Behind the Backlash

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by Lori Peek


  the U.s. declaration of war against imperial Germany on April 6, 1917,

  approximately half a million German immigrants were classified as “enemy

  Introduction / 15

  aliens.”74 During World War i, the federal government conducted round-ups

  of Germans, registered more than 260,000 male and 220,000 female enemy

  aliens, and arrested and subsequently detained roughly 6,300 Germans in

  internment camps.75

  Just over twenty years after the last German internees had been released,

  the United states entered World War ii. This time, almost a million immigrants

  and American citizens who traced their roots to the Axis powers—Germany,

  italy, and Japan—were labeled enemy aliens, fingerprinted, and registered.

  Approximately 2,300 Germans and an estimated 200 italians in the United

  states were interned in camps during World War ii.76 race prejudice and

  war-time hysteria resulted in the incarceration of more than 120,000

  Japanese American men, women, and children for the duration of World

  War ii.77 more than two-thirds of the Japanese detainees were native-born

  American citizens, although this status was meaningless in the face of mass

  arrests and forced removal from their homes and communities. Ultimately,

  none of the Japanese detainees was incriminated for any involvement in

  sabotage or espionage.

  in one of many belated apologies issued to Japanese Americans, president

  George H. W. Bush promised that the atrocities committed by the federal

  government would “never be repeated.”78 yet, in 1986, the reagan-Bush

  administration considered using two military compounds in the southern

  United states for the possible internment of Arab Americans.79 A few

  years prior to that, the Carter administration contemplated the arrest and

  incarceration of iranian students at U.s. universities as a result of the hostage

  crisis growing out of the seizure of the American embassy in Tehran.80 The

  Federal Bureau of investigation launched one of its first national campaigns

  to interview and to deport Arab Americans following the munich massacre.81

  The crisis began when palestinian militants kidnapped eleven israeli athletes

  and coaches during the 1972 Olympic Games in munich. The militants

  murdered all eleven hostages, and five of the eight terrorists were killed when

  German authorities attempted to rescue the hostages.

  since 1999, the U.s. government has entered into a series of contracts

  with major corporations to build detention camps at undisclosed locations

  within the United states. The government has also contracted with several

  companies to manufacture thousands of railcars, some reportedly equipped

  with shackles, apparently to transport detainees.82 in the aftermath of the

  9/11 attacks, calls for the internment and mass deportation of muslims

  abounded, and a provision in the UsA pATriOT Act of 2001 (introduced as

  the provide Appropriate Tools required to intercept and Obstruct Terrorism

  Act of 2001) created a legal framework for establishing detention centers to

  incarcerate U.s. citizens and foreign nationals.83 Understandably, promises

  of “never again” offer little consolation to middle eastern and muslim

  16 / Chapter 1

  Americans, who are keenly aware that they are the latest minority group to

  be defined as threatening outsiders following a national tragedy. With that

  awareness comes heightened levels of anxiety and mistrust.

  The purpose of the chapters that follow is threefold. First, drawing

  on official statistics and in-depth interviews, i examine the character and

  breadth of discrimination that muslim Americans have endured before and

  especially after the 9/11 attacks. As this book shows, muslim Americans were

  confronted with stereotypes and harassment prior to 9/11. in the aftermath

  of the terrorist attacks, muslims experienced a dramatic increase in the

  frequency and intensity of these hostile encounters. Behind the Backlash

  documents the verbal harassment; violent threats and intimidation; physical

  assault; religious profiling; and employment, educational, and housing

  discrimination that muslims faced following 9/11. second, i explore the

  personal and social impacts of the backlash. The first-hand accounts

  provide a glimpse into the personal and collective trauma that can arise

  when religious minorities are subjected to extreme prejudice and exclusion.

  Third, i discuss the ways that muslim Americans have coped with and

  responded to assaults on their faith, families, and personal identities. i draw

  on sociological insights to explain the struggles of young muslim adults to

  establish community and to define their identities during a time of national

  crisis. Ultimately, this book explores how disasters and other crisis events

  impact the most marginalized members of our society.

  2

  Under Attack

  During the early morning hours of Tuesday, september 11, 2001, nine-

  teen men took control of four commercial airliners en route to los

  Angeles and san Francisco from Boston, newark, and Washington,

  D.C. The first hijacked aircraft struck the north tower of the World

  Trade Center at 8:46 a.m. eyewitnesses flooded new york City’s 9-1-1

  call system with reports of the plane crash as the media and amateur

  photographers turned their cameras toward the World Trade Center.

  Almost immediately after the plane collided with the tower, television

  stations began broadcasting images of black smoke pouring out of a

  gaping hole in the massive building. news anchors offered conflicting

  accounts: some reported that a small, twin-engine commuter plane had

  hit the World Trade Center; others indicated that a commercial airliner

  had veered off course and had struck the tower. At this point, few report-

  ers speculated that the crash had been deliberate.1

  As stunned observers stared up at the inferno, emergency response

  personnel from new york City and the port Authority of new york and

  new Jersey began mobilizing what would become the largest rescue

  operation in the nation’s history. Well over a thousand first responders—

  firefighters, police officers, and paramedics—were deployed to the

  scene of the first crash.2 medical workers set up triage areas around the

  perimeter of the World Trade Center as they attempted to aid those who

  had been injured when the plane hit the building. police units began

  18 / Chapter 2

  shutting down subway stations as fire teams evacuated civilians from the

  north tower and its surrounding area.

  Then, at 9:03 a.m., a second airliner, traveling at more than five hundred

  miles per hour, slammed into the side of the south tower. Camera crews from

  across the city captured the impact and subsequent explosion on film. The

  force of the plane crash rocked the building, and two huge fireballs erupted

  from the south tower as several floors became engulfed in flames. Thick

  smoke billowed from the tower as ash and debris fell to the ground.

  president George W. Bush first addressed the nation at 9:30 a.m. on the

  morning of september 11. in his brief remarks, the president confirmed

  that a terrorist incident had indeed
taken place: “Today we’ve had a national

  tragedy,” Bush said from an elementary school he was visiting in sarasota,

  Florida. “Two airplanes have crashed into the World Trade Center in an

  apparent terrorist attack on our country.” Bush then promised “to hunt down

  and to find those folks” who committed the atrocities.3 Only minutes after

  the president finished his address, the third hijacked airliner hit the pentagon

  in Arlington, virginia. At 10:03 a.m., the fourth hijacked plane crashed in a

  field in rural pennsylvania.

  The violent assaults were designed to be spectacular in their destruction

  of symbols of U.s. economic, military, and political power. The first two

  hijacked commercial airliners brought down the 110-story twin towers of

  the World Trade Center and led to the partial or total collapse of seven other

  buildings in the financial district of lower manhattan. The third airliner

  heavily damaged part of the pentagon, which serves as the headquarters for

  the U.s. Department of Defense. The fourth plane was destined for either the

  U.s. Capitol or the White House but was forced down by several passengers

  before it could reach its intended target.

  These deliberate acts claimed the lives of more people on American soil

  than any other hostile attack in the nation’s history.4 The death toll stands

  at 2,973, which includes all 246 passengers and crew members on the four

  hijacked airplanes; 55 military personnel and 70 civilians at the pentagon;

  and 2,602 civilians and first responders in new york City who were in the

  towers at the time of the aerial assaults or when the buildings collapsed.5 All

  told, citizens from more than ninety nations perished as a consequence of

  9/11. The nineteen individuals who hijacked the planes also died on impact,

  although their names are typically not included among the official rosters of

  the deceased.

  in addition to those persons who lost their lives, many more suffered

  various wounds to the body and mind as a result of the disaster. soon after

  the collapse of the enormous blazing towers, which sent walls of dust and

  debris surging down narrow city streets, several thousand people in new

  york received medical care for burns, lacerations, broken bones, and other

  Under Attack / 19

  afflictions.6 in the weeks and months to follow, a considerable number of

  people who were close enough to the epicenter to inhale the smoke and

  noxious fumes sought treatment for respiratory problems, such as wheezing,

  shortness of breath, asthma, and a new syndrome aptly named “World Trade

  Center cough.”7

  The children and adults who lived, went to school, or worked near the

  disaster-affected areas were exposed to an extraordinary array of stressors

  (life threats, bereavement, disruption of normal routines, and displacement),

  which provoked fear, nightmares, and other forms of worry that persisted

  for long periods of time.8 The rescue and recovery workers who labored

  at the sites of the attacks—putting out fires, cleaning up debris, and

  salvaging human remains—witnessed scenes of unspeakable destruction

  and subsequently experienced high rates of depression and anxiety.9 mental

  health professionals who consoled the families of the deceased, comforted

  those who searched for the missing, and provided support for survivors and

  volunteers were vulnerable to various psychological disturbances arising

  from their regular confrontation with human tragedy.10

  it is clear that the emotional distress that the attacks generated was

  not confined to the impact zones but instead rippled outward across the

  United states. The pew research Center estimated that roughly 20 percent

  of Americans knew someone (or had a friend or relative who knew someone)

  who was injured or killed on 9/11. A national survey revealed that the vast

  majority of American adults—about 90 percent—exhibited at least one

  symptom of post-traumatic stress in the week following the attacks, and

  nearly half—44 percent—displayed substantial symptoms of stress.11 A series

  of follow-up polls documented ongoing adverse emotional and physical

  health reactions among the general population.12 As the months passed and

  people attempted to come to terms with the many losses associated with the

  disaster, the immediate trauma seemed to settle into a kind of generalized

  mass anxiety. in one survey, taken almost a year after the tragedy, nearly

  two-thirds of the respondents said that they thought about 9/11 at least

  several times a week.13

  The 9/11 attacks also caused staggering financial losses. The U.s. Govern-

  ment Accountability Office contends that the costs associated with the attacks

  were somewhere in the range of $80 to $100 billion (in 2001 dollars).14 This

  figure includes, among other things, the “direct costs” resulting from the loss

  of human life; the destruction of physical property, including a large section

  of the pentagon and fifteen million square feet of prime office space in lower

  manhattan; the expense of responding to the disaster during the emergency

  period; the cost of removing two million tons of rubble; and the economic toll

  of recovery. The “indirect costs” represent losses that are far more difficult to

  estimate, such as diminished business profits, the loss of employee income,

  20 / Chapter 2

  and reduced tax revenues. The business travel and tourism industries were

  severely affected as well, and in september 2001, domestic and international

  air travel fell by 30 percent nationwide. economic activity in manhattan’s

  financial district all but ceased after the attacks, and between 75,000 and

  100,000 jobs were lost in new york City in the last three months of 2001.15

  The coordinated assaults on new york and Washington, D.C., generated

  widespread disruption across the United states. less than an hour after the

  first airplane struck the north tower of the World Trade Center, the Federal

  Aviation Administration ordered a halt to all nonemergency civilian flight

  operations, stranding tens of thousands of passengers at airports across the

  country. This order represented the first time in American history that air

  traffic nationwide had been grounded. shortly thereafter, secret service

  agents were deployed to the White House, and the U.s. military was placed

  on high alert worldwide. All federal office buildings in Washington, D.C.,

  were evacuated, and new york state government offices were closed. Trading

  on Wall street was suspended, and every bridge and tunnel leading into

  manhattan was shut down. los Angeles international Airport, the destination

  of three of the hijacked airplanes, was evacuated and shut down, as was san

  Francisco international Airport, the destination of the fourth airliner that

  crashed in pennsylvania. schools, businesses, and other organizations across

  the nation closed for days, and in some cases for weeks, after the attacks.

  in the wake of the tragedy, many people experienced an overwhelming

  desire to help. Tens of thousands of emergency response personnel and

  private citizens spontaneously converged at the scene of the attacks.16 Con-

  cerned i
ndividuals lined up at blood donation stations across the United

  states, and volunteers overwhelmed community service agencies with offers

  to assist. Open displays of patriotism were evident everywhere, as Americans

  bought out every U.s. flag in the nation.17 individuals and organizations

  donated nearly $2 billion and an extraordinary amount of food, clothing,

  and supplies to the relief efforts.18

  All the while, survivors in new york City desperately hunted for the

  disappeared. Frantic family members and friends presented photos of

  missing loved ones to hospital employees, red Cross staff, strangers on the

  street, and anyone else whom they thought might be able to aid them in

  their search. Thousands of handmade fliers that asked, “Have you seen this

  person?” were posted on lampposts, in restaurants, and all along the walls of

  Grand Central and penn stations.19 Countless candlelight vigils, communal

  interfaith services, teach-ins on university campuses, and other events were

  organized to help people cope with the events. Despite some apprehension,

  no panic, no rioting, and no real looting occurred in new york City following

  the attacks.20

  in many ways, the outpouring of warmth and goodwill closely resembled

  Under Attack / 21

  the reactions that have long been observed in the aftermath of natural

  disasters and other catastrophes. samuel Henry prince, one of the earliest

  scholars of disaster, writes of a “city of comrades” coming together after

  the deadly 1917 Halifax ship explosion.21 in his report on a major flood,

  robert i. Kutak references the “democracy of distress,” which he says led to

  a temporary breakdown of race and class divisions among affected citizens.22

  Anthony F. C. Wallace23 describes a “stage of euphoria” that brought together

  those who survived a catastrophic tornado, and martha Wolfenstein24 calls

  the more general phenomenon a “post-disaster utopia.” Allen Barton uses

  the concept of the “altruistic community” to explain how human suffering

  could generate such supportive behavior among populations devastated by

  disaster.25 After reviewing a significant number of case studies of disaster,

  Charles e. Fritz concludes that the emergence of a “community of sufferers”

  is a nearly universal feature of large-scale crises.26

 

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