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Obama visits US mosque for the first time

AAP

AAP

US President Barack Obama has sought to correct what he called a “hugely distorted impression” of Muslim-Americans as he made his first visit to a US mosque.

Inserting himself into a debate that had ricocheted in the presidential campaign, he said those who demonised all Muslims for the acts of a few were playing into extremists’ hands.

He told parishioners at a mosque outside Baltimore that he’d heard from young Muslims worried they’ll be rounded up and kicked out of the country.

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Muslims, too, he said, were concerned about the threat of terrorism but were too often blamed as a group “for the violent acts of the very few.”

“We’ve seen children bullied, we’ve seen mosques vandalised,” Mr Obama said, warning that such unequal treatment for certain groups in society tears at the nation’s fabric.

“That’s not who we are.”

For Muslim advocates, Mr Obama’s visit was a long-awaited gesture to a community that had warned of escalating vitriol against them that had accompanied the public’s concern about the Islamic State (IS) and other extremist groups.

Although Mr Obama had visited mosques overseas in the past, he waited until his final year in office to make such a visit at home, reflecting the issue’s sensitive political implications.

In this year’s Republican presidential campaign, Donald Trump called for banning Muslims from the US temporarily and Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio warned of “radical Islamic terrorism.”

Muslim-American advocacy groups warned of a growing number of attacks on mosques and on individuals following attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, California, by those purporting to act in the name of Islam.

“We have to understand: An attack on one faith is an attack on all our faiths,” Mr Obama said.

Denouncing a political dynamic that encourages attacks against certain religions, he said it fell on all Americans to speak up.

For Mr Obama, the visit in his final year in office reflected a willingness to wade into touchy social issues that often eluded him earlier in his presidency.

For years, mr Obama had fought incorrect claims that he’s actually a Muslim and was born in Kenya, beliefs that polls suggested remained prevalent among many Republicans.

Mr Obama, a Christian, was born in Hawaii.

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