[lbo-talk] A history of anti-Muslim political rhetoric since Ben Franklin

B. docile_body at yahoo.com
Fri Apr 6 04:10:18 PDT 2007


[Of course, Franklin and others' ethnophobic and hateful rhetoric is despicable, but the converse isnt to embrace the ideas of the Qur'an, either, just like US demonization of Stalinists didn't mean one should support or become a Stalinist necessarily. You know, picking of lesser of two evils is bad, right, like the Dems? And that's even if Stalinism or Islam is a lesser of the evil of American imperialism. It's all kinda shitty.

Anyway, header to article given below, plus a URL. If the URL doesn't work for you, email me offlist and I'll send the whole, fascinating piece. -B.]

"Is It Worse to Follow Mahomet than the Devil?" Early American Uses of Islam

by: Kidd, Thomas S., Church History, 00096407, Dec2003, Vol. 72, Issue 4

In the last public act before his death, Benjamin Franklin parodied a proslavery speech in Congress by comparing it to a fictitious proslavery address "anno 1687" by a North African Muslim, a pirate named Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim. Like proslavery southerners, the Algerian argued that he could not countenance the end of Christian slavery because it would hurt the interests of the Algerian state, there would be no way to compensate the Muslim slave masters, and nothing could safely be done with the freed slaves. Franklin's salvo against slavery was published in 1790 in major northern newspapers.( n1) His use of Muslims and Islamic images is one of the most famous in eighteenth-century America, but not unique. Islamic references pepper the public documents of early America, demonstrating that many were not only aware of the religion but also ready to use it as a rhetorical tool of argument. A close look at the uses of Islam in Anglo-American writing before 1800 shows that Franklin's use of the proslavery argument was another version of a well-established tradition: citing the similarities between an opponent's views and the "beliefs" of Islam as a means to discredit one's adversaries. Over the course of the eighteenth century, rhetorical uses of Islam became increasingly secularized. Early in the century, Islam was typically used for religious purposes in religious debates while later commentators often took knowledge "derived" from observations of despotic Islamic states to support political points. Although one should hesitate to describe early Americans as conversant with Islam, they certainly conversed about Islam regularly.

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http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=1&hid=113&sid=873e18bc-a36e-4780-a966-51727aa0f19f%40sessionmgr104



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