Archive for the ‘Stereotyping’ Category

American Muslims Fear Anti-Muslim Sentiments

Sunday, September 5th, 2010

American Muslims have a growing concern about their ability to fit in with American society.  In the face of the harsh reaction to the proposed center near ground zero, as well as other anti-Muslim incidents, many American Muslims feel threatened.  The article quotes Muslim Americans who say they are considering moving to Canada or Australia, and others who compare the anti-Muslim rhetoric to that used by Nazi Germany against the Jews.

Question for the Class: Why do you think Muslim Americans receive harsher treatment than other religious minorities?

NYtimes article: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/06/us/06muslims.html?hp

satirical article on the onion about popular sentiment towards Islam: http://www.theonion.com/articles/man-already-knows-everything-he-needs-to-know-abou,17990/

Mosque Site Arson and Shooting in Murfreesboro, TN

Sunday, September 5th, 2010

An arson and shooting occured at a Murfreesboro, TN mosque site within two days of each other.  CNN reported that on  August 28th, four construction vehicles were destroyed when a fire was set on the premise with the use of accelerants.  The next day, a total of nine shots were fired near the boundries of the property, reported Knoxville News Sentinel.  The Islamic Center of Murfreesboro is located about a mile away and purchased the site in 2009 with the intentions of building a mosque. 

When asked about the project, Tennassee Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey is quoted as saying, “You could even argue whether being a Muslim is actually a  religion, or is it  a nationality, way of life, cult, whatever you want to call it.”

http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/03/tennessee-mosque-site-fire-an-arson-feds-say/?hpt=T2

http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2010/aug/29/shots-fired-near-murfreesboro-mosque-site/

Would something like this have happened before the NYC mosque debate?

Recent Books About Anti-Semitism

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

At a point where anti-Semitism throughout the Middle East has reached an all time high, Edward Rothstein explores the phenomenon in a review of recent books on the topic:

Edward Rothstein, “A Hatred That Resists Exorcism,” New York Times, July 6, 2010

More on Anti-Semitism throughout history

The neologism “anti-Semitism” was coined in 1879 by a German writer and hater of Jews named Wilhelm Marrih in an attempt to replace the word Judenhass (“Jew-hatred”) with a more “scientific” term.  His intent was to sanitize and otherwise dress up discourse devoted to defaming Jews.

Arabic Language Student Sues Over Detention

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Nicholas George, a student of Arabic language at Pomona College, is suing federal authorities for detaining him after spotting him studying his flash cards inside Philadelphia International Airport last summer.

Story at CNN

Assoicated Press, Feb. 10, 2010 (via the New York Times)

Is Some Stereotyping Acceptable?

Monday, January 11th, 2010

For an argument that stereotyping (in this case, called “profiling”) can in some areas (airline safety, for example) be good and worth our putting up with, see the following article written not long after the “shoe bomber” Richard Reid failed to blow up a plane in December of 2001 (via ProQuest and the NMH Virtual Desktop):

David D. Perlmutter, “Profile Me, Please,” The Baltimore Sun, Jan. 11, 2002

Stereotyping Assignment #2

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

In advance of our screening of Jack Shaheen’s film “Reel Bad Arabs” (based on his book by the same title),  look at the following review available via the NMH Virtual Desktop and ProQuest:  William Booth, “Cast of Villains, The Washington Post, June 23, 2007.  (More on the history of polemical attacks on Muslims)

More food for thought from historian Martha Nussbaum.  This quotation comes from her recent book on threats to democracy in India, a book prompted by violence between Hindus and Muslims in 1992

Nussbaum sees the problem originating with individuals. For her, the battle rages not between civilizations (no clash of civilizations here), or even between groups in a nation, but inside, within each person. She writes:

“The ability to accept difference – difference of religion, ethnicity, of race, of sexuality – requires, first, the ability to accept something about oneself: that one is not lord of the world, that one is both adult and child, that no all-embracing collectivity will keep one safe from the vicissitudes of life, that others outside oneself have reality. The ability requires, in turn, the cultivation of a moral imagination that sees reality in other human beings, that does not see other human beings as mere instruments of one’s own power or threats to that power. In effect, we are talking about the defeat of infantile narcissism.”

Martha Nussbaum, The Clash Within: Democracy, Religious Violence, and India’s Future (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press at Harvard University Press, 2007), 334.

Write a response of a half page or so to an idea or combination of ideas from this assignment. 

Stereotyping Assignment #1

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

 Please read as assigned in class for Friday, Jan. 8, 2010: 

Rachel Donadio, “Fighting Words,” The New York Times Book Review, July 15, 2007

Write a response of a half page or so to this article in which you choose one of Donadio’s points, restate it in your own words (paraphrase), and weigh its significance including whether or not you agree with her and why or why not.

Supplementary Resources:

See also: Salman Rushdie, the “Cartoon Controversy,” and “Wars of Words and Images.”

See also: History of Muslims in Europe

See also:  An editorial by Henryk Broder on SpeigelOnline International, “The West is Choked by Fear” (Jan. 4, 2010) for a look at inconsistencies in the relationship between Islam and the West.

See also: “Islam and the West” category/archive on this blog

Have Sex, not Wars (Max Png)

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Max Png

Can making love bring Arabs and Israelis? I found it an extremely interesting viewpoint to take on solving problems.

_______________________________

BBC link.

Amoz Oz, the novelist we watched a video about, was also mentioned in the article.

“His words, strangely, chime with those of one of Israel’s prouder exports, the novelist Amos Oz.”

“But the truth of it is that Israel is essentially a country of 80% secular, middle-class, hedonistic, noisy, passionate people who live on the coastal plain and have nothing to with the occupied territories.”

________________________________

Although I may not fully agree with Levy’s point about sex solving the Arab-Israeli problem, I agree that the entire issue is very much ‘human’ ie a lot of passion is involved and many sides are not thinking clearly when they respond to events. Mr. Drench’s example in class about being punched in the gut today (and then feeling like shooting the assailant) clearly showed us that.

Muslims and Christians Continue to Search for Common Ground

Friday, November 7th, 2008

See the following reports:

BBC

Rachel Donadio, “Catholic and Muslim Leaders Pledge to Improve Relations,” New York Times, Nov. 7, 2008, A11

Rachel Donadio wrote an article we read early in the semester on stereotyping — go to article.

More on Muslim-Christian relations

More on Stereotyping

WMR – Immigrant Conflict in France

Monday, October 27th, 2008

The Middle East in the News

•Jordan Bach-Lombardo, 10/27/08

 

•”Trois ans après, les familles de Zyed et Bouna demandent toujours justice », Le Liberation, France           

 

 

•http://www.liberation.fr/societe/0101165181-trois-ans-apres-les-familles-de-zyed-et-bouna-demandent-toujours-justice

 

•Exactly three years ago, in an instance that sparked riots throughout France, two teenage boys died while hiding from a police patrol.  The two boys, Zyed Benna, 15, and Bouna Traore, 17, were driven into an electrical substation and electrocuted after having been wrongfully pursued by a group of policemen.  The children of immigrant families, it was (and still is) widely assumed that the policemen made a prejudiced decision upon seeing the boys’ skin color and that the blame for the deaths lies with the French policemen, who as a group have perpetrated many less-than-legal acts against the immigrant community over the years.  An inquiry has been made into the affair but no resolution has been reached yet, causing the families of the victims to demonstrate in the streets.

 

•This article highlights the problem immigrants have faced in France for decades.  They face extreme prejudice and are frequently subject to racism coming from institutions of the state.  (These problems, of course, are not unique to France but can be seen all around the world, in countries such as the United States and the UK, to name two.)  What continues to amaze me about the situation in France, which is one that I have experienced personally and therefore seems “more real” to me than other situations which I have only read about, is just how institutionalized it is.  Every level of the government seems to be tainted by racism towards immigrants.  The current president, Nicolas Sarkozy, said a few years ago that the immigrant parts of the suburbs needed “to be washed out with a hose.”  A relative of one of the teens summed it up when she said, “Sarkozy wants to bury it.  When his son has a problem with his scooter, it’s fixed in two weeks.  Us, because we’re called Traore and not Dupond, we will always wait.”