June 5, 2009

Analysis: New Language Key In Obama Speech

Washington Post: Use Of Specific Words During Address In Cairo Shows Understanding Of Both Sides In Mideast

  • Play CBS Video Video Obama's Speech In Cairo

    President Obama extended an olive branch to Muslims during his speech in Cairo, Egypt, by honoring personal and national ties to Islam before underlining U.S. commitment to combat violent extremists.

  • Video Mideast Reacts To Obama

    People across the Mideast tuned into hear President Obama's address to the Muslim world. Lara Logan reports.

  • Video A New Beginning

    President Obama reaches out to Muslims worldwide with a message of principles.

  • President Barack Obama speaks at Cairo University in Cairo, Thursday, June 4, 2009.

    President Barack Obama speaks at Cairo University in Cairo, Thursday, June 4, 2009.  (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

  • Photo Essay Obama In Egypt

    President Obama's quest for Middle East peace.

  • Photo Essay Obama In Saudi Arabia

    President Obama arrives in Saudi Arabia on the first part of his trip to the Middle East and Europe.

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(Washingtonpost.com)  This story was written by Washington Post Staff Writer Glenn Kessler and Jacqueline L. Salmon.


There was no mention of "terrorists" or "terrorism," just "violent extremists." There was the suggestion that Israeli settlements are illegitimate and the assertion that the Palestinians "have suffered in pursuit of a homeland." There were frequent references to the "Holy Koran" and echoes of Muslim phrases.

President Obama, who aides say spent many hours "holed up" in the past week revising his Cairo speech, clearly believes in the power of his oratory to win people to his point of view. In many ways, he used his address to promote American values, but his efforts to use new language to recast old grievances have already prompted debate and consternation in some quarters.

At the same time, he avoided specific complaints about the lack of freedoms in the Muslim world. Instead, he spoke of the need to obtain concrete political goals, such as the fair administration of justice. He made no mention of his host, President Hosni Mubarak, a snub surely noticed by Egypt's autocratic ruler of nearly three decades.

In discussing the Arab-Israeli conflict, Obama was both resolute in expressing support for Israel and remarkably sympathetic to the plight of Palestinians. In an Arab capital, he spoke of America's "unbreakable" bond with Israel and condemned anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial, an apparent repudiation of the anti-Israeli rhetoric that periodically emanates from Iran. Yet he also seemed to draw an equivalence between Jewish and Palestinian suffering, noting "the daily humiliations -- large and small -- that come with occupation."

He said they were "two peoples with legitimate aspirations, each with a painful history that makes compromise elusive."

For some hawkish Israelis, the comparison was too much. Aryeh Eldad, a member of parliament with the National Union party, decried what he called "a shocking parallel between the destruction of European Jewry and the suffering that the Arabs of Israel brought upon themselves when they declared war on Israel."

Some Palestinians said they were gratified by Obama's words. "He compared Palestinians under Israeli occupation with slaves. This was powerful. He made everyone feel close and at home," said Eyad El Sarraj, a psychiatrist who heads the Gaza Community Mental Health Program in the Gaza Strip.

In contrast to what Obama called "the legitimate Palestinian aspiration for dignity," the president was sharply critical of Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank: "The United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements." Not since Jimmy Carter has a U.S. president in his own voice declared the settlements to be illegal, but Obama tiptoed very close to the line. He also deftly referred to a "Jewish homeland," slightly different from Israel's demands that it be considered a Jewish state.

Obama also appeared to break ground on Israel's possession of nuclear weapons, without even mentioning them specifically. He seemed to acknowledge the double standard of accepting Israel's weapons but opposing Iran's nuclear ambitions, and then made a specific reference to the responsibilities and rights of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which Iran has signed but Israel has not. Nuclear power should be the right of any nation that complies with its responsibilities under the treaty, "and it must be kept for all who fully abide by it," Obama said. "And I'm hopeful that all countries in the region can share in this goal."

Obama quoted from the holy books of all three Abrahamic faiths -- Islam, Christianity and Judaism. But, most especially, he drew on the Koran as well as other Islamic religious teachings and sayings to provide the spiritual underpinnings of his speech.

Mohamed Magid, imam at the All Dulles Area Muslim Society Center, a Sterling mosque, and vice president of the Islamic Society of North America, said he was "amazed" at the sophisticated use that Obama made of Islam's holy text. "He was taking verses from the Koran to support his arguments," Magid said. "He was looking to persuade them to believe in the ideas that he wanted to share with them -- 'Not only listen to my words, but your own religion asks you to do the same.' "

Obama quoted three times from the Koran, the 114-chapter Islamic holy book that Muslims revere as the word of God revealed to Muhammad, the founder of Islam, in the 7th century.

The first, quoted by Obama as "Be conscious of God and speak always the truth," is from Chapter 33, Verse 70, titled "Ahzab," or "The Confederates," and addresses the issue of those who are hypocritical in their faith and maintaining one's faith in hard times. It was quoted by Muhammad in his final sermon before he died, and imams worldwide use it frequently in Friday sermons, said Jonathan Brown, a Muslim who is a professor of Arabic and Islamic studies at the University of Washington.

When Obama used that verse, said Brown, "he wasn't just quoting from the Koran, but he was doing what any Muslim preacher would do when speaking to an audience."

Most striking to many Muslims was Obama's use of the phrase "May peace be upon them" when referring to Moses, Jesus and Muhammad. It is a term of respect and reverence that Muslims use when referring, in speech or in writing, to such figures, and rarely is used by non-Muslims.

Ben Rhodes, Obama's chief foreign policy speechwriter, said Obama told him "to cast a wide net" in preparing the address. That included conference calls and meetings between Muslim Americans and national security staff.

Tariq Malhance, the president of the largest Muslim community center in Chicago, was invited to participate in one of the calls, and later he sent an e-mail to the White House urging Obama to "be mindful" that most Muslims around the world are not Arabs.

Almost two weeks ago, senior Obama advisers met with an even broader group of Muslim leaders at the White House, including activists and academics from across the political spectrum, according to participants. One of those at the meeting, University of Maryland professor Shibley Telhami, said the result was a speech that provided a far more specific description of Obama's goals on a series of issues related to Muslims, Middle East peace and the Arab world.

"Now the pressure mounts, though, because expectations rise," Telhami said. "Once you designate specific issues, people start looking for actions. This speech raises the stakes, and the pressure is going to mount to deliver something more than just a dialogue."

Staff writer Michael D. Shear contributed to this report.


By Washington Post Staff Writers Glenn Kessler and Jacqueline L. Salmon
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

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by June 6, 2009 8:30 PM EDT
I have read most comments re: Pres. Obama's speech in Cairo, however, this is the most complete article I've seen on this historic event. Thank you for a good piece. Jah walks
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by globalcoolin June 6, 2009 5:26 PM EDT
A Cairo Tour and seprate pledge , with Biden, to throw morw money at the economy threw the summer? This is what it takes to keep a pop-culture personality with no real tallent a pop cult personality!
He don't need a band around him.Just an adoring news media and the taxpayers Air Force One.
And of course, Bill Ayers! The GURU of the baseball bat, threats and the home made kitchen table bomb.
Where is all the money going? Who is this fraud?
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by sprowlindak June 5, 2009 10:25 PM EDT
It's a good feeling to be proud of US President for a CHANGE. His knowledge of the the Koran is impressive but most of all, his sincere attitude of well-being and mutual respect. When is the last time we felt as though our President respected US? And them? Too many years have passed without this mutual respect, well-earned although he's been in office only a short time. Yes, he has the makings of a Great President and we're truly Blessed to testify to his sincerity during this time of great challenge. President Obama has handled well sooo many crises since being in office only 5 months! Wow! I continue to be pleasantly surprised. Let US keep Obama in our prayers - to protect him - to ensure his integrity and honesty throughout his political and otherwise challenging roles - to protect US ...
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by starleo146 June 5, 2009 3:04 PM EDT
I am just wondering what kind of a president America wants. A president who extends his hand for peace, or a president who wants a world filled with strife, doubt, bullying, torture, bring it on, dead or alive, fear, what our president has been through since January 20th is just plain unbelievable. The Economy in shambles, everyday he thinks about the people who have lost there jobs, I am sure of it. Criticism from the far right has been cruel, mean and unjustified, everything he does they hop on it so fast trying at every turn to make people believe he is the worst. I am sorry but although not a perfect man close to it, and I would rather have a peacemaker than a a bunch of rubble rouses, who tear our country down and undermine the work of the President of the United States .Come together America we have stayed long enough with absolutely no good has come of it , we will not succeed until we are together.
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