Capitol
Hill staff said Ellison's swearing-in photo opportunity drew more media than they had ever seen in the history of the U.S.
House. Ellison represents the 5th Congressional District of Minnesota.
The
Quran Ellison used was no ordinary book. It once belonged to Thomas Jefferson, third president of the United States and one
of America's founding fathers. Ellison borrowed it from the Rare Book Section of the Library of Congress. It was one of the
6,500 Jefferson books archived in the library.
Ellison,
who was born in Detroit and converted to Islam while in college, said he chose to use Jefferson's Quran because it showed
that "a visionary like Jefferson" believed that wisdom could be gleaned from many sources.
There
is no doubt Ellison was right about Jefferson believing wisdom could be "gleaned" from the Muslim Quran. At the time Jefferson
owned the book, he needed to know everything possible about Muslims because he was about to advocate war against the Islamic
"Barbary" states of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Tripoli.
Ellison's
use of Jefferson's Quran as a prop illuminates a subject once well-known in the history of the United States, but, which today,
is mostly forgotten - the Muslim pirate slavers who over many centuries enslaved millions of Africans and tens of thousands
of Christian Europeans and Americans in the Islamic "Barbary" states.
Over
the course of 10 centuries, Muslim pirates cruised the African and Mediterranean coastline, pillaging villages and seizing
slaves.
The
taking of slaves in pre-dawn raids on unsuspecting coastal villages had a high casualty rate. It was typical of Muslim raiders
to kill off as many of the "non-Muslim" older men and women as possible so the preferred "booty" of only young women and children
could be collected.
Young
non-Muslim women were targeted because of their value as concubines in Islamic markets. Islamic law provides for the sexual
interests of Muslim men by allowing them to take as many as four wives at one time and to have as many concubines as their
fortunes allow.
Boys,
as young as 9 or 10 years old, were often mutilated to create eunuchs who would bring higher prices in the slave markets of
the Middle East. Muslim slave traders created "eunuch stations" along major African slave routes so the necessary surgery
could be performed. It was estimated that only a small number of the boys subjected to the mutilation survived after the surgery.
When
American colonists rebelled against British rule in 1776, American merchant ships lost Royal Navy protection. With no American
Navy for protection, American ships were attacked and their Christian crews enslaved by Muslim pirates operating under the
control of the "Dey of Algiers"--an Islamist warlord ruling Algeria.
Because
American commerce in the Mediterranean was being destroyed by the pirates, the Continental Congress agreed in 1784 to negotiate
treaties with the four Barbary States. Congress appointed a special commission consisting of John Adams, Thomas Jefferson,
and Benjamin Franklin, to oversee the negotiations.
Lacking
the ability to protect its merchant ships in the Mediterranean, the new America government tried to appease the Muslim slavers
by agreeing to pay tribute and ransoms in order to retrieve seized American ships and buy the freedom of enslaved sailors.
Adams
argued in favor of paying tribute as the cheapest way to get American commerce in the Mediterranean moving again. Jefferson
was opposed. He believed there would be no end to the demands for tribute and wanted matters settled "through the medium of
war." He proposed a league of trading nations to force an end to Muslim piracy.
In
1786, Jefferson, then the American ambassador to France, and Adams, then the American ambassador to Britain, met in London
with Sidi Haji Abdul Rahman Adja, the "Dey of Algiers" ambassador to Britain.
The
Americans wanted to negotiate a peace treaty based on Congress' vote to appease.
During
the meeting Jefferson and Adams asked the Dey's ambassador why Muslims held so much hostility towards America, a nation with
which they had no previous contacts.
In
a later meeting with the American Congress, the two future presidents reported that Ambassador Sidi Haji Abdul Rahman Adja
had answered that Islam "was founded on the Laws of their Prophet, that it was written in their Quran, that all nations who
should not have acknowledged their authority were sinners, that it was their right and duty to make war upon them wherever
they could be found, and to make slaves of all they could take as Prisoners, and that every Musselman (Muslim) who should
be slain in Battle was sure to go to Paradise."
For
the following 15 years, the American government paid the Muslims millions of dollars for the safe passage of American ships
or the return of American hostages. The payments in ransom and tribute amounted to 20 percent of United States government
annual revenues in 1800.
Not
long after Jefferson's inauguration as president in 1801, he dispatched a group of frigates to defend American interests in
the Mediterranean, and informed Congress.
Declaring
that America was going to spend "millions for defense but not one cent for tribute," Jefferson pressed the issue by deploying
American Marines and many of America's best warships to the Muslim Barbary Coast.
The
USS Constitution, USS Constellation, USS Philadelphia, USS Chesapeake, USS Argus, USS Syren and USS Intrepid all saw action.
In
1805, American Marines marched across the desert from Egypt into Tripolitania, forcing the surrender of Tripoli and the freeing
of all American slaves.
During
the Jefferson administration, the Muslim Barbary States, crumbling as a result of intense American naval bombardment and on
shore raids by Marines, finally officially agreed to abandon slavery and piracy.
Jefferson's
victory over the Muslims lives on today in the Marine Hymn, with the line, "From the halls of Montezuma, to the shores of
Tripoli, We fight our country's battles in the air, on land and sea."
It
wasn't until 1815 that the problem was fully settled by the total defeat of all the Muslim slave trading pirates.
Jefferson
had been right. The "medium of war" was the only way to put and end to the Muslim problem. Mr. Ellison was right about Jefferson.
He was a "visionary" wise enough to read and learn about the enemy from their own Muslim book of jihad.