Behind the Backlash

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Behind the Backlash Page 7

by Lori Peek


  CAir first began tracking anti-muslim abuses in response to the rash of

  hate crimes that followed the Oklahoma City bombing. Although the most

  striking increase in violent incidents followed the 9/11 attacks, the data show

  that anger and acts of discrimination directed against muslim Americans

  have continued to escalate. These trends likely signify the lasting imprint of

  9/11 as well as new hostilities stoked by the wars in Afghanistan and iraq,

  conflicts erupting in the middle east, and the focus on the threat of islamic

  fundamentalism in the rhetoric surrounding the global War on Terror.

  in addition to enduring ill-treatment at the hands of fellow citizens and

  private entities, Arab and muslim Americans became the targets of special

  governmental legislation and other law enforcement measures adopted after

  9/11.73 These measures, which were ostensibly designed to combat terrorism,

  have led to a systematic erosion of civil rights for all Americans but have

  been especially devastating to Arab and muslim communities. portions

  of the UsA pATriOT Act and other post-9/11 federal legislation empower

  law enforcement officials to (1) arbitrarily choose foreign or domestic

  organizations suspected of supporting terrorism, and then—using secret

  evidence—jail or deport anyone who gives them material support; (2) jail

  those who commit even minor criminal offenses deemed “dangers to human

  Under Attack / 33

  3,000

  2,652

  2,728

  2,467

  2,500

  1,972

  2,000

  1,717

  1,522

  1,500

  1,019

  Incidents 1,000

  525

  602

  366

  500

  216

  240

  284

  285

  322

  80

  0

  2002

  2003

  2004

  2005

  2006

  2007

  2008

  1995-96

  1996-97

  1997-98

  1998-99

  2000-01

  2001-02

  1999-2000

  1/01 Backlash

  9/1

  1995 OKC Backlash

  Year

  Figure 2.2. Anti-Muslim bias incidents, 1995–2008. (Source: Council on American-

  Islamic Relations, “The Status of Muslim Civil Rights in the United States: Seeking Full

  Inclusion,” Washington, D.C., 2009.)

  life” whose intent is to “intimidate society” or “influence government policy”;

  (3) detain U.s. citizens and noncitizens suspected of being enemy combatants

  without bail and without access to attorneys; (4) try such individuals in secret

  before military tribunals; and (5) prepare detention camps to incarcerate U.s.

  citizens and foreign nationals for prolonged periods of time.74

  After the passage of the UsA pATriOT Act, Attorney General John

  Ashcroft announced further measures authorizing FBi agents to spy on

  domestic groups without having to show evidence of a crime. Agents were

  permitted to covertly monitor public meetings and religious assemblies for

  the first time in decades.75 in 2006, the U.s. Congress passed the military

  Commissions Act, which allows for the indefinite imprisonment of anyone who

  donates money to a charity that turns up on a list of “terrorist organizations”

  or who speaks out against the government’s policies. The law also calls for

  secret trials for citizens and noncitizens alike.76

  in the weeks immediately following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, local, state,

  and federal law enforcement agencies rounded up and imprisoned between

  1,200 and 5,000 muslim and Arab men.77 The government refused to reveal

  the detainees’ identities, give them access to lawyers, disclose information

  regarding the charges against them, or allow them to have contact with

  their families.78 According to a report from the U.s. Department of Justice,

  the men were subjected to “a pattern of physical and verbal abuse by some

  correctional officers” in the detention facilities.79 Under the threat of a

  lawsuit, the federal government eventually released the names of some of the

  men who had been swept up in the post-9/11 mass arrests. most of the men

  were picked up on minor immigration violations, and many were quietly

  deported after months or years in detention. none of the men was charged

  with any terror-related activity.80

  34 / Chapter 2

  in the fall of 2001 and spring of 2002, representatives from the FBi and

  other law enforcement agencies began visiting mosques, universities, and

  homes to conduct “voluntary” interviews with nearly eight thousand middle

  eastern and south Asian men between the ages of eighteen and thirty-three

  who were legally residing in the United states as students or visitors.81 The

  government acknowledged that none of the men selected for interviews

  was individually suspected of wrongdoing; instead, the interrogations were

  meant only to uncover leads that might prove useful in the antiterrorism

  campaign.82 During the interviews, 90 percent of those questioned were asked

  about their political and religious beliefs, whether they sympathized with the

  9/11 terrorists, whether they had any scientific or weapons training, and

  where they had traveled in the past.83 Of the thousands of men interviewed,

  none was found to have any connections to terrorist activity.

  Also in the wake of 9/11, islamic charities, businesses, and homes were

  raided, and assets and private property were seized pending investigation.84

  in December 2002, more than seven hundred muslim men were arrested after

  they had waited in line for several hours at immigration and naturalization

  service offices to register under the newly established national security

  entry-exit registration system (nseers).85 After this incident, the

  Associated press reported that muslim families from across the United states

  were seeking refuge in Canada. Dozens of civil-liberties and human-rights

  organizations subsequently called on the Bush administration to eliminate

  the mandatory nseers registration program on the grounds that it “appears

  to target people based on national origin, race, and religion rather than

  intelligence information.”86

  The post-9/11 arrests, detentions, and deportations of thousands of

  young muslim men resulted in several high-profile cases. These incidents

  sent shockwaves of fear through the entire muslim community. For example,

  the media offered extensive coverage of the cases of U.s. Army Captain James

  yee, portland attorney Brandon mayfield, and University of idaho doctoral

  student sami al-Hussayen. These three muslim men were arrested, held

  in solitary confinement for weeks, and labeled “terrorists.” All three were

  eventually exonerated of all charges brought against them (in the mayfield

  case, the FBi even issued a rare formal apology for its egregious investigative

  errors regarding a false fingerprint match that allegedly connected mayfield

  to the march 11, 2004, madrid, spain, train bombings). Despite the legal

  victories for the defendants, the damage to the
ir personal reputations and to

  the image of the muslim community was done.

  The statistics presented in this chapter offer a general sense of the

  contours of the post-9/11 backlash. yet when we merely examine the

  numerical estimates of acts of discrimination, hate crimes, and profiling

  incidents, they fail, as statistics often do, to describe what these forms of

  Under Attack / 35

  exclusion and violence meant to the people most affected. These numbers

  tell us nothing of what the discrimination looked or felt like on the ground,

  nor do they offer even a hint of the isolation and fear that muslim Americans

  experienced after the attacks. The numbers shed no light on the ways that the

  backlash impacted the daily lives, routines, and relationships of muslims. it is

  only through listening to the voices of muslim Americans that we can begin

  to comprehend the scope and severity of the backlash as well as to appreciate

  the sometimes remarkable ways that muslims adapted to the exclusion. With

  that in mind, the subsequent chapters in this book draw on qualitative data

  to give voice to the lived experiences of a sample of muslim men and women

  whom the post-9/11 backlash directly affected.87

  3

  Encountering Intolerance

  Over the two decades prior to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, several schol-

  ars of islam began to write with an increasing degree of urgency

  about the rise of anti-muslim hostility in the United states. This

  work focused on negative representations of muslims in the news and

  popular culture,1 the post–Cold War construction of the “islamic threat”

  by U.s. political leaders,2 the selective targeting of muslim immigrants

  by law enforcement officials,3 and the growing number of religious-dis-

  crimination lawsuits filed in state and federal courts.4 in 1991, the word

  Islamophobia—which refers to a hatred of islam and the resultant fear or

  dislike of muslims—first appeared in print in an American periodical.5

  it has been included in the Oxford English Dictionary every year since

  1997.6 The Council on American-islamic relations (CAir) issued its

  initial report on bias crimes committed against muslim people and their

  places of work and worship in 1995. CAir has since published a series of

  annual reports that chronicle a disturbing upward trend in instances of

  discrimination and civil-rights violations. Jane smith, a respected scholar

  of islam, argued in 1999, “prejudice against their religion is a reality with

  which all American muslims must deal in one way or another.”7

  The persons represented in Behind the Backlash were born between

  the years 1966 and 1983. Thus, the individuals who participated in this

  study grew up during a period when the vilification and victimization

  of muslims in the United states was becoming more common. This era

  Encountering Intolerance / 37

  was also a time of rapid growth among the muslim American community.

  From 1990 to 2000, the muslim American population increased by nearly

  40 percent, and a significant number of new mosques and islamic schools

  were founded in rural and metropolitan areas.8 The face of islam in America

  began to change as well. With the post-1965 influx of new arrivals from

  south Asia and the middle east, immigrant muslims soon outnumbered

  converts among African Americans.9 The rising visibility of islam has

  sparked an intense and ongoing debate concerning the role of religion in

  American public life and the potential “assimilability”—or ability to adapt to

  the dominant culture—of muslims.

  This chapter explores the challenges that the interviewees faced prior

  to the 9/11 attacks. Understanding this predisaster context is important for

  two reasons. First, it explains, at least in part, why the post-9/11 backlash

  against muslim Americans was so swift and severe. second, it helps put in

  perspective the various strategies that muslims drew on as they attempted

  to respond to and recover from the unprecedented outbreak of bias-related

  incidents after 9/11. (i take up these points in later chapters.) As the narratives

  presented below illustrate, muslim Americans were no strangers to hostile

  treatment before 9/11. in fact, the persons i interviewed reported that they

  regularly encountered confusion, stereotypes, and harassment as a result of

  their minority religious status.

  The data included here, which are necessarily retrospective, are based

  on interviews that i collected with muslim adults in the two years following

  the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Undoubtedly, the time frame in which the data

  were gathered shaped the memories that the participants recalled and shared

  with me. indeed, 9/11 was a catalytic event that caused the young men and

  women to reflect carefully and self-consciously on their prior experiences

  with mistreatment, ultimately heightening their awareness of their personal

  and social identities as muslim Americans.10 As the participants struggled to

  come to terms with the post-9/11 fallout, they actually had a greater capacity

  for insight into their present situations and past circumstances. it was through

  this process of critical reflection that important moments—which may have

  previously been taken for granted—rose to the surface. The fact that many

  of the experiences that the interviewees described were remarkably similar

  underscores the pervasiveness of anti-muslim sentiment that was present

  long before the assaults on the World Trade Center and pentagon.

  Discovering Difference

  Adults often imagine children to be completely unaware of status differ-

  ences that mark American society. yet social science research has shown that

  children as young as two years of age understand that race and gender are

  38 / Chapter 3

  important characteristics that define individuals and confer certain privileges

  (or disadvantages) on entire groups.11 less attention has been devoted to

  children’s knowledge or use of religious categorizations in everyday interac-

  tion. However, some evidence shows that American children and adolescents

  who practice faiths other than Christianity—the dominant religion in U.s.

  social life—often find that other youth and adults ignore, invalidate, and even

  actively contest these belief systems.12

  most of the respondents in this study could not identify specific moments

  when they realized that their islamic faith marked them as outside the norm.

  instead, they described a more general sense of “difference” from the other

  children in their schools and neighborhoods. Although they shared many

  things in common with their non-muslim friends, they were aware that their

  religion made them stand out from their predominantly Christian peers.

  Habeel remembered how, when he was a child, his mother used to call him

  inside to complete his daily prayers. This practice made him feel out of the

  ordinary, especially when his playmates would question his actions:

  i think that i always felt different as a muslim. maybe not my musical

  taste or the Tv shows i like to watch, but there’s something different

  about us. i never felt quite the same as every other ave
rage American

  kid. When we were little, we used to go outside and play with our

  friends across the street, and then our mother would call us in to

  pray. The kids would ask, “Why are you going in to pray?” That’s

  one of the things, just little things that add up. so even though you

  don’t feel totally alienated by everyone else, there’s always a bit of a

  difference.

  in addition to their religious minority status, the majority of the

  participants were immigrants or the children of immigrants with roots in the

  middle east, south Asia, and many other parts of the world. Their membership

  in multiple minority groups—religious, ethnic, immigrant—meant that

  their faith, their cultural practices, and their physical characteristics often

  stood in contrast to the white, Judeo-Christian norm associated with the

  United states. Hafeez, a second-generation immigrant of pakistani descent,

  was raised in a predominantly white neighborhood in massachusetts. He

  described the period when he first began to realize how his religion and

  ethnic background distinguished him from his peers:

  i can remember i was pretty young, in maybe second or third grade.

  most of my friends were overwhelmingly white, protestant. it was

  just the little things that i noticed. my parents would fast [during the

  islamic holy month of ramadan] and no one else would. We don’t

  Encountering Intolerance / 39

  celebrate Christmas. Christmas is so big in America. Oh yeah, and

  we’re brown. [ Laughs. ] Do you know what i mean? i guess it was just

  that i knew . . . i look different from them, so i am different from

  them. i believe different things. i think that is when i figured out

  that to be American was to be Christian or Jewish. To be muslim and

  brown was to be not American.

  even at a young age, Hafeez had begun to associate what it means to be

  “American” with specific practices (for example, celebrating Christmas) as

  well as with membership in the dominant racial group and most prominent

  faith communities in this nation.

  like the two men quoted above, many others recognized early on that

  numerous practices associated with their religion or culture set them apart

  from their peers and most of the adults in their lives. some of the respondents

  began fasting (abstaining from eating or drinking anything from dawn until

  sunset) during ramadan at the age of seven or eight years. This tradition

 

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