By Wajahat Ali
Oct. 13,
2020
Amy Coney
Barrett, President Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court, has faced immense
scrutiny of her religious beliefs, and we need to be vigilant against any
religious bias or discrimination.
US
Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
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But I
marvel at the hypocrisy of Republicans who are expressing shock and outrage
over this, after the way the right has treated Muslims. President Trump
responded to the alarm over Judge Barrett’s nomination by accusing Democrats of
bias against Catholics and “basically fighting a major religion in our
country.” This is rich from the man who is running against Joe Biden, a
Catholic; who promoted a Muslim ban; and who told America, “I think Islam hates
us.”
On Monday,
the first day of the Senate hearings on Judge Barrett’s nomination, Josh Hawley
of Missouri accused his Democratic colleagues on the Judiciary Committee of
attacking Judge Barrett for being “too Catholic to be on the bench.” He is
apparently living in the Twilight Zone, because this did not actually happen.
Mr. Biden went out of his way to say Judge Barrett’s faith should not be
considered a factor in her hearing.
I can’t
help wondering: How would Republicans behave if Judge Barrett were a Democrat
whose strongly held religious beliefs came from Islam instead of Catholicism?
We all know
how it would go.
Republicans
would demand she prove that she was not “working with our enemies.” That’s what
Glenn Beck, the conservative radio host and conspiracy theorist, called for
when Keith Ellison was elected as the first Muslim to Congress.
They would
probably use her faith to accuse her of hoping to create a “Shariah state”
through judicial activism. That what conservative bloggers did in 2011 when
Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey nominated Sohail Mohammed, a Muslim
originally from India, for a seat on the Superior Court of Passaic County.
If Judge
Barrett wore a hijab, Jeanine Pirro, the Fox News host, would question whether
her religious beliefs were in opposition to the Constitution. That’s the ugly
accusation Ms. Pirro levied against Representative Ilhan Omar of Minnesota in
2019.
The
scrutiny of Judge Barrett’ connections to the People of Praise religious
community — which opposes abortion, gay rights and marriage equality, and which
believes that men are leaders of their families — has been intense. It’s fair
to debate whether that kind of scrutiny is reasonable, and concerns that Judge
Barrett has faced bias because of her religious beliefs are understandable.
What is
clear, though, is that if a little-known Muslim group made headlines in
connection with the nomination of a justice, Republicans wouldn’t have the same
concerns about religious bigotry.
For
example, former People of Praise members told The Associated Press that women
in the group are expected to obey their husbands and provide sex on demand (the
group said in a recent statement that “husbands should not be domineering nor
should wives be servile”). If Judge Barrett were Muslim, these former members
would probably be invited to appear on “Fox & Friends” to give voice to
their concerns about the judge’s regressive stances.
Judge
Barrett co-wrote a 1998 law review article about the moral and legal “bind”
that death penalty cases might present Catholic judges. What if she had been
Muslim and had written about Muslim judges instead? Would Ben Carson call her
“schizophrenic?” In 2016, that’s how he described Muslims who embrace American
values like democracy and the separation of church and state.
Earlier, in
2015, Mr. Carson wrote in a Facebook post, “I could never support a candidate
for president of the United States that was Muslim and had not renounced the
central tenant of Islam: Shariah law.”
That
happens to be the same year Judge Barrett signed an open letter to Catholic
bishops saying, “We give witness that the church’s teachings — on the dignity
of the human person and the value of human life from conception to natural
death; on the meaning of human sexuality, the significance of sexual difference
and the complementarity of men and women; on openness to life and the gift of
motherhood; and on marriage and family founded on the indissoluble commitment
of a man and a woman — provide a sure guide to the Christian life, promote
women’s flourishing, and serve to protect the poor and most vulnerable among
us.”
If she were
Muslim and had made these statements, Republicans would no doubt smear her as a
woman oppressed by a barbaric Islamic culture that promotes misogyny.
It’s easy
to imagine all of this, because it all comes from the playbook that has been
used to attack Muslim elected officials, many of whom are in fact archetypes of
moderation and secularism compared with Judge Barrett.
I am not
critical of Judge Barrett’s nomination because of her Catholicism. I am deeply
sensitive to religious bigotry and stereotypes. I’m a practicing Muslim living
through an administration that campaigned for a Muslim ban. My community has
endured two decades of hazing after the Sept. 11 attacks, and our loyalty is
still deemed suspect. I would never wish that kind of judgment on a person of
another faith.
Like most
Americans, I am worried that Judge Barrett will use her seat to advance an
extreme agenda that will be detrimental to the interests of a majority of
people in this country. We fear that, if confirmed, she’ll help the religious
right drag equal rights and progress back 50 years.
One thing
is certain: If the Notre Dame law professor and darling of the religious right
were Muslim, she would have had a much harder time becoming a judge, let alone
a Supreme Court justice.
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Wajahat Ali is a playwright, a lawyer and a
contributing opinion writer.
Original Headline: If Amy Coney Barrett Were
Muslim
Source: The New York Times
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-west/amy-coney-barrett-faced-immense/d/123137
New
Age Islam, Islam Online, Islamic Website, African Muslim News, Arab World News, South Asia News, Indian Muslim News, World Muslim News, Women in Islam, Islamic Feminism, Arab Women, Women In Arab, Islamophobia in America, Muslim Women in West, Islam Women and Feminism