Home | Subscribe To The Final Call | Books & Tapes e-Store| Letters/Contact Us | TV & Radio  

Last Updated: Jun 30, 2009 - 4:46:47 PM 

Front Page 
Minister Louis Farrakhan
National News
World News
Perspectives
Columns
Business & Money
Entertainment News
Health & Fitness
Technology
Features
Finalcall.com Español


Subscribe to FCN E-List

Enter email address:

Email Delivery Format:
HTML  Plain Text
Manage Your Subscription


The Untold Story
of Hurricane Katrina



Exclusive Webcast:
The Havana Cuba
Press Conference

FCN, March 27, 2006

 



Rep. Keith Ellison: Confronting challenges of race and religion
By Ron Walters
-Guest Columnist-
Updated Jan 18, 2007 - 2:27:00 PM

What's your opinion on this article?

 Printable page

Ron Walters
This session of Congress begins the career of Attorney Keith Ellison of Minneapolis, an African American who is also the first Muslim elected to the Congress, at a time when the U.S. is at war in the most Islamic region in the world. Yet, receiving his law degree from the University of Minnesota, practicing in Minneapolis and serving in the Minnesota House of Representatives, Ellison would appear to have substantial challenges of both race and religion, in his new role as a Congressman.

Ellison will be representing a district in the traditionally liberal Minneapolis, that is only 13 percent Black (23 percent “minority” altogether), where formerly liberals Hubert Humphrey and Martin Sabo held sway. And although, Sharon Belton an effective African American female, also served as mayor, it was arguably the late Minnesota Senator Paul Wellstone who was Ellison’s closest political role model–and he would often take visitors out to Senator Wellstone’s grave to make the point. Nevertheless, although Ellison won his election by a strong vote of 56 percent, backed by the dominant Democrat-Farm-Labor coalition, it will be his religion that may complicate his tenure in Congress the most.


Keith Ellison has a strong social justice streak and spoke to fellow Muslims in his native Detroit, recently, urging them to stand up and confront injustice in these perilous times, saying, ?You can?t back down, you can?t chicken out, you can?t be afraid.?
During his election campaign, Ellison was attacked by his Republican opponent Alan Fine (who subsequently won only 22 percent of the vote) for being a Muslim, alleging that he had a close association with Minister Louis Farrakhan. But more recently, Dennis Prager, a radio talk show host on the Salem network, complained that Ellison’s decision to take his private oath of office on the Holy Qur’an “undermines American civilization.” But in response, Ellison, who attended the Million Man March in 1995, did not disavow Minister Farrakhan, while noting that several other elected Members chose to take their oaths using books other than the Bible.

The most recent attack on Ellison was by U. S. Rep. Virgil Goode of Virginia, a conservative bible-belt Republican, who sent a letter to his constituents urging a Bush administration crack down on immigration and objecting to Ellison’s use of the Holy Qur’an, saying that unless Americans “wake up” there are “likely to be more Muslims elected to office and demanding the use of the Holy Qur’an.”

Ellison countered that he was not an immigrant and could trace his family’s origins back to 1742, but Rep. Goode persisted in an interview with FOX News, urging a restriction on immigration “so that we don’t have a majority of Muslims elected to the United States House of Representatives.” These comments by Rep. Goode have been denounced as intolerant, but they also appear ignorant, since he failed to spell out under what contorted logic Muslim immigrants could become a majority in the U. S. Congress.

Rep. Goode’s comments resembled the mean and ugly racial rhetoric of conservative politicians in the legislative fights of the early ‘90s. But despite their vehemence, Bill Clinton was re-elected in 1996 and in a seeming rebuke to his impeachment, the American public continued to support him.

The 2006 elections could also be interpreted as a repudiation of another radical conservative approach to governing. The reason Americans are in Iraq today is a manifestation of radical conservative doctrine of “pre-emption,” which served as a pretext to re-make the politics in the Middle East in the image of the U.S., that would allow increased access to its oil resources by a private cabal and enhance the security of Israel at the same time.

But Rep. Virgil Goode has apparently missed this rejection of radical conservatism, trying to use his popularity with his conservative base to elevate a radical view of immigration to the national level–by attacking Ellison. But I am betting that it won’t work.

Keith Ellison has a strong social justice streak and spoke to fellow Muslims in his native Detroit, recently, urging them to stand up and confront injustice in these perilous times, saying, “You can’t back down, you can’t chicken out, you can’t be afraid.”

On the other hand, he will concentrate on being an effective legislator and as such, has held out the hand of friendship to colleagues like Rep. Goode and encouraged them to learn more about Islam. As he said in his speech, “How do you know that you’re not here to teach this country?” Just as he won over his constituency in the Fifth Congressional District, it appears that he has the right stuff to do it in this new arena in the Congress.

(Ron Walters is Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland, College Park.)

 


FCN is a distributor (and not a publisher) of content supplied by third parties. Original content supplied by FCN and FinalCall.com News is Copyright 2009 FCN Publishing, FinalCall.com. Content supplied by third parties are the property of their respective owners.

Top of Page

Perspectives
Latest Headlines
New Crack Cocaine Bill Leaves Thousands Behind Bars
The Death of Derrion Albert: Living and Dying in America
America's racial climate and the first Black president
The Psychological and Genetic Roots OF Urban Violence
Do Black voices still count in American discourse?
Double Duty: The Black Woman's Struggle Raising Boys Alone
Afro-Latino Heritage Must be Highlighted
Hispanic, Latino, or Indigenous
Delivering on the Million Man March pledge