by Daniel Pipes
"If I were a Muslim I would let you know," Barack Obama has said, and I
believe him. In fact, he is a practicing Christian, a member of the
Trinity United Church of Christ. He is not now a Muslim.
But was he ever a Muslim or seen by others as a Muslim? More precisely,
might Muslims consider him a murtadd (apostate), that is, a Muslim who
converted to another religion and, therefore, someone whose blood may
be shed?
The candidate for president of the United States has delivered two
principal statements in reply. His campaign website carries a statement
dated Nov. 12 with the headline, "Barack Obama Is Not and Has Never
Been a Muslim," followed by: "Obama never prayed in a mosque. He has
never been a Muslim, was not raised a Muslim, and is a committed
Christian." Then, on Dec. 22, in the unlikely setting of the Smoky Row
Coffee Shop in Oskaloosa, Iowa, as he munched on pumpkin pie and drank
tea with four locals, Obama provided more detail took on this topic
than before. When asked to explain his Muslim heritage, he replied:
My father was from Kenya, and a lot of people in his village were
Muslim. He didn't practice Islam. Truth is he wasn't very religious. He
met my mother. My mother was a Christian from Kansas, and they married
and then divorced. I was raised by my mother. So, I've always been a
Christian. The only connection I've had to Islam is that my grandfather
on my father's side came from that country. But I've never practiced
Islam. … For a while, I lived in Indonesia because my mother was
teaching there. And that's a Muslim country. And I went to school. But
I didn't practice. But what I do think it does is it gives me insight
into how these folks think, and part of how I think we can create a
better relationship with the Middle East and that would help make us
safer is if we can understand how they think about issues.
These statements raise two questions: What is Obama's true connection
to Islam and what implications might this have for an Obama presidency?
Was Obama Ever a Muslim?
"I've always been a Christian," said Obama, focusing on his own
personal lack of practice of Islam as a child to deny any connection to
Islam. But Muslims do not see practice as key. For them, that he was
born to a line of Muslim males makes him born a Muslim. Further, all
children born with an Arabic name based on the H-S-N trilateral root
(Hussein, Hassan, and others) can be assumed to be Muslim, so they will
understand Obama's full name, Barack Hussein Obama, to proclaim him a
born Muslim.
More: family and friends considered him as a child to be Muslim. In
"Obama Debunks Claim About Islamic School," Nedra Pickler of the
Associated Press wrote on January 24, 2007, that
Obama's mother, divorced from Obama's father, married a man from
Indonesia named Lolo Soetoro, and the family relocated to the country
from 1967-71. At first, Obama attended the Catholic school, Fransiskus
Assisis, where documents showed he enrolled as a Muslim, the religion
of his stepfather. The document required that each student choose one
of five state-sanctioned religions when registering – Muslim, Hindu,
Buddhist, Catholic or Protestant.
Asked about this, Obama communications director Robert Gibbs responded
by indicating to Pickler that
he wasn't sure why the document had Obama listed as a Muslim. "Senator
Obama has never been a Muslim."
Two months later, Paul Watson of the Los Angeles Times (available
online in a Baltimore Sun reprint) reported that the Obama campaign had
retreated from that absolute statement and instead issued a more
nuanced one: "Obama has never been a practicing Muslim." The Times
looked into the matter further and learned more about his Indonesian
interlude:
His former Roman Catholic and Muslim teachers, along with two people
who were identified by Obama's grade-school teacher as childhood
friends, say Obama was registered by his family as a Muslim at both
schools he attended. That registration meant that during the third and
fourth grades, Obama learned about Islam for two hours each week in
religion class.
The childhood friends say Obama sometimes went to Friday prayers at the
local mosque. "We prayed but not really seriously, just following
actions done by older people in the mosque," Zulfin Adi said. "But as
kids, we loved to meet our friends and went to the mosque together and
played." … Obama's younger sister, Maya Soetoro, said in a statement
released by the campaign that the family attended the mosque only "for
big communal events," not every Friday.
Recalling Obama's time in Indonesia, the Times account contains quotes
that Obama "went to the mosque," and that he "was Muslim."
Summarized, available evidence suggests Obama was born a Muslim to a
non-practicing Muslim father and for some years had a reasonably Muslim
upbringing under the auspices of his Indonesian step-father. At some
point, he converted to Christianity. It appears false to state, as
Obama does, "I've always been a Christian" and "I've never practiced
Islam." The campaign appears to be either ignorant or fabricating when
it states that "Obama never prayed in a mosque."
Implications of Obama's Conversion
Obama's conversion to another faith, in short, makes him a murtadd.
That said, the punishment for childhood apostasy is less severe than
for the adult version. As Robert Spencer points out, "according to
Islamic law an apostate male is not to be put to death if he has not
reached puberty (cf. ‘Umdat al-Salik o8.2; Hidayah vol. II p. 246).
Some, however, hold that he should be imprisoned until he is of age and
then ‘invited' to accept Islam, but officially the death penalty for
youthful apostates is ruled out."
On the positive side, were Obama prominently charged with apostasy,
that would uniquely raise the issue of a Muslim's right to change
religion, taking a topic on the perpetual back-burner and placing it
front and center, perhaps to the great future benefit of those Muslims
who seek to declare themselves atheists or to convert to another
religion.
But would Muslims seeing Obama as a murtadd significantly affect an
Obama presidency? The only precedent to judge by is that of Carlos Saúl
Menem, the president of Argentina from 1989 to 1999. The son of two
Muslim Syrian immigrants and husband of another Syrian-Argentine,
Zulema Fátima Yoma, Menem converted to Roman Catholicism. His wife said
publicly that Menem left Islam for political reasons—because
Argentinean law until 1994 required the president of the country to be
a member of the Church. From a Muslim point of view, Menem's conversion
is worse than Obama's, having been done as an adult. Nonetheless, Menem
was not threatened or otherwise made to pay a price for his change of
religion, even during his trips to majority-Muslim countries, Syria in
particular.
It is one thing to be president of Argentina in the 1990s, however, and
another to be president of the United States in 2009. One must assume
that some Islamists would renounce him as a murtadd and would try to
execute him. Given the protective bubble surrounding an American
president, though, this threat presumably would not make much
difference to his carrying out his duties.
More significantly, how would more mainstream Muslims respond to him,
would they be angry at what they would consider his apostasy? That
reaction is a real possibility, one that could undermine his
initiatives toward the Muslim world.
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