In one week in September,
soon after we commemorated the 14th anniversary of the September 11, 2001
terrorist attack on our country, there were three widely publicized stories
that revealed the ugliness of post-9/11 America.
At a town hall meeting in New
Hampshire, Republican campaign front-runner Donald Trump was questioned by a man
who said, “We’ve got a problem in this country; it’s called Muslims. You know
our current President is one. You know he’s not even an American.” Obviously,
the questioner felt comfortable asking this question of Mr. Trump, whose
rhetoric about immigrants has been, to put it mildly, less than kind.
Mr. Trump tried to laugh it
off. But instead of correcting the audience member’s false assertion about
President Obama or challenging his bigoted smear of Muslims, he just let it
stand.
Shortly thereafter, Dr. Ben
Carson, running close behind Mr. Trump in the campaign, asserted on Meet the Press that he would not be
comfortable with a Muslim as President of the United States.
Just prior to these ugly
interchanges, Ahmed Mohamed, a Muslim boy living in Irving, Texas, was arrested
for bringing a homemade clock to school. A teacher who thought it was a bomb
reported Ahmed, a ninth grader, to the police, who then arrested him.
President Obama invited Ahmed
to the White House, telling him, “Cool clock, Ahmed. Want to bring it to the
White House? We should inspire more kids like you to like science. It's what
makes America great.”
Although these stories were
well-publicized, they represent only the tip of the iceberg in post-9/11
America. In recent years I had an encounter that is probably more typical than you’d
expect.
During a roundtable group
forum on immigration and youth held at North Shore Child & Family Guidance
Center’s Roslyn Heights headquarters, a 12-year-old boy named Muhammad, who was
listening intently to others tell personal stories about leaving their
homelands and struggling to fit in after arriving in the U.S., decided to speak
up.
With a trembling voice, Muhammad
revealed that there were kids in school who taunted him. “They’ve been calling
me ‘terrorist’ for years because of my name.” Muhammad is an Arabic name that
means praiseworthy. But, instead of feeling proud, Muhammad felt like an
outcast.
Muhammad sat slumped in his
chair and spoke softly and guardedly, but clearly and eloquently, and he was
heard. By the end of the day he had received so much support from the group for
having the courage to speak out that he was beaming.
During the lunch break I
approached him to ask him how he was doing. He said, “Everybody is telling me
that I talk good. I didn’t know that I could talk so good. Nobody ever told me
that before.” Muhammad left the meeting feeling praiseworthy, a feeling
befitting his name—a name he was given at birth that he should feel proud to
have.
Sadly, stories of racism and
hatred against Muslims are not rare—not surprising given the recent example of
Ahmed Mohamed’s arrest for his innocent work on a school project. I recall that
shortly after 9/11 one Muslim mother who came to us for help revealed that she dyed
her children’s hair to a lighter color so that they wouldn’t be viewed as “kin
of terrorists.” Those are the lengths that one mother felt were necessary to protect
her children, and they display a sad commentary on our culture.
As we remember the thousands
who were lost on 9/11, along with other acts of terrorism, we should not lose
sight of the fact that profiling people of Middle Eastern descent as terrorists
or as sympathetic to terrorists must be confronted. Such widespread profiling is
detrimental and devastating to thousands of innocent children and their
families, many of whom were not even born until after September 11, 2001. It’s
time to let our voices be heard and, unlike Mr. Trump, take a stand against
bias when we hear it.
https://longislandweekly.com/praiseworthy/
Andrew Malekoff is executive director of North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, a nonprofit children’s mental health center in Roslyn Heights, NY.
Andrew Malekoff is executive director of North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, a nonprofit children’s mental health center in Roslyn Heights, NY.
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