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Muslims Hope Bias Ends With Bin Laden's Death

American Muslims

First Posted: 05/09/11 11:33 PM ET Updated: 07/09/11 06:12 AM ET

By Alexi Friedman and Dan Goldberg
Religion News Service

PATERSON, N.J. (RNS) Hours after Osama bin Laden's death was announced, the American Arab Forum received a phone call. The person on the line was looking for Aref Assaf, the Paterson, N.J.-based organization's Ivy League-educated president.

"'Tell your boss that we got his friend and we're going to get him,"' the man said, according to Assaf, who dismissed the threat as kids pulling a prank. While the call represented a kind of hostility Assaf said many Arabs commonly endure in the United States, he believed bin Laden's death might create an opportunity "to open a new chapter."

"We have been paying the price for bin Laden for the last 10 years," Assaf said. "Enough castigating our community. We hope this will serve as a reminder to America that the real source of terror was not in Paterson or Dearborn, Michigan, but in Afghanistan and Pakistan."

In the mosques of Jersey City and Arab-owned shops along Main Street in Paterson, opinions differed about whether the death of the world's most notorious terrorist would alter perceptions that have persisted for nearly a decade.

Across the country, there are already signs that anti-Islamic sentiment has not yet ebbed.

In Portland, Maine, the message: "Osama Today, Islam Tomorrow" was spray-painted on a mosque. A Texas teacher was suspended after allegedly telling a 9-year-old Muslim girl in his algebra class, "I bet that you're grieving." And in Anaheim, Calif., eggs were thrown at a nightclub, hitting its owner, Mohammed El Khatib.

It will take more than bin Laden's death to dispel ignorance, said James Yee, executive director of the New Jersey chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations, a Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization. "It is disheartening, and tells me our work is not going to stop," he said. Bin Laden's death "is not going to change much
regarding Muslims being accepted."

But it may end an era, one in which bin Laden stood as a convenient excuse for bias, said Salaheddin Mustafa, who heads the state chapter of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. He compared "the
picture of evil that was bin Laden" with the recent pro-democracy movements in Egypt, Tunisia, Bahrain and Libya. "There is the sea change that people will recognize," he said.

Mustafa, a Palestinian born in Jersey City, said more Americans will separate bin Laden "and his cronies" from "people like me and the vast majority, who had nothing to do with" the terror attacks.

Mohamad Hamamou, an Egyptian native who lives in Secaucus, remembers feeling doubly wounded on Sept. 11. He grieved for the thousands killed -- which included scores of Muslims -- and despaired at what the attacks meant for his community.

"Uneducated people just look at it from a perspective of, 'What a Muslim person does is to try and hurt people,"' Hamamou said.

His concerns were realized. He has been cursed at on the road, threatened by strangers, and glanced at suspiciously in malls.

Bin Laden's death, while welcomed, will do little to sway those who already have negative perceptions of Muslims, he said. Those views, he added, "have been in their brains for a long time."

When his wife was worried about raising children in an environment that was at times hostile to their religion, he reminded her it would be their children who would lead by example.

Al Ghazaly, the Jersey City elementary school where he sends his children, has a sign greeting visitors written in Arabic calligraphy: "Everyone smiles in the same language."

"If we teach our kids love and respect, we know this is going to fade away," he said later that night.

Yursil Kidwai, a 33-year-old American-born Muslim who lives in Basking Ridge, N.J., isn't so sure. Pointing to anti-Islamic rhetoric prevalent in portions of American discourse, Kidwai said bin Laden, and the mistrust he engendered, remain an albatross around the neck of American Muslims.

"I can't imagine his death would change anything," he said. Kidwai has dealt with the common stereotypes for years. His mother still asks him to shave his beard, fearing it is too conspicuous and will draw needless attention to his religious beliefs. He was friends with Amir Celoski, the Haledon native whose burial in an Islamic cemetery in upstate New York received national attention when the town administrator wanted the body disinterred.

"The whole thing was just about bias and hatred," Kidwai said.

Whether bin Laden's death will change those feelings, Mustafa couldn't say for certain.

"But I'm optimistic," he said. "My hope is this is a cycle we're going through, and that in 10 or 15 years, people, like those in Bridgewater, will realize that they were wrong. And that what they did and said violated everything good that America represents."

Alexi Friedman and Dan Goldberg write for the Star-Ledger in Newark, N.J.

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By Alexi Friedman and Dan Goldberg Religion News Service PATERSON, N.J. (RNS) Hours after Osama bin Laden's death was announced, the American Arab Forum received a phone call. The person on the line ...
By Alexi Friedman and Dan Goldberg Religion News Service PATERSON, N.J. (RNS) Hours after Osama bin Laden's death was announced, the American Arab Forum received a phone call. The person on the line ...
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05:23 PM on 06/12/2011
The bias has gone on too long and may be ingrained in certain kinds of people--those already predisposed to hate the Other. In those people, it won't go away anytime soon.

My mother-in-law, a reasonably intelligent and tolerant person, hated Germans till the day she died (literally) because of what she came to believe during WW2.

It's a lot easier to learn to hate than it is to tolerate.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
05:14 PM on 05/26/2011
I have recently been looking into the bias that some Islamic Governments seem to have against "Christians", would that be a bias that many Muslims hope will end?
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05:31 PM on 06/12/2011
So your goal is to imitate their behavior?
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Demetrios423
01:59 PM on 05/22/2011
Bias isn't going to end in the U.S. anytime soon. Just as it wont end in the Middle East anytime soon. There are always going to be individuals in the U.S. that are biased for whatever reason. There will also always be individuals and sadly governments in the Middle East that are going to be biased towards others.

Speaking as a Catholic, it is up to each one of us to treat others as we want to be treated. Period. You don't have to be a Catholic to understand that logic.
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Roxee
"Feeling" you're right, doesn't "prove" you are.
11:20 AM on 05/15/2011
Once muslims accept that the text contained with their holy book is a primitive instruction on how to manage human relationships, especially relationships with people who are not muslims, they will see they're religion for what it is - an ancient book that purports a sky daddy exists, just like the two holy books before their holy book did. Apostacy is so peaceful, try it sometime.
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bsultan
Universal truth is not measured in mass appeal.
05:05 AM on 05/16/2011
"Apostacy is so peaceful, try it sometime."

If you, and many other arrogant atheists who enjoy degrading religion, ever picked up a history book and saw how violent and primitive humanity was before the dawn of religion, you would understand that religion does not make people violent, people have and always will be violent even in the event that humanity ever witnesses a time when religion is no more.
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05:26 PM on 06/12/2011
So you're saying that religion makes no difference, one way or the other?
07:16 AM on 05/17/2011
Spoken like a person who hasn't read the Qur'an, yet.
10:49 PM on 05/12/2011
9/11 wasn't the beginning of Xtians hating Muslims. It was only the excuse.

Shameful.
09:34 PM on 05/12/2011
What muslims? Did you ever hear of an Imam who declared Fatwa on Ossama bin Laden or any other terrorist?
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Doug Sandlin
We see the world not as it is, but as we are.
05:39 PM on 05/13/2011
Yes.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Gd3nKT9PTo
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02:51 PM on 05/12/2011
And I hope that Islamic terrorism ends with Bin Laden.
10:58 PM on 05/12/2011
another civilian family bombed by u.s. warplanes today in pakistan ... oh wait ..thats not terrorism ...
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constitutional 1
No ad hominem
11:53 AM on 05/12/2011
Not every prius had an accelerator issue, but sales sure dropped, People assume i am good at basketball. Stereotypes aren't always right, just most of the time.
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05:27 PM on 06/12/2011
Some of the time.
03:22 AM on 05/12/2011
"Trying to make Muslim extremism into a Muslim problem is every bit as ignorant as trying to make Christian extremism into a Christian problem"

Do the Christians drive planes into high rise buildings as a part of an ongoing jihad against infidels?
11:34 AM on 05/13/2011
no, but you saw a muslim do it? or were you just told that? i'm just asking? not attacking. i mena if you really back up from any issue and try to question even your own thoughts and the reasons you have them things look a lot different. People that swear they saw a UFO believe they did and when the government says oh it was just swamp gas, then it was swamp gas, right? because you have never seen a UFO either so they probably didn't either. But just say there was a crime and your fingerprints were all over the house, yet only you knew you didn't do the crime, but you have no way of proving that. But the DA says you did it in the press then you did it. Why was there no trial, even in a world court? wat too many questions about this than answers but everyone has to believe in something, i believe i'll reserve judgment on any government "official story" until i see proof!
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Jamal Alexander
Jamal 39
03:33 PM on 05/13/2011
Of course not. Christians only invade other countries, while murdering innocent civils in an effort to force their ideals down the throats of the unexpected.
03:18 AM on 05/12/2011
"Muslims listen to them -- and they're saying all the right things, despite anti-Musli­m lies to the contrary."

The fact that there have been 17,000 terror strikes since 9/11 proves that the above is a dhimmi lie.
10:51 PM on 05/12/2011
How many strikes have Americans made on Muslim citizens since 9/11?

Probably more than 17,000.
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kodimirpal
teacher
11:59 PM on 05/15/2011
Pranav being a Hindu shows his Islamophobia with lies and exaggeration. There are 1001 moral unsolved issues in Hinduism to which he is not addrssing. I give you one instance from a staunch Hinduism based newpaper in india called The Times of India.

http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-04-25/bhubaneswar/29471167_1_mid-day-meals-dalit-kids-dalit-children

Read yourself how the low caste Hindu kids are treated in indian schools

Dalit children at a school in Jagatsinghpur district (India) complain that teachers refused to check their notebooks. We are considered untouchables. The teachers refuse to touch our books and our homework is never corrected," said Bijaya Mallick, a student of Class IV at the school at Keutapala in Balikuda block. "If we even touch our teachers by mistake, they scold us for polluting them," he added.

The 40 odd Dalit students in the school were allegedly singled out and made to clean classrooms and toilets. "I clean toilets at school," said Samir Mallick, a Class V student. He looked puzzled when asked why he agreed to do so. "The teachers tell me to do it," the 11-year-old boy said. "We are not even allowed to take water from the drinking pot at school," he added.

Several students and their parents complained that they were victims of caste discrimination by the school staff since long. The final straw, however, was when teachers refused to serve mid-day meals to the children.
11:41 AM on 05/13/2011
and you know for a fact, not through the "official story" from the white house, that those terrorist attacks were committed by Islamics? That there was no collusion with any other forces, that they did it because of extreme prejudices towards Americans or their religions? and besides what does religion have to do with the main root of the problem? The IFC wants to control all the debt of all nations and the ones that don't happen to bow to that and try to stay independent are exactly the ones coming under fire because of "their independence".
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Mathyld Amenemhet
Egyptian Goddess
11:54 AM on 05/13/2011
I liked the news today that the Navy Seals are in fear for their lives and of their family. First off DEVGRU has over 200 members that go out on different missions. Its not like they all live together so they will not know what 24 of them that went in. Plus if a seasoned Navy Seal member is scared! Which is unlikely unless he did something wrong like kill and unarmed and innocent man perhaps. Why would you be afraid? Are you guilty of killing a man that would talk and prove how the US was involved in 9/11?
10:55 PM on 05/11/2011
"Opinions seem to vary on that point. I genuinely feel the same about your posturing."

Rubbish. I clearly told you to ask the minorities in muslim countries about how peaceful are the muslims; say the Copt Christians in Egypt. You are an avowed dhimmi or a mercenary apologist like Naom Chomsky. You never answered my quote of Marco Polo some 500 years back nor reply to what Chruchill said.

"If Islam taught violence --- a lot more Muslims would be violent. Simple as that."

It depends on their size. Muslims can be tolerant or violent as they choose to be, depending upon their size. If they are in minority, they are bound by Mecca verses; "let there be no compulsion in religion". If they are in dominance, they are guided by Medina verses; "kill the unbelievers".

Dough, There are no radicals in any other religion, who kill others, steal bodies and who rape women because they are scantily dressed. In Australia Bilal Skaf represents muslims and Al Hilaly is the sacred name. Youy have conveniently sidestepped my remark abour Malaysia. Ha!ha!!ha!!!

"but because of their misunderst­anding of Islam.'

This is as stale as last year fish. We are tired; provide something new.

"When someone such as yourself has a view that is at odds with all evidence in the real world"

I have quoted Churchill, Gladstone, Marco Polo etc. to contend that Islam is not a peaceful religion; you have no evidence except the blind assertion. I'm sick.
12:00 PM on 05/13/2011
Would it then be acceptable to say, in view of your facts, and i do not contest or criticize them, that those facts alone could be used in an even bigger plot, say to incite a war? If you wanted to create a crime, threw a Muslim into the mix of a crime, it would cause outrage against Muslims? Then you could use that outrage to invade that country that the perpetrator was from or where he was hiding? Then you could name all of his friends and connections as co-conspirators, right? Then when you have control of those countries, you could then lead them to the supreme master of Global domination through owning their debt and controlling their way of life, correct? Then, their friends that might have their own source of income and their own sovereign country independent from the Global debt masters, could then bed led to that master and be initiated into the club also. All wars and events don't hinge on religion but more on monetary gain. And the countries that want to practice Islamic religions can or may be violent and inhumane, but to use that as a tool to create international chaos and deprive them of their sovereignty and way of life is a mandate of any other government? I'm just curious.
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Doug Sandlin
We see the world not as it is, but as we are.
06:03 PM on 05/13/2011
"Rubbish."

Just as an FYI, there might be better ways to start a conversation that calling the other person's comments "rubbish".

"You never answered my quote of Marco Polo some 500 years back nor reply to what Churchill said."

Why do other people's negative opinions about something matter? I form my own opinions. I don't recall the Marco Polo quote - please repost, if you like. I've commented on the Churchill quote more than once (if there's anyone whose posts more repetitious than mine, Pranav - it's yours) -- and I've said, "So what? Churchill is a bigot."

That may seem like a pass-off non-response, but I mean it; I'm not saying Churchill was an anti-Muslim bigot; I'm saying he was a bigot, period; he even disparaged Gandhi. Somewhat like George W. Bush during 9/11, Churchill was a far-less-than-stellar politician, who happened to be leading his country during a volatile time. He was canned for good, right after WWII, as I recall.

Regarding the Quran, abrogation, etc., just saying that Muslims do something or not because of a set of verses in the Quran makes no sense. Even a little knowledge about Islam will show that this is just an anti-Muslim talking point, and nothing more. No religion or group is that "black and white".

That's the problem with people outside of a group, who hate that group, trying to explain its beliefs and actions: unlikely to be correct. Very.
09:45 PM on 05/11/2011
and the hilarious part is that the more the u.s. sinks the more they hate islam ...the country is literally crumbling in just about every meaningful category ...no problem...
09:44 PM on 05/11/2011
muslims are being hated in the u.s. because christians feel threatened ideologically and logically by islam...most of them realize that there would never have been a u.s. if islam had been out "to get everyone" --christian europe was a hovel when islam ruled the world ..the muslims could have exterminated christianity if that was the aim
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sandalwood
songs of the shamans...
10:40 PM on 05/11/2011
Why does Christianity feel threatened by Islamic doctrine... logically too, you say? BTW, I am neither Christian nor Muslim, but I am curious.
12:16 AM on 05/12/2011
islam says no usury; no whoredom--- those two prohibitions alone are anathema to the christian world ..they literally cannot survive in such a world
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Connor Alexander
Stop playing the 2 party game!
05:18 PM on 05/11/2011
I think the problem goes beyond a bias against Islam in this country. It goes to a general ignorance and fear of Middle Eastern and Asian cultures in general. Most of middle America wouldn't be able to the difference between a Muslim and a Sikh if their life depended on it.

Bin Laden's death might take it down a notch, but what we really need to do now is start giving our kids some real international historical and cultural education. They are growing up in a world where we need to know, appreciate and get along with our global neighbors much better.
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tallen
panem et circenses
08:51 PM on 05/11/2011
The real problem is intolerance, ignorance, and violence stemming from the muslim world.

Here in the US intolerance is the occasional sign or graffiti, maybe even a verbal insult, rarely physical violence.
In the middle east, non muslims are brutalized and killed as well as officially discriminated against in every other way.
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Sean Padman McMenamin
91 CSSB Warrior, Supply Coy, Geelat Soldier!
09:14 PM on 05/11/2011
Gee, really? Just that? No political discrimination, no being demonised by a country for worshipping a religion that has a crazy fringe element that in no way represents the majority, and having to put up with remarks about the how the place they left behind for a better life in the land that is supposed to be a democracy is the reason for all problems, theirs included? And yes, rarely indeed has there been assault, the place of worship has never been burnt, and never have they been denied the ability to build a place of worship.
Yes, the problem is that a theocracy is acting in ways that are undemocratic, so why should those in a democratic liberal country rise above that and learn to castigate those responsible for that while accepting the others who leave it for a better way of life?
07:57 PM on 05/12/2011
"Most of middle America wouldn't be able to the difference between a Muslim and a Sikh if their life depended on it."

Agreed, but I do not see that lives are depending on it.
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Seven Teenatheart
Tolerance, peace, and sanity. Be your own person.