President Obama on Friday voiced strong support for Huma Abedin, saying the top aide to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has been "nothing less than extraordinary in representing our country and the democratic values that we hold dear."
Obama praised Abedin during remarks at a White House iftar dinner to mark the end of the fasting during the Ramadan holiday observed by Muslims. Abedin has been subject to unproven accusations by some House Republicans, including Michelle Bachmann (Minn.), that she is part of a conspiracy by the Muslim Brotherhood to infiltrate the top reaches of the U.S. government.
The president called Abedin an "American patriot" and added that the public owes her "a debt of gratitude" because she is "an example of what we need in this country – more public servants with her sense of decency, her grace and her generosity of spirit."
In his remarks, Obama said diversity "makes us Americans," but he warned that tolerance for such diversity is "threatened."
He cited the recent shooting at the Sikh temple in Wisconsin, in which six people were killed by a gunman who eventually shot himself.
"Tonight, our prayers, in particular, are with our friends and fellow Americans in the Sikh community," Obama said. "We mourn those who were senselessly murdered and injured in their place of worship. . .So tonight, we declare with one voice that such violence has no place in the United States of America. The attack on Americans of any faith is an attack on the freedom of all Americans. No American should ever have to fear for their safety in their place of worship. And every American has the right to practice their faith both openly and freely, and as they choose."
Washington Post, 10 August 2012
See also Huffington Post, 10 August 2012
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