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February 11, 2015 2:16 pm
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The Truth About the Muslim Leaders Who Met With Obama

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avatar by Daniel Pipes

For the first time in his six years as president, Barack Obama met behind closed doors with an exclusively domestic group of Muslims for about an hour on February 4. They covered the boringly predictable topics, judging by the official readoutaccounts by participants, and newsreports.

What about the guest list? It includes a curiously unimpressive and motley collection of modestly accomplished individuals of little renown:

  1. Diego Arancibia, Ta’leef Collective
  2. Bilqis Abdul-Qaadir, Indiana State University
  3. Azhar Azeez, Islamic Society of North America
  4. Maya Berry, Arab-American Institute
  5. Hoda Elshishtawy, Muslim Public Affairs Council
  6. Rahat Hussain, Universal Muslim Association of America
  7. Sherman Jackson, University of Southern California
  8. Farhana Khera, Muslim Advocates
  9. Farhan Latif, Institute of Policy and Understanding
  10. Mohamed Magid, Adams Center
  11. Haroon Mokhtarzada, Webs
  12. Dean Obeidallah, radio host
  13. Kameelah Mu’Min Rashad, University of Pennsylvania
  14. Arshia Wajid, American Muslim Health Professionals

Here are my thoughts: It hardly needs to be said, but I’ll say it anyway: Almost all the guests are Islamists while not a single anti-Islamist made the cut.

Eight participants are affiliated with organizations, though one of them, the Arab-American Institute, is ethnic, not Islamic. Has the White House staff not yet learned that not all Arabs are Muslims, and especially not all Arab-Americans?

Six participants do other things: a basketball coach (Abdul-Qaadir), a professor (Jackson), an imam (Magid), a businessman (Mokhtarzada), a “comedian” (Obeidallah), and a university chaplain (Rashad). Hard to see how these folks are “leaders.”

A White House decision to tone down what is by nature a controversial meeting probably explains the absence of notable religious figures such as Zaid Shakir, Siraj Wahaj, or Hamza Yusuf. This would also explain the absence of big names from Muslim-American institutional life such as Nihad Awad or Louis Farrakhan.

The list contains several surprises: Two lowly staffers represented the Muslim Public Affairs Council and Ta’leef. The obscure Bilqis Abdul-Qaadir represented basketball, rather than the famed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar or Hakeem Olajuwon. And where are such Muslim-American stars such as Muhammad Ali, Farouk El-Baz, Omar Sharif, McCoy Tyner, and Ahmed H. Zewail?

MPAC made the cut but not the Council on American-Islamic Relations; the latter must be seething, especially as it is hoping for U.S. government assistance to get off the United Arab Emirates’ terrorism list. This fits a long-term pattern of preferring tamer Islamists over more aggressive ones. Same story with Islamic Society of North America and Islamic Circle of North America.

In conclusion, this meeting appears to have been pro-forma, part of the political preparation for the “Summit on Countering Violent Extremism” to be held at the White House on February 18. The president invested an hour to protect his standing among his Islamist constituency.

This article was originally published by The Blaze.

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