Where is Islamophobia heading in the US?
 
 
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25 May 2013 Saturday
 
 
 
 
 
 
Columnists 12 August 2012, Sunday 8 0 0 0
ARZU KAYA URANLI
auranli@todayszaman.com

Where is Islamophobia heading in the US?

Since I wrote about freedom of religion last week, I have received many comments worth mentioning.

So, I was planning to share them with you and to write about how religious freedom works positively in the US. Then, ironically, the week started with a string of tragedies, including a heated discussion about a shooting at a temple.

Army veteran Wade Michael Page killed six people and then himself last Sunday morning at a Sikh temple near Milwaukee, Wis., as number of people gathered there for services.

The attack is being treated as a hate crime and is considered by the FBI to be domestic terrorism. Teresa Carlson, the FBI agent in charge of the investigation into the attack, told reporters that “the agency is looking into [Page’s] ties to the white supremacist movement.”

So, after the shameful, bloody shooting, here we are discussing hate crime and religious discrimination.

Because they have been victim to hundreds of reported hate crimes since 9/11, the attack has sparked concern among the Sikhs who live across America. Some members of the Sikh community felt compelled to tell the nation they are peaceful people, not militant Muslims. Rajwant Singh, chairman of the Washington-based Sikh Council on Religion and Education, told the Associated Press he believes the attack was a result of ignorance. “This is something we have been fearing since 9/11, that this kind of incident will take place. It was a matter of time because there’s so much ignorance and people confuse us [as] being members of Taliban or belonging to [Osama] bin Laden,” he said.

Also, it has been suggested since the attack that as Page had a 9/11 tattoo on his arm, he maybe wrongly believed his victims to be Muslims. Thus, some have attributed the attack to Islamophobia despite no concreting evidence of this having yet been found.

Daryl Johnson, a former analyst for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), told the Huffington Post that Homeland Security has neglected to form a domestic terrorism unit to eliminate this type of attack. “Hindsight is always 20-20, but if DHS had a domestic terrorism unit today, we would definitely have sent out a warning, a threat assessment [to] Muslim-Americans being attacked. I know this was a Sikh temple, but he mistook them for Muslims,” Johnson indicated.Despite constant reports of increasing violence against mosques, “not a single intelligence report has warned these communities. ... Someone’s not connecting the dots,” Johnson added.

So far, no one knows why Page chose the Oak Creek Sikh temple. Some people have suggested he may have targeted the worshipers at the temple because of their different style of clothing: turbans. Others say that perhaps because the people who attend the temple have dark skin the gunman may have simply thought Sikhs are Muslims.

On CNN news, Carol Costello connected the shooting with Islamophobia and pointed out that this is a national problem that needs to be discussed seriously. She also said that “many observers say Sikhs have been unfairly targeted ever since 9/11, but that implies Muslims can be fairly targeted. Well, they are targeted.”

Yes, since 9/11, Muslims have been targeted. As you may remember, a mosque was destroyed by a fire in Missouri. The residents of Murfreesboro, Tenn., have been fighting to keep a mosque from opening. In Washington, D.C., US Representative Peter King, chairman of the Homeland Security Committee, has held a series of congressional hearings on Muslim radicalization -- including inside the military -- and has claimed extremist Muslims influence the US government.

I have to mention that an assistant professor of sociology at Colorado State University, Lori Peek, said in her book “Behind the Backlash”  that after the events of 9/11, Muslim Americans became subject to alarming amounts of backlash violence. In her book, 140 Muslim Americans describe their encounters with prejudice, discrimination, exclusion and harassment -- both before and after 9/11. The book seeks to explain why blame is so prevalent after catastrophes, using Muslim Americans as the prime example.

On the other hand, I wonder why we haven’t had anything about the white supremacist threat. According to the non-partisan think tank New America Foundation, since 9/11 there have been twice as many domestic terrorist attacks by right-wing extremists (eight) as by jihadists (four). Somehow, since 9/11, the word “terrorism” in the US will usually call to mind links with al-Qaeda, while white supremacists and other right-wing militants are often ignored by the public. I think right-wing extremists in the US have been more likely to use violence when expressing their political or social ideas than those motivated by al-Qaeda’s ideology since then.

In conclusion, I am not sure if we can really relate the Wisconsin attack to Islamophobia, but I am quite sure that Islamophobia is a serious, rising problem in the US and something has to be done soon to prevent more violence in the future. Religious freedom in the US has been overshadowed by Islamophobia, so I was not able to write about it this week, but hopefully the days in which we will be able to write and read many articles about absolute religious freedom in the US are not so far away.

COMMENTS
A stupid question. What about the rampant INFIDELOPHOBIA of Islam?
No dhimmi fool
I'm sorry, but I have stopped reading anything containing the neologism "islamophobia". It is a dishonest contruction made to put valid dissociation, criticism and disagreement on a level with mental illness and racism.
Steffen Larsen
Winslowdream: Count the murder of millions of non-Christians by White Anglo-Saxons nations over the past 250 years, and you will start to get the picture why you are under the threat of constant retaliation. Don't whine about tit for tat.
Boe Jangles
While agreeing with most of your article,there are simmering currents of contest between new immigrants(non whites) and old immigrants(whites). Rise of Neo Nazi and Ku Klux Klan doctrine is a reality,and it is not restricted to US only,entire Europe is witnessing gradual rise of Right Wing polity. L...
waqar khan
Well-written article. Thank you.
Sidheek India
An excellent article. In answer to your question on why more has not been heard about the white supremacist threat: in many parts of the world, members of police forces and other law enforcement agencies tend to have at least some elements which are sympathetic to extreme right-wing views or groups....
Alexinho
Assuming that Islamophobia is rampant in the US is wrong. Allegations of it though are beconming more numerous. But these are not the same thing. I question the findings of the New America Foundation which is not as non-partisan it purports - it is funded by numberous far left funderrs. Only four j...
Kinneddar
Count the murders by muslims of Christians just in the last year. i am sure the average Turk has no idea of the violence inflicted on Christians by Muslims throughout the world. people in the non muslim world are acutely aware of this hatred. So, lets have an open discussion addressing all religious...
winslowdream
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