
The
history of the relationship between America and the Muslim
World is deeper and more complex than the common perception
might suggest. Thomas Jefferson taught himself Arabic using
his own Quran kept in his personal library, and had the first
known presidential Iftaar by breaking fast with the Tunisian
Ambassador at sunset. President Dwight Eisenhower attended
the dedication ceremony of the Islamic Center in Washington,
D.C. on June 28, 1957. President Bill Clinton issued the first
presidential greeting for Ramadan, appointed the first Muslim
American ambassador, M. Osman Siddique, to Fiji, and sent
the first presidential Eid al-Adha greeting to Muslims. And
one year after President George W. Bush placed the Holy Quran
in the White House library in 2005, Representative Keith Ellison
took the oath of office on the same Quran owned by Thomas
Jefferson two hundred years before.
With his speech in Cairo, the President will lay another
marker, addressing America’s relationship with the
Muslim World in the heart of the Middle East. Whereas the
past years and decades have deepened the rift in that relationship,
the President will seek a new start by opening up a serious,
honest dialogue to find areas of common interest where we
agree, and new ways of communication where we do not. By
continuing unprecedented outreach to the Muslim World, the
President is strengthening national security and opening
up new opprtunities to address some of the problems that
have seemed so intractable over recent years.