| Obama Celebrates End of Ramadan, Praises Islam |
|
|
|
| Written by According to an Associated Press report, | |||
| Saturday, 05 September 2009 01:33 | |||
|
Source: New American
At a time when Americans may have gotten used to the White House referring to Easter-related celebrations as merely one kind of "Springtime tradition," President Obama has found a religion he apparently cannot praise highly enough: Islam. President Barack Obama on Tuesday praised American Muslims for enriching the nation's culture at a dinner to celebrate the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. "The contribution of Muslims to the United States are too long to catalog because Muslims are so interwoven into the fabric of our communities and our country," Obama said at the iftar, the dinner that breaks the holiday's daily fast. The president joined Cabinet secretaries, members of the diplomatic corps and lawmakers to pay tribute to what he called "a great religion and its commitment to justice and progress." At a time when some adherents of Islam are busy upholding a 1,300-year tradition of waging war against Christianity and when even in America a young woman who converts to Christianity - Rifqa Bary - claims to fear martyrdom at the hands of her Moslem parents, Obama's tribute to Islam's "commitment to justice and progress" makes for a pretty jarring contrast with suicide bombers, sharia (Islamic law), and on-going allegations of coerced conversions.
Obama also noted the contributions of Muhammad Ali, who was not in attendance, though the president borrowed a quote from famous boxer, explaining religion. "A few years ago," Obama said, "he explained this view - and this is part of why he's The Greatest - saying, 'Rivers, ponds, lakes and streams - they all have different names, but they all contain water. Just as religions do - they all contain truths.'" Such shallow Universalism is self-negating the moment one looks at the fundamental, and mutually irreconcilable, tenets of the major religions; for example, Christianity is founded on the belief that Jesus Christ is the Son of God whose suffering and death made atonement for sin; Islam denies this element of that belief, and insists that Jesus was merely a prophet, and one who was inferior to Mohammed. Any purported Universalism seeking to unify all religions is simply a form of moralism, and a shallow one, at that.
|












