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A weird dilemma for Obama...
Obama now says he plans to go, or is thinking about going, to Iraq. He
has previously stated that he'd meet with Ahmedinejad, etc. Here's the dilemma as I see it: Most members of the Iranian leadership, many Iraqi leaders - in fact, a large part of the population of the Middle East, among others - would seem to have a sacred duty (and a legal obligation) to treat him as an apostate (and arguably, albeit a weak argument, as one who denies the Christian and/or Jewish books as well, which is equally-serious to being an apostate). And he and many in US leadership (mostly Dems, but some GOPers) are seemingly obligated, by statements they have made, to allow them to treat him thus in that they feel the US shouldn't interfere with or attempt to impose US "values" upon the laws of sovereign nations. The question would seem to hinge upon whether the person or people in question follows the interpretation of the majority or minority of Islamic scholars. The majority of Islamic scholars, um, do not view apostates (or those who are held to deny the other books) er, "favorably." This is, IMO, no reflection on Obama as it would seem none of it - or at least being an apostate - involves a choice he made or had any influence upon (IOW, he could hardly pick his father). But it is, again IMO, an interesting, weird dilemma for him as well the non-Islamic world - if he were elected Prez, AFAIK, he would be the first apostate leader of major government. And here's what could be the real "**** hits the fan" thing: what happens when some radical pushes the issue with Khamenei, etc.... R |
A weird dilemma for Obama...
On Jun 2, 8:14*am, wrote:
Obama now says he plans to go, or is thinking about going, to Iraq. *He has previously stated that he'd meet with Ahmedinejad, etc. *Here's the dilemma as I see it: *Most members of the Iranian leadership, many Iraqi leaders - in fact, a large part of the population of the Middle East, among others - would seem to have a sacred duty (and a legal obligation) to treat him as an apostate (and arguably, albeit a weak argument, as one who denies the Christian and/or Jewish books as well, which is equally-serious to being an apostate). *And he and many in US leadership (mostly Dems, but some GOPers) are seemingly obligated, by statements they have made, to allow them to treat him thus in that they feel the US shouldn't interfere with or attempt to impose US "values" upon the laws of sovereign nations. *The question would seem to hinge upon whether the person or people in question follows the interpretation of the majority or minority of Islamic scholars. The majority of Islamic scholars, um, do not view apostates (or those who are held to deny the other books) er, "favorably." This is, IMO, no reflection on Obama as it would seem none of it - or at least being an apostate - involves a choice he made or had any influence upon (IOW, he could hardly pick his father). *But it is, again IMO, an interesting, weird dilemma for him as well the non-Islamic world - if he were elected Prez, AFAIK, he would be the first apostate leader of major government. And here's what could be the real "**** hits the fan" thing: what happens when some radical pushes the issue with Khamenei, etc.... R A similar (not identical, only similar) thing happened with Madeleine Albright. She has Jewish ancestry, but denies any connection with the Jewish faith; many in Israel were very unsure of how to respond to that. AFAIK, no one in the Arab world cared at all, although they certainly could have. Likewise, the fringe of the muslim world has a lot to say about women being in positions of authority...I don't see them having any problem with meeting with Hilary, Madeleine or Condi. Without knowing MUCH more about Islam, and you can read that to mean BEING Muslimm or at least being an expert on the ins and outs of Islam, I don't think any hypotheticals you or I came up with about how the Arab world would treat Obama have enough basis is reality to be worth worrying about. This whole Apostate thing has become such a political football that I'm surprised that you are posting it here as if it was someting that just dawned on you. For one (of many) counterpoints, read: http://news.newamericamedia.org/news...f 900bedd1fc6 --riverman |
A weird dilemma for Obama...
On Sun, 1 Jun 2008 21:31:03 -0700 (PDT), riverman
wrote: On Jun 2, 8:14*am, wrote: Obama now says he plans to go, or is thinking about going, to Iraq. *He has previously stated that he'd meet with Ahmedinejad, etc. *Here's the dilemma as I see it: *Most members of the Iranian leadership, many Iraqi leaders - in fact, a large part of the population of the Middle East, among others - would seem to have a sacred duty (and a legal obligation) to treat him as an apostate (and arguably, albeit a weak argument, as one who denies the Christian and/or Jewish books as well, which is equally-serious to being an apostate). *And he and many in US leadership (mostly Dems, but some GOPers) are seemingly obligated, by statements they have made, to allow them to treat him thus in that they feel the US shouldn't interfere with or attempt to impose US "values" upon the laws of sovereign nations. *The question would seem to hinge upon whether the person or people in question follows the interpretation of the majority or minority of Islamic scholars. The majority of Islamic scholars, um, do not view apostates (or those who are held to deny the other books) er, "favorably." This is, IMO, no reflection on Obama as it would seem none of it - or at least being an apostate - involves a choice he made or had any influence upon (IOW, he could hardly pick his father). *But it is, again IMO, an interesting, weird dilemma for him as well the non-Islamic world - if he were elected Prez, AFAIK, he would be the first apostate leader of major government. And here's what could be the real "**** hits the fan" thing: what happens when some radical pushes the issue with Khamenei, etc.... R A similar (not identical, only similar) thing happened with Madeleine Albright. She has Jewish ancestry, but denies any connection with the Jewish faith; many in Israel were very unsure of how to respond to that. AFAIK, no one in the Arab world cared at all, although they certainly could have. Likewise, the fringe of the muslim world has a lot to say about women being in positions of authority...I don't see them having any problem with meeting with Hilary, Madeleine or Condi. Non sequitur. What "Arabs" might think of those who "deny any connection with the Jewish faith" or women in positions of authority is unrelated to what Islamic law and the Quran state about apostates. Obama was born a Muslim and he actively and knowingly rejected Islam as an adult - the debate over what Islamic law says about apostates is viable; to debate his apostasy is pointless. Without knowing MUCH more about Islam, and you can read that to mean BEING Muslimm or at least being an expert on the ins and outs of Islam, I don't think any hypotheticals you or I came up with about how the Arab world would treat Obama have enough basis is reality to be worth worrying about. This whole Apostate thing has become such a political football that I'm surprised that you are posting it here as if it was someting that just dawned on you. His apostasy didn't "just dawn on me," but his recent leaving of his church put another spin on it. To me, this could be (and should be) trouble for him - why is he leaving it now? Oh, I know it's supposedly all final-strawish because some guilty white liberal Catholic priest went off the my brotha deep end, but his narrow wanna-be-black ass was right there warming the oak through the same kind of schtick when it made him look good locally. For one (of many) counterpoints, read: http://news.newamericamedia.org/news...f 900bedd1fc6 Not much of a counterpoint. They are absolutely correct about a few Islamic scholars stating that it is their interpretation that apostasy is a crime, but it is to be punished in the afterlife, by God, etc. So what? There are US scholars who would state that it is their thinking that many US drug laws are wrong, un-Constitutional, etc. Attempts at using such with a court to get a possession with intent rap tossed ain't gonna build a legal career. IAC, I had not seen, read, or even heard of the referenced NYT piece until I read your cite: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/12/op...12luttwak.html but it seems more accurate than the one you cited. Further, what the "Arab media" might or might not say about Obama is not conclusive, or even material as to his apostasy, and citing that they haven't made an issue of his apostasy has no bearing on the fact that under much of Islamic law and for most "authorized interpreters," he is an apostate. The "Arab media" doesn't make that call, clerics interpreting the Quran do. And note the quote from your story, "The Grand Imam of Al-Azhar...Tantantawi sic said, 'A Muslim who renounced his faith or turned apostate should be left alone _as long as he does not pose a threat or belittle Islam._'" Emp. add. (and BTW, it's Tantawi). I'll not attempt to define what "pose a threat" or "belittle" might mean to whom, but I will say that the threshold for doing so doesn't seem to be particularly high for some. And the rest of his position is "If Muslims are forced to take action against the apostate, it should not be because he or she had given up the faith but because he or she had turned out to be an enemy or a threat to Islam." And for the record, Tantawi does seem to tolerance and peaceful co-existence, with the serious caveat that threats to Islam shall not be tolerated. http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/857/eg9.htm FWIW, it appears he supports death for Rushdie as an apostate blasphemer and enemy of Islam. But since he is a single scholar in Egypt, I'm not sure what he has to do with Iran, Iraq, Syria, a Palestinian state, etc. TC, R --riverman |
A weird dilemma for Obama...
riverman wrote:
On Jun 2, 8:14 am, wrote: Obama now says he plans to go, or is thinking about going, to Iraq. He has previously stated that he'd meet with Ahmedinejad, etc. Here's the dilemma as I see it: Most members of the Iranian leadership, many Iraqi leaders - in fact, a large part of the population of the Middle East, among others - would seem to have a sacred duty (and a legal obligation) to treat him as an apostate (and arguably, albeit a weak argument, as one who denies the Christian and/or Jewish books as well, which is equally-serious to being an apostate). And he and many in US leadership (mostly Dems, but some GOPers) are seemingly obligated, by statements they have made, to allow them to treat him thus in that they feel the US shouldn't interfere with or attempt to impose US "values" upon the laws of sovereign nations. The question would seem to hinge upon whether the person or people in question follows the interpretation of the majority or minority of Islamic scholars. The majority of Islamic scholars, um, do not view apostates (or those who are held to deny the other books) er, "favorably." This is, IMO, no reflection on Obama as it would seem none of it - or at least being an apostate - involves a choice he made or had any influence upon (IOW, he could hardly pick his father). But it is, again IMO, an interesting, weird dilemma for him as well the non-Islamic world - if he were elected Prez, AFAIK, he would be the first apostate leader of major government. And here's what could be the real "**** hits the fan" thing: what happens when some radical pushes the issue with Khamenei, etc.... R A similar (not identical, only similar) thing happened with Madeleine Albright. She has Jewish ancestry, but denies any connection with the Jewish faith; many in Israel were very unsure of how to respond to that. AFAIK, no one in the Arab world cared at all, although they certainly could have. Likewise, the fringe of the muslim world has a lot to say about women being in positions of authority...I don't see them having any problem with meeting with Hilary, Madeleine or Condi. Without knowing MUCH more about Islam, and you can read that to mean BEING Muslimm or at least being an expert on the ins and outs of Islam, I don't think any hypotheticals you or I came up with about how the Arab world would treat Obama have enough basis is reality to be worth worrying about. This whole Apostate thing has become such a political football that I'm surprised that you are posting it here as if it was someting that just dawned on you. For one (of many) counterpoints, read: http://news.newamericamedia.org/news...f 900bedd1fc6 --riverman the fundamental (i.e., rabid) religious sects there and here are problematical in political conduct, though i think such matters are generally most focused within each country's own borders (real or imagined). i seriously doubt apostasy will be a diplomatic issue worthy of concern given the purported announced and perceived agendas and politics of the various leaders, candidates, and countries. i'm much more worried about mccain's ability to do anything meaningful or responsible in quelling the real world problems we have created and perpetuated in that area of the planet. his election will be perceived as more of the same by the muslim world. military-enforced and militant solutions will never work on any permanent basis, nor will hawkish chest-thumping, imo. jeff |
A weird dilemma for Obama...
On Mon, 02 Jun 2008 07:24:31 -0500, George Cleveland
wrote: Richard, the whole apostasy thing is just another dumb GOP whispering campaign. No, it isn't. Did you read my last cite: http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/857/eg9.htm http://religiondispatches.org/Gui/Co...Page=AR&Id=272 Again, I don't claim or think that _all_ Muslims will or should care one way or the other about Obama and apostasy, but for anyone, including scholars, to say it won't matter to _any_ is, simply put, bull****. I would agree that a) Muslims of US citizenship should not let it influence their vote, and b) that in the US, it goes without question that his religious status is legally meaningless. OTOH, I think that for Dems to try and play this off as some "vast right-wing conspiracy" is a mistake. TC, R |
A weird dilemma for Obama...
On Jun 2, 9:19*pm, wrote:
On Mon, 02 Jun 2008 07:24:31 -0500, George Cleveland wrote: Richard, the whole apostasy thing is just another dumb GOP whispering campaign. No, it isn't. *Did you read my last cite: http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/857/eg9.htm http://religiondispatches.org/Gui/Co...Page=AR&Id=272 Again, I don't claim or think that _all_ Muslims will or should care one way or the other about Obama and apostasy, but for anyone, including scholars, to say it won't matter to _any_ is, simply put, bull****. *I would agree that a) Muslims of US citizenship should not let it influence their vote, and b) that in the US, it goes without question that his religious status is legally meaningless. *OTOH, I think that for Dems to try and play this off as some "vast right-wing conspiracy" is a mistake. TC, R Not a right-wing conspiracy, but certainly typical religio-centric paranoia. Wikipedia (religious textual icon that it is) pretty strongly implies that you have to be post-puberty and renounce Islam to be considered an Apostate. AFAIK, Obama left the muslim faith about the time that most of us were about the age that we thought Easter was about chocolate. I think that among the vast vast majority of muslim states, modern diplomacy will supplant any religious dictates (such as it has with meeting with unveiled women in authority, etc). Among the Islam lunatic fringe, they don't need any reason to attempt something extreme, and we have entire secret organizations whose sole purpose is to prevent such events. I don't think the US voters should let our elections be affected by some fear that our President might be a Target. If we do, then we lose control of our own elections, and they win. There are always similar irrational concerns about candidates: people who did not know Catholicism feared that JFK would be more allegiant to the Pope than the Constitution, and I remember Yankees fearing that Jimmy Carter would be more allegiant to the Stars and Bars than the Union. --riverman |
A weird dilemma for Obama...
On Mon, 02 Jun 2008 08:22:51 -0400, jeff miller
wrote: This is, IMO, no reflection on Obama as it would seem none of it - or at least being an apostate - involves a choice he made or had any influence upon (IOW, he could hardly pick his father). But it is, again IMO, an interesting, weird dilemma for him as well the non-Islamic world - if he were elected Prez, AFAIK, he would be the first apostate leader of major government. And here's what could be the real "**** hits the fan" thing: what happens when some radical pushes the issue with Khamenei, etc.... R the fundamental (i.e., rabid) religious sects there and here are problematical in political conduct, though i think such matters are generally most focused within each country's own borders (real or imagined). i seriously doubt apostasy will be a diplomatic issue worthy of concern given the purported announced and perceived agendas and politics of the various leaders, candidates, and countries. i'm much more worried about mccain's ability to do anything meaningful or responsible in quelling the real world problems we have created and perpetuated in that area of the planet. his election will be perceived as more of the same by the muslim world. military-enforced and militant solutions will never work on any permanent basis, nor will hawkish chest-thumping, imo. OK, let me ask you this - if Obama had been just some guy in Afghanistan during the Talibani control, what do you think he would do and what do you think would happen to him? And do you think that those labeled "radical" or worse by the west (the followers of OBL and the like) would say about his or anyone else's apostasy? While I more-or-less agree that attempts to persuade Ahmedinejad, Khamenei, etc. to personally injure or kill a US Presidential candidate, much less the POTUS, is not probably going to be seriously considered by the attempted persuadee, OTOH, I can see the Iranian leadership being put into a position of not being able to talk, negotiate, etc. with an apostate (or using it as an internal excuse for whatever they wish). For many Muslims, there is no room for "political realism" when it comes to Islamic law, and breaking it under such circumstances is itself a serious violation. But surprisingly to me, you seem to be doing what many other are doing - imposing a secular, Western-centric, law-view on this. This has nothing to do with it being, particularly, Obama or who Obama is, or whether he might be a better or worse POTUS than whoever, it has to do with absolute law as many Muslims see it. For many Muslims, they can "deal" with a person who may be "hawkish" but never Muslim, and thereby not apostate, as a "ruler" of a non-Islamic state, but they cannot come into contact with an apostate as the "ruler" of a non-Islamic state without having a absolute sacred duty to treat that apostate accordingly, based on the apostate's actions. IOW, while they might not feel a duty to seek out apostates in non-Islamic states, they might well see their duty differently if that apostate is before them, especially if that apostate is acting in a way that they see as that of an "enemy of Islam." Heck, flying a jumbo jet full of people into an office tower full of people, blowing up train stations, nightclubs, and buses, even for religious reasons, is pretty much a legal no-no in most of the western world, but the local legal prohibitions didn't seem to matter to those involved. I'd offer that if someone is not only willing to die, but intent upon doing so to accomplish their goal, secular laws and/or possible criminal penalties aren't exactly a shield from them or a sword against them. TC, R jeff |
A weird dilemma for Obama...
On Mon, 2 Jun 2008 07:41:28 -0700 (PDT), riverman
wrote: On Jun 2, 9:19*pm, wrote: On Mon, 02 Jun 2008 07:24:31 -0500, George Cleveland wrote: Richard, the whole apostasy thing is just another dumb GOP whispering campaign. No, it isn't. *Did you read my last cite: http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/857/eg9.htm http://religiondispatches.org/Gui/Co...Page=AR&Id=272 Again, I don't claim or think that _all_ Muslims will or should care one way or the other about Obama and apostasy, but for anyone, including scholars, to say it won't matter to _any_ is, simply put, bull****. *I would agree that a) Muslims of US citizenship should not let it influence their vote, and b) that in the US, it goes without question that his religious status is legally meaningless. *OTOH, I think that for Dems to try and play this off as some "vast right-wing conspiracy" is a mistake. TC, R Not a right-wing conspiracy, but certainly typical religio-centric paranoia. I'm sure what you mean to say, but if you think the issue of apostasy in Islam is some new Obama-inspired thing, you're the one being, er, "-centric." Wikipedia (religious textual icon that it is) pretty strongly implies that you have to be post-puberty and renounce Islam to be considered an Apostate. AFAIK, Obama left the muslim faith about the time that most of us were about the age that we thought Easter was about chocolate. Er, no, and no. Under the majority of Islamic scholars' interpretation, he is an apostate - he was born Muslim. The only thing minority allows, generally, is that he is not subject to punishment for an apostasy until majority - there is no minority period of "free apostasies" prior to majority. IAC, Obama apostatized as an adult, so whatever he may have done as "a child" is no longer the controlling factor. And as to beliefs about Easter (perhaps a Freudian choice, certainly an ironic one...), given some of his supposed self-stated beliefs and ideas, he obviously still believes in fairy tales... I think that among the vast vast majority of muslim states, modern diplomacy will supplant any religious dictates (such as it has with meeting with unveiled women in authority, etc). Why do you think that? Among the Islam lunatic fringe, Um, do you consider the vast majority of Muslims the "Islam lunatic fringe?" they don't need any reason to attempt something extreme, and we have entire secret organizations whose sole purpose is to prevent such events. I don't think the US voters should let our elections be affected by some fear that our President might be a Target. If we do, then we lose control of our own elections, and they win. There are always similar irrational concerns about candidates: Like John McCain's age...? Seriously, I agree with the above, generally. I don't suggest that anyone in the US should consider his apostasy in voting (but I don't suggest that they don't, either), but I find it another of life's little ironies, given the aforementioned positions on other nations and US involvement...much like the whole delegates-vs-"popular vote" mess Hillary finds herself in, with none other than Terry McAuliffe as her head poot boy... people who did not know Catholicism feared that JFK would be more allegiant to the Pope than the Constitution, Well, sure - anyone who had any insight into the Kennedys knew he'd ignore 'em if possible and **** 'em both over if not for family and "friends"... and I remember Yankees fearing that Jimmy Carter would be more allegiant to the Stars and Bars than the Union. Uh... IAC, a whole lot of Yankees aren't all that bright, anyway... TC, R --riverman |
A weird dilemma for Obama...
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