Behind the Backlash

Home > Other > Behind the Backlash > Page 10
Behind the Backlash Page 10

by Lori Peek

There are definitely cultures and cultural practices where women

  are oppressed. But it’s very hard to distinguish between culture and

  religion, and it’s especially hard to defend your religion when you

  don’t know everything about those cultures. i’ve been to egypt, but i

  haven’t been to iran or Afghanistan or saudi Arabia. i know in saudi

  Arabia women can’t drive, and that’s wrong because women and

  men are supposed to have equal rights, to be equal, in the Qur’an.

  But i couldn’t tell you why these practices exist. As a muslim, people

  always expect you to know why.

  it is unthinkable to most Christian Americans that they would be asked

  to denounce injustices committed in the far corners of the world in the

  name of their faith. yet as natasha’s quote indicates, muslim Americans are

  regularly expected to explain (and to apologize) when wrongs are associated

  with islam.

  even more nuanced educational materials were not necessarily successful

  in breaking down negative constructions of islam. iffat, a native of new york

  City, described what happened to her after her ninth-grade class watched a

  film on female circumcision:

  i remember there was one time in ninth grade, the year we were

  learning about the whole world, the middle east. We were learning

  about female circumcision. We watched a tape about it. After the

  52 / Chapter 3

  class, a girl was like, “Have you been circumcised?” i was like, “What?

  no!” i’m thinking, we just watched this whole tape and it said not all

  muslims did this and this was a ritual thing; some people in Africa

  do this. i don’t understand; was she not paying attention during the

  tape? people still think things. i explained it to her. That’s a ritualistic

  thing. it has nothing to do with islam.

  The muslim women were obviously aware that they were widely seen

  as passive, at best, and totally mindless and oppressed, at worst. The men

  also recognized these gendered stereotypes, and they understood that,

  by extension, they were viewed as the oppressors. interestingly, the men

  were more likely than the women to acknowledge patriarchy in islamic

  communities. They argued adamantly, however, that gender inequality

  emerges from cultural differences or limited educational opportunities

  rather than from something endemic to the faith itself. Hassan, who was

  raised in a household where his mother was the primary breadwinner and

  decision maker, emphasized this perspective:

  it strikes a nerve when you know people see you as against women,

  antiwomen. my mom’s a nuclear engineer. she works and travels. We

  moved to Washington because of her work, even though my dad did

  not have a job yet. it’s very normal. it really isn’t something to do with

  the religion. it’s something to do with the culture and how people are

  brought up. you would find that people who are less educated may

  oppress women.

  Another young man, Ali, echoed Hassan’s point and added, “people believe

  we have four wives, we mistreat our wives. i remember guys would ask me

  whether it was true that islam says you can do this or do that with women.

  it’s actually really offensive.”

  The muslim men were painfully aware that members of their sex and

  faith are stereotyped as rigid, intolerant, and inherently prone to extremism.

  Just as muslim women tend to appear in the news only when a story can

  be told about their real or perceived oppression, muslim men are almost

  always portrayed as violent and fanatical. in cartoons, it is easy to spot the

  caricature of the muslim man: He is the one with the wild eyes, crooked

  nose, unruly beard, and turban who is yelling “Allah Akbar!” and toting

  a gun or a bomb—or both.23 muslim men are depicted as villains in an

  alarming number of Hollywood films and television shows.24 And, since the

  early 1980s, the Western media have regularly reported on the misdeeds of

  muslim men throughout the islamic world.25 These stories rarely offer any

  Encountering Intolerance / 53

  context for the actions of these so-called islamic extremists and thus serve to

  demonize and to dehumanize all muslims.

  The men who participated in this study recalled a number of early

  encounters with peers and adults who knew little about islam beyond its

  association with terrorism. Bombings, hijackings, kidnappings, and other

  key events associated with muslims or Arabs reinforced the most negative

  visions of the islamic faith. One interviewee, shadi, who immigrated with

  his family to the United states from yemen, did not identify a specific

  incident that made him feel like he was being stereotyped. instead, he spoke

  of “people” looking at him as if he were a terrorist. This general sense of

  being viewed as a violent extremist made him wary of identifying himself as

  a muslim. He said, “since we were kids, it’s been false things. When i came

  to this country, it was troubling just to say i’m a muslim. people looked at

  you like you were a terrorist.”

  Enduring Harassment

  such stereotypes as those described above are not only demeaning to muslim

  Americans; they are also dangerous. stereotypes may lead to many damag-

  ing effects, especially when the targeted group is marginalized in the larger

  cultural context. The persons whom i interviewed recognized that their status

  as religious minorities, combined with the many negative images and miscon-

  ceptions of their faith, left them vulnerable to harassment. Ameena, who was

  of southeast Asian descent, emphasized the pervasive threat of mistreatment

  that she felt when growing up: “you always have that threat of being the tar-

  get. you can get looks. . . . i’ve gotten looks ever since i was young.”

  in this research, i defined harassment as any nonverbal, verbal, or physical

  incident carried out with the intent to threaten, to intimidate, to harm,

  to offend, or to otherwise ostracize on the basis of the person’s perceived

  minority religious or ethnic identity. Harassment thus encompassed many

  different acts, ranging from threatening stares to verbal taunts to physical

  altercations. Of the 140 persons whom i interviewed, just over 70 percent ( n =

  99) reported that they had been harassed in the pre-9/11 period. (note: Given

  the relatively young age of the sample population—eighteen to thirty-five

  years—the probability of experiencing harassment throughout one’s lifetime

  is possibly even higher.)

  When the respondents were in elementary and high school, harassment

  most often took the form of teasing and name calling. students would also

  tell jokes about Arabs and muslims, which usually drew on the most common

  stereotypes about Arab people and the islamic faith. rais noted, “every

  muslim, every Arab has to live with the kidding around in school . . . [being

  54 / Chapter 3

  called] camel jockey, sand roach, this kind of stuff.” muslim women who did

  not wear the headscarf would be asked such questions as “When is your dad

  going to make you put on the veil?” Those who did cover remembered being

  mocked for “wearing a tablecl
oth” on their heads. Other students frequently

  ridiculed Zoya, who was one of the few pakistani American youth in her

  hometown in new Jersey, while she rode the bus to school:

  i lived in a mostly white town where people were pretty racist against

  me, especially on the school bus. every day all the guys would call me

  “dot head” and “towel head” and all these things. i was always like,

  “you know, islam is a religion. Go and educate yourself.” They would

  make fun of me, call me all those names because i’m darker, because

  i was a different religion, because i dressed differently.

  This quote highlights the fact that muslims may be mistreated due to a

  complex array of factors associated with their religion, ethnic identities, and

  cultural practices. Zoya realized that she was being made fun of based on her

  status as a religious outsider and because of her dark skin and the clothing

  that she would wear. By calling Zoya such names as “towel head” and “dot

  head,” the children on the school bus were invoking stereotypical terms used

  to disparage and to marginalize. (“Dot head” is a derogatory reference to the

  bindi or forehead “dot” that many Hindu women and some Hindu men wear;

  Zoya, as a muslim, obviously did not wear the bindi.)

  For decades, the mass media has presented the Arab and muslim

  worlds overwhelmingly in the context of political violence and conflict.

  Consequently, Americans are accustomed to seeing images of war-torn

  regions throughout the middle east and to hearing stories about extremists

  committing atrocities in the name of islam. it is no surprise, then, that the

  respondents were subjected to the most severe harassment when violent

  incidents that were associated with Arabs or islam were covered widely in the

  media. marwan discussed how the 1988 bombing of pan Am Flight 103 over

  lockerbie, scotland, which was perpetrated by a libyan intelligence officer,

  resulted in a string of hostile comments from his classmates: “in grade

  school, it would be like, ‘Don’t mess with him; he’s a muslim and he’ll blow

  up your house.’ This was around the time of lockerbie, the plane coming

  down, terrorists and all that stuff. i remember even in sixth grade, the other

  boys would say, ‘Don’t mess with him, he’ll blow up your house.’”

  The first palestinian intifada against the israeli occupation began in

  1987 and led to anti-muslim and anti-Arab incidents in the United states.

  Farook, who was from Colorado, had a part-time job in a middle eastern

  grocery and takeout deli at the time of the uprising. He described several

  negative encounters with persons who would enter the store just to make

  Encountering Intolerance / 55

  hateful remarks: “The deli, it was owned by palestinians. We have always

  dealt with people coming in and talking crap about islam—this is way before

  9/11—people coming in saying, ‘i hope we give nuclear arms to israel so they

  can nuke the palestinians’ [or] ‘Go back to the middle east.’”

  some of the people i interviewed were younger than Farook, and thus they

  did not recall the first intifada as vividly. However, they clearly remembered

  and were affected when the second palestinian uprising began in the fall of

  2000. As palestinian-israeli violence intensified, so, too, did tensions among

  muslim American youth and their Jewish American counterparts. A woman

  in Brooklyn discussed the conflicts that emerged on her college campus:

  When the intifada in palestine started last year, problems broke out

  on campus between palestinian and israeli students. A few muslim

  students—there was this whole issue where some muslim students

  were harassed by some Jewish students. Then they were both ripping

  down each other’s fliers [that were advertising events on behalf of

  israel or palestine]. We had a meeting with [the dean] on what we

  could do to prevent from being continually harassed.

  When the first persian Gulf War began in the fall of 1990, negative

  opinions toward Arabs and muslims were widespread. One national poll,

  which was conducted in February 1991, found that 41 percent of Americans

  had a low opinion of Arabs. in that poll, a majority of Americans said the

  following terms applied to Arabs: “religious” (81 percent), “terrorists” (81

  percent), “violent” (58 percent), and “religious fanatics” (56 percent).26

  After the start of the first persian Gulf War, the respondents in this

  study recalled being taunted at school about iraq and saddam Hussein, who

  was president of the country at the time. Karima, who attended a large and

  diverse high school in michigan, described how other students, as well as a

  close friend, made comments to her after the outbreak of the Gulf War: “i’m

  sure people had it worse than i did during the Gulf War. i would mostly get

  teased about saddam Hussein being my uncle. One of my friends who i knew

  really well even asked me, ‘Are you related to saddam Hussein?’ Things like

  that. i guess it depends a lot on what’s going on in the world in terms of what

  people are thinking and what they see in the media.”

  The teasing was sometimes more insidious, and, as a result, the

  participants felt that their patriotism and allegiance to the United states was

  constantly being questioned. One man, who was only ten years old when the

  Gulf War began, said he asked his mom to sew a yellow ribbon on his coat.

  He hoped that wearing that particular symbol would prove to his classmates

  that he did indeed support the American troops.

  The interviewees tended to dismiss name calling as “stupid” or “childish”

  56 / Chapter 3

  behavior. This allowed them to forgive their peers and others for being

  insensitive and saying hurtful things. However, the harassment escalated at

  times, subsequently leaving the muslim men and women feeling scared or

  depressed. latifah, who grew up in a small town in the midwest, depicted

  the environment where she lived as “vicious.” some people in the town

  treated her as if she were going to hell because she was not a Christian,

  and one of her high school teachers made improper and bigoted statements

  about islam in front of the entire class. in the end, latifah could not wait

  to move away:

  At times it was sad to see how ignorant people were about islam,

  about anything different. you really saw how afraid people were of

  something different. Other places embrace and respect differences,

  but in small-town America they’re fearful of it. Being muslim, people

  would think that i was going to hell because i didn’t believe that

  Jesus was the lord and savior. it was really vicious. even though i

  would try to talk about how there are so many similarities between

  Christianity and islam, one literally evolved from the other, they

  didn’t care. They didn’t want to hear it. They would dwell on the little

  differences. Then they would think it’s a terrorist religion and say

  things like, “The angels of satan came to muhammad and that’s how

  the Qur’an came about.” A teacher would say this. my history profes-

  sor said this to our class. What that d
id for me was make me want to

  leave as soon as i possibly could. i understand how ignorant people

  can be, even people that are nice people by nature—these people can

  still be so ignorant and hateful.

  Amani attended a school where she remembered the other students as

  mostly friendly and accepting toward her and her faith. When she was in

  public, however, it was a different story. Because Amani wore the headscarf,

  she realized she “stuck out like a sore thumb” in her home community in

  southern Colorado. she was frequently stared at and pointed at. And, after

  receiving numerous hostile comments, she eventually stopped going to

  certain places at night where she tended to feel unsafe:

  i got a lot of stares, a lot of negative comments before 9/11. i won’t

  go to [the main shopping district] in the evening as a rule, because i

  have had comments there, and when i do have to go, i go during the

  day and i don’t window shop. i go straight in to where i am going,

  and i go straight out and go to the bus or whatever. i think it really

  depends on how much you show up as a foreigner, or as appearing of

  middle eastern descent or as a muslim. i have always stuck out like

  Encountering Intolerance / 57

  a sore thumb, because i wear a scarf. Therefore, people judge me by

  that, and people react to me like that.

  several of the interviewees not only were verbally harassed but also

  were subjected to unwelcome physical contact. The women who started

  wearing the headscarf in middle school or high school were the most

  likely to remember being bullied by their peers, which was undoubtedly a

  consequence of their visibility. nearly half the young women noted that they

  had their headscarves yanked or pulled off by other students. Alisha, whose

  family immigrated to the United states from syria when she was an infant,

  was kicked the first day that she wore the headscarf to high school: “i wore

  it, and i went to school—the first time i was getting a drink of water—and

  this guy kicked me. That was my first kind of experience with the scarf that

  i really remember.” The boy who kicked Alisha was suspended from classes

  for a week. Alisha was grateful that the school took swift disciplinary action

  against him, as she believed it may have stopped other students from “picking

  on” her.

 

‹ Prev