by
Amritjit Singh, Zubeda Jalalzai & Dan Moos
We write with reference to the story "Man Taken into Custody at
Providence
Rail Station
Identified" (September 12) regarding the arrest of Mr. Sher J. B. Singh
of
Leesburg, VA.
Mr. Singh is clearly a member of the Sikh faith, the sixth largest
religion
in the world today, with
over 20 million adherents around the globe. As we write this, we do not
know if Mr. Singh has
been released from police custody. Your story updated at 6:30 p.m.
indicates that he would be arraigned
in the morning for the possession of a knife over 3" long. We are
appalled
at the hasty actions in this
regard of the Providence Police, FBI, and other federal and local
agencies.
The knife in point is a kirpan,
one of the five symbols of the Sikh faith, along with kes (unshorn hair
and
beard) - two elements of his
religious identity that made Mr. Singh an easy suspect in the first
place
in the eyes of Amtrak personnel.
Mr. Singh and three other people initially questioned and released were
all
presumed guilty because
they looked "Arab," our media's version of a terrorist. It is a good
thing
that we did not buttonhole
every white citizen this way when Timothy McVeigh turned out to be the
terrorist.
Apparently, in the frenzy to find a target for Americans' anger at the
outrageous attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon yesterday, our law enforcement agencies
media
have violated Mr.
Singh's civil rights as a U.S. citizen. Our media - which might be
expected to know a bit more about
the world - make matters worse by rushing stories into print or to TV
screen without asking critical
questions or doing even minimal research.
Mr. Singh was driven away in a police cruiser in the presence of loudly
cheering crowd who shouted
unprintable racial epithets at him. It seems Mr. Singh became for these
Rhode Islanders a scapegoat
and an object of their uncontrolled rage, harkening back to darker
moments
of U.S. history where such
overzealous reaction has led to tragic injustices for certain groups
(for
example, the internment of
Japanese Americans during World War II).
We hope that our media and our educators, as well as federal and local
leaders, will urge people to show
restraint as well as respect for our diversity so that we do not create
new
victims in our understandable need
to vent our fury and bewilderment..
We cannot accept that the US government prepares war, eluding its
own
responsibility after so many provocations against Arabic and other
people of
the world. This is a manipulation of the sufferings of the US victims.
This
will only provoke a lot of sufferings for innocent victims in the Third
World and also increase the risk of terrorist attacks in our countries.
Washington did already bombard 23 countries and after a certain time it
was
discovered its media had lied to justify it.
Amritjit Singh, Zubeda
Jalalzai & Dan Moos contributed above lines from Department of
English, Rhode Island College.