have in Europe.
But, per usual, we get the oh-so-hip and politically correct "bad, bad America" line of garbage from the media. Such a horrible and oppressive place for Muslims, as 10s (100s?) of thousands emigrate to the U.S. every year, living and worshiping peacefully, side-by-side with non-Muslims, sending their kids to schools and college, and, generally, being productive and welcome members of our society.
But because America is concerned about Islamic extremism, we're all "anti-Muslim", according to the MSM. Same bs the media and the liberals pull with illegal immagration. If you support measures to end illegal immigration, you're "anti-immigrant" and, of course, a racist.
"The most common
June 4, 2009 - 00:23 ET by snaggletoothie"The most common misconception about Islam is that it is oppressive to women." Maybe Ingrid Mattson could send us some photos of bilini clad, free Egyptian women cavorting along the banks of the Nile?
7 million Muslims in America now?
June 4, 2009 - 05:33 ET by Sergeant ROCKWhere's that from? Wikipedia?
Rush cited Pew Research where the number was just over 2 million.
Neither number makes us 'one of the largest Muslim countries in the world' however.
"I ask, Sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people. To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them."
George Mason
He was talking about land
June 4, 2009 - 05:35 ET by motherbeltHe was talking about land area. ;-)
I didn't think it was physically possible, but this both sucks and blows. -Bart Simpson
Prayers start today
June 4, 2009 - 05:37 ET by Sergeant ROCKSo, will that be five breaks today at work? What if I don't have a carpet?
"I ask, Sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people. To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them."
George Mason
Islamophobia?!?!?
June 4, 2009 - 08:42 ET by Wildcatter1980I ain't got no stinkin' Islamophobia!
However, I do have a phobia of anyone who wants to convert or kill me simply because I do not believe in the same religion as they do. But, then this can be applied to the far left loons as well, can't it?
--
We already have term limits. They are called elections. We can & should vote out those who do not represent & serve us! - Me
If there is any
June 4, 2009 - 16:25 ET by rbosqueIf there is any "Islamophobia" it is only because those bastards like to bomb, rape, murder and (really) torture Westerners. They've been doing that since Mohammed so those left-wing #@!holes can kiss my ass about Islamophobia.