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Home Front: Culture Wars
Aide: Obama fighting Muslims' 'otherization'
2010-04-29
President Barack Obama's aggressive outreach to the Muslim American community is reducing its sense of isolation, President Barack Obama's envoy to the Muslim world told a conference in Washington Wednesday evening. "We've really started to knock down that sense of otherization," said Rashad Hussain, a White House lawyer who also serves as liaison to the Organization of the Islamic Conference. Hussain defined the rather esoteric term "otherization" as a sense that many Muslims had during the Bush years that their value or danger to society was viewed solely through the prism of terrorism.

"Muslims ... sometimes feel like they don't have as much of a stake or a role in the future of the country," Hussain told the Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy conference. "That's something that all of the engagement that the United States has done on these issues both internationally and domestically has helped to counter."

Hussain was the keynote speaker at the session, which marked one year since Obama's historic speech in Cairo last April, where he attempted to reset America's relationship with Muslims around the globe. In many ways, the most remarkable thing about Hussain's speech was the context in which it took place: a conference that featured explicitly "Islamist" political leaders from Algeria, Bahrain and Morocco, as well as a provocative Oxford scholar whom the Bush administration effectively banned from the U.S., Tariq Ramadan. Many Republicans, such as former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, continue to use the term "Islamist" to describe enemies of the U.S. The GOP politicians also fault Obama for failing to recognize the threat such an ideology poses to the U.S.

Giuliani's view is pretty much 180 degrees from the prevailing sentiment at Wednesday's conference. "There doesn't really seem to be much of a debate about whether engagement with Islamists should happen," professor Peter Mandeville of George Mason University declared. "There really is no other alternative. The question now is about the nature of that engagement ... rather than the question of whether this is something the United States should do."

In his 20-minute speech and a subsequent Q & A session, Hussain generally stuck to Obama's rhetorical formulation of using the term "violent extremism" for what the Bush folks — and just about everyone else — used to call "terrorism." However, Hussain did use the T-word a couple of times. He touted the U.S. commitment to resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, to a diplomatic resolution of tensions with Iran, to avoiding religious- and nationality-based profiling in airport security screening and to freedom for Muslims around the world to wear Islamic garb.

In response to a question about the U.S. willingness to deal with Taliban members who are prepared to renounce violence, Hussain said, "The U.S. will engage those groups that are lawfully elected and are lawfully part of the political process and don't engage in violence, and that is a commitment that is demonstrated over a set period of time."

Pressed by a questioner urging U.S. action against Israel over its refusal to end settlement-building activity, Hussain didn't offer much to satisfy the pro-Palestinian audience. "The best way to address that issue is to get negotiations between the parties back on track again. ... It's not something that you will see this administration walk away from," he said.

Hussain did seem a tad exasperated by complaints that, despite the vaunted Muslim outreach campaign, Obama has failed to visit a mosque in the U.S. as president. "If there is this silver bullet people are looking for, that the president visit a religious center in the United States, I'm sure there will be an appropriate time for that as well," Hussain said.

Shortly after his appointment as the OIC envoy earlier this year, Hussain grabbed some headlines for a flap over comments he made in 2004 describing the Bush administration's actions against some terror suspects as "politically motivated persecutions." He initially said he had no recollection of making the remarks, but after POLITICO obtained a recording of the presentation he conceded he'd made the comments and called them "ill-conceived or not well-formulated."
Posted by:ryuge

#7  At the next press conference, ask Barry to define "otherization".
Posted by: tu3031   2010-04-29 19:15  

#6  So is Obama working on the muslim "otherization" of the West? Well, I didn't think so.
Posted by: JohnQC   2010-04-29 17:33  

#5  Hello?

They're isolated because they have a high proportion of murderous nutbags to the general population, and you can't tell which is which and they won't help.

Tends to cut down on the "oh, let's vacation in Syria this year" demographic, y'see?
Posted by: mojo   2010-04-29 17:02  

#4  otherization

Yeah, I'll put that right next to Avatar's "unobtainium"
Posted by: Swanimote   2010-04-29 16:25  

#3  ObamaGod has enough power to invent his own Words?

Otherization sounds like one of those anthropology-lite cant words that communist cadres throw around during self-criticism meetings. It indicates the mindset of those with whom the president has chosen to surround himself.
Posted by: trailing wife   2010-04-29 14:52  

#2  So ObamaGod has enough power to invent his own Words?
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2010-04-29 14:15  

#1  "...Hussain did seem a tad exasperated by complaints that, despite the vaunted Muslim outreach campaign, Obama has failed to visit a mosque in the U.S. as president..."

and if he had, there would have been complaints about other things.

Oh, and the Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy is considered way, way too moderate for many (probably most) muslims. Finally, the fact that such an organization even exists is a strong indication of the problem. Imagine a "center for the Study of ... and Democracy" where the ... is any other religion.
Posted by: lord garth   2010-04-29 14:10  

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