Obama: Religious Educator-in-Chief
Religion Dispatches examines President Obama's speech in Cairo. Are we capable of learning the nuanced view of world religions and culture of which the president speaks?
President Barack Obama has been called commander-in-chief and [basket]baller-in-chief, but with his speech at Cairo University the former law professor has acquired the unlikely credential of religious-educator-in-chief. This task is a daunting one since our hopes for world peace depend largely on it. His speech gave religious educators a demo of how to teach religion in our globalized world.First, you have to establish rapport and disarm suspicion. By greeting his audience with the simple Arabic, as-salam alaykum (peace be upon you), the president demonstrated that he knew the audience and the cultural rubric, and that he was not simply speaking of religion in the abstract.
The President taught that we have to avoid negative stereotypes about people of other faith traditions, providing a history of the long trajectory of the interaction between Muslims and the West. Religion was not treated as a timeless and reified subject, but embedded in historical, cultural, and political development of particular locales. In an age of sound bites and Twitter, he demonstrated the importance of historical knowledge, critical analysis, and fair judgment. He trusted that his audience could reason and negotiate complex data and perspectives, and not resort to knee-jerk reactions.
Read more here.

Yet the actions of this so-called "religious educator" include lying about repealing Don't Ask, Don't Tell, arguing to the Supreme Court that it is valid military policy, and refusing to stop removing qualified and needed personnel from the service.
He once argued for equal civil marriage protections for same sex couples, but during his campaign claimed that separate but equal is good enough, and then has done nothing to promote even that limited idea of equality, doing nothing to support the repeal of the hatefully named Defense of Marriage Act.
All politicians lie. This one does too. So what exactly can he educate us about when it comes to religion?
That it's ok for religious leaders to lie; to promise to respect the dignity of GLBT persons while keeping them legislatively in second class status?
Come to think of it, he sounds just like a lot of "religious educators" and leaders right here in TEC.
Who needs them.
Hypocrites.
Posted by Bryant A. Hudson
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June 9, 2009 4:53 PM