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Alienating Muslims
By Imran Nasrullah
YellowTimes.org Guest Columnist (United States)
April 21, 2002
(YellowTimes.org) – The gestalt of anti-Islamic sentiments
here in America because of government action, a pro-Israel
biased media (press, television and Hollywood), and Christian
fundamentalists serve to compromise American security in the
long run by driving Muslims, at home and abroad, to greater
resentment. The result will be less cooperation in the "War on
Terrorism."
History has shown long term effects of creating an atmosphere
of suspicion and censure toward a suspected class of people;
they adopt a posture of resentment, or worse, hostility, from
their feelings of defensiveness.
Since September 11, there has been a marked step up in
anti-Muslim polemics with the effect of marginalizing a distinct
class: Muslims and Arabs. The source arises from a triumvirate
of government, media, and the Christian right, i.e. Christian
fundamentalists (here the term should be understood in the
context of Islamic fundamentalists).
With respect to the government, Attorney General John
Ashcroft continues to round up Arabs and Muslims who, by
Ashcroft's own admission, may have no direct connection to the
9/11 attacks, Al Qaeda, or Osama bin Laden. Now, on the basis of
guilt by association, nationality, and religion, the government
draws scrutiny upon this one class. Ironically, these three
elements are exactly the basis by which the government cannot
discriminate.
Furthermore, after 9/11 John Ashcroft announced that
dissenting against the U.S. government provided ammunition to
the enemy. George W. Bush, sounding an awful lot like Osama bin
Laden in his rhetoric, declared you're either with us or you're
with the terrorists (bin Laden, incidentally, declares that if
you are a true Muslim you are with us, otherwise you're a kuffr;
an unbeliever), thereby, precluding all ideas contrary to the
government position. Muslims who dissent with the government's
actions are viewed by average Americans as unpatriotic, at best,
and at worst, the terrorist in our midst.
On the journalism and media side, no one casts the pall of
suspicion more than Steven Emerson, a journalist who claims that
virtually every Muslim organization in America, including
mosques, is either a front for terrorist fundraising, or is
infiltrated by Muslim fundamentalists. Yet, he admits none of
these groups are violating the law. Nonetheless, they need to be
monitored because they adhere to unpopular political speech and
they are of the same ethnicity as the World Trade Center
terrorists.
Columnists, talking heads and putative Middle East "experts,"
constantly attack Islam. Jeff Jacoby, Judith Miller, Daniel
Pipes, Charles Krauthammer, Mortimer Zuckerman, and A.M.
Rosenthal constantly vilify Arabs (especially Palestinians) and
Islam. On a weekly basis they draw the inference that Islam
equals suicide bombers, and that suicide bombers equals
terrorism. Furthermore, these same people equate Islam's
teachings with jihadism or hatred. Their viewpoint is colored in
whole by the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. They ignore that
there are more Muslims in India than in the entire Middle East,
yet Islam is defined by one conflict.
While firebrand mullahs bear the brunt of fanning Islamic
fundamentalism, Americans ignore our own homegrown
fundamentalists, the religious right. Televangelists like Pat
Robertson and Franklin Graham publicly preach hatred towards
Muslims, with little reprobation. Both Robertson and Graham
claimed Islam as a "violent religious tradition trying to take
over the world…[mandating the] killing of infidels." In 1997,
Robertson called Islam "a religion of the slavers." While Graham
stated, "I believe [Islam] is a very evil and wicked religion.''
Such hate speech may have prompted America's first
religiously inspired suicide bomber. Just recently, in
Tallahassee, a man tried driving a truck with a propane tank
into a mosque. Found in the front seat was a Bible. The attacker
claimed he wanted to join the military to kill Muslims.
In a dangerous blend of religion and politics, our own
Attorney General, John Ashcroft, proclaimed in an interview with
syndicated columnist Cal Thomas that "Islam is a religion in
which God requires you to send your son to die for him.
Christianity is a faith in which God sends his son to die for
you."
I believe if Americans continue on with such attitudes,
non-Muslim Americans will drive Muslim-Americans and Muslims
worldwide from defensiveness to a posture of resentment, or
worse, hostility. In this global war against terrorism, the U.S.
government needs the active participation of Muslims, not the
alienation of Muslims.
I believe more than ever that all members of all faiths must
mend their relationships and cultivate a relationship of respect
and acceptance. Rather than subscribe to mistrust, all must
build and participate in community. And most of all, we must be
free to dissent, or else we are not Americans.
(Imran Nasrullah is an attorney living in Boston,
Massachusetts.)
Imran Nasrullah encourages your comments:
nasrullah@attbi.com
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