Crossposted at Green Mountain Daily.
I’ve got a lot of grace for Barack Obama. He impresses me one moment and pisses me off the next (his AIPAC speech is a prime example). Then there are his staffers who treated me poorly including Suzanne Goldberg of The Guardian U.K. This time however was low. Really low.
It’s from Politico so hopefully they have their facts straight. They’re known for getting their stories wrong.
Ben Smith writes:
“Two Muslim women at Barack Obama’s rally in Detroit on Monday were barred from sitting behind the podium by campaign volunteers seeking to prevent the women’s headscarves from appearing in photographs or on television with the candidate.
The campaign has apologized to the women, both Obama supporters who said they felt betrayed by their treatment at the rally.
“This is of course not the policy of the campaign. It is offensive and counter to Obama’s commitment to bring Americans together and simply not the kind of campaign we run,” said Obama spokesman Bill Burton. “We sincerely apologize for the behavior of these volunteers.”
Heeba Asef, a 25 year-old lawyer who came to see Obama.
“I was coming to support him, and I felt like I was discriminated against by the very person who was supposed to be bringing this change, who I could really relate to,” said Hebba Aref, a 25-year-old lawyer who lives in the Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Hills. “The message that I thought was delivered to us was that they do not want him associated with Muslims or Muslim supporters.”
The story continues below the fold.
“In Detroit on Monday, the two different Obama volunteers – in separate incidents – made it clear that headscarves wouldn’t be in the picture. The volunteers gave different explanations for excluding the hijabs, one bluntly political and the other less clear.
In Aref’s case, there was no ambiguity.
That incident began when the volunteer asked Aref’s friend Ali Koussan and two others, Aref’s brother Sharif and another young lawyer, Brandon Edward Miller, whether they would like to sit behind the stage. The three young men said they would but mentioned they were with friends.
The men said the volunteer, a 20-something African-American woman in a green shirt, asked if their friends looked and were dressed like the young men, who were all light-skinned and wearing suits.
Miller said yes but mentioned that one of their friends was wearing a headscarf with her suit.
The volunteer “explained to me that because of the political climate and what’s going on in the world and what’s going on with Muslim Americans, it’s not good for [Aref] to be seen on TV or associated with Obama,” said Koussan, a law student at Wayne State University.
Both Koussan and Miller said they specifically recalled the volunteer citing the “political climate” in telling them they couldn’t sit behind Obama.
“I was like, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me. Are you serious?'” Koussan recalled.”
Here’s my favorite part:
“… Aref said she was glad Obama had apologized, but she was not entirely satisfied.
“I think this is a much bigger deal than maybe they’re perceiving it as,” she said, noting that Obama had placed a personal call to a television reporter he’d dismissively called “Sweetie.”
“An apology from him personally would be better,” she said, then reconsidered. “If they are true to their word, I think it would suffice to have an invitation to their next rally and have seats behind him and show up on TV.”
Good for her!
To read more click here.
Personally, I’m not OK with this. My friend who sent me the story asked me this question: If it’s not their policy then why did they do it? That’s what I want to know.
6 comments
Skip to comment form
Author
the personal phone call to the reporter came because Obama himself had called her “sweetie” – he probably didn’t know about this particular incident until after it happened. And the next day, he did this.
So I agree that a more forthright apology and statement about respecting diversity would be nice, but I think you’re leaving out info to make it look worse than it is:
I’m sure if Clinton or McCain had pulled someone in a head scarf from a photo op, people would be ripping into them. But I hope we’d have the good sense to look at it in context no matter who the alleged perpetrator is. Everything here points to an overzealous campaign member, and away from any actual negative attitudes that Obama has towards Muslims.
Author
Just caught this from Daily Kos: