Behind the Backlash

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Behind the Backlash Page 23

by Lori Peek


  participant remarked that her apartment was the one location where she

  “didn’t feel out of place all the time.”

  The home certainly offered some protection from harsh mistreatment.

  The privacy and security that muslim Americans hoped to attain, however,

  proved elusive. in the weeks and months following the terrorist attacks,

  federal immigration officials and law enforcement agents conducted raids

  on muslim residences and businesses in virginia, Georgia, new york, and

  other locations along the east Coast.36 vivid accounts of dozens of armed

  men searching homes and seizing possessions while frightened mothers and

  daughters were handcuffed on the floor spread like wildfire through the

  muslim community, as did news that the government was now engaged in

  the wholesale monitoring of telephone conversations and e-mail messages.37

  As concerns about government surveillance mounted, so, too, did

  other anxieties within muslim households. The respondents reported that

  one of the most significant tensions that erupted between family members

  after 9/11 was related to their dress and other aspects of their physical

  appearance. religious visibility was a key predictor of who was, and was

  not, discriminated against after 9/11. Because visibility was so important in

  determining the likelihood of being harmed, it is understandable that much

  discussion and debate ensued within muslim homes and the larger faith

  community regarding acceptable norms of dress in the disaster aftermath.

  Repercussions / 131

  Among the participants in this study, more than half the men said that

  their mothers or fathers asked that they change some aspect of their physical

  appearance after 9/11 so they would look “less Arab” or “less muslim.” most

  often, the men’s family members wanted them to trim or shave their beards.

  Other times, the men faced opposition when they attempted to wear islamic

  attire outside the home. Farook, who lived in Colorado, wore a kufi, which

  is a brimless, rounded cap donned by some muslim men. The day after the

  terrorist attacks, Farook and his parents, who lived in new mexico, got into

  an argument over the telephone regarding his decision to keep his kufi on:

  my parents wanted me to take it off. The day after, i was fighting

  with my parents on the phone about it. They wanted me to take it

  off—they ordered that i stop wearing it. i took it off, and i sat it on

  my knee. But then i thought about how the [muslim] sisters would

  be treated, because you can see them even more than you can see a

  muslim man. so i felt like i had an ethical responsibility to leave it on.

  i took it off for about twenty minutes, but then i put it back on.

  nearly three-fourths of the women who covered reported that their

  parents told them to wear the hijab in a “less muslim way” (i.e., instead

  of letting the headscarf drape around their shoulders and bosom, tying

  the headscarf back tightly around their heads) or they insisted that their

  daughters quit wearing the headscarf altogether. leila described what

  happened to her after 9/11:

  When the whole thing happened, after two hours i’m getting phone

  calls from my relatives saying that i should take off my headscarf,

  saying, “no way in hell. you shouldn’t even go out. Take off your

  headscarf. you’re going to get yourself killed.” i’m like, “What are

  you talking about?” my relatives were giving lectures to my parents

  and telling them, “you should stop your daughter from wearing a

  headscarf.” i’m the only child living with my mom and dad right now.

  They were like, “no way. no headscarf.”

  leila quit wearing her headscarf to appease her parents. she was

  distressed, however, that she was unable to express herself or display her

  identity as a muslim. When i interviewed her four weeks after 9/11, she was

  wearing the headscarf again, unbeknownst to her parents. she said, “i go

  to school, i put it on, and then i take it off when i leave.” This was far from

  an ideal solution. leila felt extremely guilty about doing something against

  her parents’ wishes and without their knowledge. At the same time, she was

  unwilling to stop wearing the hijab.

  132 / Chapter 5

  Women in new york and Colorado experienced similar challenges as

  they attempted to balance the demands of their family members and the

  practices of their faith. several college-age women who participated in a

  focus group in Brooklyn described how adamant their mothers and fathers

  were that they take off their headscarves following 9/11:

  sArAH: my family was like, “i knew you shouldn’t have covered.” my

  mom used to cover, and now she doesn’t. she and my father are

  like, “Why are you punishing yourself? you’re not going out like

  that. you’re going to wear a hat.”

  minA: my father literally stood in front of me. . . .

  rAinA: my family doesn’t cover. [ Everyone talks at once. ]

  minA: my dad said to stay home for a couple of days until everything

  calms down. He said, “you’re going to get really bad reactions if

  you go out that way.” But after the first week, he let go. He trusted

  that we know what we’re going to do. no way am i going to take

  it off. [ Everyone talks at once. ]

  DAriA: my dad was yelling at me, “you take that off your head.” He

  actually said to me, “it’s for safety purposes.” in our religion, you

  are allowed to take off the headscarf if you are in danger. He was

  so angry at me, because i wasn’t obeying him. i said, “no, i’m

  not taking it off.” right now—thank God, i don’t want to jinx

  myself—ever since this has happened, nobody has really come up

  to me or said anything or physically tried to do anything to me.

  it’s all about how you feel inside. if you know what kind of person

  you are, and if you carry yourself . . . [w]hen people stare at me

  on the train, i stare right back at them. i’m not going to put my

  head down.

  The respondents quoted above, as well as many others who had similar

  confrontations with their family members, understood that their parents

  asked (or demanded) that they stop wearing islamic attire because they were

  truly worried about their physical and mental well-being. nonetheless, some

  of the participants were hurt that their mothers and fathers would make

  requests that violated their religious beliefs. Habeeba, a native of india,

  shared what happened with her family:

  my mom wants me to take my headscarf off, because she’s terrified

  that somebody is going to hurt me. This is my religion. i can override

  whatever my parents want. i have to do what the religion says. i told

  them, “leave me alone. i want to wear it. you can’t tell me to take it

  off.” But it’s very hurtful, growing up in an islamic home and then

  Repercussions / 133

  having your parents say this to you because they’re scared. it makes

  me feel very sad. i lock my door and think about how they’re so reli-

  gious and they pray all the time. What is going through their minds?

  How do they feel when i leave the house in the morn
ing? They know

  that they can’t stop me. if i want to do something, i’m just going to

  do it. it’s hard that this happened and the situation that it puts us all

  in as muslim women.

  many of the women in the study were quick to point out that their

  decisions to wear the headscarf had provoked conflict long before the post-

  9/11 backlash began. The headscarf is one of the most contested symbols in

  islam, and an array of complex cultural, historical, political, socioeconomic,

  and religious factors influence whether women in nations around the world

  accept this form of dress. For example, in some of the respondents’ or their

  parents’ countries of origin, women who wear the headscarf represent the

  most poor, uneducated, or stigmatized members of society. moreover, a

  number of the participants’ parents had immigrated to the United states

  to escape repressive social conditions that required all muslim women to

  cover. some of the mothers and fathers viewed wearing the hijab as strictly a

  cultural practice—not mandated by God and certainly not required for girls

  or young women. Given these varied perspectives, it is not surprising that the

  women described many different familial reactions to their choices to wear

  the hijab, reactions that ranged from happiness to shock and even anger.

  Hiba, who began covering five years before the 9/11 attacks, recounted her

  family members’ initial response to her decision:

  For my dad, after i put on the headscarf, it was “Why are you wear-

  ing that?” Then when i started wearing the jilbab, it’s like, “Oh my

  God, those are Arab clothes. Why are you wearing Arab clothes?”

  The way we were raised, women don’t wear this. if you see the

  muslim women who are on television, the majority don’t even cover.

  so for them, it’s not even an issue. But the fact that our generation

  wants to cover—my relatives are so Westernized, you can’t even

  tell they’re Arab, let alone muslim. They have blonde hair, [light-

  colored] contact lenses, tight clothes. They’re like, “Why are you

  wearing that?” i’m like, “Why not? Why aren’t you wearing it? i

  should be asking you that question.” They’re like, “you’re young;

  you shouldn’t do that to yourself.” They think that i shouldn’t wear

  my headscarf until after i get married. And even if i wear it now, i

  should wear more tight clothes and be more Westernized. i think

  they want that. if i tell them something, they’re like, “Oh my God,

  are you the priest or what?”

  134 / Chapter 5

  randa described similar opposition from her family after she decided to

  cover:

  On 9/11, they were worried about me, but even before that. . . . There

  are all these sentiments about religion that result from being from

  a colonized country, like insecurity about their religion. especially

  educated middle-class and upper-class people tend to think that if

  someone wears a scarf, that means that they’re ignorant and unedu-

  cated, poor, lower class, backward. educated people don’t do that. my

  parents tend to have that feeling. They also think that it’s not neces-

  sary. you can be muslim and not wear a scarf, but i wanted to move

  to another level. They still have a hard time with it. i’m working on

  trying to explain things. it’s hard when it’s your family, when you’d

  think they would understand.

  Those women who had encountered familial resistance to wearing the

  hijab before 9/11 were especially likely to describe elevated tensions within

  their households after the terrorist attacks. semira’s experience underscores

  this point. she started covering when she was a teenager. Her actions were

  met with disapproval by her parents, who were natives of egypt and who

  wanted their daughter to have “every opportunity” in the United states.

  Thus, semira’s islamic dress had been debated in the household for years.

  After 9/11, semira received angry stares and verbal insults from strangers,

  but she decided not to tell her family members, because she assumed that

  they would advise her to stop wearing the hijab. The struggle between semira

  and her parents intensified after her father witnessed her being harassed a

  few weeks after 9/11. she described what happened:

  my father had come to pick me up after work, because they weren’t

  allowing me to take the train again yet. They were too scared

  something was going to happen to me, so my dad was driving me

  everywhere. He came to pick me up one day, and i was just sitting

  on the bench in front of the office building. As my dad pulled up,

  this gentleman and his wife, they were in the next car over. The man

  raised the middle finger to me and started cursing. my father saw

  this happen, and he started yelling at the couple in the car, “Why are

  you doing this? Why are you looking at her?” He was so mad to see

  me, his only daughter, treated this way. But at the same time, he was

  so angry at me. We went home, and my mother, father, and i had this

  huge fight. it was all “We told you that you shouldn’t cover. We told

  you that you are going to get hurt. What if i wouldn’t have been there

  to protect you? What if you get yourself killed?” it was absolutely

  Repercussions / 135

  terrible. i know that they love me very much. i know that they want

  me to be safe, but it was a very difficult time.

  Beyond the conflicts with their parents regarding their clothing and

  appearance, many of the younger respondents, and especially the women,

  who still lived at home were required to adhere to stricter curfews after 9/11.

  some parents also asked their children to “report in” and let them know

  where they would be and whom they would be with during all evening and

  weekend outings. The interviewees with the most protective mothers and

  fathers described how their parents began checking up on them constantly.

  For instance, iffat, who was twenty-two years old, detailed the lengths her

  parents had gone to after 9/11: “my parents got me a cell phone. yesterday i

  went to the library to study in school. i checked my voicemail, and there were

  nine messages from my parents at two-minute intervals! i turned it off after a

  while. [ The rest of the women in the focus group laugh and nod. ]”

  even though the interviewees sometimes joked about their highly

  cautious parents, they understood their apprehension and obviously shared

  many of their parents’ concerns. At the same time, it was difficult for the

  interviewees to relinquish freedoms that they had taken for granted before

  the terrorist attacks.

  As the participants began returning to other normal activities in the

  weeks following 9/11, their family members encouraged them to take special

  precautions to try to reduce their vulnerability. specifically, parents urged

  their children to keep a low profile and to try to avoid drawing attention

  to their religious or ethnic identities. some of the interviewees’ parents

  insisted that they stop attending activities associated with Arab or islamic

  organizations. Kamilah, a second-generation American of egyptian de
scent,

  noted that her mother no longer wanted her taking part in events associated

  with the Women in islam club at her college, even though Kamilah was the

  president of the group: “my mom has always been supportive. They have

  always let me do whatever i want to do with my life. They’ve never butted

  in—except for now. my mom won’t let me go to food sales, fundraisers for

  Women in islam. she’s like, ‘no. people would know. They’ll follow you

  around.’ she’s not scared of me getting killed. i’m not scared of getting killed.

  But i’m scared of getting harassed.”

  Hamad, who was active in the msA and a palestinian human-rights

  organization on his university campus, similarly noted that his parents

  told him to “stay away from politics, to stay away from everything” after

  9/11. Despite their warnings, Hamad said, “i just couldn’t stop, though,

  because i’ve always been involved in certain things.” Hamad continued his

  association with these student groups, but he was forced to hide his actions

  from his parents, which left him feeling guilty and unsettled.

  136 / Chapter 5

  The men in this study also described how worried their parents were

  about their participation in activities at their local mosques. immediately

  after the terrorist attacks, law enforcement officers interrogated and arrested

  thousands of muslim men across the nation. in the ensuing years, the FBi

  sent undercover agents posing as worshippers into mosques and allegedly

  pressured muslim men to become government informants.38 Ali, whose

  parents were indonesian, said that the public and governmental backlash

  that followed 9/11 “posed big challenges for me personally.” He elaborated: “i

  know that my parents have not been happy that i go to the mosque to pray

  in the morning. They have never been very happy, but now they really don’t

  want me to go to the mosque in the morning. They are worried i could be

  attacked there or that the government will follow me and accuse me of being

  an extremist.”

  Faraaz, whose family was originally from yemen, had a cousin arrive for a

  visit to the United states the day before the terrorist attacks. even though the

  cousin, Amin, was in the United states legally, his presence in the household

  caused “a lot of tension” within the family. in particular, the fact that Amin

 

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