http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2009/06/20096503523590820.html

Friday, June 05, 2009 
18:15 Mecca time, 15:15 GMT


      Tears and hard truths in Cairo  
     
     
      By S Abdallah Schleifer in Cairo 

     
           
            Barack Obama wants to end the "cycle of suspicion and discord" with 
the Middle East [Reuters] 

      It was at Cairo University's Festival Hall that the great diva of 
Egyptian song, Umm Kalthoum, held her greatest concert triumphs in the 1950s 
and 1960s.

      In the hall with a massive beige dome that made it look like an elegant 
concert hall or even opera house, she moved educated, influential Egyptian men 
and women to tears and ecstasy - a joy that has not been felt in this crowded 
and often chaotic city for years.

      Until today.

      Barack Obama entered from the far right of the stage and the audience of 
a few thousand of Egypt's great and good rose almost as one body.

      Ministers of state, Coptic bishops and Muslim imams, senior Egyptian 
journalists - supporters of the regime and its critics - successful businessmen 
and leading academics, along with a large contingent of carefully chosen 
students from Cairo University and the American University of Cairo, applauded 
and waved back to the US president as he strode with an athlete's grace to 
centre stage.

      Moving speech

      An Umm Kalthoum song could go on and on without losing its intensity for 
more than an hour, and Obama sustained the rapt attention of his audience - 
most relying on simultaneous translation and the earnestness of his body 
language, his lean, appealing physical presence - for nearly as long.

           
            Obama's speech was watched live by millions around the world [AFP] 
      One minute into his speech he won nearly every heart and mind in the 
great hall, announcing his pride to be carrying "the goodwill of the American 
people, and a greeting of peace Muslim communities use in my country: asalaamu 
alaikum.

      The audience rose to its feet and I was not the only one in that vast 
hall with tears in my eyes.

      I never imagined, as an American and a Muslim, that I would ever hear an 
American president invoke the blessing of Islam or to go on to quote from the 
Quran, as he would do several times with great relevance.

      Or to refer to Muhammad as "the Prophet upon whom be peace".

      But this extraordinary event was more than superb pacing and performance, 
more than the soaring, almost classic oratory Obama is famous for and that 
translates so well into modern literary Arabic.

      It was more than soothing and conciliatory words for a predominantly Arab 
audience here in the Festival Hall, or the millions who watched and listened at 
home and the office, at universities and cafes courtesy of a dozen live Arab 
satellite feeds.

      A vast Arab audience nursing the grievances of decades sharpened by the 
blows of the past eight years that preceded Obama's presidency - the invasion 
and occupation of Iraq, the collapse of the Arab-Israeli peace process, the 
brutality of the siege and war on Gaza that cry out for justice and 
conciliation.

      'New beginning'

      Obama vowed that he was in Cairo "to seek a new beginning between the 
United States and Muslims around the world", a new beginning based  on respect 
- a word that figured significantly in this speech - as well as "mutual 
interests and shared values".

           
            The US president vowed a "new beginning" with Muslims worldwide 
[AFP] 
      But it quickly became clear that he was basing that new beginning on 
acknowledging realities and speaking hard truths - to Americans and to Israelis 
as well as to Arabs and Muslims.

      He went well beyond the at-best well-meaning but almost meaningless 
platitudes about Islam as the religion of peace, to call his distant American 
audience's attention to Western civilisation's debt to Islam, "that carried the 
light of learning through so many centuries paving the way for Europe's 
Renaissance and enlightenment".

      He recalled a Muslim civilisation that was based on innovation, science, 
mathematics, printing, medicine, the fine arts, and in general, religious 
tolerance and racial equality.

      But for his audience here and throughout the Arab world, he insisted that 
the impulse behind the creation of the state of Israel was a tragic history 
that could not be denied, alluding to the persecution of the Jewish people for 
centuries, culminating in an unprecedented Holocaust.

      And he denounced Holocaust denial just as he denounced Israeli 
indifference to the suffering and the hardships of the Palestinians and the 
daily humiliations of occupation.

      Finally, hard talk that his audience was ready to meditate upon.

      Perhaps it is Obama's deep reading in philosophy that led him to seek 
synthesis of apparent tension and conflict.

      Even in his opening words, he honoured his official hosts - Al Azhar, the 
citadel of Sunni orthodoxy, and the University of Cairo, the launching pad in 
the 1920s and 1930s for secular education - as two remarkable institutions 
"that represent harmony between tradition and progress".

      Obama differentiated between the invasion of Iraq, which he had opposed, 
and the war in Afghanistan which he defined as a war of necessity, and repeated 
his pledge to pull out all US combat units from Iraqi cities by next month, and 
all troops by 2012.

      Broad alliance

      He continually stressed the importance of broad alliance and 
international support that the US had when, in the wake of 9/11, it went into 
Afghanistan in pursuit of al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

           
            Obama, left, was hosted by Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president, 
during his Cairo visit [EPA] 
      But he engaged rather than denounce those in the Muslim world who doubted 
America's intentions, in effect renouncing that overbearing theme of his 
predecessor that "whoever is not with me is against me".

      So when Obama condemned al-Qaeda for killing innocent men, women and 
children, it was not just American victims of 9/11 but the murder "of people of 
different faiths - but more than any other, they have killed Muslims".

      He acknowledged that in response to the trauma of 9/11 America had in 
some cases acted contrary to its best traditions and ideals and he spoke of 
"concrete actions to change course" by unequivocally prohibiting the use of 
torture and ordering the Guantanamo prison to be closed by early next year, 
drawing significant applause.

      This was also a moment for giving assurances.

      Obama insisted that the US sought no military bases in Afghanistan and he 
acknowledged that military power alone would not solve the problems in 
Afghanistan and Pakistan.

      Rather, he was committed to spending many billions of dollars partnering 
both countries to build schools, hospitals, roads, businesses and to help the 
many displaced by war.

      Obama was clearly responding to those supporters newly turned into 
critics who claimed he had been co-opted by the lure of a military solution in 
Afghanistan and by extension, in Pakistan.

      The range of the US president's speech was broad, reaffirming his 
commitment to human rights, democracy and women's rights, but also stressing 
the importance of development, job creation and extending education, 
particularly to women, that is problematic for much of the Muslim world.

      Middle ground

      As usual he sought the middle ground, saying that America has no business 
imposing its own system on different societies, but he insisted on basic human 
rights - the rule of law, freedom of expression, freedom to practise one's 
religion, equal justice, a voice in government that is free of corruption.

           
            Obama is pushing for a two-state solution to the 
Israeli-Palestinian conflict [AFP] 
      Typical of his instinct for ethical realism, however, instead of 
threatening or denouncing his ultimate host - the Egyptian government - or any 
other state in the region practising political repression, he said governments 
respecting those universal rights would enjoy more stability, security and 
prosperity.

      Along with the hard truths there were some very significant, if subtle, 
messages.

      An idea circulated by Israeli official circles and Americans enthralled 
by the Jewish state, that Obama was in the Middle East to put together a Sunni 
Arab-Israeli alliance to isolate and combat Shia Iran, was nowhere to be found 
in his speech.

      Nor did Iran occupy an equal amount of concern or time with the 
Afghan-Pakistani issue, the Iraqi war and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

      But slipped into a most unconfrontational discussion of American-Iranian 
relations that included an acknowledgment of America's role in overthrowing a 
legitimately elected nationalist government in Iran during the Cold War years, 
Obama reaffirmed an early election campaign commitment, too controversial at 
the time for him to pursue, that the US government was ready to talk with the 
Iranian leadership without any preconditions.

      Even more significant was his acknowledgment that Hamas enjoyed popular 
support among Palestinians and it was in this context that he made the usual 
call for Hamas to renounce violence, recognise past agreements between the 
Palestinians and Israel, as well as recognise Israel's right to exist.

      Suddenly he was advising Hamas, not denouncing it, to accept the 
responsibility of governing. Perhaps historians will remember this speech as 
the moment America's engagement with Hamas began.

      S Abdallah Schleifer is Distinguished Professor of Journalism at the 
American University in Cairo and Adjunct Scholar at the Middle East Institute 
in Washington DC.

      The opinions expressed in this article are the author's own and do not 
necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
     


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