Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Barack Hussein Obama, Omar Bradley, Benjamin Franklin and other Semitically Named American Heroes

At Cincinnati, Bill Cunningham, according to the LAT, who "introduced presidential candidate John McCain at a rally here today accused Barack Obama of sympathizing with 'world leaders who want to kill us' and invoked Obama's middle name -- three times calling him 'Barack Hussein Obama.' " John McCain repudiated Cunningham's low tactics and said that using the middle name like that three times was "inappropriate" and would never happen again at one of his rallies.

I want to say something about Barack Hussein Obama's name. It is a name to be proud of. It is an American name. It is a blessed name. It is a heroic name, as heroic and American in its own way as the name of General Omar Nelson Bradley or the name of Benjamin Franklin. And denigrating that name is a form of racial and religious bigotry of the most vile and debased sort. It is a prejudice against names deriving from Semitic languages!



Christian, Western heroes have often been bequeathed Middle Eastern names. Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar, the medieval Spanish hero, carried the name El Cid, from the Arabic al-Sayyid, "the lord."

Barack and Hussein are Semitic words. Americans have been named with Semitic names since the founding of the Republic. Fourteen of our 43 presidents have had Semitic names (see below). And, American English contains many Arabic-derived words that we use every day and without which we would be much impoverished. America is a world civilization with a world heritage, something Cunninghamism will never understand.

Barack is a Semitic word meaning "to bless" as a verb or "blessing" as a noun. In its Hebrew form, barak, it is found all through the Bible. It first occurs in Genesis 1:22: "And God blessed (ḇāreḵə ) them, saying, Be fruitful, and multiply, and fill the waters in the seas, and let fowl multiply in the earth."

Here is a list of how many times barak appears in each book of the Bible.

Now let us take the name "Hussein." It is from the Semitic word, hasan, meaning "good" or "handsome." Husayn is the diminutive, affectionate form.

Barack Obama's middle name is in honor of his grandfather, Hussein, a secular resident of Nairobi. Americans may think of Saddam Hussein when they hear the name, but that is like thinking of Stalin when you hear the name Joseph. There have been lots of Husseins in history, from the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, a hero who touched the historian Gibbon, to King Hussein of Jordan, one of America's most steadfast allies in the 20th century. The author of the beloved American novel, The Kite Runner, is Khaled Hosseini.

But in Obama's case, it is just a reference to his grandfather.

It is worth pointing out that John McCain's adopted daughter, Bridget, is originally from Bangladesh. Since Hussein is a very common name in Bangladesh, it is entirely possible that her birth father or grandfather was named Hussein. McCain certainly has Muslim relatives via adoption in his family. If Muslim relatives are a disqualification from high office in the United States, then McCain himself is in trouble. In fact, since Bridget is upset that George W. Bush doesn't like her "because she is black," and used her to stop the McCain campaign in South Carolina in 2000, you understand why McCain would be especially sensitive to race-baiting of Cunningham's sort. The question is how vigorously he will combat it; he hasn't been above Muslim-taunting in the campaign so far. (And, the McCains really should let Bridget know that she is Asian, not "black." The poor girl; Bush and Rove have done a number on her, and Cindy's confusion can't help.)

The other thing to say about grandfathers named Hussein is that very large numbers of African-Americans probably have an ancestor ten or eleven generations ago with that name, in what is now Mali or Senegal or Nigeria. And, since so many thousands of Arab Muslims were made to convert to Catholicism in Spain after 1501, many Latinos have distant ancestors named Hussein, too. In fact, since there was a lot of Arab-Spanish intermarriage, and since there was subsequent Spanish intermarriage with other European Catholics, more European Americans are descended from a Hussein than they realize. The British royal family is quite forthright about the Arab line in their ancestry going back to Andalusia.

Obama, being a cousin of Dick Cheney on one side and having relatives in Kenya on the other, is just more and more typical of the 21st century United States.

So, anyway, Obama's first two names mean "Blessing, the Good." If we are lucky enough to get him for president, we can only hope that his names are prophetic for us.

Which brings me to Omar Bradley. Omar is an alternative spelling of Umar, i.e. Umar ibn al-Khattab, the second caliph of Sunni Islam. Presumably General Bradley was named for the poet Omar Khayyam, who bore the caliph's name. Omar Khayyam's Rubaiyat, in the "translation" of Edward FitzGerald, became enormously popular in Victorian America.

Gen. Omar Bradley, who bore a Semitic, Muslim first name, and shared it with the second Caliph of Sunni Islam, was the hero of D-Day and Normandy, of the Battle of the Bulge and the Ruhr.



Would Mr. Cunningham see Omar Bradley as un-American, as an enemy because of his name?

What about other American heroes, such as Gen. George Joulwan, former NATO Supreme Allied Commander of Europe? "Joulwan" is an Arabic name. Or there is Gen. John Abizaid, former CENTCOM commander. Abizaid is an Arabic name. Abi means Abu or "father of," and Zaid is a common Arab first name. Is Cunningham good enough to wipe their shoes? Is he going to call them traitors because they have Arabic names?



What about Congressman Darrell Issa of California? ("`Isa" means Jesus in Arabic). Former cabinet secretary Donna Shalala? (Shalala means "waterfall" in Arabic).

I won't go into all the great Americans with Arabic names in sports, entertainment and business, against whom Cunningham would apparently discriminate on that basis. Does he want to take citizenship away from Kareem Abdul Jabbar [meaning "noble the servant of the Mighty"] and Ahmad Jamal [meaning "the most praised, beauty"]? What about Rihanna ["sweet basil," "aromatic"]? Tony Shalhoub [i.e. Mr. Monk]?

Let us take Benjamin Franklin. His first name is from the Hebrew Bin Yamin, the son of the Right (hand), or son of strength, or the son of the South (yamin or right has lots of connotations). The "Bin" means "son of," just as in modern colloquial Arabic. Bin Yamin Franklin is not a dishonorable name because of its Semitic root. By the way, there are lots of Muslims named Bin Yamin.

As for an American president bearing a name derived from a Semitic language, that is hardly unprecedented.

John Adams really only had Semitic names. His first name is from the Hebrew Yochanan, or gift of God, which became Johan and then John. (In German and in medieval English, "y" is represented by "j" but was originally pronounced "y".) Adams is from the biblical Adam, which also just means "human being." In Arabic, one way of saying "human being" is "Bani Adam," the children of men.

Thomas Jefferson's first name is from the Aramaic Tuma, meaning "twin." Aramaic is a Semitic language spoken by Jesus, which is related to Hebrew and Arabic. In Arabic twin is tau'am, so you can see the similarity.

James Madison, James Monroe and James Polk all had a Semitic first name, derived from the Hebrew Ya'aqov or Jacob, which is Ya`qub in Arabic. It became Iacobus in Latin, then was corrupted to Iacomus, and from there became James in English.

Zachary Taylor's first name is from the Hebrew Zachariah, which means "the Lord has remembered."

Abraham Lincoln, of course is, named for the patriarch Abraham, from the Semitic word for father, Ab, and the word for "multitude," raham,. Abu, "father of," is a common element in Arab names today.

So, Mr. Cunningham, Barack Hussein Obama fits right in this list of presidents with Semitic names. In fact, we haven't had one for a while. We are due for another one.

A blessed and good one.

99 Comments:

At 6:31 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great post. Bigots begone.

 
At 6:32 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wonderful post, Juan. Not that bigots have ever let facts or logic deter them. Unfortunately, McCain's desperation for the office has long since overwhelmed his sense of decency or shame. Indeed, these tactics tell us less about how low the Republicans will stoop -- we already knew that -- than about how desperate they are to find something to attack Obama with. As far as legitimate issues go, there's apparently no there there.

As for myself, I'm getting ready to tromp off through the snow to see Barack Hussein Obama speak at Ohio State this morning. Won't be wearing my turban, though I could use it. It's cold.

 
At 6:54 AM, Blogger Mark Pyruz said...

Outstanding post, Professor Cole. Thank you.

 
At 7:01 AM, Blogger TEST said...

A Thank you is not enough, but it is all that I can offer for once again being thoughtful and so eloquent in pointing out what is right. Keep it up!!!

:-)

 
At 7:05 AM, Blogger raythebrit said...

Than-kyou for a complete repudiation of such bigotry.
Unfortunately this is just the start, we need strong voices to throw this garbage back in the bigots faces.

 
At 7:53 AM, Blogger ljosserand said...

Dear Dr. Cole,

I'm in great agreement with the main thrust of your piece on names with Middle Eastern origin. However, I would like to make one very minor correction. You mentioned John Sununu of New Hampshire as being one of those well known Americans with such a name. But, I have read that the name "Sununu" is actually of Finnish origin:

http://dkosopedia.com/wiki/John_E._Sununu

If instead you were making a more subtle connection related to the Finnish language having Asian roots (like Turkish), then please excuse my comment.
Overall, I really enjoy your Blog and look forward to reading it every day. Keep up the excellent work!

Yours truly,

Laurence T. Josserand
Josserand57@gmail.com
Rock Hill, SC USA

 
At 7:54 AM, Blogger Gryphynx said...

Very well said.

 
At 8:15 AM, Blogger lilybelle said...

Thanks for your erudition and wit. I can't believe the right is going with an attack so pathetic--his name is foreign, it's Arab, it's Muslim. But bring it. Will whip `em. And your post will help.

 
At 8:18 AM, Blogger Zeno said...

Not only does Obama have a middle name that means "handsome" (and not, as some would have it, "terrorist"), McCain has a middle name ("Sidney": what can you do with that?) and a Roman numeral: John Sidney McCain III. The playground bullies who make fun of Obama's name would have a field day with McCain's, but for partisan reasons they pretend not to notice.

 
At 8:35 AM, Blogger Dr. Mathews said...

Thanks for the lesson, Juan! Count Miguel de Cervantes (of Don Quixote fame) among those that were also influenced por los Musulmanes.

 
At 8:41 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

WOW! very well done!!
I have enjoyed reading your blogs daily since 2003.

 
At 9:53 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

A bit disingenuous, wouldn't you say, to claim this is some sort of prejudice against Semitic names, without mentioning that the vast majority of Americans with Semitic names probably have no idea of their Semitic origin? Is Semitic really a useful category here?

It is, though, always fun to tell a Caleb what his name means.

I assume you're being ironic here, but it still seems rather odd coming from the man who insists on calling the Vice President "Richard Bruce Cheney" against all popular usage. Perhaps you can explain what you are trying to gain by doing that.

 
At 10:01 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Benjamin was the youngest son of Rachel and one of the tribes of Israel. The tribe of Benjamin was considered a tribe of well trained fighters and they had a pact with the tribe of Judeah - the tribe that got the throne and therefore wrote the history and many of of the Bible (old testament)stories. This pact with Judeah provides the most probable origin to the tribe's name - Ben Yamin. They were always Judeah's Right Hand Men. Interestingly, the majority of the tribe of Benjamin were left handed, an attribute that helped them on the battlefield.

 
At 10:11 AM, Blogger People for Peace and Justice Sandusky County said...

Many thanks, Juan. I'll share this widely.

 
At 10:46 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I remember right before super Tuesday there was a news item on a reputable news network where they were talking to a Clinton campaigner/supporter in (rural) Minnesota. I remember the disbelief when this supporter said how she had rebuked an Obama supporter (at a grocery store checkout line) by asking "Do you know what his middle name is? Its Hussein!!". Its sad how people start to discriminate even with names.

 
At 10:57 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

Those of us who use our brains in decision making already know this is vile vapors issued by the extreme right's propaganda machine.... Do you really expect that other segment of the public who decide on their votes based on primeval fears induced at gut level by the propaganda machine to understand your argument?
Murat

 
At 11:58 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you, Mr. Cole, for writing this piece. It is just what I was looking for as I searched for the meaning of Hussein. Not only have you explained the name's meaning, you have compared it to the meanings of names of others in American history, and in doing so, you have presented readers with a compelling etymological lesson.

 
At 11:58 AM, Blogger David Seaton's Newslinks said...

Very good post, but it is true that he is, or has been, a bit self conscious about his name, in high school he called himself "Barry" Obama. But, hell, the "I" in I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby really stands for "Irving", so nobody's immune.

If Obama gets the nomination, the "Swiftboaters" will probably concentrate on his years in Indonesia and his Indonesian stepfather. I don't think they'll find anything, but for sure they'll be looking hard.

I think there'll also be a lot of innuendo about his mother always marrying foreign men of color. I imagine they'll work all that pretty hard in the NASCAR back channels. I don't think McCain will have anything to do with it, but is is in the Republican's DNA and probably inevitable. It could be very effective.

I predict that it will be the dirtiest campaign in living memory.

This was the year the Democrats couldn't lose so that's when they decide to run either an African-American or a woman. Death wish?

 
At 12:08 PM, Blogger Leila Abu-Saba said...

Thank you so much for this post. As a woman who carries around the name Leila Elias Abu-Saba in the USA, I appreciate your explication.

Re: Sununu - it may indeed have a cognate in Finnish, but the Sununu family are from Lebanon. I think sununu is a songbird but I'm not positive.

 
At 1:35 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

this name thing will keep coming up during the election.Very well done Mr Juan Cole.

 
At 1:36 PM, Blogger goethean said...

Proposed title for this post: "Our Semitic Heritage"

 
At 2:16 PM, Blogger Rafael said...

My maternal family name is Arrufat, so I understand what your saying Professor. Thank you...

 
At 2:27 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This post made me cry. I have been hoping to see such information on the internet. Thank you so much for doing this. You are educating the American people. This is so important. I will be forever grateful for this thorough post.

What happened yesterday at the McCain event was sad and disgusting. Our only weapon is a post like this. I hope it will make the rounds.

 
At 2:29 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great post! I'm going to save the link and send it to some of my in-laws when they start sending those stupid e-mail forwards.

One quick point though (some of us old folks will know) -- Kareem *chose* his name, it wasn't given to him. He was born Lew(is) Alcindor.

 
At 3:24 PM, Blogger tc said...

Awww yeah.....you got academic on his ass. I lub me an intellectual azz-whuppin'. Hard to refute what ya can't even understand. Thanks Prof. Cole; that should be nominated as one of the better web posts of 2008, barring the production of an unexpected number of stellar posts. Thanks.

 
At 3:29 PM, Blogger ljosserand said...

Here's another recent political dust-up over Semitic names as told in a Matthew Yglesias piece on theAtlantic.com (Atlantic Monthly, I presume):

"... Am I wrong or is Martin Peretz citing as his primary objection to giving Bill Shaheen a role in Middle East diplomacy that Shaheen's family comes from Lebanon? Fascinatingly, his wife Jeanne Shaheen's 2002 Senate campaign got a lot of backing from "pro-Israel" groups ('[writer mentions AIPAC here]') and this site indicates she got a bunch of money because her GOP then-opponent, John Sununu, is, like her husband, an Arab Christian."

from: http://matthewyglesias.theatlantic.com/archives/2007/03/no_arabs_need_apply.php

One of the 37 comments to the original article goes on to add:

"Sununu is a christian name, but it's not Lebanese, it's Palestinian and worse it belongs to a family that lived in Jerusalem for a thousand years or more. I think that was the sin."

Posted by Ed Marshall March 28, 2007 10:14 PM

NOTE: I think that "sin" (above) refers to a possible reason for the 2002 backing of Sununu's Democratic opponent (Shaheen) by what the writer describes as several "pro-Israel" groups (who might tend to resent any non-Jewish, 1000-year old claims on Jerusalem -- just a guess).

From the same webpage cited above. This webpage appears to consist of one final comment from Yglesias, followed by the 37 comments. But it's confusing, because the link to the full article says that it is no longer available(?). ...so only comments survive?

 
At 3:35 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you for your usual excellent post, Mr. Cole.

 
At 3:47 PM, Blogger AmericanGoy said...

Professor - please stop injecting common sense, logic and most of all intelligence into a political debate.

Those things have no place in American politics.

Sincerely,
American TV media

/sarcasm off

 
At 4:07 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Excellent piece. Thank you.

 
At 4:17 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Boring. Somebody needs to get a life. We know this. Let's get to more substantive stuff.

 
At 4:18 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Another post elsewhere on similar lines ...

http://delong.typepad.com/sdj/2007/02/special_super_j.html

 
At 4:21 PM, Blogger Jaraparilla said...

I'm writing from the Antipodes, so I may be out of touch, but I was surprised to read about Obama being a "cousin" of Cheney. For anyone interested, here's a link:

A spokeswoman for Mrs Cheney said that Mr Obama was descended from Mareen Duvall, a French Huguenot. His son married the granddaughter of one Richard Cheney, Susannah, who arrived in Maryland from England in the late 1650s.

The Duvalls are Mr Obama's great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandparents, and the vice-president's great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandparents.

A spokesman for Mr Obama made the wry observation that "every family has a black sheep".

 
At 4:22 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks for thids- it's a keeper. One quibble: as a writer in today's NYT pointed out, "Black" in most of the world does not only mean African-American or descended from Africans. In England when I was growing up, it referred to any non-white. When my father was serving in Egypt in WWII he heard even Jews being called "black" by other British soldiers. As a Bengali, McC's daughter is "blacker" than most African-Americans.

 
At 5:05 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

As a painfully Anglo "Kenneth," I can't lay claim to such multicultural depth to my own name. But I do thank you for this article, which I plan to print out and keep with me between now and the first Tuesday in November!

 
At 6:27 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Imagine if the worst thing you could say about George WALKER Bush was that he has the same middle name as John Walker Lindh.

 
At 6:29 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

In Shoumatoff, "The Mountain of Names" he says that if you are from southern Europe you are almost certainly a descendant of Muhammed hiself. That if you are from northern Europe you are almost certainly a descendant of Charlemagne.

My ancestors come from both places. I come from good stock!

 
At 6:56 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

An excellent post but I do have the problem with how easily you classify John McCain's daughter as "Asian" and not "Black". I find it troubling that you so easily find a racial classification based on some pre-conceived notion or what constitutes "Black" or "Asian". How long are we going to continue to perpetuate the myth of race? Human beings are human beings - there is no racial aspect that defines who are what we are. There are some regional differences that have developed due to environmental factors and there are absolutely different cultural groups. There is no racial sub-species break down, though, between humans of any region.

 
At 6:59 PM, Blogger Stephen Pihlaja said...

Very, very well put. Good work!

 
At 7:09 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Barack Obama, "American Hero"? Let's not write our history in advance of its actuality. As a professional historian I would hope you would be more careful to weigh reality against hype.

 
At 7:16 PM, Blogger gadgiiberibimba said...

@ Mike,

Juan Cole started calling Cheney "Richard Bruce Cheney" because he observed Bush abruptly dropping his familiar nicknames for such beloved folks as Michael "Heckuva job, Brownie" Brown or "Scooter" Libby as soon as they indulged in such hijinks as coming under indictment or ignoring the obliteration of major cities. When it appeared Cheney would be implicated, Juan Cole started assigning him his full name in accordance with what he took to be official Bush admin style.

 
At 7:23 PM, Blogger Charles said...

Sir, you are a truly a Renaissance Man, sadly we're on the cusp of dimmer rather than more enlightened times.

 
At 8:39 PM, Blogger Mordent Ink said...

Juan Cole,

More people should see this. It's too late for this news cycle, but the next time this issue comes up (and it will), you should publish a shorter version of this post as an op-ed - preferably not in the NY Times but rather in a broad, more Middle American syndicate. (From someone with a Semitic first name.)

 
At 8:52 PM, Blogger Brian Krenz said...

great post.

i'd love to see Cunningham squirm listening to this.

 
At 9:49 PM, Blogger Bujara said...

The use of ones names does not border on bigotry unless of course, unless the emphasis and repetition is meant to conjure sentiments alluding to it. Which is exactly why GOP is using rogue guys like Cunningham to evoke these sentiments only to come and repudiate (or is it denounce or reject) them after the fact. However by this time it is already too late..... point made.

Although there is no shame in one's name, to use them in such derogatory ways is not only downright bigotry, but in utter contempt of the Great American ideals like equality envisioned by the forefathers of this great nation.

 
At 9:57 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Excellent post, bravo!

Go back under the rock from whence you came wingnuts!!

 
At 10:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Fantastic, awesome post! Such learnedness!

 
At 10:51 PM, Blogger A H s e n said...

I'm sure all Americans with semitic names are appreciative of the post, I know I am.

 
At 11:11 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

To David Seaton - "Very good post, but it is true that he is, or has been, a bit self conscious about his name, in high school he called himself "Barry" Obama."
My name is Jennifer and I'm sometimes called Jenny. Does that make me self conscious of my name? A lot of people have nicknames and I think you're reading into too much.

"This was the year the Democrats couldn't lose so that's when they decide to run either an African-American or a woman. Death wish?"
Barack Obama alone received more votes than ALL of the Republican candidates in several of the primaries. In some of the primaries, there have been twice as many Democrats voting than Republicans. If they continue mobilizing voters to get out and VOTE, they'll definately win.

 
At 11:34 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I think its time to start ignoring the bigots, Juan - people like Bill Cunningham are in the same group as Anne Coulter, misguided, inflammatory bigots, who just scream from their perches to inflame, rather than to educate. Its time to see them for what they really are - irrelevant cooks. And we should just ignore them, just like you'd ignore a crazy guy screaming about jesus on the side of the sidewalk.

 
At 11:43 PM, Blogger scottmaui said...

I find the fact that the odds-on favorite to be the next president has a first name that rhymes with Iraq, a middle name Hussein, and a last name that rhymes with Osama both amusingly ironic, and hugely encouraging about the state of tolerance and open-mindedness in America.

One of the things that has bothered me, though, about Obama's campaign is his reaction to the email campaign calling him a Muslim. Obviously, there's nothing wrong with being a Muslim. Calling someone a Muslim is not a smear! Yes, it was meant to be a smear, but it shouldn't be responded to as one. But it seems to me he has responded to it rather defensively with his Christian bona fides. The way he replied seemed to accept the premise that there would be something wrong with being muslim and helped perpetuate the bigotry. I mean, jeez, he could have quoted George W. Bush.

Or added something like: "...But if I were a Muslim, I would be no less qualified to lead this great nation than I am as a Christian! The Constitution clearly states that no religious test should ever be applied, and I fully stand behind the Constitution."

 
At 11:59 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...


[John Sununu's]
father, whose parents were Lebanese, grew up in Boston. His mother hailed from El Salvador, though her parents were Lebanese and Greek. [...] In Arabic, sununu means sparrow, and appears often in poetry and songs.

András

 
At 1:48 AM, Blogger Juan Cole said...

Someone asked about the relationship of Barack to Hebrew and Arabic.

Barak in the sense of 'blessing' is a Semitic root. In Arabic it has a hard "k", in Hebrew a kh sound like Loch in Scottish.

Swahili, the language of Kenya, is full of Arabic loan words.

It is not the same word as the Hebrew Barak meaning lightning. In Arabic lightning is Barq. There is no second "a" and it is a different kind of fricative.

 
At 3:15 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

شكرن

 
At 7:01 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dr Cole you are trying to be reasonable in the world of American politics. Obama will probably lose the election over his "terrorist" name. There is no place for reason.

 
At 10:37 AM, Blogger Danishova said...

All this name etymology scholarship is very interesting but largely irrelevant. The idea that the name of "John Adams" is no different from "Barack Hussein Obama" is absurd, and misses the point entirely.

Names like Matthew, Mark, Luke and John are Biblical names, but it is not that their roots are "Semitic" that matters. Since Arabs and Jews are Semites, that is a ridiculous glossing over of why particular names have been chosen for children.

John Adams was a Christian with a Christian name. "Hussein" is a Muslim name, not a Judeo-Christian name, and there lies the difference.

Certainly this country's Founding Fathers were not named after Mohammed or his descendants or followers.

Whether Obama's name matters or not is a different story, but your presentation uses fatuous reasoning to say that it should not.

Moreover, you say, "Barack Obama's middle name is in honor of his grandfather, Hussein, a secular resident of Nairobi", but according to this reporter, Obama's grandfather, Onyango Hussein, was one of the first Muslim converts in the village.

Obama's father and namesake may have been an agnostic, but his grandfather clearly was not.

 
At 11:38 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Americans may think of Saddam Hussein when they hear the name, but that is like thinking of Stalin when you hear the name Joseph."

..or Hitler whenever you hear they hear the name Adolf, or Moussolini every time they meet a Benito.

Cuh-razy!

 
At 12:15 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Your explanation is all well and good. Thanks for taking the time. The trick is though ... Cunningham's use of his name, and the inevitable continuation of it through the general election is NOT aimed at people who read about such things or even give them much thought. It is aimed at the least among us. It is aimed at the people who fall for that emotional string he pulls by invoking the comparison to Saddam. And it will work. Those people will not ever hear or understand an explanation of it. And I think that time and time again, the left underestimates the amount of people like that in America. How do you think GWB got re-elected? Maybe I'm just jaded, but it seems to me that people who could understand this message are vastly outnumbered by people who snicker at Hussein (and people who don't read).

As another poster already said :
"Dr Cole you are trying to be reasonable in the world of American politics. Obama will probably lose the election over his "terrorist" name. There is no place for reason."

Sad but true.

 
At 12:20 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

David Seaton:
I went to high school w/ a Jalal--only nobody knew his name was Jalal, b/c he went by Joe. In college, he went back to Jalal. My best friend in grade school was Andria, but she went by Andi starting in 4th grade (and went back to Andria as an adult). My best friend in h.s. was Christina, and went by Chrissy, until she got to college and decided she wanted to be Chris.

People experiment with their identity when growing up--esp. when they're a minority trying to fit into the majority. It's a natural part of human development.

 
At 12:32 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yet another person applying way more thought to this matter than I assure you Cunningham did. It's about as simple as, "Saddam Hussein" means evil for Willie's listener, and Barack Obama's middle name is half of "Saddam Hussein". If you think Cunningham is going to pass on a chance to mock a Democrat for anything, you need to listen to his show sometime. If Barack Obama's middle name was "Vivian" or "Francis" or anything else that might've sounded funny to Cunningham, we would've heard that too. The guy is a rabble rousing talk radio host, a professional clown. It's you're time but I'd say you're giving his antics way too much thought and attention here.

 
At 12:43 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This reminds me of that wonderfully funny line from "All in the Family" in the late 70's. Archie is ranting about "heeb" names like Morris and Irving, and Edith says---to thunderous applause and laughter---"I didn't know Abe Lincoln was Jewish!"

 
At 12:48 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Names are often used in politics to make a point. I remember Dan Rather constantly referring to one vice-president as "J. Danforth Quayle" rather than Dan Quayle.

Bill Clinton played off his middle name "Jefferson" to make political points by starting his campaign at Monticello. In fact, as a teenager he changed his name to "Clinton" from "Blythe" because it sounded better for going into politics.

 
At 1:55 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Man, I've found you annoying and disagreed with much of what you've written in the past. But this is just GREAT. Perfect response to the stupid bigotry of Cunningham. I hope this piece gets wide circulation on the Internet. Good on you!

 
At 2:01 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I think its time to start ignoring the bigots, Juan - people like Bill Cunningham are in the same group as Anne Coulte

Hmmmm.... isn't 'Ann' a Semitic name? There must be a modern Arabic cognate of 'Ann'.

 
At 2:32 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

If the full name is so great, then why not use it ? what is he afraid of ? Or is he just another politician? Do and say anything to get nominated, elected? Where is the change? Besides, another man, regardless of color, race, religion in the highest office of the land is not real change.

 
At 2:51 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

In fact, the Hebrew form of the name "Barak" is Baruch ("blessed"), like Spinoza and Bernard .

 
At 3:24 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

They pulled a similar name association on one of the news stations last week. They were discussing the election and when they got to Barack Obama they discussed him and his campaign fairly but had a picture of Osama Bin Laden up in the background. Obviously my friends failed to notice the game being played. Osama and Obama is what they were implying...it was shocking.

 
At 4:33 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

sorry Juan, this information, while interesting, will never sell pharmaceuticals. So most Americans will never hear it.

 
At 5:03 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hmmmm.... isn't 'Ann' a Semitic name? There must be a modern Arabic cognate of 'Ann'.

I think it is Hanae as in Hannah. Oh my god ! Ann Coulter is a moooooooooslim !!!!!!!!

 
At 6:30 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good point about names, but boy have you drunk deeeeeeply of the Obama worship waters, Juan. You aren't even worth reading anymore. Pathetic.

Happy lemminghood. Best wishes. Keep misleading the people with your Obama-worship.
Maybe he'll give you a job in his administration. Maybe Yale was right to tell you to **** off after all, even if they did it the wrong way.

 
At 7:33 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I still think there is a lot of prejudice, not because of the name's origin, but because of it's association with the Iraqi dictator. Would we ever elect a president whose first name was Adolf or whose last name was Hitler? Although Obama may be a good guy, the name is certainly a sticking point with lots of people.

 
At 8:01 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

Thank you Mr. Cole. Unfortunately those who NEED to read a post of this sort will never see it. Unfortunately, erudition is quite absent in the group of people that follow George Bush - little wonder and dangerously pathetic.

 
At 2:37 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great post!! I learned a lot about names today, quite interesting and, you put Cunningham in his place.

 
At 12:25 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

You Forgot to mention Casey Kasem from American Bandstand (his real name is Casey Kassam/Kasim/Kasaam/Qasim) who is an Arab American. One of the top figures in American Entertainment (and one the nicest people you'll every meet)

 
At 3:50 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

fyi: Obama's dad's side, it is unclear I think if the "Barack" is being borrowed from the Arabic or maybe from the Amharic, another semitic language spoken in the horn of Africa (e.g., Ethiopia).

 
At 3:52 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

fyi: As for the Barack, it may be from Amharic (rather then Arabic), another semitic language and one spoken natively in the horn of Africa (e.g., Ethopia).

 
At 4:58 PM, Blogger Juan Cole said...

People in Kenya and elsewhere tend to use Swahili as a lingua franca, and it is the official or a national language in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and the Congo. Its name comes from the Arabic word sahil, plural sawahil, meaning coast. It is called Kiswahili in the language itself, "ki" meaning 'language' in Bantu tongues. It grew up as an amalgam of Arabic, Persian, Prakrit (proto-Hindi) and Bantu African dialects spoken on the east coast of Africa, especially in entrepot trading cities. So barak is mostly likely a loan word in Swahili from Arabic. It would not exist in Bantu, which is not Afro-Semitic. The Amharic speaking Christians of Ethiopia are actually pretty far from Nairobi and had less to do with Kenyan trade and culture than did Swahili speaking groups. And, Amharic doesn't seem to use that root for its word for 'blessing.'

By the way, one reader pointed out that there is an obscure figure in the bible named 'Omar.' But I just would point out that none of his relatives or friends, also named in the Bible, ends up in the American naming system, and I am pretty sure that Bradley was named for a newspaper editor who in turn was named for Omar Khayyam.

 
At 7:46 PM, Blogger Zappatero said...

This is exactly what I was looking for today. Thank you.

 
At 8:04 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Juan,

Thank you for the wonderful, well-thought-out article. The problem with people like Cunningham is that they will never read it. They are too bound up in their hatred and racism that they can not see how ignorant their bile-spewing makes them. As a graduate student in Middle Eastern history, I have found it necessary to explain just this to people outside of academia, sometimes to no avail. Shukran Gazilan!

 
At 9:39 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Floridamom

Kareem Abdul Jabar did choose his name, (chosen for him) BUT it was from one Semitic last name to another.

Most words that start with al- are borrowed from Arabic so alcohol, algebra and Lewis Alcindor all share that same arabic root.

 
At 8:41 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The problem with most people is that they live peripheral lives. The small little mind of Mr.Cunningham knows only one guy by the name of Hussein,and he is a bad guy,(Saddam) and so Mr. C thinks Obama is the same. Poor Mr. Cunnighham! I feel sorry for him and such close minded people.

 
At 10:49 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wow!

I thought Christians obsessed over ridiculous details!

Obama may win, he may not. I am not a supporter of Obama. But truly, what is in a name? It is reputation and character that puts value on a name. My name means crowned with laurel leaves. Does that mean I walk around with flowers in my hair? Um, no. But my character and reputation tell people that I will stand up for them despite our differences; that I will support them; that I will remain loyal to our friendship.

The same with Obama. Who really cares what his name is? What people should care about is his leadership ability, his alignment with their values, and his strength. That goes for all of the candidates that are in this silly race - McCain, Huckabee, Nader, Charlie Brown.

 
At 3:30 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

CAn we please believe that someone has to do something to bring a change about... The Clintons already had their turn... think about it do you really believe Hillary let Bill Clinton run the White House by himself in between his "time out"... hey maybe she telling the truth she does have experience as President.

 
At 4:28 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

thank you mr cole, it is a well written and insightful article, i really enjoyed reading it and learning from it.

what's with the whole recent fear of anything arab related anyway?
lack of knowledge is perhaps the single most significant contributor to that...

so thanks once again for your (hopefully successful) attempt to correct this!

 
At 12:59 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I want to shout, me too, I so loved your post, I found it just at the right time, after again receiving one of the vile emails going around about Barack Obama.

Thank you again U C

 
At 9:32 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ok. Now that we all know what Barack means and where it originated, can someone please tell me just where Obama stands on the issues? And I don't want to hear 'change you can believe in!'

 
At 1:55 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Nice piece, great start.

However, not a mention of the real origins of all these names: Africa.

Both Hebrew and Arabic are African languages and owe a lot of names, vocabulary and customs to Africa.

For instance, Adam is derived from the Ancient Egyptian concept of the Perfect Person (Man). Atam/Atum in Ancient Egyptian culture is a representation of the first realization of existence depicted in human form.

 
At 2:22 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Forgot to add:

Barak is an African name; roots: Mtw Ntr ( Ancient Egyptian): Ba-ra-ka – a transferable quality of personal blessedness and spiritual force (almost a physical force). As we know, Barak is also a Hebrew and Arabic name.

 
At 12:35 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

So did black dude, Obama..is he black? or American Native...wtf...who cares?

 
At 11:10 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good Job, I believ we are blessed to have Barack,we need to pray for change. Uche N

 
At 9:04 PM, Blogger Stephane MOT said...

The next president has a definitely beautiful name.

 
At 3:08 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Others have said it but the people who need to read this either can't or won't.

 
At 12:08 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Americans are very open minded people, historically they have accepted good people as their leaders, it does not matter whether they have foreign or semitic names. God bless America and its democratic institutions!

 
At 8:55 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wow! Very informative! Thank you!

 
At 4:40 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have no problem with Mr. Obama's name and I am one of those conservative right people. I find Mr. Obama pleasant, easy to listen to and handsome. I cannot however vote for him because of his voting record, I am conservative. I do not however go along with others,from both parties, that condemn a person before truly learning how they think, vote or believe. We sometimes condemn to easily in this country, shame on us.

NES

 
At 5:28 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wait, wait...

What about the part where is isn't
the LEAST bit QUALIFIED for the
JOB?

 
At 1:21 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

So glad to have found this! It's sad to hear people negatively using Barack's name in relation to Saddam and being proud of their use of it!

 
At 3:37 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks Cole. "Baraka" indeed means blessing in Swahili. The world is blessed to have such a Baraka. May Barack continue to be a baraka to all.

 
At 1:14 AM, Blogger Micgar said...

Interesting, informative post! Came here by way of the Jon Swift Best Blog Posts of 2008 feature! And this truly is a great piece! I didn't know about all those names! Now I do!

 
At 1:39 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Mr Cole-Fantastic. Well done, and True/Factual Information(from my own research) - TO: Scott: Thank-You about saying "being called a Muslim should NOT be a Smear" or something degrading/or to be feared. Correct, the name Hussein, is popular in Africa, Europe, Asia, the Middle East, etc, not just for ONE PARTICULAR REASON, But MANY...I myself converted to Islam 5 yrs ago thru what I believe to have been a miracle. And I Love and Respect Imam Hussein. His Martyrdom to Uphold Faith. I Love my Faith and - ISLAM : WAS NOT SPREAD BY "The Sword" and has opened my heart to Love; I'm not a Sunni/Wahabi Muslim. But Yes, there are Bigots and Rednecks here still (in many parts of the US, they outnumber lib/open-minded ppl. God-Willing, things will change

 

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