Discrediting Senator Obama in the Jewish Community: A Response

By Kenneth Bob

The following letter distributed by the National Jewish Democratic Council should not be construed as an Ameinu endorsement of Senator Barack Obama. We simply want to assist in dispelling the false rumors circulating the Internet and print media regarding the senator. For other coverage of the presidential campaign and Israel, please see articles by Gershom Gorenberg and Dan Fleshler on the Ameinu website.

We have received several reports about dishonest emails circulating about Senator Obama, aimed at Jewish voters. The fact of the matter is, Senator Obama is a good friend of the Jewish Community. He is very popular in the Chicago Jewish Community (one of the most vibrant centers of Jewish life in the nation) and has made courting Jewish votes a priority in his presidential campaign. A recent profile about Senator Obama in the Jewish Telegraphic Agency explained: “What you might not hear is that the Illinois senator, who made history by winning the Democratic caucus in Iowa, has made Jewish leaders an early stop at every stage in his political career.”

Some of the viral emails sent out about Obama claim that the Senator is anti-Israel. Such charges are off-base. Like the other Democratic candidates, Barack Obama is a strong supporter of the U.S.-Israel relationship. He has never cast a vote against the position of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Shmuel Rosner, the U.S. correspondent for the Israeli newspaper Haaretz writes that Senator Obama “is pro-Israel. Period.”

Senator Obama told the audience at NJDC’s 2007 Washington Conference, “When I am President, the United States will stand shoulder to shoulder with Israel in search of this peace, and in defense against those who seek its destruction.” Likewise, in March 2007, Senator Obama told an AIPAC audience in Chicago that he believes the U.S. must have “a clear and strong commitment to the security of Israel: our strongest ally in the region and its only established democracy. That will always be my starting point” in approaching Middle East policy. Continued Obama: “And when we see all of the growing threats in the region: from Iran to Iraq to the resurgence of al-Qaeda to the reinvigoration of Hamas and Hezbollah, that loyalty and that friendship will guide me as we begin to lay the stones that will build the road that takes us from the current instability to lasting peace and security.”

Senator Obama has been endorsed by several prominent supporters of Israel, including Jewish Congressman Robert Wexler of Florida, who wrote: “What has always struck me about Senator Obama – and this is one of the reasons I have endorsed his candidacy for the United States Presidency – is that a love for Israel and a desire to keep the Jewish people secure is evident not just in his work, but also in his heart.” Another prominent supporter of Israel, distinguished financier Lester Crown, wrote: “As president, [Obama] will be the friend to Israel that we all want to see in the White House – stalwart in his defense of Israel‘s security, and committed to helping Israel achieve peace with its neighbors.”

The New York Sun – hardly a bastion of support for Democrats – editorialized: “We’re no shills for Mr. Obama, but these Republicans [who questioned the Senator’s support for Israel] haven’t checked their facts. At least by our lights, Mr. Obama’s commitment to Israel, as he has articulated it so far in his campaign, is quite moving and a tribute to the broad, bipartisan support that the Jewish state has in America.”

It is also worth noting that Senator Obama is an outspoken critic of Iran, who wrote legislation to make it easier for states to divest from Iranian holdings. (The legislation is being blocked by a Republican Senator.)

Another Republican smear campaign falsely claims Senator Obama was educated in a radical Muslim madrassa – a blatant lie. While Senator Obama’s religion – he is Christian – should not matter in the Presidential election, setting the facts straight is important. We’ve seen terrible fear mongering by the right wing in the form of baseless attacks against Muslim Congressman Keith Ellison – a good public servant and a friend of Israel and the Jewish Community. Similar attacks seem to be sprouting up against Senator Obama although he is Christian.

If a friend or neighbor asks you about an email or internet rumor regarding Senator Obama’s religious upbringing, here are some important things to tell him/her:

(1)   CNN reports “Allegations that Sen. Barack Obama was educated in a radical Muslim school known as a ‘madrassa’ are not accurate, according to CNN reporting.”

(2) The false “madrassa” rumors were published in a right wing smear magazine owned by the same company that owns the ultra-conservative Washington Times. These are the same people who have printed numerous falsehoods about the Clintons through the years.

(3) The Obama campaign has a fact sheet on its website which serves as an excellent resource about his background and sets the record straight about his religion.  While Obama’s religion should not be a political issue, lying about a candidate’s religion is noteworthy. The fact sheet explains that, despite lies saying otherwise, Obama “is not and has never been a Muslim.”

Scurrilous emails have also been circulating which attempt to smear Senator Obama because a magazine associated with his church gave an award to Louis Farrakhan. In the response to inquiries about Farrakhan, Obama repudiated and decried Farrakhan and his anti-Semitism. He was praised by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) for so-doing.

ADL National Director Abraham Foxman released a statement saying: “We welcome Barack Obama’s condemnation of the anti-Semitic rhetoric of Minister Louis Farrakhan, and his making clear that he did not agree with his church’s decision to honor Farrakhan. Issues of racism and anti-Semitism must be beyond the bounds of politics. When someone close to a political figure shows sympathy and support for an individual who makes his name espousing bigotry, that political figure needs to distance himself from that decision. Senator Obama has done just that.”

The rhetoric in some of these viral emails about Obama is so over the top, that recently several leaders of national Jewish organizations signed on to a letter condemning the smear campaign being run against him. The signatories represent non-partisan organizations which do not endorse political candidates. In the letter, they wrote: “Of particular concern, over the past several weeks, many in our community have received hateful emails that use falsehood and innuendo to mischaracterize Senator Barack Obama’s religious beliefs and who he is as a person” and “These tactics attempt to drive a wedge between our community and a presidential candidate based on despicable and false attacks and innuendo based on religion. We reject these efforts to manipulate members of our community into supporting or opposing candidates.”

The signatories include William Daroff of United Jewish Communities, Nathan J. Diament of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, Abraham Foxman of Anti-Defamation League, Richard S. Gordon of the American Jewish Congress, David Harris of the American Jewish Committee, Rabbi Marvin Hier of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Rabbi David Saperstein of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, Phyllis Snyder of the National Council of Jewish Women and Hadar Susskind of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs.

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