By
Kourosh Ziabari
Jul 08,
2020
Arun
Kundnani, the author of “The Muslims are Coming! Islamophobia, Extremism, and
the Domestic War on Terror.”
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Islamophobia
in the US has increased ever since the 9/11 attacks in 2001. Discrimination and
hate crimes against American Muslims skyrocketed immediately after the
deadliest assault on US soil took place. Despite sporadic efforts by former
President Barack Obama to bridge the religious and racial divides, anti-Muslim
prejudice was further heightened after the election of Donald Trump in 2016,
leading to what the Council on American-Islamic Relations described as a “sharp
rise” in a campaign against “innocent Muslims, innocent immigrants and
mosques.”
Beverly
Hills, CA, USA on 7/14/2016. © Michael Gordon / Shutterstock
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Robert
McKenzie, a senior fellow at New America, a Washington-based think tank, said
in 2018 that “political rhetoric from national leaders has a real and
measurable impact.” McKenzie led a data visualization project that logged
anti-Muslim incidents.
A survey by
the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding shows that 62% of Muslims in
the United States, including 68% of Muslim women, experienced religious
discrimination in 2019. The Pew Research Centre reported that an overwhelming
majority of US adults (82%) agree that Muslims are subject to at least some
form of discrimination in America. This includes 56% who believe Muslims are
discriminated against “a lot.”
In 2018,
the last year for which the FBI released official data on hate crimes committed
across the US, anti-Muslim offenses accounted for 14.5% of 1,550 cases
motivated by religion. Yet the actual number is believed to be much higher as
many incidents are often unreported. President Trump’s comments and policies
regarding Muslims — most notably his executive order in 2017 banning
immigration from several Muslim-majority countries — are linked to the spike in
Islamophobic attitudes.
Arun
Kundnani is a
visiting assistant professor in the Department of Media, Culture and
Communication at New York University. He is the author of the book “The Muslims
Are Coming! Islamophobia, Extremism, and the Domestic War on Terror.” In this
edition of The Interview, Fair Observer talks to Kundnani about
the rise in Islamophobia and President Trump’s views toward Muslims.
KouroshZiabari: Bretton Tarrant — the alt-right
terrorist who killed 51 Muslim worshippers in Christchurch, New Zealand, in
2019 — had described US President Donald Trump “as a symbol of renewed white
identity and common purpose” in a manifesto. Is Trump’s position on Muslims and
his rhetoric on immigrants emboldening white supremacists and racists within
the US and beyond?
Arun
Kundnani: Most
activists in racist, nativist and neo-Nazi movements around the world have seen
in President Trump a fellow traveller, if not someone who completely shares
their political agenda. His choice of advisers such as Stephen Miller and Steve
Bannon confirms for them that he is an ally. His racist policies, such as the
Muslim travel ban and his mass separating of children from their migrant
parents, are seen as the first steps in the creation of an “ethno-state,” in
which Jews, Muslims and anyone not considered white will be violently
eliminated.
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from Getty Images
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Trump’s
presidency, along with the election in various European countries of racist
political parties, is taken to be a sign that racist nationalism is on the rise.
In fact, the rise of the far right in the US and Europe is rooted in the crisis
of racial capitalism that has unfolded since the 2008 financial crisis. But
Trump’s presence in the White House has emboldened organized racists
everywhere.
Ziabari: As you said, one of the most
controversial decisions President Trump made shortly after taking office was to
introduce a travel ban against citizens of several Muslim-majority countries.
Was the “Muslim ban” constitutional and reflective of the values that the
United States stands for?
Kundnani: Liberals in the United States
often assert that policies of racial or religious exclusion are incompatible
with American values and the constitution. This ignores the more fraught
relationship between American national identity and principles of racial
equality and justice. The US Constitution expressed the values of a class of
slave-owning settler colonists in the 18th century seeking to overthrow an
older regime. It considers the right to bear arms important, for example,
because of the need for settler citizens to eliminate indigenous populations
from captured territory. Private property is sacrosanct because the American
Revolution was carried out by a capitalist class which owned slaves.
Trump’s
Muslim ban is, from this angle, not an aberration but consistent with the long
history of US racism and colonialism. From another angle, there are indeed
values of equality and religious freedom expressed in the Constitution. But for
them to be valid today, they need to be unstitched from narratives of American
exceptionalism and woven together in new ways for the 21st century.
Ziabari: In March 2016, President Trump
appeared in an interview on CNN and claimed that “Islam hates us … there’s a
tremendous hatred there.” Do you think what he said is true? Do Muslims hate
the United States?
Kundnani: What many Muslims and, for that
matter, many others around the world hate is not the United States as such but
its imperialism. The Middle East is a region where resistance to the US is
especially strongly felt, largely because of America’s deep support for Israel.
After the Cold War, US foreign policy planners mistakenly interpreted this
resistance as signaling Islam’s cultural incompatibility with modernity and
imagined “radical Islam” as the new threat that was to replace communism.
Trump’s
comments repeat the Washington foreign policy establishment’s tendency to
regard resistance to the US as rooted in a clash of cultures, rather than a
political desire for freedom. But the Palestinian movement is not ultimately a
fight for religious or cultural values; it is a struggle for political
liberation from Israel’s military occupation.
Ziabari: Many media people and scholars
believe Trump built on anti-Muslim sentiment, among other appeals, to please
his support base — mostly white Americans in Southern states — and boost his
popularity. Will he intensify his anti-Muslim rhetoric in the run-up to the
2020 elections as a campaign tactic?
Kundnani: In 2016, Trump styled himself as
the brave outsider willing to speak truths that no one else in the
establishment would do. There were two kinds of “truths.” He was willing to
defy political correctness and make explicit in his rhetoric about Muslims and
Mexicans what had previously only been implicit in counterterrorism and
immigration policymaking; and he was willing to attack “globalist” elites who
he said had abandoned “ordinary” Americans.
The dilemma
for his 2020 re-election campaign is that running as an outsider won’t work
after being in the White House for three years. He will have to stand on his
record. Were it not for the COVID-19 pandemic, his campaign would have focused
upon lower taxes and an improving economy? Alongside that, he would have
presented himself as a victim of a liberal establishment that tried to use the
“deep state” to weaken him and attack the Democrats as now dominated by
socialists in league with Muslim extremists.
With the
economy devastated, that second part will be more significant. Anti-Muslim
rhetoric will be used again, therefore, but in a different way from 2016. It
won’t be about terrorists crossing into the US through weak borders but about
accusing the Democratic Party of pandering to radicals — from Congresswomen
Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib, who will be portrayed as anti-Semites and radical
Muslims, to the “left-wing mobs” of Black Lives Matter.
Ziabari: Moving away from Trump, why do you
think the acceptance of anti-Muslim bigotry in the United States and the
broader Western world has become normalized? Are anti-Muslim bigots held to the
same standards that other racists, including anti-Semites, are held to?
Kundnani: All empires require violence to
sustain themselves, and the US empire is no different in this respect. In the
modern era, imperial violence has to be legitimized and rationalized. The main
way this happens is through racism. When empires confront resistance, they
typically frame it as the expression of an inferior culture that does not
appreciate the “benefits” that empire brings. The normalization of anti-Muslim
racism in the US is driven by this dynamic; its impetus comes from the need to
provide an interpretation of conflicts that are the result of US foreign
policy. Since the 1990s, the US public has been repeatedly told that Muslim
populations harbor a religio-cultural threat that can only be met through war,
torture and the suspension of human rights (anti-Muslim racism at home has been
the necessary correlate of the US’ imperialism abroad).
But all
racisms are, in the end, connected. For example, today’s Black Lives Matter
activists are monitored by the FBI as constituting a threat of terrorism,
building on the language and institutional apparatus that was established after
9/11 to target Muslims. Likewise, the conspiracy theories that anti-Muslim
propagandists have circulated over the last 10 years — which hold that Muslims
secretly control the US government and the European Union — are structurally
similar to the anti-Semitic conspiracy theories that emerged in Europe a
century ago. And their circulation today has helped create the space for
anti-Semitic tropes of Jewish manipulation to return again to conservative
political rhetoric.
Ziabari: What is the role of mainstream
media in perpetuating and spreading fear of Muslims and antipathy toward them?
Do you think the corporate media are to blame for the rise of anti-Muslim
prejudice in the United States?
Kundnani: The conservative corporate media
have mainstreamed the most blatant racism against Muslims, giving credence to
every stereotype and fear. To read and watch conservative media is to be
presented with a view of Islam as violent, deceptive and hateful. The liberal
corporate media is different but has also, in the end, enabled Islamophobia.
Take, for example, an incident in 2019 involving Congresswoman Ilhan Omar.
After she gave a speech in Los Angeles encouraging Muslims to be more
politically active in asserting their rights, a few words were taken out of
context and misrepresented in conservative media such as The New York Post, to
give the impression that she did not take 9/11 seriously — an obvious Islamophobic
slur. The liberal media condemned the attack on her. But the way it framed its
response was to say that conservatives were wrong to characterize Omar as
un-American and that her family had, after all, chosen to come to the US as
Somali refugees.
What this
does is set the terms of Omar’s acceptance by liberals: Were she to criticize
US foreign policy in Somalia, for example, and — instead of expressing
gratitude to the US— highlight America’s complicity in forcing her family to
flee, she would then be cast as no longer worthy of defense. For liberals, the
problem is one of conservative intolerance of a different religious identity
held by a fellow American. But that means that victims of racism have to pass a
national loyalty test before receiving support. And it erases from view the
roots of anti-Muslim racism, not in religious difference, but in US foreign
policies — such as drone strikes — that liberals have been eager to defend.
Ziabari: A 2018 report by The Washington
Post asserts that the majority of mass shootings are carried out by white
males. This confirms the findings of a 2015 research study by the Northeastern
University scholar Emma E. Fridel, who revealed that most mass shootings in the
US are perpetrated by African American and white males, not immigrants and
Muslims. When a Muslim citizen carries out an act of violence, the entire
religion is blamed. When a white American kills several people in a shooting
spree, the assailant is referred to as a “lone wolf” with a mental illness. Why
is it so?
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from Getty Images
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Kundnani: The reason for this obvious
divergence is the prejudice that everything Muslims do is driven by Islam, as
if it is a monolith that mechanically drives people who believe in it to acts
of barbarism. But no religion works like that. We are all shaped by a complex
mix of social, cultural and political conditions, and then from those
conditions [we] attempt to mold ourselves according to our own personality.
Acts of violence are individual decisions, products of culture and laden with
political meanings.
It makes
little sense to think of cultures in grand terms like “Islam” and the “West”
but, if we do, there is evidence that Islam is less prone to violence. Polls of
global public opinion suggest that whether one thinks that violence against
civilians is legitimate has more to do with political context than religious
belief; and such violence is considered more acceptable in the US and Europe
than everywhere else in the world. In fact, “Islam is violent” is a false belief
that has been used to legitimize US wars which, since 9/11, have caused the
deaths of over 800,000 people.
Ziabari: What do you think needs to be done
so that the gaps between American Muslims and the general public are bridged
and anti-Muslim prejudice is eliminated? Are academics and advocacy
organizations doing a good job in tackling Islamophobia?
Kundnani: Overcoming anti-Muslim racism in
the US requires that we face up to the devastation that US foreign policy has
inflicted in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Libya, Somalia, Yemen and Palestine.
We have to look squarely at the human consequences of war, torture and economic
destabilization. We must not erase from these episodes in our history the
victims themselves, their agency, their voices, their existence. Advocacy
organizations and academics have spent too much time thinking of Islamophobia
as a matter of individual attitudes and beliefs influenced by fringe publicity
campaigns or right-wing politicians. The focus instead needs to be on the deeper
drivers of anti-Muslim racism within the policies of US empire and the racial
fractures of neoliberal capitalism.
The demand
should not be for better cultural understanding of Islam or a more tolerant
attitude toward religious differences. Instead, the argument should be that
anti-Muslim racism is the means by which imperialist wars are legitimized and
that these wars are not in the interests of working-class Americans.
Ultimately, the issue of Islamophobia is inseparable from the question of how
resources are distributed in the US: ending anti-Muslim racism means creating a
US in which we use our resources to ensure the health, education, and
well-being of everyone who lives here rather than to fund a military machine
that serves the interests of corporate elites.
Ziabari: What do you make of President
Trump’s response to the recent killing of an African American man, George
Floyd, in Minnesota while in police custody and the ensuing protests against
police brutality and racism? Does the president’s handling of nationwide
protests and his reaction to Floyd’s death reveal anything about his broader
worldview on the rights of minorities, including Muslims?
Kundnani: Historically, the role of the
president in moments of what is euphemistically called “racial tension” is to
deploy old clichés of overcoming. His function is to speak somberly of the
“difficult” history of “racial animus” before uplifting us with pleas for
“reconciliation” and “renewal” of basic values. Such narratives of “moving on”
have enabled US white supremacy to survive to the present day by disguising
itself as the past. No one will be surprised that Trump has chosen a different
approach, painting the Black Lives Matter protests as acts of extremism and
hatred.
One could
be tempted to say that, in not expressing the usual establishment pieties,
Trump is doing anti-racists an unintended favor: undisguised racism is perhaps
easier to expose and challenge. But we should not ignore the extent to which
Trump’s open defense of racist police violence empowers forms of racist
oppression across US society, not least in law enforcement itself.
What’s
more, the danger of Trump’s rhetoric is that, in our outrage at his statements,
we fall into the trap of narrowing our focus to him alone. When that happens,
we forget that the Black Lives Matter movement is about the need for
deep-seated change to the whole way we deal with issues of safety and violence
in our communities. We should not allow Trump’s statements to side-track us
from pursuing this agenda in every way possible.
The
views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily
reflect New Age Islam’s editorial policy.
Original
Headline: Why Has Islamophobia Risen in America?
Source: The Fair Observer
URL: https://newageislam.com/interview/islamophobia-america-trump’s-position-muslims/d/122326
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