United
States is not a Christian Nation
One of the hard facts of
life is that the United States of America is not a Christian
Nation. The following Treaty was made by the United States of
America with the Barbary Pirates. It passed the 5th Congress
without a hitch. Article
11 was made part of the record to convince the Muslims
that the United States of America is not a Christian Nation,
and therefore peace could be established between the two
nations.
TREATIES AND OTHER
INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS
OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1776-1949
Compiled under the direction of
CHARLES I. BEVANS, LL.B.
Assistant Legal Adviser, Department of State
Volume II
PHILIPPINES-
UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC
DEPARTMENT OF STATE PUBLICATION 8728
Released February 1974
___________________________________________________
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government
Printing Office, Washington D.C. 20402 - Price $14.35
pages 1070 - 1074
Tripoli
PEACE AND FRIENDSHIP
Treaty signed at Tripoli
November 4, 1796, and at Algiers January 3, 1797
Senate advice and consent to
ratification June 7, 1797
Ratified by the President of the
United States June 10, 1797
Entered into force June 10, 1797
Proclaimed by the President of
the United States June 10, 1797
Superseded April 17, 1806, by
treaty of June, 4, 18051
8
Stat. 154; Treaty Series 3582
[TRANSLATION of 1796]3
TREATY OF PEACE AND FRIENDSHIP BETWEEN THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND THE BEY AND SUBJECTS OF TRIPOLI
OF BARBARY
ARTICLE 1
There is a firm and perpetual
Peace and friendship between the United States of America and
the Bey and subjects of Tripoli of Barbary, made by the free
consent of both parties, and guaranteed by the most potent Dey
& regency of Algiers.
ARTICLE 2
If any goods belonging to any
nation with which either of the parties is at war shall be
loaded on board of vessels belonging to the other party they
shall pass free, and no attempt shall be made to take or
detain them.
ARTICLE 3
If any citizens, subjects or
effects belonging to either party shall be found on board a
prize vessel taken from an enemy by the other party, such
citizens or subjects shall be set at liberty, and the effects
restored to the owners.
ARTICLE 4
Proper passports are to be
given to all vessels of both parties, by which they are to be
known. And, considering the distance between the two
countries, eighteen months from the date of this treaty shall
be allowed for procuring such passports. During this interval
the other papers belonging to such vessels shall be sufficient
for their protection.
ARTICLE 5
A citizen or subject of
either party having bought a prize vessel condemned by the
other party or by any other nation, the certificate of
condemnation and bill of sale shall be a sufficient passport
for such vessel for one year; this being a reasonable time for
her to procure a proper passport.
ARTICLE 6
Vessels of either party
putting into the ports of the other and having need of
provisions or other supplies, they shall be furnished at the
market price. And if any such vessel shall so put in from a
disaster at sea and have occasion to repair, she shall be at
liberty to land and reembark her cargo without paying any
duties. But in no case shall she be compelled to land her
cargo.
ARTICLE 7
Should a vessel of either
party be cast on the shore of the other, all proper assistance
shall be given to her and her people; no pillage shall be
allowed; the property shall remain at the disposition of the
owners, and the crew protected and succoured till they can be
sent to their country.
ARTICLE 8
If a vessel of either party
should be attacked by an enemy within gun-shot of the forts of
the other she shall be defended as much as possible. If she be
in port she shall not be seized or attacked when it is in the
power of the other party to protect her. And when she proceeds
to sea no enemy shall be allowed to pursue her from the same
port within twenty four hours after her departure.
ARTICLE 9
The commerce between the
United States and Tripoli, - the protection to be given to
merchants, masters of vessels and seamen, - the reciprocal
right of establishing consuls in each country, and the
privileges, immunities and jurisdictions to be enjoyed by such
consuls, are declared to be on the same footing with those of
the most favoured nations respectively.
ARTICLE 10
The money and presents
demanded by the Bey of Tripoli as a full and satisfactory
consideration on his part and on the part of his subjects for
this treaty of perpetual peace and friendship are acknowledged
to have been received by him previous to his signing the same,
according to a receipt which is hereto annexed, except such
part as is promised on the part of the United States to be
delivered and paid by them on the arrival of their Consul in
Tripoli, of which part a note is likewise hereto annexed. And
no pretence of any periodical tribute or farther payment is
ever to be made by either party.
ARTICLE
11
As the
government of the United States of America is not in any sense
founded on the Christian Religion,4
- as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws,
religion or tranquility of Musselmen, - and as the said States
never have entered into any war or act of hostility against
any Mehomitan nation, it is declared by the parties that no
pretext arising from religious opinions shall ever produce an
interruption of the harmony existing between the two
countries.
ARTICLE 12
In case of any dispute
arising from a violation of any of the articles of this treaty
no appeal shall be made to arms, nor shall war be declared on
any pretext whatever. But if the Consul residing at the place
where the dispute shall happen shall not be able to settle the
same, an amicable reference shall be made to the mutual friend
of the parties, the Dey of Algiers, the parties hereby
engaging to abide by his decision. And he by virtue of his
signature to this treaty engages for himself and successors to
declare the justice of the case according to the true
interpretation of the treaty, and to use all the means in his
power to enforce the observance of the same.
Signed and sealed at Tripoli
of Barbary the 3d day of Jumad in the year of the
Higera 1211 - corresponding with the 4th day of Novr
1796 by
JUSSUF BASHAW MAHOMET Bey
SOLIMAN Kaya
MAMET - Treasurer
GALIL - Genl of the Troops
AMET - Minister of Marine
MAHOMET - Comt of the city
AMET - Chamberlain
MAMET - Secretary
ALLY - Chief of the Divan
Signed and sealed at Algiers
the 4th day of Argib 1211 - corresponding with the
3d day of January 1797 by
HASSAN
BASHAW Dey
and by the Agent plenipotentiary of the United States of
America
JOEL
BARLOW [SEAL]
[THE "RECEIPT"]
Praise be to God &c-
The present writing done by our
hand and delivered to the American Captain OBrien makes known
that he has delivered to us forty thousand Spanish dollars, -
thirteen watches of gold, silver & pins-back, - five
rings, of which three of diamonds, one of saphire and one with
a watch in it, - one hundred & forty piques of cloth, and
four caftans of brocade, - and these on account of the peace
concluded with the Americans.
Given at Tripoli in Barbary
the 20th day of Jumad 1211, corresponding with the
21st day of Novr 1796 -
JUSSUF
BASHAW - Bey
whom
God Exalt
The foregoing is a true copy
of the receipt given by Jussuf Bashaw - Bey of Tripoli -
HASSAN
BASHAW - Dey of Algiers
The foregoing is a literal
translation of the writing in Arabic on the opposite page
JOEL
BARLOW
[THE "NOTE"]
On the arrival of a consul of
the United States in Tripoli he is to deliver to Jussuf Bashaw
Bey -
twelve thousand Spanish
dollars
five hawsers - 8 Inch
three cables - 10 Inch
twenty five barrels tar
twenty five do pitch
ten do rosin
five hundred pine boards
five hundred oak do
ten masts
(without any measure mentioned, suppose for vessels from 2 to
300 ton)
twelve yards
fifty bolts canvas
four anchors
And these when delivered are
to be in full of all demands on his part or on that of his
successors from the United States according as it is expressed
in the tenth article of the following treaty. And no farther
demand of tributes, presents or payments shall ever be made.
Translated from the Arabic on
the opposite page, which is signed & sealed by Hassan
Bashaw Dey of Algiers - the 4th day of Argib 1211 -
or the 3d day of Jany 1797 - by -
JOEL
BARLOW
[APPROVAL OF U.S. MINISTER AT LISBON]
To all to whom these Presents
shall come or be made known.
Whereas the Underwritten David
Humphreys hath been duly appointed Commissioner
Plenipotentiary by Letters Patent, under the Signature of the
President and Seal of the United States of America, dated the
30th of March 1795, for negociating and concluding
a Treaty of Peace with the Most Illustrious the Bashaw, Lords
and Governors of the City & Kingdom of Tripoli; whereas by
a Writing under his Hand and Seal dated the 10th of
February 1796, he did (in conformity to the authority
committed to me therefor) constitute and appoint Joel Barlow
and Joseph Donaldson Junior Agents jointly and seperately in
the business aforesaid; whereas the annexed Treaty of Peace
and Friendship was agreed upon, signed and sealed at Tripoli
of Barbary on the 4th of November 1796, in virtue
of the Powers aforesaid and guaranteed by the Most potent Dey
and Regency of Algiers; and whereas the same was certified at
Algiers on the 3d of January 1797, with the
Signature and Seal of Hassan Bashaw Dey, and of Joel Barlow
one of the Agents aforesaid, in the absence of the other.
Now Know ye, that I David Humphreys Commissioner
Plenipotentiary aforesaid, do approve and conclude the said
Treaty, and every article and clause therein contained,
reserving the same nevertheless for the final Ratification of
the President of the United States of America, by and with the
advice and consent of the Senate of the said United States.
In testimony whereof I have signed the same with my Name
and Seal, at the City of Lisbon this 10th of
February 1797.
DAVID HUMPHREYS [SEAL]
[United States Minister at Lisbon]
1
TS 359, post, p. 1081.
2
For a detailed study of this treaty, see 2 Miller 349.
3
This translation from the Arabic by Joel Barlow, Consul
General at Algiers, has been printed in all official and
unofficial treaty collections since it first appeared in 1797
in the Session Laws of the Fifth Congress, first session. In a
"Note Regarding the Barlow Translation" Hunter
Miller stated: ". . . Most extraordinary (and wholly
unexplained) is the fact that Article 11 of the Barlow
translation, with its famous phrase, 'the government of the
United States of America is not in any sense founded on the
Christian Religion.' does not exist at all. There is no
Article 11. The Arabic text which is between Articles 10 and
12 is in form a letter, crude and flamboyant and withal quite
unimportant, from the Dey of Algiers to the Pasha of Tripoli.
How that script came to be written and to be regarded, as in
the Barlow translation, as Article 11 of the treaty as there
written, is a mystery and seemingly must remain so. Nothing in
the diplomatic correspondence of the time throws any light
whatever on the point." (2 Miller 384.)
The Miller edition also contains an
annotated translation from the original Arabic made in 1930 by
Dr. C. Snouck Hurgronje of Leiden; for text, see p. 1075.
4
See footnote 3, p. 1070.
Billy Graham also stated that
the United States of America is not a Christian Nation. The
following is a televised interview by David Frost with Billy
Graham on May 30, 1997.
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David Frost: You
said, we are a society poised on the brink of self
destruction.
Billy Graham: That's
right. I believe that. When one knows the little bit
of the inside as you would of the chemical weapons
and other weapons. But it is the moral thing I was
thinking about. The fact that we are going down
morally so fast until there's no longer among our
young people an understanding of right and wrong.
You can see it in their faces, their searching for
something. And I think that many of our political
leaders are the same way. They want something but
they haven't found it yet.
David Frost: Say is this still a
Christian Country?
Billy Graham: No! We're not a
Christian Country. We've never been a Christian
Country. We're a secular Country, by our
constitution. In which Christians live and which
many Christians have a voice. But we're not a
Christian Country.
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David
Frost interviews
Billy Graham.


1 minute clip
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Apotheosis means elevation to divine status, or
deification. George Washington has been elevated to
a god. The United States capitol dome interior has
an overhead painting in the "heavens."
Figures in the overhead painting - an allegorical
glorification of the first President - were drawn as
much a 15 feet high to seem life-size from the
Rotunda floor 180 feet below. The "Apotheosis
of Washington" covers 4,664 square feet of
concave surface. Constantino Brumidi worked the
fresco in 1865. Gods
and mortals mingle in the Dome's fresco heavens.
These ancient gods are not part of Christianity.
Jesus Christ is the Son of God and we are commanded
by Him to worship only one god, Almighty God, our
Father in Heaven.
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