by Kristen Schurr
All Arabs are not Muslims. All Muslims are not terrorists. The Middle
East
does not operate as a single mind. No one knows who flew two planes into
the
World Trade Center, another into the Pentagon, and crashed a fourth in
Pennsylvania on Tuesday, September 11, 2001. But, as we in the United
States
were victimized by the terror that many people of the world are subject
to
every day, the Arab bashing began immediately on CNN, the networks, and
in
corporate radio and newspapers. Several web sites, described as ‘Arab,’
were
shut down, ostensibly due to an overwhelming amount of hate mail. A
local
New York reporter told a captive audience that the responsible party was
either a “Middle East country, or as the evidence suggests, Osama bin
Laden.”
What evidence? At that point there was none and there may still be none.
On
CNN Tuesday morning a reporter pushed a former Clinton aide to express
why
it was “an attractive option” to find bin Laden responsible. Regardless
of
the former aide’s reticence to place blame, and clear statement to his
pure
speculation on the matter, the reporter was relentless until a list of
possible connections was postulated. And in turn, immediately reports
came
in from friends and colleagues of verbal and physical assault on
Arab-Americans, Muslims, and people of South Asian descent.
Arab-Americans
were called on by the corporate media to explain bin Laden, Islam, and
suicide bombers. Palestinians were accused, by way of showcasing
eleven-year-old footage, of celebrating the bombings. Arafat was forced
to
deny culpability, as was the Democratic Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, while others in the 'West' were expected only to express
sympathy
and sadness. This led to the nearly constant bottom-screen ribbon on
CNN,
which read, “Hamas and Palestinian groups deny responsibility,” to an
audience unprecedented in size, perpetuating the stereotype of
Palestinians,
Arabs, people of the Mid-East, as a single entitiy and as terrorists.
Where
was the ribbon that read, “White, male Gulf War vets deny
responsibility,”
if we were truly looking toward those who have committed such acts in
the
U.S. Timothy McVeigh’s 1993 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma
City
was immediately blamed on the “Middle East” in the corporate media.
Arabs in
the U.S. are forced into issuing denials. Take for instance the heavily
reported on man detained for driving a car with a Palestinian sticker on
the
outside, and a photo of bin-Laden on the dashboard. Of course, the
photo, it
turned out, was of the man’s father. But this was barely news.
CIA trained bin Laden also issued a denial. If, as some are warning, he
wants to engage in a full-scale war with the U.S., why deny the attack?
Why
did the U.S. give the Taliban 120 million dollars this year? Saudi
billionaire bin Laden, along with the Taliban, overtook Afghanistan with
U.S. help in 1997. Now U.S. jingoism is pointed at the drought ridden
country. 5.5 million Afghanis will be dependent on food aid to survive
this
winter, yet international aid workers have been evacuated for fear of
attacks by the U.S. Iran, after having long been trying to get back in
the
good graces of the U.S., has once again closed its borders to starving
and
fearful Afghan refugees. But the corporate media would have us believe
that
the Afghan people are our enemies, as well as Iraqis still suffering
under
the U.S. embargo and bombing, and Occupied Palestinians.
Since Ariel Sharon, the man who led the attacks on Sabra and Shatila
refugee camps in Southern Lebanon, became Israel’s Prime Minister, U.S.
public sentiment had begun a barely palpable shift away from
unquestioned
support of Israel’s racist policies toward Palestinians. Although not
much
had been made of Israel’s control of the Palestinian water supply, the
economic blockade, and the inability to move freely throughout the West
Bank
and Gaza, public sentiment was stirred when reports started to mention
that
the Palestinian buildings razed by Israeli bulldozers or bombed with
U.S.
supplied weapons, were not only buildings, but were also Palestinian's
houses.
But that slight sea-change in attitude is no longer present. Now as
anti-Arab sentiment, fear of Muslims, and the continued stringing
together
of the terms ‘Middle East,’ ‘terrorist,’ and ‘Islam,’ spins out of
control
in the media, Israel is taking its cue to escalate its already horrific
treatment of Palestinians. Any dissent will easily be silenced as
anti-Arab
sentiment rages in the U.S. and even papers like the Village Voice run
stories such as the headlined, “the Bastards,” which suggested a renewed
kinship with Israel because, “now we know what you have to put up with.”
No
where do we see a differentiation between Palestinian people and Osam
bin-Laden, a wealthy Saudi living in Afghanistan. Nor do we read about
Palestinians being Occupied and continually attacked. These issues are
especially important to take note of now as consent for war against any
and
all Arabs is being manufactured in the corporate media.
Dissent, which had been on the rise in the U.S., against corporate world
domination, U.S. hegemony, and State-sanctioned racist practices and
policies, will now be more difficult to voice. Instant face recognition,
controversial a week ago, will now be installed with ease. Internet
surveillance has the go-ahead, and any protest, or protester, besides
being
criminalized, will be viewed as an unfeeling scourge. Meanwhile, 'man
on
the street' type interviews feature hateful rhetoric, such as the
war-cry
shown on CNN of a man shouting, "this is what you get when you're soft
of
Iraqis." Racist profiling, recently getting the heat it deserved, is
alive
and well once again. Arab-Americans, and those with “Arab
characteristics”
are under attack, as are South Asians and all followers of Islam.
Arab-American children need escorts to school, where some reports
indicate
they are being verbally attacked by their teachers, while their mothers
are
afraid to leave their apartments in order to grocery shop. A Sikh was
shot
in killed in Arizona Sunday, September 16th. Some Arab-American children
and
stores are sporting the omni-present U.S. flag as a life preserver.
As the people of the U.S. mourn the proximity of this attack to
themselves
and their immediate communities, nationalism is marketed as the tool for
healing. Rally around the flag, either as a call to war or as communal
sentiment of shared loss. But what does nationalism mean to people who
are
sincerely sporting these flags? It perpetuates ‘us versus them’ jingoism
and
strengthens U.S. calls for militarization. On Saturday, September 15th,
New
York Times front page read, “U.S. Demands Arab Countries ‘Chose Sides,’”
promoting more racism by equating Arabs with terrorists, and
legitimizing
the notion that there is a specific ‘Arab world' and 'Arab mind.' Who
would
not ‘chose sides’ with the U.S., where under the best of circumstances a
dissenting country would have its disobedience punished with sanctions
and
at worst be bombed out of existence. If this is the collapse of the
Empire
(signs are in place—heavy debt, heightened militarization) or an excuse
for
war (signs also in place here—domestic unrest, impending recession) I
hope
the people of the world come together to mourn all of the victims of
U.S.
imperialism, its own citizens included, protect one another from
aggression
and hate, and use our time wisely and kindly.
by the same author: